April 2010

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I don’t make a habit of telling people they need to read certain books.  Chacun a son gout, I always say, which, roughly translated, means something about how gout is a genetic disease you can pass on to your son.

Seriously, people’s tastes are so drastically different you have to know your audience.  My father told me to read Elegance of the Hedgehog because he loved it, so I borrowed Kim’s copy.  When I returned it to her, admitting I had given up halfway through because it was so much NOT my kind of book, she laughed and said, “You’ll notice I didn’t tell you you should read it.  I didn’t think you’d like it.”  Kim knows me well enough to know what to recommend to me–and what not.  For instance, every good friend or relative of mine knows never to tell me to read a book where a child gets bullied or abused in any way, because I won’t sleep for a month, and I’ll blame them.

And I know Kim doesn’t share my love for graphic novels or fantasy, so I wouldn’t go around telling her to read any of my favorites, although I will rush to tell my sister or my oldest son about any new good one, since they love that stuff too.

But I’m reading a book right now that I think anyone who’s into books at all would enjoy.  It’s funny, for one thing–and who among us can’t use a good laugh right around now?  Can’t think of a soul–but even more importantly, it has insights about publishing and book-writing that are so unbelievably on target, it’s basically a primer in how to write and sell books.

The book is How I Became a Famous Novelist by Steve Hely.  (Full disclosure: my husband’s met Hely a few times and they have some mutual friends, which is why he read the book in the first place and passed it on to me.  But I’ve never even met the guy and, sadly, I don’t get any commission or recognition for recommending his book.  Of course, if Steve reads this post and wants to send me a muffin basket, I’ll be all “STEVE!  BUDDY!” so I hope someone sends it on to him and he feels inspired . . .)

Most of this book is laugh out loud funny–when Rob was lying on the bed, reading the book to himself, I got annoyed at how often he’d chortle.  I think that’s rude if no one else can share the joke, don’t you?  (Note: it isn’t rude when I do it.)  Pete, the protagonist, is stuck in a dead-end job, but when his former girlfriend invites him to her wedding, he realizes he needs to become a success before then.  He decides he’ll write a best-selling book and sets about figuring a formula that will work for him. Read the rest of this entry »

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The highlight of the LATFOB for me this year was the first event I attended, the panel on Biographies of 20th century lives.  I’m actually not much of a biography reader.  I’ve had too many experiences of being 400 pages into a book, the subject is only 30 years old, and I realize I know more about the subject’s early life than want to know about my own.  This panel opened my eyes.

The panel consisted of three authors, Cari Beauchamp, Kirstin Downey, and Linda Gordon.  I was fascinated by two different Depression era women, Frances Perkins and Dorothea Lange, who had an enormous impact on our democracy.  (Cari Beauchamp was hilarious, I’ve quoted her numerous times since the panel, and her book on Joseph Kennedy in Hollywood looked interesting, but I’m not the one to write about another Hollywood book.)

The Woman Behind the New Deal:  The Life and Legacy of Frances Perkins–Social Security, Unemployment Insurance and the Minimum Wage by Kirstin Downey (childhood dispensed with by page 20!)

  • Before listening to Kirstin Downey, I hadn’t heard of Frances Perkins, now she is my new hero.  Downey was a writer for The Washington Post and noticed that the Frances on the Frances Perkins Labor Building was spelled with an “e,” indicating a woman.  Frances Perkins was Franklin Roosevelt’s Secretary of Labor and the force behind much of the New Deal.
  • Perkins met FDR in 1910 when he was a state politician and she was an activist for working conditions even before the Triangle Shirtwaist factory.  By the time FDR won the presidential election, he and Perkins were close friends for over 20 years.  She agreed to join him in DC as Secretary of Labor if he would work toward unemployment insurance, the minimum wage, Social Security and universal health care.  With Frances Perkins the first three became a reality, and without her, the fourth needed another seventy years.
  • Frances was the largest single promoter of the ‘get to work’ programs, including the WPA that funded Dorothea Lange’s work.  In his first presidential race, FDR ran under a balanced budget plank and Read the rest of this entry »
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Kim’s Advice for Attending Book Festivals:

1.  Stay Riveted for the Great Panels: I started at the Biography 20th Century Lives panel with the authors Cari Beauchamp (Joseph P. Kennedy Presents:  His Hollywood Years), Kirstin Downey (The Woman Behind the New Deal:  The Life of Frances Perkins) and Linda Gordon (Dorothea Lange:  A Life Beyond Limits and the winner last Friday of the LA Times Festival of Books Prize for Biography). It was fascinating.  I didn’t know about Joseph Kennedy’s influence in Hollywood, had never heard of Frances Perkins and now she may be my hero, and Dorothea Lange is so much more than those haunting pictures of Dust Bowl farmers.  There is so much to share about this panel that my next post, creatively titled Los Angeles Times Festival of Books – Part 2, will be dedicated to it.

