Thursday, May 17, 2012

Mysterious Update

Phantom  Last to Die: A Rizzoli & Isles Novel The Drop (Harry Bosch Series #17)


Mystery lovers – have you noticed it’s getting to the point that you need a detective’s spiral pad to keep notes on all the mysteries (and thrillers, too) being rushed to publication.  A recent New York Times article shed some light on this publishing mystery.  Authors who could be counted on to bring out one new title in their series each year are now feeling strong pressure to publish more.  eBook formats have made readers eager to download the next title quickly. Authors are even producing short works just in eBook format for the most insatiable.  Take out your notebook and note these clues to upcoming titles.    You will be sure to find them all available at the Mark Twain Library in the months to come.  And subscribe to Wowbary to be alerted when your favorite title has arrived.  Look at a few due out soon.  

Kill Alex Cross (Alex Cross Series #18)XO (Kathryn Dance Series #3)                The Age of Doubt Cast On, Kill Off


                                           

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Ready to Rumble?

The recent failure of the Pulitzer board to award a 2012 prize for fiction prompted quite an uproar.  The publishing industry put up its dukes and flailed away at the perceived insult to its 2011 fiction lists.

The brouhaha actually worked out in productive ways.  Many people (see And the winner isn't... and The Great Pulitzer Do-Over ) took the opportunity to champion their favorite 2011 novels, bringing attention to a wide range of worthwhile books.*  That's a good thing!

It made me reflect on the vagaries of the book prize process, though, and at the risk of being called unpatriotic, I'd say the British handle their literary awards system more efficiently.  They announce an initial 15-book "longlist", cut it down to a 5-6 book "shortlist", and then award the prize. Lots of publicity is focused on that extensive longlist, and being placed on the shortlist is seen as the real stamp of approval, with the actual award a bit of an anticlimax. (Similar to the Oscars.) Avid readers really appreciate those longlists.

Of course, the British do have their own controversies.  The judges for the 2011 Man Booker Prize, the UK's top literary award, noted that they were going to take "readability" into account in their deliberations.  Quel horreur! The literary community was incensed. It didn't help that the ultimate selection for the prize, THE SENSE OF AN ENDING, was widely seen as a tepid choice.

But I'm looking forward to next year's Booker Prize anyway.  Why?  Because I am so very amused that one of the five members of the 2012 judging panel is actor Dan Stevens, better known to many of us as Matthew Crawley of "Downton Abbey". (I kid you not. Oh, all right, he does have a degree in literature from Cambridge.) Those Brits sure know how to have more fun.

Mary Hoskinson-Dean

*It's not over 'til it's over? The Pulitzer jury describes "what really happened this year"