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Neha | May 10 2007

The very famous Brazilian author, Paulo Coelho, 59, best known for ‘The Alchemist’, an inspirational story which inspired many people including me, is all ready to be back in the world of literature with his new novel. And I being a fan of his work am pretty happy to receive the news.

His new novel is called ‘The Witch of Portobello’ is about the journey of a Transylvanian Gypsy’s illegitimate daughter who goes all around the world searching for her purpose in life. Coelho will also visit USA to promote his latest book. As per The Times in London, he is the world’s second biggest selling author after John Grisham. And I have no doubts in that. His books have been sold in around150 countries, in 64 languages.

His book, the alchemist is also among the favorites of celebs like Bill Clinton, Madonna, Julia Roberts, Russell Crowe, Will Smith and Jeremy Irons. A film version of the book is also being discussed. So, all you readers out their make sure you grab this one as soon as possible.

Source: USAtoday

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Neha | May 9 2007

Everyone knows that the bible is continuously loosing its popularity and now only a few are left who read the bible and attend the prayers heartily. But a new Swedish magazine project seeks to reform things and people by transforming the looks of the bible and adding provocative pictures. ‘The Book’, ill be the new name for the modern version of the Bible.

Dag Söderberg, who has a background in advertising, is the project leader of the very new Swedish magazine called ‘Bible Illuminated, Gamla Testament: The Book’. The project seeks to remove the inaccessibility present in the Bible, by reproducing the Old Testament in a magazine format. The magazine won’t have a religious inclination at all. Söderberg says that, like other people, he too depends on the morals and ethics of the Bible, but without being particularly religious.

And the non religious notion is testified by the pictures that have been used in the book; a gas chamber, a homeless man sleeping on the street, an industrial wasteland of smoke-belching chimneys. The images are something you can never relate with the Bible. The magazine has hit the shelves and Söderberg hopes for a positive reaction.
Some Facts associated with ‘The Book’...

• It contains the same, unedited text from the Old Testament.
• The book is conceived and designed to be accessible, neutral, ethical and aesthetic.
• It includes 450 pages, with photographs.
• It is in the format of a magazine.
• 30,000 copies have been printed.
• It actually targets the urban middle class ( 25-50)
• Will be translated into English in some time.

Source: Sweden

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Neha | May 3 2007

Angolan journalist and author Jose Eduardo Agualusa has won this year’s Independent Foreign Fiction Prize for his book ‘The book of Chameleons’. He shares the prize money of £10,000 prize money with translator Daniel Hahn.

Jose writes in Portuguese and is basically a native of Angola. His previous works include novels, some short stories, a novella. He has also won the Grande Premio Literario RTP for his novel Nacao Crioula.

The prize is given to novels in other languages, translated into English and published in the UK. Boyd Tonkin, the judge who is also the literary editor of the Independent, described it as “a delightful, moving and revealing novel about modern Africa. It is remarkable for its witty originality and profound humanity, and blessed by a captivating translation from the Portuguese by Daniel Hahn.’

The prize was founded in 1990, lapsed in 1995and was restored in 2001, with help from the Arts Council. Authors like Milan Kundera and WG Sebald are included in the list of its previous receivers. Last year, the novel ‘Out Stealing Horses’ by Per Petterson was the winner.

Source:BBC

Image credit: Amazon

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Neha | May 3 2007

Finally, it’s out! Yup! The 2007 Edgar Allan Poe award for best play has been announced and the winner is Sherlock Holmes: The Final Adventure, by Steven Dietz. Another work which won the award having the same fictional detective was The Science of Sherlock Holmes: From Baskerville Hall to the Valley of Fear. It won the won the award for best critical/biographical book.

The best novel of 2007 is Jason Goodwin’s The Janissary Tree and the winner for best first novel by an American author was Alex Berenson’s The Faithful Spy. The Edgar awards are presented by Mystery Writers of America, a New York-based organization for mystery and crime writers, fans and professionals, honour the best in mystery fiction, non-fiction, television and film. The Edgars has been circling since 1946. The award is given annually. Edgar Allan Poe, the benefactor of MWA, was a writer of fiction known for his macabre tales.

