Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Speaking Volumes Selection for June 2010: Return to Sullivan's Island by Dorothea Benton Frank




Come celebrate the beginning of summer and Speaking Volumes’ sixth anniversary Monday, June 28 at 5:30 PM at McCormick and Schmick at SouthPark.


This month we’re reading “Return to Sullivan Island” by Dorothea Benton Frank. We’ll discuss the book while partaking in M &S’s most excellent happy hour goodies! Click HERE for the menu (which BTW they've mentioned can change, but at least it gives you a good idea of the plethora of possibilites for just $1.95!) Please be advised, all food and drink will be the responsibility of the purchaser.



Kindly RSVP by e-mailing bookclub@carolinaweeklynewspaper.com. For more info, visit our blog, which is linked on our website, http://www.thecharlotteweekly.com/.

Monday, May 17, 2010

Want to Get Your Book Published?

Writers, want to learn some inside secrets of the publishing business?

Katharine Sands, literary agent at the Sarah Jane Freymann Agency and agent provocateur of the book, "Making the Perfect Pitch," will appear as a guest on the "Your Book Is Your Hook!" Show Tuesday, May 18th, 2010, 9:00am on WomensRadio.com. Ms. Sands talks about what authors need to know to catch a literary agent's eye. She also discusses how authors can make the perfect pitch for their books and how she uses her book as her hook.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

The Creation of Eve - Date for Book Club Set!

Hello all!

FYI, the new date for "The Creation of Eve" discussion with author Lynn Cullen is set for Friday, May 28 at 7 PM EST.

Please RSVP by e-mailing me at bookclub@carolinaweeklynewspaper.com.

See you there!

Alison

Sunday, May 09, 2010

May 2010 Book Club Selection: The Creation of Eve by Lynn Cullen


We're reading the amazing book, "The Creation of Eve" for May's book club.
Originally it was scheduled that we meet Monday, May 17 but we're moving the date to the last week of May. We're trying to secure the exact date with the author now but we're hoping to meet with the author via SKYPE. Stay tuned to this blog for more details.
But in the meantime, happy reading!
Alison

Saturday, May 01, 2010

Looking for a Great Read for your Mom?



The best book I've read this season hands down is the new book from NPR: Mom: A Celebration of Mothers from StoryCorps.


It's filled with beautiful vignettes about the impact of mothers on a number of people's lives. And these little bite-size delights are perfect for the mom on the go (BTW, what mom do you know who doesn't multitask?)


Buy a copy for your mom, yourself and your friends! You won't be sorry you did.

Friday, April 02, 2010

Listen to our book club chat with Adriana Trigiani

If you couldn't call in Monday night, no worries. Here's our chat with best-selling author Adriana Trigiani.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

DETAILS for Adriana Trigiani LIVE Book Chat TONIGHT!

Hi everyone,

The chat with Adriana Trigiani is over but look to this website tomorrow morning as we will post the link. Wasn't she just the BEST?

She truly is an extraordinary talent! Watch the videos below for more!

Alison

My Favorite Adriana Trigiani Video Clips

As we get ready to chat with the ONLY AUTHOR who has been a CW' Speaking Volumes author four times, I thought it would be great to share some of her amazing videos.

Enjoy!






Saturday, March 20, 2010

Speaking Volumes Selection for April 2010: A Reliable Wife by Robert Goolrick


Hi all!

A quick reminder: We're meeting with author Robert Goolrick IN PERSON on Friday, April 23 in the early evening (more details soon!) at Park Road Books.

Hope you're enjoying all the great reading!

All the best,
Alison

Tuesday, March 09, 2010

Speaking Volumes Pick for March 2010: Brava, Valentine by Adriana Trigiani



It’s shaping up to be a glorious spring!

Speaking Volumes, Carolina Weekly Newsgroup's book club, has selected Adriana Trigiani’s newest book, “Brava, Valentine” as its pick for March.

Adriana holds a very special place in our heart. She kicked off our very FIRST book club meeting on June 27, 2005! See the photo above! And here we are, still going strong.

And so is she! I just finished this book and I never thought I'd love anything more than the Big Stone Gap series but seriously, this is FABULOUS! Read the review of her newest book below this post.

