Littoral Gets Critical (or Critical Gets Littoral)

Must be synchronicity -- or is that serendipity? -- but just a day after I point out how cool the National Book Critics Circle's blog Critical Mass is, they go and link to Littoral, the most excellent of local literary blogs (or national literary blogs for that matter). The specific item that caught their interest was Arlo Haskell's interview with Barry Unsworth, historical novelist and one of the keynote speakers at the upcoming Key West Literary Seminar. Since taking on this blog and making it his own, Arlo's really classing up the joint.

Radio saved the literary star?

Amid all the mourning for disappearing book coverage in newspapers, Publishers Weekly reports some good news: NPR is increasing its books coverage. (That's 100.5 on your FM dial in Key West, most of the time, or anytime on the web from a station of your choice -- I like the NPR books podcast they put out every couple of days which collects a bunch of their books stories -- reviews, interviews, features -- it's free and you can subscribe on iTunes then pop them right onto your computer and/or iPod.) I found this story about NPR, by the way, on Critical Mass, the excellent National Book Critics Circle blog. Don't know if anyone but me uses my blog's blogroll as a handy way to check in on various book and literary sites but some of them are fun. And today I added a new one, PhiloBiblos, the blog of a young and, judging from his blog, extremely smart librarian up in Massachusetts. Found that one through my new addiction, LibraryThing.

Tax Free Tuesdays at Voltaire Books

Sure, it's hot and sticky around here in July -- but Voltaire Books is rewarding those of us who stick around with Tax-Free Tuesdays. For the entire month, locals -- who already get a 5 percent discount -- can take an extra 7.5 percent off purchases at the island's best independent bookstore. Let's go! (The store also offers a 15 percent discount for all Key West High School required summer reading books, all summer long.)

A read medium-length and entertaining

My review of Tony Horwitz's latest historical travelogue, A Voyage Long and Strange, is in this week's edition of Solares Hill, and on the Citizen's website. I liked the book, better than Blue Latitudes but not as much as Confederates in the Attic. Still, a fun and informative read. It will be interesting to see if Horwitz continues along this line or strikes into something entirely new. Maybe we can ask him at the 2009 Key West Literary Seminar, where he will be appearing along with his wife, Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Geraldine Brooks. I've since finished another great nonfiction book by an upcoming KWLS panelist (and workshop leader) Patricia O'Toole: The Five of Hearts was really well written history, or biography, or whatever you want to call it. Even if you think you don't give a damn about late 19th century politics and literary history, it's a good read. Last weekend, in one enormous gulp, I read "After You'd Gone," Maggie O'Farrell's first novel. I discovered her earlier this year when I reviewed her most recent, "The Disappearing Act of Esme Lennox," for SH. This first effort hits some of the same themes -- Scottish social oppression, especially of women, historically and now, especially of smart, unconventional women. It's a little melodramatic, especially toward the end. But I bought it. (The story I mean, not the book -- got the book through interlibrary loan, a service I'm starting to use much more now that I work at a library and I don't know why I didn't before.) Speaking of melodrama, I also finished listening to an audiobook, Lady MacBeth, by romance writer Susan Fraser King -- the best part about it was the reader's Scottish accent, which I found replaying in my head all through the day.

It was mostly a test to see if my 20-minute commute was enough to make an audiobook worthwhile and I have to say, it was. Fortunately we have a sizeable audiobook collection at the library so I'll be pillaging that for future rides. I'm currently listening to a two-disc NPR compilation of baseball stories, and after that it's a Billy Collins appearance in New York, which includes reading and a talk. Billy, by the way, will be back for next year's seminar. As if you had any doubt.

Next on the plate: More seminar reading: "Dominion" by the recently-added Calvin Baker and Russell Banks' first work of nonfiction, "Dreaming Up America."

The most astounding thing I've read in ages, however, was not between hard covers. It was in the June 2 New Yorker, the issue I just finished because of my obsessive-compulsive habit of reading New Yorkers straight through, in order, which means I'm always at least a couple weeks behind. I had heard of Roger Stone, most recently when my friend Amy broke the news in the Miami Herald of his possible involvement in Eliot Spitzer's downfall. But Jeffrey Toobin's profile of Stone and recounting of his involvement in every American nightmare from Watergate to the 2000 Florida recount was a revelation. Even if you're not a political junkie, this is a story worth reading. And then you can join me in weeping.

A good find

I haven't read the Da Vinci Code (can you hear my tone of satisfied superiority via text?) -- though I think it made a fine movie. I did read Angels & Demons and thought the writing SUCKED but eventually found myself turning the pages for plot. But I have been looking for several years for a good writer of biblio-thrillers -- not literary thrillers, which I define as more in the P.D. James, Benjamin Black category -- but books where the MacGuffin is a book or a manuscript and a few of the characters are bibliophiles. I tried Ross King. Ex-Libris was OK but not terrific. I tried Arturo Perez-Reverte. Same verdict for The Club Dumas (though I recommend, for sheer camp value, the movie they made out of it, called The Ninth Gate and starring Johnny Depp as the corrupt, chainsmoking book dealer). Then I looked at Salon's summer reading recommendations and they were swooning over some guy named Michael Gruber.

The Big Pine branch of the public library has his book The Book of Air and Shadows so I ordered it up and found myself devouring it last week. It's got it all -- character, plot and best of all, smart writing. His new one, The Forgery of Venus, is set in the world of art, not literature, but that's OK. I'm going to read it anyway.

Speaking of art, and books, here's an interesting essay on a couple of interesting book artists in an interesting online journal called The Quarterly Conversation. I'm not sure how I feel about destroying the original physical form of books in order to make art, or at least some kind of artistic statement. But hey, I'm not an artist.