Books on the Nightstand discussion
What do you want us to talk/write about?
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Linda
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Dec 09, 2011 08:31AM


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(Flavia may just be my favorite character in all fiction).
Another series my wife and I love is Bloody Jack: Being an Account of the Curious Adventures of Mary "Jacky" Faber, Ship's Boy
These last three books all are narrated by a girl between 11-13 years old.


Another obvious one: Margaret Mitchell. As a writer, I'm thinkin' that, if there's only one book in me, having Lee and Mitchell as role models isn't a bad idea!




Let me just list few examples:
Julia Steward: The Tower, the Zoo, and the Tortoise (US title); Balthazar Jones and the Tower of London Zoo (UK title),
Karin Slaughter: Undone (US title), Genesis (UK title)
Lolly Winston: Good Grief(US title), Sophie's Bakery For The Broken Hearted (UK title),
etc.

Agatha Christie: 4:50 from Paddington (UK); What Mrs. McGillicuddy Saw (US)
Agatha Christie: Lord Edgeware Dies (UK); Thirteen at Dinner (US)
(more Christie at http://www.poirot.us/titles.php)
Ngaio Marsh: Swing, Brother, Swing (UK); A Wreath for Rivera (US)
P.G. Wodehouse: Summer Lightning (UK); Fish Preferred (US)
A Google search for "U.K. title" "U.S. title" book brings up lots and lots of these.


Agatha Christie: 4:50 from Paddington (UK); What Mrs. McGillicuddy Saw (US)
Agatha Christie: Lord Edgeware Dies (UK); Thirteen..."
...and don't forget "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" vs. Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone"!


I'd love to do a retreat in England. However, we'd need to find a sponsor or someone to fund it, since I don't think Michael's and my family would appreciate us raiding the household budgets for a jaunt across the pond without them!
Speaking of The Readers in one segment, I think it was 6, they talk about violence in crime novels and how we in the US seem to want it graphic. This might make a good topic for discussion on BOTNS.


I think that is interesting since the most graphic violent novel is Swedish.
Yes, Gerald, those Swedish novels are graphic but according to the some of the authors, they are pressed by the publishers to make them so...

ger

What a great idea, Melissa. It would be interesting to see what common (or contrasting) ground the U.S. and U.K. podcasters would find. I like The Readers because their reading interests are so different from BOTNS and the other podcasts I listen to (Nancy Pearl, NPR, The New Yorker's fiction, and CBC's Writers and Company, and The Next Chapter).
In the past few years, there have been several instances of either plagarism or fictionalizing supposedly true stories (think James Frey). What vetting process does a manuscript go through?
I bring this up because of a pet peeve of mine (the at-the-moment unemployed writer). I'm reading a popular book at the moment and last night came upon this sentence: "The nurses stopped long enough for Sonja and I each to plant a kiss..."
There is an author, a co-author and there should have been an editor, right? Who's responsible for facts and correct grammar?
I bring this up because of a pet peeve of mine (the at-the-moment unemployed writer). I'm reading a popular book at the moment and last night came upon this sentence: "The nurses stopped long enough for Sonja and I each to plant a kiss..."
There is an author, a co-author and there should have been an editor, right? Who's responsible for facts and correct grammar?


What a great idea, Melissa. It would be interesting to see what common (or contrasting) ground the U.S. and U.K. podcasters would fi..."
I cannot take complete credit for the idea. I think Simon tweeted that he wanted to do a podcast with Michael. I would just love to go to a book retreat inEngland.