We will be hosting an exclusive phone chat with the author from her home in NYC on Tuesday, March 30 from 7-8PM.
Book clubs or individuals interested in participating can do so from the comfort of their own homes. E-mail us at bookclub@carolinaweeklynewsgroup.com to receive the direct call-in information for the event.
Looking forward to hearing from you all soon!
Alison

Book Review: Brava, Valentine by Adriana Trigiani



“Brava, Valentine” is the latest and second installment in a series written by New York Times best-selling author Adriana Trigiani, who sold more than 8 million copies of her uber popular “Big Stone Gap” series.

The series revolves around Valentine Roncalli, a shoe designer who works in New York City’s Greenwich Village, following literally in the family footsteps. Her grandfather Michel was a brilliant creative artist and founder of Angellini’s Shoes. And now with her grandfather’s passing, the prospect of modernizing the custom shoemaker’s business lies on the shoulders of Valentine. She’s a 35-year-old woman who at the book’s open is in Tuscany with her family celebrating the marriage of her beloved grandmother to the man who supplied the shoemakers with supple leather.

Valentine has all the modern conveniences and challenges of most single, 30-something women: demanding work, the desire to have a fulfilling relationship, meddlesome family members, a gay best friend and wondering if this is all there is in life.

At the wedding in Italy, Valentine reconnects with former flame Gianluca Vechiarelli, son of the octogenarian groom, and she flirts with the idea of romance, all while trying to launch the ready-to-wear line of shoes that hopes to keep the company’s fortunes and future afloat during challenging economic times. Her grandmother asks her to work with her cantankerous brother, a former Merrill Lynch banker who had been downsized, to help revive the family’s signature business.

What elevates this story is Trigiani’s uncanny ability to take the intricate family dynamics and dialogue and mesh them in a way that lifts off the page from melodrama to the situation every reader has experienced or can imagine. Whether Valentine is dealing with her parents, or drama between her sisters, it’s the relationships in all of Trigiani’s books that bind readers to the author and bring them back for more. Trigiani is a superbly skilled writer adept who creates characters that resonates with readers long after the books are through.

When it comes to classifying her books, Trigiani’s genre is known as “women’s fiction” but her talent lies beyond even that or even that dreaded label – “chick-lit.” No, these are thinking women’s books. And as the ultimate Renaissance women herself – she is an accomplished playwright, screenwriter – the author is perfectly suited for examining the multitudes of conflicting options women have in the 2010’s and beyond.

“Brava” is a standalone book; those who did not read the first installment, “Very Valentine” can pick it up and enjoy it as an individual book. But as in most series of note, it will nevertheless entice readers to start at the beginning, albeit out of order because this series is a delicious read.

“Brava, Valentine” is available at booksellers everywhere.

Join us on Tuesday, March 30 at 7 PM as we chat LIVE with author Adriana Trigiani. E-mail us at bookclub@carolinaweeklynewspapers.com for more details!

Thursday, March 04, 2010

Breaking News: Book Club to Meet with Author Robert Golrick in Person

It's rare, OK, never, that I've used that phrase to blog about but seriously, this is as good as it gets!

Just finished chatting with Park Road Book's most excellent Frazier Dobson. And guess what book club fans? While I was working on getting Robert Golrick, author of "A Reliable Wife" to chat with us in March, they were working on getting him to come to Charlotte in person. So we're combining forces and will host one, super duper event on Friday, April 23. More details to come but thought you should all know this instantly!

So keep reading...but now you have time for work, family and such.

Stay tuned for what will now be the NEW March pick.

The April selection will be "A Reliable Wife."

- Alison

Book Review: Committed: A Skeptic Makes Peace with Marriage by Elizabeth Gilbert

How does a successful author follow up mega-wattage success? That question has plagued best-selling writers since they started keeping track of book sales. (Hello, Shakespeare!) Elizabeth Gilbert answered that question by writing a book that’s quite different than “Eat, Pray, Love,” the book that vaulted her to literary superstardom. For the uninitiated, “EPL” was Gilbert’s best-selling divorce memoir and carried the author’s distinctive and lyrical voice as she travelled through Italy, India and Bali.