2.  Don’t be a Miser: If there is a panel that you really want to go to and there is even a slight chance that you could go, buy the ticket.  Because really, it’s only a dollar.  More than anything else, I wanted to hear Dave Eggers.  But, I wasn’t sure of my schedule this weekend and when I finally realized I could spend all Saturday afternoon at the Festival, right when Dave would be there, the tickets were sold out.  I was nervous about the standby line for this event, and rightly so, when I walked up it was over 50 people long.  I did make it to the front of the line, but that’s only because everyone, I mean everyone, even the event staff, left because there were no more seats.

3.  Talk to the People Working in the Booths: I stopped by the Chin Music Press booth and asked about their latest books.  Chin Music publishes two types of books:  translated contemporary Japanese literature and books that deal with broader issues in America (this division of Chin Music started publishing books about New Orleans after the hurricane but has expanded).

I purchased the book Chin Music is currently promoting, Home, Away by Jeff Gillenkirk.  It’s about a major league pitcher who gives up his career to care for his son.  The opening line of the blurb is “how much is a father’s love worth?”  I knew immediately that it is the perfect Father’s Day gift for my baseball loving husband (my kids should thank me for giving them a leg up on the holiday).  I asked the author about his favorite baseball team and he said he cheers for his local team wherever he lives, and that right now he’s in the Bay Area so it’s the Giants.  I wondered if he knew those were fighting words in LA.  He noted the only exception was when  he lived in New York, he wouldn’t support the Yankees.  That convinced me, Gillenkirk is an author you can trust with baseball.

And why the name Chin Music?  Well, I learned a couple of new crossword-handy facts Read the rest of this entry »

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It IS Earth Day, right? Kind of snuck up on me.

I totally forgot to pose the family for our Earth Day cards.  Guess we won’t be sending them this year.

Actually, in all seriousness, one of the reasons I don’t send holiday cards is the wastefulness of the paper involved.  A lot of people I know are going paperless with their cards and the online options are getting fancier and classier.  There’s an Earth Day tip right there!

Kim thinks I’m relatively conscientious about this stuff because I compost.  It’s so easy to impress her.  (I will say that there’s a disgusting aspect to composting that does test your commitment).  I’m happy to report that our recycling waste now far outpaces our regular waste, and between that and the composting, we’ve definitely cut down on icky bags of goo going out to the trash can.

And of course I made a vow to be a vegetarian this year (and maybe on into the future) for strictly environmental reasons.  If you’re a faithful reader of this blog, you’ll remember that I “went” vegetarian on New Year’s Day, which makes it roughly four months now since I’ve eaten meat or fowl.

(Okay, confession time: I had a few mouthfuls of chicken at a literary festival where I had JUST spoken and was sitting back down, still shaking from having been up in front of hundreds of people, and found lunch waiting on the table in front of me.  Without thinking, I had devoured a bite or two of chicken salad before realizing what I was doing.  I cried out, “Oh, no!  I just ate chicken and I’m a vegetarian!” which raised some skeptical eyebrows among my tablemates, since most vegetarians know not to eat chicken. Also: once I nibbled on my daughter’s leftover pizza and she pointed out to me it was barbecue chicken pizza.)

Overall, though, I’ve found it surprisingly easy to stay the course, even when we were traveling all over the place for spring break.  Of course, I made it easy on myself: I’m not a vegan, so I eat eggs and dairy–can’t imagine doing this without cheese–and I also eat fish which pretty much solves the “what do I get at a nice restaurant” problem.  I try to focus on types of fish that are environmentally sound, like anchovies, sardines, and tilapia, but when I branch out from those, I can’t always remember which ones are best, so I may have made some mistakes in that area.  (I should carry one of those lists around–I know you can get them online–that tell you which fish you shouldn’t order because they’re being overfished or are toxic or are caught in ways that harm other species.) Read the rest of this entry »

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My girlfriend, Jackie, sent me this link today.  I hadn’t heard of The Gift of an Ordinary Day by Katrina Kenison until I viewed this video.  Normally, I wouldn’t recommend a book until I had read it.  However, I love the message of the video, that it’s the ordinary days that create the fabric of life.  One of my many Kim-isms it that, the moments in my life that are the most meaningful to me aren’t planned and they are frequently small.  I love our adventures, but I know that what binds my family together is the daily ride home from school, the family dinners, or the inside jokes.  Don’t get a romantic view of our life, those rides home can be sullenly silent, many dinners can be aggravating and the jokes can fall flat, but that’s part of creating the ties.   So, even though I haven’t read the book and knowing what my schedule it between now and Mother’s Day, I won’t be able to read it by then, the video itself is worth the time to watch.  Then, follow my example and buy the book and add it to the mix of what you plan to read, soon.

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