"I cannot live without books." -- Thomas Jefferson

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

5 questions with Ken Paves

We are starting a new program whereby we ask authors who will be appearing at Book Soup to answer a few questions about themselves to introduce them to our readers. Mr. Paves has been kind enough to participate and help us launch what we hope will be a fun and informative questionnaire. Enjoy!



 1. Fictional character you admire? Mickey Mouse. He's just cool. He has timeless style, he's always relevant, he's got a lot of friends, brings people together, a cool park and he's very philanthropic!!!



2. Favorite L.A. Destination? The Tree People! A 45 acre environmental edupark at the top of Beverly Hills atop the 100 + acres of nature that make up Fryman Canyon and 600 + acres that make up Franklin Canyon.


3. What was your favorite book as a kid? Walt Disney's The Sorcerer's Apprentice. Come on…the Mouse and magic!! What kid doesn't love that!!! My wand is now my comb!


4. Your desert island book? The Butterfly's Daughter by Alice Monroe. My mother gave it to me after my Grandmother passed away- she loved butterflies. It reminds me of her, but it is also a story of family, tradition, belief, love, honor, determination and hopes and dreams!!!


5. Describe your book in a tweet (140 characters or less.) You Are Beautiful is a guide to help ALL women understand,appreciate&celebrate their own unique beauty; filled w tips to look&feel her best!

Monday, April 29, 2013

David reviews the new Joe Hill novel NOS4A2



There's a place for your children in Christmasland. And for all those worried parents and pesky adults, there's a place for you too, in the House of Sleep. Charlie Talent Manx is a monster of sorts, somewhere between a vampire and something else entirely. He travels the back roads of the mind taking children in his 1938 Rolls-Royce Wraith to a fantastically horrible place called Christmasland. A place shaped by his warped imagination. Along the way the children that he takes are slowly transformed into cold wretched creatures with mouths full of sharp hooked teeth, and a giddy innocent desire to do the most horrible things to those that don't belong in the land of never ending Christmas carols.

Charlie enlists the help of an unbalanced and deranged man name Bing Partridge in his quest to populate Christmasland with children. Bing, also known as the Gas Mask Man, drugs the children so they're nice and pliable for the metamorphic ride. Parents and anyone else that get in the way become victims of the Gas Mask Man in the House of Sleep. If your a woman it's doubly worse as your road to an ugly death is paved with rape.

Like Charlie Manx, Victoria McQueen also has the ability to travel the unseen roads of thought an imagination by way of a bike and a covered bridge called the Shorter Way. It is through this bridge Vic is able to locate things that are "lost." It acts as much as an escape from things unpleasant as it does a doorway to others. Eventually these two travelers of the hidden back roads of thought and imagination find each other, and that's when Victoria's real nightmare begins...

NOS4A2 is a strange beast of a novel. While it definitely has its feet firmly planted in the horror genre, it has a lot of other ideas on its mind. Lengthy stretches of the novel delve into the exploration of abuse, be it familial, drug, or mental. It is here that Joe Hill separates himself from other authors of the genre. He takes his time building his characters and their world which, for some, could make for a taxing read if you're in the mood for a quick and to the point blood and guts rush. The story is quite episodic, starting in Vic McQueen's child and spanning though her adulthood. However, for the patient reader, the book eventually rewards. Hill paints a disturbing world where fractured, damaged individuals make up the hero roster, and chilling soulless creatures their antagonists. The battles that the hero's must fight and the pain and violence they must endure is just as much internal as it is external. While Hill's writing style shows flourishes of his father's, his stories and his storytelling are very much his own.

Fans of Hills work will undoubtedly scoop this up and devour it. Others who are unfamiliar with Hill's writing style may be a little more perplexed. As the novel clocks in at 686 pages, it might prove to be too lengthy a read for the uninitiated. For those who are on the fence about diving in to Joe Hills oeuvre, I would recommend Heart Shaped Box, Horns, or 20th Century Ghost to see if he's your cup of tea. That being said, while the novel is fairly lengthy, it's a bloody good read that will change the way you feel about hearing Christmas carols.

