Laurie Frankel's Blog, page 3
March 30, 2011
Online Chat at SheKnows.com
SheKnows.com is hosting an online chat with me about THE ATLAS OF LOVE, their first book club pick of the year, on Thursday 3/31 from 8-11pm EST (5-8 PST). Please stop by to chat, ask questions, or just say hi. I'd love to meet you! It's like an author event you can attend in your PJs (though really, you're welcome to attend the live-in-person ones in your PJs too as far as I'm concerned.) So come on by! And if you've missed it, it'll be archived, so you can still check it out.
Here's the URL:
http://www.sheknows.com/entertainment/articles/827109/live-chat
Here's the URL:
http://www.sheknows.com/entertainment/articles/827109/live-chat
Published on March 30, 2011 22:54
March 18, 2011
If libraries+bookstores=good, then ebooks+bookstores=good
So anyway, back to that library gala. The Bellevue Library just overtook the library in Queens, NY to be the number one most visited library in the country. Their gala took place in the library -- which made me worried going in that the lighting would be designed to help people read (what you want in a library) rather than to help you look good in a cocktail dress (what you want in a gala) -- for which it was entirely suited. Great space, great lighting, and, as my husband pointed out, replete with entertainment when you got bored of schmoozing and watching your wife sign books. That is, it's beautiful, a place you want to be and hang out.
The gala was sponsored by/supported by/and sold copious books supplied by a local, independent bookstore, Third Place Books. What struck me was that no one thought this was a problematic pairing. No one thought: if we offer people books on loan for free, they'll stop buying them. No one thought: if we make books too affordable and bookstores too cool, no one will use libraries anymore. Instead, everyone knows this: teach a kid to fish and s/he'll eat for a lifetime. Kids who grow up on libraries will be lifelong readers who will 1) support local libraries and 2) support local bookstores. Used, usable libraries make for strong communities which make for smarter, more curious, more well-read, more wealthy, more healthy, more cultured, more community-supporting, bookstore-supporting, library-supporting citizenry plus a nicer place to live. Duh.
Whereas the attitude towards ebooks is the opposite. All of the players in this game seem to have concluded that ebooks mean the death of bookstores, mega and local, and of community reading spaces and most authors who aren't Dan Brown. This seems stupid to me. I'm back to teach a kid to read and s/he'll eat for a lifetime. Seems to me that ebooks should, in fact, lead to greater demand and support for bookstores and library services and authors because what we all want is readers. Make reading easy, available, affordable, portable, sleek, and cool, and you make people who read more. Those people are going to want spaces to go read with other people, spaces to go read and also get coffee, spaces to read with other readers, spaces to meet authors and go to events, ways to connect with their community, a wide variety of good things to read, people to recommend good things to read, people to filter out all the crappy things they don't want to read so that they can find the ones they do, and, well, lots of books...so libraries and bookstores and authors. I own a Kindle AND I spend a lot of money at the bookstore AND I spend a lot of money at the library (because we support the library but also, okay, because we lost a wallet of kid DVDs in the airport in Minneapolis, but that's another problem, the problem of flying cross-country several times a year with a toddler. Now if libraries could solve that problem, we'd be in business.) People get their reading material from lots of places, not just one. Ebooks make for people who read more. That is the world I want to live in.
The gala was sponsored by/supported by/and sold copious books supplied by a local, independent bookstore, Third Place Books. What struck me was that no one thought this was a problematic pairing. No one thought: if we offer people books on loan for free, they'll stop buying them. No one thought: if we make books too affordable and bookstores too cool, no one will use libraries anymore. Instead, everyone knows this: teach a kid to fish and s/he'll eat for a lifetime. Kids who grow up on libraries will be lifelong readers who will 1) support local libraries and 2) support local bookstores. Used, usable libraries make for strong communities which make for smarter, more curious, more well-read, more wealthy, more healthy, more cultured, more community-supporting, bookstore-supporting, library-supporting citizenry plus a nicer place to live. Duh.
Whereas the attitude towards ebooks is the opposite. All of the players in this game seem to have concluded that ebooks mean the death of bookstores, mega and local, and of community reading spaces and most authors who aren't Dan Brown. This seems stupid to me. I'm back to teach a kid to read and s/he'll eat for a lifetime. Seems to me that ebooks should, in fact, lead to greater demand and support for bookstores and library services and authors because what we all want is readers. Make reading easy, available, affordable, portable, sleek, and cool, and you make people who read more. Those people are going to want spaces to go read with other people, spaces to go read and also get coffee, spaces to read with other readers, spaces to meet authors and go to events, ways to connect with their community, a wide variety of good things to read, people to recommend good things to read, people to filter out all the crappy things they don't want to read so that they can find the ones they do, and, well, lots of books...so libraries and bookstores and authors. I own a Kindle AND I spend a lot of money at the bookstore AND I spend a lot of money at the library (because we support the library but also, okay, because we lost a wallet of kid DVDs in the airport in Minneapolis, but that's another problem, the problem of flying cross-country several times a year with a toddler. Now if libraries could solve that problem, we'd be in business.) People get their reading material from lots of places, not just one. Ebooks make for people who read more. That is the world I want to live in.
