Books

Readers: I need help to chase the book blahs

Cheryl Truman Herald-Leader books editor

I'm in a reading drought. Can you help?

John Updike wins special Bad Sex in fiction prize

By JILL LAWLESS Associated Press Writer

It's not quite the Nobel Prize, but John Updike has a new literary accolade: laureate of bad sex.

Web contest authorized young writer of thrillers

By Josh Kegley jkegley@herald-leader.com

The Internet is rife with potential to make savvy users rich or well-known, but with so many trying at once to push their services, skills and scams, it can be hard to stand out from the crowd. Finding success often takes as much luck as skill. Just ask Lexington stay-at-home mom and newly published author Amanda Crum.

P.D. James' latest mystery lacks her usual knife edge

By Janet Maslin New York Times News Service

Obama's mention of book about FDR sparks a flurry of interest

By Motoko Rich New York Times News Service

When President-elect Barack Obama appeared on 60 Minutes on CBS last Sunday in his first interview since winning the election, he mentioned having read "a new book out about FDR's first 100 days," without specifying a title or author.

Pet Milk: a new type of collaborative art project

By Amy Wilson awilson1@herald-leader.com

Kelli Burton's Pet Milk: A Collaborative Creative Exchange has a chance to be the fiercest piece of performance art conceived in these parts in a long time.

Read about placesto avoid or to put on your must-see list

By Beth J. Harpaz Associated Press

NEW YORK — Feeling bad that you can't afford a vacation? The travel books Don't Go There! and I Should Have Stayed Home might make you feel better. For $15 or so, you'll get a laugh out of vacation horrors that you'll be happy to miss.

Kentucky Book Fair author writes about down-home Kentucky

By Cheryl Truman ctruman@herald-leader.com

Now that she has lived in South Carolina for 21 years, Janna McMahan is closer to Kentucky than ever — in her fiction.

Writers see Obama as one of their own

By Hillel Italie Associated Press

NEW YORK — Last winter, Nobel laureate Toni Morrison received a phone call from Sen. Barack Obama, then the underdog to Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination.

Acclaimed author's struggles with drugs continue

By J. Peder Zane McClatchy News Service

RALEIGH, N.C. — Kaye Gibbons became a writer by turning her pain into art. Her troubled childhood near Rocky Mount — her father was an alcoholic, her mother committed suicide with sleeping pills when Gibbons was 10 — became the inspiration for her acclaimed first novel, Ellen Foster, published in 1987, which featured a plucky, resilient heroine.

Susan Orleanis targeting her readers' children

By Colette Bancroft St. Petersburg Times

Fans of Susan Orlean's writing have come to expect the unexpected from her.

Dual narrative, sentimentality get in way of good read

By Chauncey Mabe Orlando Sun-Sentinel

I See You EverywhereBy Julia Glass. Pantheon. 304 pp. $24.95.

Lehane misses private eye but has found a different genre

By Chris Talbott Associated Press

JACKSON, Miss. — Private investigator Patrick Kenzie is missing and presumed dead.

Vowell sees 21st-century ideas in 17th-century writings

By Vick Mickunas Cox News Service

The Wordy Shipmates By Sarah Vowell.Riverhead Books. 254 pp. $26.

'Ghost Dogs' author turns to cats

By Phil Kloer Cox News Service

Could you get more ways to hook readers with a title than the new book Ghost Cats of the South (John F. Blair, $19.95)?

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