By our supervisor David.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Mundo Cruel


I just started reading this book and I can't put it down!  It's a small book but the stories open up in big ways.  I am definitely looking forward to meeting Mr. Negron and the book's translator Suzanne Jill Levine when they make a stop on their book tour with us.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Another Round of Blues

I recently finished reading Shawn Colvin's rollicking memoir Diamond in the Rough ahead of a concert I attended in Kansas City.  Ms. Colvin was performing with her good friend Mary Chapin Carpenter and I'm a big fan of both artists.  It was a great show with both ladies trading back and forth acoustic versions of their best songs and some stirring covers of the Beatles, Steve Earle and Crowded House.

I had seen Ms.Colvin in concert before so I was prepared for some witty banter and funny stories, and she offered plenty.  There is more of the same in her memoir too, including stories of exacting revenge on an ex-husband, her first European tour (as a back up singer for Suzanne Vega) and one very dangerous act of ritual cleansing involving a fireplace, an ex-lovers belongings, a match, and a closed chimney!  Along the way Ms. Colvin is quite honest about her marriages, her struggles with anxiety, depression, and motherhood.

And there's the music too. Ms. Colvin discusses the making of her albums  in great detail which is a real treat for fans.  Steady On was her big shot and her first album with producer John Leventhal.  It was a rocky arrangement with great results. Other great albums would follow including A Few Small Repairs which would earn Ms. Colvin critical praise,  sales, and two more Grammy awards. 

That was 1998 and in the years since then the big record labels have toppled and lots of music artists (including Ms. Colvin) have been let go, pushed aside and ignored by radio, record labels, retailers, you name it. It's a grind these days and musicians struggle to eek out a living, especially female singer-songwriters like Ms. Colvin (see also Cyndi Lauper's new memoir.) It means you spend most of the year on the road touring.  That's tough work if you can get it, and Ms. Colvin's frank memoir is not without heartache and great humor.  She's up to the task.

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Darryl Shelly at Book Soup on 3/27/13

Check out this video for Darryl Shelly's erotic thriller the Hobbyist!  Join us on Wednesday, March 27th at 7pm when Darryl Shelly discusses & signs his book. 

http://vimeo.com/user6987225/thehobbyistbooktrailer

Thursday, March 7, 2013

An essay by Allison Hill, President of Vroman's, originally published on Huffington Post

I was working in the bookstore late one evening when a customer asked for me. "I'm looking for a book," he said, "and I saw your staff picks around the store and thought you might be able to help me." I asked him what kind of book he was looking for. He paused for a moment, then his voice caught and it seemed like he might start crying: "I'm looking for a book that will change my life."
In 20 years of bookselling, I've had customers share surprisingly intimate details of their lives with me. A woman in her late 50s asked me for books on relationships, but after I walked her to the section, she started crying and confided the story of her daughter's marriage to an abusive man, and how she needed a book that could save her. A well-dressed couple, him in a suit and her in a wrap dress, came in over the holidays and asked me for books to give a friend who was just diagnosed with terminal cancer. They had tried searching on Amazon, but the titles that came up were about the mechanics of how to survive, not the particular poetry of living with dying. More than once someone has asked me for a good novel, "something that will make me laugh," only to admit once I'd found a book for them, that they needed something funny to distract them from some trauma or drama that they then proceeded to share with me. A hipster asked me for books on personal finances; she was determined to begin the long crawl out of a deep debt. A famous actor admitted his stage fright and asked for a copy of Feel the Fear and Do It Anyway. A young woman asked me for books on recovering from loss; she had recently lost a child...
In the wake of Internet competition, bookstores have been feeling like publisher showcases and promoting ourselves as literary curators. But our true value may be as basic as this: often people come to us simply to talk to another human being. In a world that is more and more automated, computerized, web-based, sometimes, someone just wants to tell their story to another human being, feel like someone heard them, and take away hope that things will change -- hope in the form of a book.
I walked with the customer downstairs and we went through my staff picks that he had seen earlier: Going to Pieces Without Falling Apart, A Woman's Worth, The Gift of Fear. At various points these books had all shifted my perspective, changed my way of thinking, even saved my life one could say. Diet for a Small Planet inspired my conversion to vegetarianism when I was 18. The Comfort Trap helped me bring necessary closure to my 10-year marriage. Wherever You Go, There You Are introduced me to meditation and a new mindful approach to my life. As Thoreau wrote, "How many a man has dated a new era in his life from the reading of a book."
These recent years have marked a new era for all of us, one full of changes. And for many people, those changes felt dramatic and alarmingly sudden. But they were years in the making, the results of hundreds of decisions we all made every single day: who we voted for, who we trusted, where we shopped, where we didn't shop, what we chose to not pay attention to, and so on. I'm not saying the global economic meltdown is our fault, but I am suggesting that perhaps right now we are making choices every day that will influence our future. A decision to save $6.00 on Amazon, multiplied by thousands of customers every day, means that your local bookstore, the place where you hang out, meet friends, met your partner, or found the book that changed your life, may not be there next year...
But for now, many of us brick and mortar booksellers are still here, committed to what I believe is a noble pursuit: putting the right book in the right person's hands. Tonight when I left work there were 30 people lined up for the grilled cheese food truck in our parking lot. There were another 40 people in our event space to hear a first-time author read. There were 10 members of a book club discussing a new novel, and another dozen folks in our coffee shop, most of them reading or writing. A family in the children's department was reading picture books together, and another 15 people quietly browsed the bookshelves. It is in these moments that I am awed by the role a bookstore plays in a community, a feeling made even more awesome by the realization that today we sold 1,087 books, any one of which could change someone's life.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

