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Interviews | July 4, 2009
By Jill Owens
Luis Alberto Urrea is a poet, novelist, journalist, and essayist who has been writing about the relationship between the United States and Mexico,...
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We're too old to cheer, "School's out!" But we can't help ourselves we get so excited when summer begins. Maybe it's the air-conditioned movie theaters full of wonderfully mindless blockbusters, or the smells of barbecue grills in every backyard or, more likely, the delights of being able to read our favorite books outside in the warm sunshine! There's no shortage of great summertime reading in our newsletter, either. From our interview with Ethan Canin to signed first editions of his novel America America; from mouth-watering original essays by Elizabeth Hartley Winthrop ( December), Jennifer Haigh ( The Condition), and Paul and Anne Ehrlich ( The Dominant Animal) to cool, refreshing Q&As from Edward Dolnick ( The Forger's Spell) and Jonathan Evison ( All about Lulu); right up to the guest blogs from Hayden Childs and Darin Strauss we're ready for summer at last!
signed editions
"Ethan Canin's best novel... [I]t couldn't have arrived at a more auspicious moment than this season of potentially epochal political change," raves Ron Charles of the Washington Post. The L.A. Times called it "a big, ambitious, old-fashioned, quintessentially American novel about politics, power, ambition, class, ethics and loyalty." Get your signed first editions of Ethan Canin's America America while they last.
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FEATURED INTERVIEW
Kirkus calls America America, Ethan Canin's first novel in seven years, "[a] novel of character [that] is powerful and haunting, a major work." It is a sweeping, epic story that more fully explores themes Canin has written about previously class, politics, fatherhood, wealth, and power in a seamless and beautiful multigenerational American saga. America America is both an important work and a page-turning summer read. Especially in this election year, it is a powerful reminder about what is great, and what is broken, within our country. In this interview, Canin discusses his new book, the politics of generosity, class-jumping, and method acting for writing.
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NEW ARRIVALS
HARDCOVER
The Idiot Girl and the Flaming Tantrum of Death: Reflections on Revenge, Germophobia, and Laser Hair Removal by Laurie Notaro
"If you gave David Sedaris a sex change and about nine shots of tequila, you'd have Laurie Notaro....She articulates sentiments about life's absurd situations that we have all been too polite to say out loud, and I love her for it." Danielle, Powells.com
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Sale $14.00 | Hardcover
List Price: $20.00 (You Save: $6.00) |
The Cellist of Sarajevo by Steven Galloway
Inspired by a true story, The Cellist of Sarajevo is a spare and haunting, wise and beautiful novel about the endurance of the human spirit and the subtle ways individuals reclaim their humanity in a city ravaged by war. "Indelible imagery and heartbreaking characters give authority to this chilling story," hails Kirkus (starred review).
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Sale $15.36 | Hardcover
List Price: $21.95 (You Save: $6.59) |
Persepolis
The Academy Award-nominated adaptation of Marjane Satrapi's critically acclaimed graphic novel, Persepolis, is now available on DVD. Enjoy what film critics are calling "the most original, inventive and moving film of the year" (USA Today) that "sparkles with witty self-awareness" (Entertainment Weekly) and is "alive with humor and a fierce independence of spirit" (New York Times). As always, all DVDs ship free from Powells.com!
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Sale $26.19 | DVD
List Price: $29.95 (You Save: $3.76) |
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PAPERBACK
Deer Hunting with Jesus: Dispatches from America's Class War by Joe Bageant
"Bageant mixes a reporter's keen analysis, a storyteller's color, and a native son's love of his roots in this absorbing dissection of America's working poor," raves Booklist, calling Deer Hunting with Jesus "wise, tender, and acerbic."
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Sale $9.76 | Trade Paper
List Price: $13.95 (You Save: $4.19) |
Up High in the Trees by Kiara Brinkman
In spare and gorgeous prose, the heartbreaking debut novel Up High in the Trees reveals a family in turmoil as told through the startling, deeply affecting voice of a nine-year-old autistic boy. "The treasures here are exquisite," proclaims the Washington Post Book World.
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Sale $9.80 | Trade Paper
List Price: $14.00 (You Save: $4.20) |
When You Are Engulfed in Flames by David Sedaris
New in eBook: Culminating in a brilliant account of his venture to Tokyo in order to quit smoking, bestselling author David Sedaris's sixth essay collection, When You Are Engulfed in Flames, is a new masterpiece of comic writing from "a writer worth treasuring" (Seattle Times).
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Sale $16.85 | Microsoft eBook
List Price: $18.99 (You Save: $2.14) |
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Mary Pols, author of Accidentally on Purpose, recently blogged for Powells.com about independent bookstores in particular, one that's (ahem) near and dear to our own hearts.
June 24, 2008:
Pricing Book Lust Versus Bookstore Love
Going on book tour means a lot of time dropping by the mega-chains to sign stock, all of them a blur of sameness, cavernous spaces where books seem almost like afterthoughts to the business of selling lattes, magazines, and movies we've already seen.
But I've also been to many independent stores, among them the legends like Book Soup in Los Angeles and the sweet upstarts, like the charming Queen Anne Books in Seattle. In these places, I explored rather than searched, and felt myself growing almost physically rounder as I did so, filling with possibilities for the mind.
Always, though, there were reminders of the realities of the business. I spent more than an hour in the magnificent children's section at Seattle's Elliott Bay Books, half listening to a grandmother reading books to her granddaughter. Based on their clothing and the woman's cell phone discussions of dinner reservations, they were far from a poor family. But as they were leaving, the girl asked if they could buy one of the books. "I'll get it somewhere else," the grandmother told her. "Somewhere cheaper." She's the kind of shopper who came to mind a few hours later when I heard that Cody's Books, one of the most important independent bookstores in the Bay Area where I live was closing its doors for good after 52 years in the business.