Other winners were:

Paperback original, Snakeskin Shamisen, by Naomi Hirahara.

Fact crime, Manhunt: The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln’s Killer, by James L. Swanson.

The best short story was won by The Home Front, in Death Do Us Part, by Charles Ardai.

Best juvenile, Room One: A Mystery or Two, by Andrew Clements.

Best young adult, Buried, by Robin Merrow MacCready.

Best television episode teleplay was given to Life on Mars - Episode 1, by Matthew Graham.

Best television feature/miniseries teleplay was awarded to The Wire, Season 4. The teleplay was by Ed Burns, Kia Corthron, Dennis Lehane, David Mills, Eric Overmyer, George Pelecanos, Richard Prise, David Simon and William F. Zorzi.

Best motion picture screenplay for The Departed. Screenplay by William Monahan.

Source: USAToday

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Neha | May 3 2007

This book season you just can’t miss your dogs. Remember, John Grogan’s 2005 memoir, Marley & Me: Life and Love with the World’s Worst Dog? The heart warming and beautiful story of a family and an anxious dog, who teaches them a couple of things about life. The book has some 3.2 million copies in print again. And the news isn’t over yet, two more Marley books targeting the child readers are arriving in stores.

The publishers are hoping to cash them with the dog owners and pet lovers. Not only dogs, even the cats are in the some limelight this season. Take a look some of the books in stores and decide your pick.

Marley: A Dog like No Other by John Grogan (Adaptation of Marley & Me) for ages 8 to 12.

Bad Dog, Marley! By John Grogan

Lost & Found by Jacqueline Sheehan

The New Yorkers by Cathleen Schine

Dreaming in Libro: How a Good Dog Tamed a Bad Woman by Louise Bernikow

Dog Days: Dispatches From Bedlam Farm by Jon Katz

Merle’s Door: Lessons From a Freethinking Dog by Ted Kerasote

Dewey, a Small Town, a Library and the World’s Most Beloved Cat

Source: USAtoday

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Neha | May 3 2007

If you remember, we have around a week ago suggested a book for reading ‘the silver ship and the sea’ and here the magical lady is herself answering all those questions that you have in your minds for her. Take a look!

Q. Who is Brenda Cooper outside the frame?
Brenda:I’m not sure I understand the question - outside the frame? If you mean fame, well, I’m not famous yet. I’m pretty busy since I have a day job (I’m the Chief Information Officer for the City of Kirkland) and a family and I’m writing novels and short stories and giving talks as a futurist. So a lot of my time is spent on those things. I also love to read and walk and travel.

Q. What made you decide to take to writing? At what age did you actually start?
Brenda:I’ve always wanted to be a writer. I was writing poetry and stories at a very young age, and I kept writing and journaling at various levels throughout my life. I did have some poetry published when I was in college. I have a twenty-seven-year-old son, and right after he turned eighteen, I decided to write professionally. I think it was the realization that if I didn’t get started on my writing career, I wouldn’t have time left in my life to really succeed at it. I was thirty-eight.

Q. How has the journey been up till now?
Brenda:Fun. I love to write. I have pretty much always loved to write. Learning the craft enough to get published was sometimes hard since it’s really a process of getting a lot of rejections. But a friend (who is a published writer) once told me that you just need to wallpaper a whole room with rejections until you start selling, and so every rejection is one more piece of the work done. That advice helped - it made it easier to get rejections.

Q. Your book “the silver ship and the sea” is a science fiction. From where do you get ideas for writing?
Brenda:Sometimes from reading the paper, or a science magazine or hearing a talk. An idea might come from a casual conversation with a friends or something that happens at work. I might meet someone and see something in them that I want to integrate into a fictional character. As a writer, it is important to watch and listen a lot, which is sometimes hard for me.

Q. You are a writer as well as a futurist. Your profile and books show that you are quiet interested in technology and science. Any specific reasons?
Brenda:I just always remember wanting to understand how the world works. You know that period kids go through when they ask ‘Why?’ all the time? I might have just never quite outgrown that.

