martes, 27 de agosto de 2013

About Books & Literature: Time to Hit the Books

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From Emily Faherty, your About Books & Literature Editor
Whether school is already back in session or you're savoring what little remains of summer vacation, we understand it can be a tough transition back to the classroom for students and parents alike. But we're here to help, with a few easy ways to keep reading this fall―beyond the textbooks and required assignments.

Back to School
Unless they're off to Hogwarts, chances are your kids are dreading going back to school. Or if they're starting a brand new school this year, they probably have a case of the jitters, too. Calm the nerves of your smallest students with these great children's picture books that make the first day a bit less scary.

Back to Book Club
Set a good example for kids this school year and show them how much fun reading can be! The fall is a great time to start or join an adult book club. Not only will your children see Mom and Dad doing their "homework" too, it's also a chance to read any books you might have missed this summer. Personally, I can't wait to start Khaled Hosseini's latest―a perfect book club pick.
Search Related Topics:  book clubs  reading lists 

Back to the Kitchen
If your family is anything like mine, you probably lived on burgers and dogs or other quick (often takeout) meals all summer long. Now that everyone will be back on a set schedule, why not find your way back to the kitchen to make family suppers a priority? For some dinner inspiration (and light reading), try one of these top family cookbooks.
Search Related Topics:  kids cooking  cookbooks  mother's day gifts

(Wishing We Were) Back to the Beach
While we love to watch the trees change colors, go apple picking, and indulge in all things pumpkin, we're just not ready to say farewell to our favorite sandy reading spot at the water's edge just yet. If you feel the same, grab a beach chair and soak up the last few rays of summer with this year's best beach reads.
Search Related Topics:  beach reading  romance novels  mystery novels

 


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martes, 20 de agosto de 2013

About Books & Literature: Shakespeare & Star Wars, Brilliant Bestsellers

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From Erik Wander, your About Books & Literature Editor
Looking for some ideas about what to read next? You've come to the right place. This week we've got funny books for kids and a couple intended for students getting ready to return to their classrooms, as well as some recent reviews of contemporary fiction for adults and young adults alike. Here's a look at some of what our Books and Literature Guides have been working on lately.

Books as Funny as that Wimpy Kid's Diary
Did you and your kids love the Diary of a Wimpy Kid series by Jeff Kinney? Are you looking for more books that will keep your 7- to 12-year-olds laughing as hard as they did when they first met Greg Heffley, the "Wimpy Kid" himself? Try these 10 titles that feature quirky characters and come highly recommended by our Children's Literature Guide.

So Far, So Good: The Best Bestsellers of 2013
We've still got a third of the year to go, and plenty of not-yet-published, potential bestsellers could crack this list before 2013 is through. But our Guide says these titles by writers like George Saunders, Anthony Marra, Curtis Sittenfeld and Isabel Allende are the best of the year so far.
Search Related Topics:  2013 books  book recommendations 

'Lexicon' by Max Barry
"Are you a cat person or a dog person?" "What is your favorite color?" "Pick a random number between one and ten?" "Do you love your family?" "Why did you do it?" Wil Parke is asked this confounding series of questions while two guys literally stick a needle in his eye in an airport bathroom. And so begins Max Barry's fast-paced, suspenseful, dystopian Lexicon.
Search Related Topics:  max barry  satire  thriller

William Shakespeare's Star Wars
Star Wars and Shakespeare might not be the most obvious mashup, but Ian Doescher's book is a fun one, at least according to our Young Adult Books Guide, who also writes that Star Wars fans are probably going to want to grab a copy for posterity. No word on what literature professors or Shakespeare scholars might make of this re-imagining of Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope as a five-act play written in iambic pentameter.
Search Related Topics:  ya science fiction books  ya plays  star wars

 


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martes, 13 de agosto de 2013

About Books & Literature: You've Read All These, Right?

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From Erik Wander, your About Books & Literature Editor
For some, it may seem hard to believe. Others may be in denial. And of course some people, parents for example, are practically rejoicing, counting down the days until it's time to send the kids back to school. This week we're looking at just some of the many books and pieces of literature we believe everyone should read before finishing high school, or in some cases middle school. There really are too many to pack into one list, but do note: If you've already finished high school and didn't read some (or any) of these, it's never too late. Re-reading is likewise always encouraged.