Published on March 18, 2011 09:11
March 16, 2011
Libraries+Spring Break=Love
What do libraries have to do with spring break? Nothing really. But I find I have a zillion (okay, maybe three) would-be blog posts about libraries AND, because it's spring break, time to write them. Like chocolate and peanut butter I tell you.
Last week, I attended a fundraising gala for King County Libraries. More about them in my next post on libraries. (You can hardly wait I know.) For this gala, I bought high heels AND mascara AND eye shadow just like an actual female adult. Incredible! It's a good thing I did too because while I was at my assigned table signing my books and chatting with readers, Nancy Pearl (!!!) (!!!) came up to HUG me because, she explained, though we'd never met she felt like she knew me because she read my book and thought it was "wonderfully wonderfully wonderfully" written. She even tweeted this impression Monday morning: "Don't miss Laurie Frankel's The Atlas of Love; this story of women's friendships and redefining 'family' flows with lovely writing." If you can think of something cooler than that, please post it in the comments section, but know that the bar in this case is high indeed.
It is high because Nancy Pearl is just that cool. And she's a librarian. I assume that the stereotype of librarians as uncool has gone the way of, uh, libraries. That is, libraries have gotten pretty cool of late. At least in my part of the world. Here in Seattle, the branch libraries are plentiful with interesting architecture and inviting spaces, and the central library was designed by a world-famous architect and is one of the coolest buildings in the city by any definition. Check out the google image search. So I have to think as library cred goes up, so does librarian cred? I have been meeting lots of lovely -- and cool -- librarians on this journey.
All that said, once you get made into an action figure -- and become the go-to book recommender for NPR -- I think you have cool pretty much cornered.
Last week, I attended a fundraising gala for King County Libraries. More about them in my next post on libraries. (You can hardly wait I know.) For this gala, I bought high heels AND mascara AND eye shadow just like an actual female adult. Incredible! It's a good thing I did too because while I was at my assigned table signing my books and chatting with readers, Nancy Pearl (!!!) (!!!) came up to HUG me because, she explained, though we'd never met she felt like she knew me because she read my book and thought it was "wonderfully wonderfully wonderfully" written. She even tweeted this impression Monday morning: "Don't miss Laurie Frankel's The Atlas of Love; this story of women's friendships and redefining 'family' flows with lovely writing." If you can think of something cooler than that, please post it in the comments section, but know that the bar in this case is high indeed.
It is high because Nancy Pearl is just that cool. And she's a librarian. I assume that the stereotype of librarians as uncool has gone the way of, uh, libraries. That is, libraries have gotten pretty cool of late. At least in my part of the world. Here in Seattle, the branch libraries are plentiful with interesting architecture and inviting spaces, and the central library was designed by a world-famous architect and is one of the coolest buildings in the city by any definition. Check out the google image search. So I have to think as library cred goes up, so does librarian cred? I have been meeting lots of lovely -- and cool -- librarians on this journey.
All that said, once you get made into an action figure -- and become the go-to book recommender for NPR -- I think you have cool pretty much cornered.
Published on March 16, 2011 11:33
January 26, 2011
Adam Haslett on Stanley Fish and Strunk and White
There's lots about this article that's lovely and interesting, and I'm especially taken by the allowance that extra words are in fact what we enjoy about good writing. Also that "if we could separate meaning from sound, we'd read plot summaries rather than novels," and that teaching minimalist writing leads to minimal thinking and lack of creativity. Teaching someone how to write good sentences might be the ultimate Sisyphean task. But what's stuck with me (since I read this Monday) is this bit about letter writing: "The writing of complete sentences for aural pleasure as well as news is going the way of the playing of musical instruments—it's becoming a speciality rather than a means most people have to a little amateur, unselfconscious enjoyment." Right? Interesting!
Published on January 26, 2011 10:30
November 12, 2010
Outside the Box is Where I Live
This line, midway through season one, was the reason I had to stop watching Battlestar Galactica. I know that mortally offends some people -- my apologies. But it's not a well written line.
Never mind. I've been thinking today about alternatives, other ways of doing things, things outside of boxes. For instance, I did a reading at Pacific Lutheran University's bookstore Thursday night. Their bookstore rocks so much harder than a) most campus bookstores and b) even most bookstores period. Their bookstore lives outside the campus bookstore box. How so?
1) It isn't located in the student union or even on campus. It's located two blocks from main campus on a busy street and also in a strip mall so that other people, people who are not students, might go. It even has its own name: Garfield Book Company.