Her success became the pinnacle of the memoir genre and inspired Oprah and Julia Roberts to come knocking. Both women bought dozens of copies for friends; Oprah hosted on her show several times and Roberts is currently turning “EPL” into a major motion picture.

In “Committed” Gilbert picks up the story where “EPL” left off with the author still romantically entangled with her darling Felipe. The book opens with a prologue that attempts to answer the question of following up success. Her answer: The feat is impossible. So she decided to go in a totally different direction. The result is a book that takes an almost anthropological, Margaret Mead-esque approach to the how’s and why’s of marriage.

The book’s prologue points out that Gilbert had been working on a manuscript for a year before she decided the tone was too self conscious. Not wanting to repeat her work line-for-line she threw the baby out (with the bathwater!) and started afresh.

Gilbert and her amore were content to stay united in partnership, not marriage, until the Homeland Security Department got involved and questioned Felipe’s legal status to remain in the U.S. A kindly U.S. Customs agent suggests the one way to get around the complications was to marry and therein our heroine begins her tale.

Fans of “EPL” will find the same type of delicious writing that propelled Gilbert to success with that tome and her previous books and magazine career. The only downside is that the stunning moments of beauty are knitted together with some prose that can sometimes feel pedantic. Readers looking for a repeat of the same type of navel gazing about the inner workings of one of human kind’s most vaulted institution might ultimately be disappointed. Limited to the conventions of marriage, albeit crossing a span of age and cultures, Gilbert’s limited topic and extreme focus can sometimes feel like neurosis.

As a writer, Gilbert is like a Golden Retriever with a sunny disposition and willingness to please. “To thine own self be true,” Hamlet’s Polonius reminds us. She does accomplish her mission. Though her readers may want to know what happens next. The book ends on the not-too surprising conclusion but leaves you craving more. Perhaps she’s saving those details for Book 3. No matter. Gilbert’s ability to turn a phrase and her ability to elevate the mundane to the magical guarantees her a legion of loyal and committed readers.

“Committed” is available at booksellers everywhere.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Feb. 2010 Book Club Selection: Committed by Elizabeth Gilbert




Join us Monday, Feb. 22 at 7 PM at Barnes & Noble at Carolina Place Mall for our discussion of Elizabeth Giberts newest book, "Committed." Please RSVP by e-mailing bookclub@carolinaweeklynewspapers.com.


Hope you're having a great month!


Alison

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Interview with Game Change Authors John Heilemann and Mark Halperin

A Conversation with "Game Change" authors Mark Halperin and John Heilemann


A few questions and answers from the authors of THE must-read book of 2010.

Enjoy!

Alison


Q: Given the amount of coverage available during the 2008 election, why does the world need yet another campaign book?

A: The idea for the book arose in the spring of 2008 out of a pair of firm convictions. The first was that the election we had both been following intensely for more than a year was as riveting and historic a spectacle as modern politics had ever produced.

The second was that, despite wall-to-wall media coverage, much of the story behind the headlines had not been told. What was missing and might be of enduring value, we agreed, was an intimate portrait of the candidates and spouses who (in our judgment) stood a reasonable chance of occupying the White House: Barack and Michelle Obama, Hillary and Bill Clinton, John and Elizabeth Edwards, and John and Cindy McCain.

As you explain in the book, you conducted more than 300 interviews from more than 200 people that had a wide range of roles in the campaign. However, you did all of these interviews on “deep background,” which means you agreed not to identify the subjects as sources in any way. Why did you choose such a potentially controversial method of journalism?

We believed this was essential to eliciting the level of candor on which a book of this sort depends. To a very large extent, we were interviewing people with whom one or both of us had long-standing professional relationships, and thus a solid basis to judge both the quality of the information being provided and the veracity of the providers.

The book gives an extraordinary amount of details—specific conversations, email exchanges, etc. How did you verify this information using deep background sources?

With the help of the participants, we have reconstructed dialogue extensively—and with extreme care. Where dialogue is within quotation marks, it comes from the speaker, someone who was present and heard the remark, contemporaneous notes, or transcripts. Where dialogue is not in quotes, it is paraphrased, reflecting only a lack of certainty on the part of our sources about precise wording, not about the nature of the statements. Where specific thoughts, feelings, or states of mind are rendered in italics, they come from either the person identified or someone to whom she or he expressed those thoughts or feelings directly.

