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Product Details
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When Booklist asked Pearl about the provenance of her new book, her answer struck us as the dream of every writer and book lover. "The publisher came to me," she confided, "with the idea of doing a book of recommended reading--incorporating all sorts of books, old and new, fiction and non, for all ages. They wanted it to be friendly and inviting, to sound like I was talking to people who shared my love of reading and good books and wanted some ideas of what to read next."
The publisher certainly approached the right person for the job. A practicing librarian for many years, Pearl is currently the director of the Washington Center for the Book at Seattle (WA) Public Library. Also, it was her brilliant and much-imitated idea to get all the readers in her hometown to read the same book at the same time and join discussion groups about it. The idea has spread from city to city across the country. She has written a two-volume readers'-advisory reference set titled Now Read This (1999; 2000). But her new book is more than a reference resource for librarians in their readers'-advisory work. It is also a book for personal use by library patrons, and even a book to own and keep on one's reading stand.
Pearl sees this book as a personal milestone. "It's the book that I think my whole life (and career as a librarian) has been leading toward. I basically went through my bookcases at home, where I have managed to accumulate most of my favorite books, and figured out categories they would go in." She came up with almost 200 categories, many of them not surprising, such as "Latin American Fiction," "Science gFiction, Fantasy, and Horror," "Techno-Thrillers," "Biographical Novels," and "First Novels." Other categories reflect Pearl's creative approach to linking books, and these unexpected but exciting categories include "Our Primates/Our Selves," "Historical Fiction for Kids of All Ages," "Grit Lit," "Do Clothes Make the Man (or Woman)?" and "Shrinks and Shrinkees."
One of the most interesting categories is called "Too Good to Miss." Actually, this category makes repeat appearances throughout the book, each time focusing on the work of a single author. In "Too Good to Miss," always approximately a page in length, Pearl isolates what makes a particular writer special to her and what books she would recommend. The authors receiving this special treatment include Frederick Busch, Mark Kurlansky, Eric Kraft, and Iris Murdoch. When Booklist suggested these one-author spotlights were one of the best features of the book, Pearl admitted, not surprisingly, that she loved preparing them. "I tried to include authors who I felt might be underappreciated . . . as well as those who might be less well known. Doing them gave me the chance to talk a bit about what makes these writers so good, which was a fine exercise for me as a reader and book reviewer." She expresses the regret that "I wish now that I had done more of them." So will her readers.
Of course, in preparing a book like this, which is all about recommending books on all kinds of subjects to open and eager readers, Booklist wondered if Pearl worried more about leaving out a number of books and authors than figuring out which ones to include. Pearl concurred: "The worst--most painful--part was having to bring the project to a halt. I still wake up in the middle of the night in a panic, realizing that I left out [certain] authors and books." That would seem to be an inevitable part of the selection process. Pearl had the last word on the subject: "I have to say, having done the indexing myself, that most of my favorite books are here. Except, of course, for the new books that come out after the book was done. I might have to do another book to include those!" We look forward to the sequel, then. Brad Hooper
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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Most helpful customer reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
I was a bit dissappointed,
By A Customer
This review is from: Book Lust: Recommended Reading for Every Mood, Moment, and Reason (Paperback)
I was a bit dissappointed with this book. I read the great reviews that it but the book let me down. I didn't enjoy the catergories that the book had. For example the book has a topic of Bomb Makers (makers of the atomic bomb) and lists 8 ( too many) books. She also has a Canadian Fiction section There is a Cat Crazy Section with over 10 books. I felt that her catagoies needed more help. I also didn't like the fact that there really were not any list. You just can't open the book to a page and look at a list of of 10=15 books. You have to read the paragraph. The books are underlined but the author's are not. I didn't like this format. I would of preferred that she write her comments on the Middle East, for example, and then list her 10-15 books. She has 5 sections of Africa in one section and a 6th somewhere else. Anyway, this book wasn't my style. So I wouldn't recommend it to my friends...
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
mediocre,
By A Customer
This review is from: Book Lust: Recommended Reading for Every Mood, Moment, and Reason (Paperback)
I checked the sections on science writing andscience fiction, two areas I am very familiar with, and found many selections to be poor to mediocre. The author did not seem to be able to distinguish trash from titles of value.
5.0 out of 5 stars
So much fun!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Book Lust: Recommended Reading for Every Mood, Moment, and Reason (Paperback)
Any list of book recommendations that gives Barbara Pym her own category is likely to rate highly with me. I very much enjoyed reading "Book Lust" and now have a very long list of books that I want to tackle. While some of Pearls suggestions were, in my opinion, duds, that's just part of the fun. On the one hand, Book Lust has led me to read the works of writers I would never have chosen for myself, such as Percival Everett--I enjoyed his novel "Erasure". On the other hand, Book Lust has helped me to find more books in the style that I like most. I particularly enjoyed Elizabeth Taylor's "Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont"--before reading Book Lust I had never heard of Elizabeth Taylor. I've recommended Book Lust to several people, prompting someone to present me with the Nancy Pearl action figure (complete with shushing action) as a gift.
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