2) It has, front and center when you walk in, a climber with sliding board plus some little tables with toys. Before I had a child, I imagined that you'd bring your kids to the bookstore and plop them in the children's section where they'd read quietly to themselves and then you'd let them pick one book to take home and all would be right with the world. Then I had a kid and realized that a children's section in a bookstore is no place for a child who will run around pulling all the books off the shelves and flipping them over the shoulder like Bret Boone. Having a sliding board, someplace to climb, and toys to play with? Well, that's much more promising. Kids who like to go to bookstores and bookstores with indoor (and thus dry) play structures make for parents who patronize bookstores.
3) They also have a fireplace, a lovely, full-size coffee shop (with gelato and, soon evidently, wine), and a whole floor dedicated to being a real bookstore while the upstairs is reserved for being a college bookstore (i.e. sweatpants, water bottles, and everything else on which you might write "PLU" plus books for courses).
4) The bathrooms are clean and nice and have those toilets where you press one button for half flush and another for full. Do decent bathrooms make that much of a difference? You bet.
5) They have a designated space for readings and community gatherings with the aforementioned fireplace, sofas and comfy chairs (with swivel writing desks for note taking), and a full kitchen for their brilliant book club Food for Thought which reads books about food BUT ALSO brings in a chef to cook stuff from the books. Book clubs through bookstores? Middling attendance. Book clubs with food? Much bigger draw. Plus, they've got the double draw going -- community and college campus, students, faculty, staff, and friends.
In a word: smart. We need more community, independent bookstores. Like everything and everyone these days, they're on the brink of not making it. So I'm saying, maybe outside the box is where they should live.
Never mind. I've been thinking today about alternatives, other ways of doing things, things outside of boxes. For instance, I did a reading at Pacific Lutheran University's bookstore Thursday night. Their bookstore rocks so much harder than a) most campus bookstores and b) even most bookstores period. Their bookstore lives outside the campus bookstore box. How so?
1) It isn't located in the student union or even on campus. It's located two blocks from main campus on a busy street and also in a strip mall so that other people, people who are not students, might go. It even has its own name: Garfield Book Company.
2) It has, front and center when you walk in, a climber with sliding board plus some little tables with toys. Before I had a child, I imagined that you'd bring your kids to the bookstore and plop them in the children's section where they'd read quietly to themselves and then you'd let them pick one book to take home and all would be right with the world. Then I had a kid and realized that a children's section in a bookstore is no place for a child who will run around pulling all the books off the shelves and flipping them over the shoulder like Bret Boone. Having a sliding board, someplace to climb, and toys to play with? Well, that's much more promising. Kids who like to go to bookstores and bookstores with indoor (and thus dry) play structures make for parents who patronize bookstores.
3) They also have a fireplace, a lovely, full-size coffee shop (with gelato and, soon evidently, wine), and a whole floor dedicated to being a real bookstore while the upstairs is reserved for being a college bookstore (i.e. sweatpants, water bottles, and everything else on which you might write "PLU" plus books for courses).
4) The bathrooms are clean and nice and have those toilets where you press one button for half flush and another for full. Do decent bathrooms make that much of a difference? You bet.
5) They have a designated space for readings and community gatherings with the aforementioned fireplace, sofas and comfy chairs (with swivel writing desks for note taking), and a full kitchen for their brilliant book club Food for Thought which reads books about food BUT ALSO brings in a chef to cook stuff from the books. Book clubs through bookstores? Middling attendance. Book clubs with food? Much bigger draw. Plus, they've got the double draw going -- community and college campus, students, faculty, staff, and friends.
In a word: smart. We need more community, independent bookstores. Like everything and everyone these days, they're on the brink of not making it. So I'm saying, maybe outside the box is where they should live.
Published on November 12, 2010 14:04
November 7, 2010
November
So far, I've been using this blog mostly to post events. This is lame. I should be using this blog to post interesting, insightful, inspiring, gorgeously worded observations about love, life, and literature (the three Ls) which are so interesting, insightful, inspiring, and gorgeous that they 1) cause people who stumble upon the blog to buy my book, 2) cause people who stumble upon the blog to forward the link to other people who themselves then 3) buy my book. Instead, I just post events.
Here, however, are the reasons:
1) The events need publicizing.
2) Full-time job with one hundred billion papers to grade.
3) Two-year-old to raise.
4) Book-the-second to write.
5) Now that it's November, it gets dark at like 4:15 which means by the time #3 up there's in bed, I'm too tired to do anything useful at all.
6) It's a lot of work. One must update one's website and blog and a couple facebook accounts and Goodreads and Amazon. The social network, such that it is, is wondrous but also boundless. And boundless, my friends, is big.
That said, soon, for better and for worse, I'm going to have less book news for a bit I think, and then I will be able to dedicate myself to blogging the old-fashioned way. Something to look forward to.