Want to see more? Watch the authors on "Charlie Rose."

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Book Review: Game Change by John Heilemann and Mark Halperin


"Game Change" is easily the most riveting and unputdownable book of the winter 2010 season.

The basics of the story we already know. Even if you didn't pick up a newspaper or watch TV in 2008, you are familiar with the main characters in this drama: an upstart politician with limited national experience, a seasoned First Lady, the maverick, the unknown political phenom and the former U.S. Senator from North Carolina and his cancer-stricken wife. This was the playing field in the race for the land's highest office. We also know the ending. But what makes "Game Change" so fascinating is the in-depth story behind the story.


The success of the book is largely due to authors John Heilemann and Mark Halperin's treatment of their subjects as flesh and blood, fully dimensional human beings. As someone who watched the campaign with interest, I remember what happened. What I often wondered about is why it happened.


"Change" answers those questions and more.


What made Obama feel like this was his time? Answer: He had a lot of backroom prodding from fervent yet undercover supporters in the Washington ranks plus a true sense of destiny.


Why did Hilliary really cry in New Hampshire? Answer: Just before that press junket, a senior campaign official suggested she throw in the towel.


Why did McCain pick Palin? Answer: It was a risk-taking choice and one he thought his party would celebrate him for.


For me, the most intriguing aspect about the book was the ability to look at the three main players - Obama, Clinton and McCain - and see their overall narrative arc. Despite their images as clear-headed leaders, Clinton and McCain come off as indecisive and hesitant. Obama was not the perfect candidate when he threw his hat in the ring. But he was someone who was dedicated to being open and learning as he trudged down the year-long path to the White House. He became a better candidate as he went along and it's this capacity for intellectual and emotional growth which makes him the hero of this story and, ultimately, of the election.


The book's most stinging rebuke is left entirely for former U.S. Senator John Edwards and his wife, Elizabeth. The authors say they interviewed hundreds of staffers, who obviously based on the information gleaned here, want to remain anonymous. The details of the Edwards' downfall is staggering and sad. For someone who inspired a great deal of promise, their footnote in history will go down as one of ego and selfishness. If you're just interested in that bit of the story, read NY Magazine's fascinating excerpt. (A shout out here to Katherine Johnson, who first pointed out this tidbit to me!)

The chapters on Palin don't add anything more to what we already know- the botched Katie Couric interview, her complete lack of brain stuffing and those infamous Tina Fey impressions -but further makes readers certain that she was clearly not fit to hold the highest office in the land, if circumstances had come to that.

"Game Change" is a must read for anyone who wants to examine the forces that shape our political leaders. It's an unputdownable read and the fact that this tale is true, makes it even more potent.

I'm looking forward to their next collaboration, which I hope is the president's first year in office.

"Game Change" is available at booksellers everywhere. Tune in tomorrow for my interview with the authors!

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Penn, Pattinson circle 'Water'

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One of my all-time favorite books and one of our previous book club selections, Sara Gruen's "Water for Elephants," is being made into a movie.

Slated to star is Reese Witherspoon. And currently the studio is talking to Sean Penn and "Twilight's" Robert Pattinson. Read more on "Variety." Penn, Pattinson circle 'Water'

Brace for Impact Signing at Park Road Books


Hi everyone,


Who can believe it's been a year since we first heard of Capt. Sullenburger and the entire crew of US Air Flight 1548?


A number of survivors on the flight will be at Park Road Books this Saturday at 2 PM for a signing of their new book, "Brace for Impact." Visit PRB's website for more details.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Game Change: The Book I Cannot Put Down

I was thrilled to receive a copy of "Game Change" the hot new political book about the 2008 race Friday. I thought I'd read a few pages over the weekend and savor it. NOT! I cannot put this book down. My eyes were so tired from reading half the book that by Saturday night they were watering.

I'll have more later this week including an interview with the authors but wanted to share that if you are even remotely interested in living history, run, don't walk, to pick up a copy of this book.

Alison