Man, I don’t know why I’ve been so quiet lately. I’ve been trying to finish posts this week, but haven’t managed to get anything ready to publish. Which is bad, because I have a backlog of things that I’m very excited to talk about, and I can only do so much at a time.
In the meantime, I did manage to cobble together a list of odds ‘n ends over the week about books and reading that caught my eye. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
- The American Writers Museum — opens in Chicago next week. Sounds pretty cool
- Um, what? Bill Clinton And James Patterson Collaborate On A Novel — would’ve loved to have been watching that one being pitched: “Patterson’s got another co-writer? Like he needs another . . . wait, what? Who?”
- Last week, Gibson talked about his upcoming book about her winning in 2016, and this week the headline is: Curtis Sittenfeld is writing a novel about Hillary Rodham not marrying Bill Clinton.
- Here’s What Andy Weir’s New Book ARTEMIS is All About (Exclusive) — Nerdist.com has all the details on Weir’s follow up. Can’t imagine the pressure he’s feeling to try to match the success of The Martian.
- Speaking of high expectation: Presenting Beneath the Sugar Sky, the Third Book of Seanan McGuire’s Wayward Children Series — before #2 is released, we get the announcement of #3.
- {Aside} Rating On Goodreads Before You’ve Read It. — hear, hear.
- Why You Should Buy A Book Right Now
- This Week’s New Releases I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
- Nearly Nero: The Adventures of Claudius Lyon, the Man Who Would Be Wolfe by Loren D. Estleman — a fun, and quirky tribute to Nero Wolfe — and some interesting stories, even without the Wolfe. See my complete thoughts here
- Girling Up: How to Be Strong, Smart and Spectacular by Mayim Bialik — Okay, I probably won’t read this one, but my daughter might. It could be an interesting (and problematic) take on things.
- The Vinyl Detective – The Run-Out Groove by Andrew Cartmel — this looks quirky enough that I should probably grab it and it’s predecessor. Also, if Ben Aaronovitch recommends it . . .
- Blackwater by GJ Moffat — the latest from Fahrenheit Press looks like a winner.
Lastly, I’d like to say hi and welcome to Abinotronix, martyn james, and Jeyran Main for following the blog this week.
Bookstooge
Gah, that cartoon is WAY too true to life…
HCNewton
Yup