Q. What do you expect from the future? Why is it one of your favorite topics?
Brenda:The future is likely to be pretty chaotic. If you think about it, the last two decades have seen a lot of change in communication, technology, and knowledge/information. Yet in spite of all the change, a lot of what it is to be human is still the same as it was hundreds of years ago. We love, we learn, we experiment, we create. We yearn to be accepted and we value our families. Most of us have some kind of spiritual life. Unfortunately, we still go to war a lot. So some things will be really different and a lot will be like today. But there are a lot of new risks as technology has made more powerful ways to both do good and cause evil, to put it really simply. Climate change is going to be a big topic for a long time, and probably very disruptive in good and bad ways. So the future is a favorite topic of mine because I think it is important that we act responsibly with the power and ideas and capabilities we have.

I’m a member of the Futurist Board for the Lifeboat Foundation which is dealing with those issues. Even though I don’t have much time to engage with the foundation, I think it’s an interesting community and worth visiting.

Q. Do you have a certain criterion/writing style for making your readers stick to your books?
Brenda:I just try to write an interesting story and make the people I write about as realistic as possible, no matter which side of an issue they are on. I think readers can relate to that. If you look at most debatable topics in the real world, there are multiple sides and both side soften have a lot of valid points, or at least the people on both sides of the issues are well-intentioned.

Q. Which one is your favorite among your own works?
Brenda:I really like a short piece - a few thousand words - called ‘My Grandfather’s River,’ that got published in the journal Nature last year. That story came out of a lecture. I was in San Diego at a geographic information systems users group, and our keynote speaker was Michael Fay, who talked about his fabulous trips through the Congo (I think they were sponsored by National Geographic). Mr. Fay mentioned something like ‘I’m mapping a vanishing ecosystem before it disappears.’ When he said that, it almost made me cry, and so I decided to write a story about that idea. I’ve actually written a few versions of that story, and the one in Nature came out the way I pictures it.

Q. Who are your favorite authors/books? What kinds of work fascinate you?
Brenda:I read widely. I love poetry. I like Stephen King’s non-horror work (I really liked Lisey’s Story). I grew up on Robert Heinlein and Larry Niven and J.K. Krishnamurti and Mary Stewart. I love finding writers who are new to me (I just discovered Jodi Picault, who has been a bestselling mainstream author for years, and Tamora Pierce who writes wonderful YA fantasy). I like dissidents, like Arundhati Roy. For example, when I was a teenager I read all of Solzenheitsen’s books. I just listened to the Dalai Llama’s book on science and spirituality on my ipod, and I enjoyed his thoughts a lot (this was the first full-length work of his I’d read).

Q. What are you doing when not writing?
Brenda:There isn’t much time that isn’t writing or working. But I try to exercise an hour a day, and manage more like three or four hours a week (usually walking the two dogs, Sasha and Nixie). I like listening to live music and pulling weeds and meeting friends and talking.

Q. Your life’s philosophy in your own words?
Brenda:
Learn a lot, work hard, love hard, and be happy.

Q. What advice do you hold for upcoming authors?
Brenda:
Well, I’m still an upcoming author. But I think the best advice is to practice. Write. Writers write, and the way to learn to write better is to write more. Don’t let yourself make excuses, but do let yourself write badly. You can always re-write. But you can’t even do that until you’ve written. Oh...and turn off the television.

Wow!what a piece of advice. By the way, thank you so much Brenda for taking out some time for us from your busy schedule.

Image Credit:IInet

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Neha | Apr 30 2007

Rosie Thomas for the second time has been announced the winner of the Romantic Novel of the Year for her book ‘Iris & Ruby’. Before she won the same, 22 years back for her novel ‘Sunrise’. Other short listed authors included were Judith Lennox for Saga, Carole Matthews for Welcome to the Real World and Matt Dunn for the Ex-Boyfriend’s Handbook.

The story can be told as a tale of generations. The novel balances between a woman and her grand-daughter, who are drawn together by their experiences in love to create a whole new picture. It imbibes the past as well as the future. The surroundings, the characters, the relationship, the attachment, the love; everything is so beautifully written and described. The story basically develops and is concentrated in Cairo. The book makes you travel with its words. It is a journey between two generations. That may be the reason why Dame Tanni Grey-Thompson, a judge described it as ‘beautifully written’.