Must-Read Novels: The Catcher in the Rye
Scour 100 reading lists compiled by educators, libraries, high schools across the country, foundations and others, and you'll likely find 100 different opinions about what 10 or 25 or 100 books and/or writers high school kids should read before they graduate. But certain titles do tend to pop up again and again. So with a nod to F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain and Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird, all of which About Books and Literature has dealt with in recent weeks, our three picks are highlighted by J. D. Salinger and his most memorable protagonist, Holden Caulfield.
Search Related Topics:  the catcher in the rye  j.d. salinger  banned books

Must-Read Poetry: Emily Dickinson
Poets? Well, take your pick. From Blake and Browning to Tennyson and Thomas, from Wordsworth and Williams to Angelou and Auden, the catalog of the world's greatest poets is vast, to say the least, just as reading poetry is so intensely personal. So why Dickinson? Probably the same reason you chose the poet atop your list: because he/she wrote [fill in the blank]. That sentence might end with "I Measure Every Grief I Meet" or "I Died for Beauty" if you're talking about Emily Dickinson.

Must-Read Plays: Death of a Salesman
In this category, honorable mention goes to The Crucible, also by Arthur Miller, and Antigone by Sophocles, and you can't go wrong with just about anything by William Shakespeare. But it's hard not to recommend this particular Miller classic that represents what our writer called "both an attack on the ideals that had, for the last 160 years, constituted the American dream for prosperity and material wealth as well as a compelling portrayal of a man trapped by his past." The tragedy of Miller's main character, Willy Loman, most recently and memorably portrayed in Tony Award-winning fashion by Philip Seymour Hoffman in 2012, remains as universal and believable as it did more than 60 years ago.

Middle School Must-Reads: The Diary of a Young Girl
Also commonly known as The Diary of Anne Frank, this book, whether you've actually read it or not, needs no introduction for most adults. It was 1942 to 1944. Anne was just 13 years old when she started writing. It took place during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands. The diary was discovered after the war and given to Anne's Father, Otto Frank, the only member of the family who survived. But for many children, having a child their own age describe her experiences during the Holocaust is a truly poignant experience.

 


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martes, 6 de agosto de 2013

About Books & Literature: Let's Keep This Short

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From Erik Wander, your About Books & Literature Editor
This week, we're welcoming a new member to the small collection of About.com sites devoted exclusively to books and literature: Short Stories, with new content including a piece on flash fiction and one detailing how to write short stories with strong characters, among others. We're therefore dedicating this week's edition to a genre that the likes of Alice Munro, Raymond Carver and Flannery O'Connor, to name just a few, have made look easy at times, but that so many novelists, poets, essayists, journalists and writers primarily of other genres have learned, many the hard way, is anything but.

Stories: 'A & P' by John Updike
"Summer is the season of skin, but how much is too much?" writes our new Short Stories guide about this Updike piece in which three teen girls march into a grocery store clad only in bathing suits, thus unwittingly testing the limits of what's socially acceptable. Find out how such a simple yet shocking act in many ways affects Sammy, a cashier at the store and the narrator of the story, and how Updike takes aim at our own consumer-conditioned society.
Search Related Topics:  john updike  short stories 

The Esquire Four: New Voices for a New Era of Fiction
Short stories by four up-and-comers are featured in this e-book published by Esquire Magazine and digital publisher Byliner: "Hesca" by M.C. Armstrong, "Retreat from Moscow" by Jennifer duBois, "Rape in the Animal Kingdom" by Matt Sumell and "You Only Get Letters from Jail" by Jodi Angel. And if you're really looking for something short to read, this collection includes a bonus: the winner and finalists in Esquire's most recent short short fiction contest.
Search Related Topics:  new authors  short story reviews 

Classics: 'The Story of an Hour'
The title of this 1894 story by Kate Chopin refers to the time immediately after protagonist Louise Mallard learns that her husband has apparently died in a railroad accident. Far from being devastated or shocked by the news as her sister fears, especially considering her heart problems, Mallard instead feels liberated, something that made Chopin somewhat of a controversial writer by 1890s standards. Chopin, however, has something even more shocking in store for her main character and the reader.
Search Related Topics:  kate chopin  story of an hour  american literature

Collections: 'Dubliners'
Fifteen stories about middle class life near Dublin just after the turn of the 20th century comprise this collection by James Joyce published in 1914. Irish nationalism, identity and often conflicting influences are themes that recur in the stories themselves, which are narrated by increasingly older protagonists, from children to adolescents to older adults as the stories progress, and hinge on moments when the characters experience epiphanies of various kinds.
Search Related Topics:  dubliners  james joyce  irish literature

 


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