Visiting Powell's this morning was a welcome tonic, then. It's the granddaddy and grandson of them all in a way: a place so thriving and sprawling it seems it has to have a future. I joined throngs of happily dazed shoppers who looked as if they were touring a Louvre where they were allowed, for a small fee, to take home the art.
Read more of Pols's post plus daily guest bloggers and Book News, Read It Before They Screen It, and more on our blog!
| From the Authors |
SAVE 30% |
ELIZABETH HARTLEY WINTHROP: ORIGINAL ESSAY
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In December, Elizabeth Hartley Winthrop's novel of spellbinding emotional power, 11-year-old Isabelle hasn't spoken in eight months. As characters spiral desperately around Isabelle's impenetrable silence, she herself emerges, in a fascinating, boldly original portrait of an exceptional child. "A captivating read, peopled with characters hard to forget," hails Booklist. Read Winthrop's original essay for Powells.com and save 30% on December. |
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December
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Sale $16.76 | Hardcover
List Price: $23.95
You Save: $7.19
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JENNIFER HAIGH: ORIGINAL ESSAY
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The long-awaited third novel from the bestselling, award-winning author of Mrs. Kimble and Baker Towers, PEN/Hemingway-winner Jennifer Haigh's The Condition explores the immutable bonds of family witnessed through one turbulent year in the lives of New England's McKotch family. "Compelling; highly recommended," praises Library Journal. Read Haigh's original essay for Powells.com and save 30% on The Condition. |
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The Condition
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Sale $18.16 | Hardcover
List Price: $25.95
You Save: $7.79
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HAYDEN CHILDS: GUEST BLOGGER
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In the fall of 1980 Richard and Linda Thompson (of Fairport Convention fame) had recently been dumped from their record label and were on the verge of divorce. Somehow they overcame these miserable circumstances and managed to make an album considered by many to be a masterpiece. Part of Continuum's 33 1/3 series, this week's guest blogger Hayden Childs's Shoot Out the Lights is a brilliant, emotional book about a brilliant, emotional album. Check out his daily posts and save 30% on Shoot Out the Lights all week long! |
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Richard and Linda Thompson's Shoot Out the Lights
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Sale $7.66 | Trade Paper
List Price: $10.95
You Save: $3.29
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DARIN STRAUSS: GUEST BLOGGER
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Darin Strauss, the acclaimed author of Chang and Eng, returns with More Than It Hurts You, a beautifully realized novel set in a world turned upside down, where doctors try to save babies from their parents, police use the law to tear families apart, and the people you know the best end up surprising you the most. "Highly recommended," praises Library Journal (starred review). Next week we're pleased to welcome Darin Strauss as our guest blogger. Read his daily entries and save 30% on More Than It Hurts You. |
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More Than It Hurts You
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Sale $17.46 | Hardcover
List Price: $24.95
You Save: $7.49
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in our stores
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Praised in starred reviews as "breathtaking" (Publishers Weekly), "wonderfully written" (Kirkus), and "excruciatingly captivating" (Library Journal), David Wroblewski's debut novel The Story of Edgar Sawtelle is the riveting saga of an American family that captures the deep and ancient alliance between humans and dogs, and the power of fate through one boy's epic journey into the wild... (read more) |
6. The Road by Cormac McCarthy (Literature)
8. Confessor by Terry Goodkind (Science Fiction and Fantasy)
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JULY 9: Leif Enger and Lin Enger
So Brave, Young, and Handsome is a rugged and nimble story about an aging train robber on a quest to reconcile the claims of love and judgment on his life, and the failed writer who goes with him. In this stunning successor to his bestselling Peace Like a River, Leif Enger is "in fine storytelling form," hails Kirkus (starred review). Leif's brother Lin Enger makes a "beautifully rendered" (Publishers Weekly) debut with Undiscovered Country, a hair-bristling novel of betrayal, revenge, and the possibilities of forgiveness. |
JULY 11: Dirty Words
Edited by Ellen Sussman, Dirty Words is a playful take on bedroom talk a smart, funny encyclopedia with entries written by notable contemporary writers, including guests Elissa Schappell (Use Me) and Maria Dahvana Headley (The Year of Yes). Dirty Words includes everything you need to know about the language of love and more. (Click here to read our guest blogger posts from several of the Dirty Words contributors, including Headley.) |
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preorder signed editions by authors coming to Powell's
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IN OUR NEXT EDITION:
An interview with David Benioff and signed first editions of City of Thieves
Fup raced back along the path, same way she'd come from the park.
Until, wait: Why was she running? What purpose could running possibly serve? She hated herself for running but didn't break stride. One yard and another, blurs. Had anyone followed her? Bear or Bandit or Wiggums, were they trailing?
She leapt onto a familiar woodpile but stopped there in haste, lost purchase on a wad of kindling and rammed her shoulder into the side of the shed. The shed door someone had left it open, she'd seen it.
Go in there and think. Collect yourself!
She dove in.
Kit shrieked. The Lab from the park exploded with barks. Fup almost had a heart attack, and then nearly got trampled under his flailing paws. Kit and the Lab from the park? Garden tools leapt off walls, an overturned shelf sent ceramic pots tumbling to the floor.
Inside their house, meanwhile, behind sliding glass and several yards removed, the Twibels didn't hear the crash, Don and Becky leaning on their kids' shoulders, Dad behind son and Mom behind daughter.
"Tableau," Becky mumbled.
Bandit on the deck, Bear on the gravel, Wiggums by the edge of the woods, and Lisa by her parked car: all of them turned toward the noise.
Send questions, comments, suggestions, and new bathing suits (modest, please, not too revealing) to newsletter@powells.com.
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