Rosie Thomas lives in London. She is basically from Wales. Her novels include White, the Potter’s House, if My Father Loved Me and Sun at Midnight. Her other celebrated novels include Bad Girls, Good Women, A Simple Life. She generally spends her time mountaineering and traveling.

The award was started in 1960 by the Romantic Novelists Association to recognize and award talent in the field of romantic fiction and encourage writers. The award includes £5,000 as the prize money.

Source:BBC

Image Credit: Fantasticfiction

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Neha | Apr 27 2007

Free Food for Millionaires by Min Jin Lee gives us an insight into the lives of Korean-Americans. And why not, the author has herself immigrated to USA from South Korea when she was 7. The novel will be published in May by Warner Books.

The protagonist in the novel is Casey Han and it’s her story. The novel traces the treacherous and not so perfect life of Casey Han. The novel shifts between Queens and Manhattan. Casey’s parents work at a dry cleaner, are old fashioned and emotionally distant. And as most of the parents, they too experience difficulties understanding their already Americanized daughter. If we compare, the life of the heroine and the author, we can say that it is kind of a semi autobiography of Lee herself. The reviews of the book have been positive.

Lee, who lives in Manhattan with her husband and a son, has a degree in law. Min Jin Lee has received the 2004 Narrative prize for her short story ‘Axis of Happiness’. She has also received a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in fiction writing and of the William Peden Prize in fiction. The Virginia Tech. shootings are being related to the book, but I don’t see any connection here as such, except that the Korean American was involved there too.

Source: USAtoday

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Neha | Apr 27 2007

Brenda Cooper is out with her latest science fiction novel, The Silver Ship and the Sea. And for those of you who are genuinely interested in the future of technologies, the future of humanity and how technologies can be used for the betterment, it is all that you wish.

The book sets in future and traces a confrontation between the ‘natural’ humans and the genetically enhanced humans. And certainly the outcome is not anything new. Despite their technological advancements and abilities the genetic humans face a defeat. But the way the characters have been sketched, the way technology has been streamlined, the book definitely deserves a lot of attention. My favorite part is where the surviving youngsters are adopted by the victors, emphasizing that humans are not just better then the technology but even their hearts are full of love and compassion.

The book or rather the authoress takes you in to a whole new world, a strange system. This is the authoress second book. Brenda has imbibed everything from genetic engineering to nanotechnology in a beautiful way. The book can take you ahead of time, grab your copy now.

Source: Futurist

Image Credit: Amazon

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Neha | Apr 27 2007

The fans of J.R.R. Tolkien queued outside the book shops to buy the special editions of a “new” book by him, 34 years after his death. ‘The Children of Hurin’ may be the last Tolkien story to be published. The copies of the book were signed by Tolkien’s son and literary executor Christopher and illustrator Alan Lee, who had also won an Oscar for his work on the film, “The Lord of the Rings”. The initial print run of this edition worldwide is around 500,000.

J.R.R Tolkien whose real name is John Ronald Reuel Tolkien was born on January 3, 1892 and died on September 2, 1973. He is best known for his works such as The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. He apart from being a writer was an English philologist university professor of Anglo-Saxon language and English language and literature. A devout Roman Catholic, he was a good friend of C. S. Lewis. However, after his death writers like Morris, Howard preceded Tolkien, but the success of his work have led him to be known as the “father of modern fantasy literature”. Tolkien works show his influence of the history and legends of England, Celtic, Scottish and Welsh as well as countries such as Scandinavia and Germany. He was also influenced by the Anglo-Saxon literature, Germanic and Norse mythologies, Finnish mythology and even the Bible.

His posthumously published books are edited by his son Christopher Tolkien.

Source: CNN

Image Credit: Isd77

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Fresh Comments

on Will the Wizard Be Finally... hee harrry potter is so coooool abizz .....i hope met with daniel radclife ... some day...
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on Free Food for Millionaires;... I hope someday i will be a millionaire. Amien.
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