David reviews Cogan's Trade


Cogan's Trade by George V. Higgins

"There's all kinds of reasons for things," Cogan said. "Guys get whacked for doing things, guys get whacked for not doing things, it don't matter. The only thing that matters is if you're the guy that's gonna get whacked. That's the only fuckin' thing."

                                                                                                                                                              -- Jackie Cogan

And that right there sums up this book. This criminal world surfaces through the characters that inhabit it and how they perceive the violent events that surround them. The entire plot hovers at the edge of the story, revealed piece by piece through the various character interactions. It can be a little disorienting at first. Pages and pages of one character talking can go by that, at first glance, seem totally irrelevant to what's happening. But there in lies the beauty of the novel. The actual plot is extremely straight forward. A couple of lowlife hoods knock over a mob run card game and mob enforcer Jackie Cogan is called in to make things right. It's through the richly drawn, and vile, characters this world is seen through that makes it so much more interesting. The structure gives you a ground level view of what transpires letting you see only what the characters see, adding an unknowable danger. Just like the characters in the story, you have no idea who's around the next corner. Gritty, propulsive, and wickedly funny, Cogan's Trade is a fantastic read. Highly Recommended to fans of Elmore Leonard, James Elroy, Don Winslow, and Quentin Tarantino.   

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

David reviews Kings of Cool





Kings of Cool by Don Winslow
Don Winslow pulls off a neat trick with The Kings of Cool. We see how Ben, Chon, and O come together, and all the pieces for Savages are set up. Within in that twisty plot we're treated to some surprise walk-on's by characters from some of his other novels, bring the Winslow universe that much closer together. I won't say who, not because it ruins anything plot-wise, but it was a nice surprise as a reader, and feel it should be left as such. A nice bit of gravity is given to each of the main characters as we learn about their pasts, and what a past they have.

The prose is terse, muscular, and engaging. The story isn't quite as tight as Savages, which worried me in the beginning. But as the conclusion draws near it all comes together. It made me want to revisit Savages just to see it all the way through to the bloody, brutal end.

Monday, February 25, 2013

David reviews Packing For Mars


Packing For Mars by Marry Roach.

I always wanted to travel into space. After reading this, I'm seriously rethinking that dream. The thought of being encased in, essentially a tin can that smells like a Porta Potty, eating food that gets re-hydrated as you chew it, while contemplating my ever decreasing bone mass just seems...enormously challenging. Needless to say, Packing For Mars is anything but. Fascinating, hilarious, and completely engrossing, Mary Roach digs into the many facets that accompany life in the freezing killer vacuum of space. I'll put it this way. Star Trek this ain't. Space travel, as it stands, is more akin to the frontier life of the early settlers; uncomfortable, dangerous, and smelly.