Meantime, here are some November events:
November 2011
Paperback release of The Atlas of Love.
Something else to look forward to.
Thursday, Nov. 11 at 7pm
Tacoma, WA
Garfield Book Co. at PLU
Spotlight Literary Series
Saturday, Nov. 20, 3-6pm
Seattle, WA
Seattle7Writers Holiday Book Signing
Phinney Neighborhood Center
This one should be fun. Come meet 20 local writers, mingle, chat, eat cookies, feel holiday cheer, buy some books for a good cause (Writers in the Schools), and then have them signed thus making them perfect holiday presents. Awesome, no?
Here, however, are the reasons:
1) The events need publicizing.
2) Full-time job with one hundred billion papers to grade.
3) Two-year-old to raise.
4) Book-the-second to write.
5) Now that it's November, it gets dark at like 4:15 which means by the time #3 up there's in bed, I'm too tired to do anything useful at all.
6) It's a lot of work. One must update one's website and blog and a couple facebook accounts and Goodreads and Amazon. The social network, such that it is, is wondrous but also boundless. And boundless, my friends, is big.
That said, soon, for better and for worse, I'm going to have less book news for a bit I think, and then I will be able to dedicate myself to blogging the old-fashioned way. Something to look forward to.
Meantime, here are some November events:
November 2011
Paperback release of The Atlas of Love.
Something else to look forward to.
Thursday, Nov. 11 at 7pm
Tacoma, WA
Garfield Book Co. at PLU
Spotlight Literary Series
Saturday, Nov. 20, 3-6pm
Seattle, WA
Seattle7Writers Holiday Book Signing
Phinney Neighborhood Center
This one should be fun. Come meet 20 local writers, mingle, chat, eat cookies, feel holiday cheer, buy some books for a good cause (Writers in the Schools), and then have them signed thus making them perfect holiday presents. Awesome, no?
Published on November 07, 2010 19:02
October 12, 2010
Maryland My Maryland
I am doing two readings "at home" this week. Very special. And I am hoping to see lots of old friends there. Also very special.
Here are the particulars:
Wed. Oct. 13, 7pm
Howard County Public Library
Central Branch
Local Author Showcase
This one will be a quickie as I'm sharing stage time with four other authors, so I'll only read and take questions for about 15 minutes though I will be delighted to discuss, reminisce, sign books, chat, answer questions one-on-one, and otherwise hang out afterwards.
Sat. Oct. 16, 2pm
Barnes and Noble, Power Plant
Downtown Baltimore
Reading and Author Chat and Book Signing
This one will be a bit longer as it's all me all the time. Also hoping for much time to hang out and chat after.
Pass it on please! I'm looking so forward to seeing everyone there!
Here are the particulars:
Wed. Oct. 13, 7pm
Howard County Public Library
Central Branch
Local Author Showcase
This one will be a quickie as I'm sharing stage time with four other authors, so I'll only read and take questions for about 15 minutes though I will be delighted to discuss, reminisce, sign books, chat, answer questions one-on-one, and otherwise hang out afterwards.
Sat. Oct. 16, 2pm
Barnes and Noble, Power Plant
Downtown Baltimore
Reading and Author Chat and Book Signing
This one will be a bit longer as it's all me all the time. Also hoping for much time to hang out and chat after.
Pass it on please! I'm looking so forward to seeing everyone there!
Published on October 12, 2010 17:05
September 29, 2010
Debut Lit
Have just been advised (reminded) by a new friend today that being a debut author is something special. It only happens once (in fact, I suppose the curse is remaining a debut author forever). It's new and exciting. You have an excuse to know absolutely nothing at all. I also get to work with this amazing organization: Debut Lit. I am reading with them in San Francisco on Oct. 9. And I have guest blogged for them this week about my twelve first chapters. Not my first twelve chapters. My twelve first chapters. So. Many. Check out my guest blog post. Pretty cool.
Published on September 29, 2010 22:16
September 22, 2010
Readings this Week
I have two readings this week. These have been nerve-wracking but fun. Speaking in front of people makes me very, very nervous. Certainly, that puts me in the majority, but it seems weird given that I speak in front of people every day for my job. Question: how is teaching different than speaking in front of people? Why is talking about books to my students different than talking about books at a reading? I don't know. But it is. Very.
The 'me' part of these readings has been challeng...
The 'me' part of these readings has been challeng...
Published on September 22, 2010 10:12
September 10, 2010
Bellingham, Sunday
In case you're nearby (or want a very nice road trip), I'm reading at Village Books in Bellingham, Washington this Sunday, September 12 at 4pm. Village Books is an awesome, old-school, independent bookstore with a very, very good cafe in an especially lovely part of the especially lovely Bellingham. So if you can, please come say hello. I'd love love love to see you.
Published on September 10, 2010 22:10