I'm getting close to retirement and look forward to the reading I'll do. I intend to read all of Michael Connelly's Harry Bosch and all of Kathy Reichs Temperance Brennan.
I like the idea of planning ahead and this might make a good podcast discussion.
I like the idea of planning ahead and this might make a good podcast discussion.
Carol wrote: "I'm getting close to retirement and look forward to the reading I'll do. I intend to read all of Michael Connelly's Harry Bosch and all of Kathy Reichs Temperance Brennan.
I like the idea of pl..."
and while you are at it, speaking of Michael Connelly's books (or any series author) how do you know when/if you need to read them in order?
Normally I am OCD enough to be CDO and would read any series in chronological order. Recently I won a copy of Connelly's latest book. I am looking forward to reading it but wonder how much I will lose by not starting with the first of the series.
I like the idea of pl..."
and while you are at it, speaking of Michael Connelly's books (or any series author) how do you know when/if you need to read them in order?
Normally I am OCD enough to be CDO and would read any series in chronological order. Recently I won a copy of Connelly's latest book. I am looking forward to reading it but wonder how much I will lose by not starting with the first of the series.
I'm racking my brain to remember if BOTNS did a segment on reading series in order. Whether you need to or not is a challening question particularly in my profession of librarian. There are many series with entries that stand well on their own but some readers must start at the beginning. There are other series that may benefit from a reading from the start. I usually take the easy way out and suggest that you start with the first to get the main players set in your mind and then go from there. I have read Nevada Barr's out of order as the location is more important to me than what's happening in Anna Pigeon's life and I can usually figure out what I've missed from detail in the story. I have read some of the early Harry Bosch but for some reason just want to start at the beginning and go. And another I forgot would be all the Lee Child.
I am not a huge fan of series and if given the alternative would rather read a stand-a-lone. I absolutely loved Barr's 13 1/2. Though there is comfort in the known I'm really hooked on writers that can give you something different all the time. Now who are those writers? One that surprises and delights is Mary Doria Russell and another, Margaret Atwood.
I am not a huge fan of series and if given the alternative would rather read a stand-a-lone. I absolutely loved Barr's 13 1/2. Though there is comfort in the known I'm really hooked on writers that can give you something different all the time. Now who are those writers? One that surprises and delights is Mary Doria Russell and another, Margaret Atwood.
Carol wrote: "I'm racking my brain to remember if BOTNS did a segment on reading series in order. Whether you need to or not is a challening question particularly in my profession of librarian. There are many series with entries that stand well on their own but some readers must start at the beginning. There are other series that may benefit from a reading from the start. I usually take the easy way out and suggest that you start with the first to get the main players set in your mind and then go from there. I have read Nevada Barr's out of order as the location is more important to me than what's happening in Anna Pigeon's life and I can usually figure out what I've missed from detail in the story. I have read some of the early Harry Bosch but for some reason just want to start at the beginning and go. And another I forgot would be all the Lee Child.
I am not a huge fan of series and if given the alternative would rather read a stand-a-lone. I absolutely loved Barr's 13 1/2. Though there is comfort in the known I'm really hooked on writers that can give you something different all the time. Now who are those writers? One that surprises and delights is Mary Doria Russell and another, Margaret Atwood."
I prefer stand-alones and first-in-series books myself. For the few series I do follow I usually only last for about three or four titles, until the writing goes bad.
I am not a huge fan of series and if given the alternative would rather read a stand-a-lone. I absolutely loved Barr's 13 1/2. Though there is comfort in the known I'm really hooked on writers that can give you something different all the time. Now who are those writers? One that surprises and delights is Mary Doria Russell and another, Margaret Atwood."
I prefer stand-alones and first-in-series books myself. For the few series I do follow I usually only last for about three or four titles, until the writing goes bad.
Tanya wrote "I prefer stand-alones and first-in-series books myself. For the few series I do follow I usually only last for about three or four titles, until the writing goes bad".
and why is that? Do you think there is too much pressure from publishers to produce or does the character go stale or is the author bored with the whole but the public won't let go, or what?
and why is that? Do you think there is too much pressure from publishers to produce or does the character go stale or is the author bored with the whole but the public won't let go, or what?
Tanya wrote "I prefer stand-alones and first-in-series books myself. For the few series I do follow I usually only last for about three or four titles, until the writing goes bad".
Carol wrote: "and why is that? Do you think there is too much pressure from publishers to produce or does the character go stale or is the author bored with the whole but the public won't let go, or what?
"
I'm not really sure; but I can speculate :-)
These are generalizations only:
More care seems to be taken with the first-in-series novels in terms of setting up the characters, settings and, most importantly plot. In subsequent novels, the characters are more or less assumed and the challenge becomes coming up with another original plot.Too often, I've watched the same plot dressed up in a new setting with the same characters. The most common plot structure I've seen is what I call the "AB" structure: There's plot A and Plot B and in the end, they tie in together. There's nothing sadder than opening up a new book and knowing how it's going to end with the first chapter or two. This is common in mystery series.
Lack of true character evolution. The core of any character should remain the same; but that doesn't mean that the character needs to remain static or flat. If you haven't seen your best friend in a long time, you can usually pick up a conversations as if no time had really passed at all. It's because that who you are, who the both of you are, hasn't really changed. It's the same kind of relationship with a reader and characters in a book. You should be able to recognize them immediately; but that doesn't mean their experiences wouldn't have had an impact on them. I see a lot of characters who remain absolutely the same, year after year, like they haven't learned anything from the last the books (e.g. The Stephanie Plum series.) Some readers like the comfort of unchanging characters; but I get bored. Less frequently, but worse, is when in the name of character evolvement, the author completely makes over the character to the point they are not recognizable (e.g. Lt. Murphy in The Dresden Files.)
I think publishers want authors to expand the world that was originally created; but often authors drop into a formulaic mode, thinking that what worked before, will work again. And again. And again.
Carol wrote: "and why is that? Do you think there is too much pressure from publishers to produce or does the character go stale or is the author bored with the whole but the public won't let go, or what?
"
I'm not really sure; but I can speculate :-)
These are generalizations only:
More care seems to be taken with the first-in-series novels in terms of setting up the characters, settings and, most importantly plot. In subsequent novels, the characters are more or less assumed and the challenge becomes coming up with another original plot.Too often, I've watched the same plot dressed up in a new setting with the same characters. The most common plot structure I've seen is what I call the "AB" structure: There's plot A and Plot B and in the end, they tie in together. There's nothing sadder than opening up a new book and knowing how it's going to end with the first chapter or two. This is common in mystery series.
Lack of true character evolution. The core of any character should remain the same; but that doesn't mean that the character needs to remain static or flat. If you haven't seen your best friend in a long time, you can usually pick up a conversations as if no time had really passed at all. It's because that who you are, who the both of you are, hasn't really changed. It's the same kind of relationship with a reader and characters in a book. You should be able to recognize them immediately; but that doesn't mean their experiences wouldn't have had an impact on them. I see a lot of characters who remain absolutely the same, year after year, like they haven't learned anything from the last the books (e.g. The Stephanie Plum series.) Some readers like the comfort of unchanging characters; but I get bored. Less frequently, but worse, is when in the name of character evolvement, the author completely makes over the character to the point they are not recognizable (e.g. Lt. Murphy in The Dresden Files.)
I think publishers want authors to expand the world that was originally created; but often authors drop into a formulaic mode, thinking that what worked before, will work again. And again. And again.
How about talking about Jo Nesbo. He has the series of thrillers such as
and
and at the same time he has the Fart Powder series
. Perhaps the latter is how he detoxes from the intensity of the former?



Another idea I have (up to my elbows in books for our May library book sale) - what about older writers that some of us "younguns" may never have read i.e. Phyllis Whitney, Taylor Caldwell, Mary Roberts Rinehart, Victoria Holt, Louis Bromfield, - maybe just letting us know how publishers decided to continue publishing or stop publishing an author. I know Bromfield is out of print, so when I find him...I pounce.
Great Idea!
LOL, I am weeding our library collection and Victoria Holt was the author of the day. The younguns in our library said "Victoria who?". We were going to dispose of Mary Renault's The King Must Die, but an older staffer couldn't let it go so we bought this and the sequel in nice new editions and are going to see who we can fool into reading them by putting them on our new shelf. I'll let you know what happens
LOL, I am weeding our library collection and Victoria Holt was the author of the day. The younguns in our library said "Victoria who?". We were going to dispose of Mary Renault's The King Must Die, but an older staffer couldn't let it go so we bought this and the sequel in nice new editions and are going to see who we can fool into reading them by putting them on our new shelf. I'll let you know what happens

LOL, I am weeding our library collection and Victoria Holt was the author of the day. The younguns in our library said "Victoria who?". We were going to dispose of Mary Renault's The K..."
All these older authors just brought back so many memories of my mom! She was an avid reader taking out 5 or 6 books from the library at atime and Phyllis Whitney and Victoria Holt were 2 of he favorites!
It's going to slay me when I get to Whitney and have to part with some of her books!
There are so many wonderful older authors. Do you think it's out with the old, in with the new?
There are so many wonderful older authors. Do you think it's out with the old, in with the new?
Carol wrote: "It's going to slay me when I get to Whitney and have to part with some of her books!
There are so many wonderful older authors. Do you think it's out with the old, in with the new?"
Never! It's make new friends but keep the old. One is silver and the other is gold.
There are so many wonderful older authors. Do you think it's out with the old, in with the new?"
Never! It's make new friends but keep the old. One is silver and the other is gold.



I love it!

Queen of Camelotwhich is told from Guinevere's point of view. I'm sure there are many more for this tale alone but also for other classic stories.
As regards historical fiction, a related topic might be different author treatments of the same famous person. It seems that a lot of authors are writing about Catherine the Great right now. It would be interesting to note different author takes on gray areas of the history. A friend of mine is reading The Constant Princess by Philippa Gregory and we fell into a discussion of the controversy of whether Katherine of Aragon ever consummated her marriage to Henry VIII's older brother Arthur and how various authors came to their conclusions. I know...this is what I talk about with my nerdy friends...lol. Anyway, I've rambled a bit but these are reader topics that I personally find fascinating.

There are so many wonderful older authors. Do you think it's out with the old, in with the new?"..."
I just googled Victoria Holt - she sold over 100 million books... how have I never heard of her?!? Thanks for these new names to explore!
A brief segment on the good ol' authors might be fun. Victoria Holt, Phyllis Whitney, Eugenia Price, etc., prolific writers and well loved.



There are so many wonderful older authors. Do you think it's out with the old, in ..."
Great idea. THERE are so many. I went thru a year of reading books only by dead authors once. Does anyone remember Barbara Pym?
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