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Summer Books: Simon & Schuster and Counterpoint/Soft Skull

Friday Catalogs: Simon & Schuster and Counterpoint/Soft Skull Summer '08

Simon & Schuster

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First up is a book I've been hearing a lot about lately, The Book of Chameleons by Angolan Jose Eduardo Agualusa (available, trans. Daniel Hahn). The book received last year's Independent Foreign Fiction Prize and has been likened to Barges and Calvino. It involves a man who sells pasts, and the plot deals with Angola's history. Reviews in The Complete Review and the Orlando Sentinel.

I'm heartened to see Simon & Schuster publishing a collection of short stories in translation, Love Today (available, trans. Anthea Bell). The author is Maxim Biller, who has placed two stories from this collection of 27 in The New Yorker.

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Currently available is a book that is getting a number of good reviews (see the LA Times and The Barnes & Noble Review), The God of War by Marisa Silver. The book takes place near the Salton Sea at the bottom of  California and deals with a broken family living in a trailer. As James Gibbons puts it in the Times,

This air of thickening menace is enhanced by the narrative's setting in 1978, well before the spectacular mass deaths of wildlife at the Salton Sea in the 1990s but at a time when the area's imminent environmental catastrophe had eerily begun to manifest itself. Scores of tilapia carcasses wash ashore toward the end of novel; a week later, area residents discover the remains of pelicans and other birds that had eaten the fouled fish.

Also worth mentioning that is that S&S will publish over here in July the 2007 Costa award winner, The Tenderness of Wolves (Stef Penney). If you're interested in more, you can read a fair amount of it on Google Books.

Counterpoint/Soft Skull

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Author Tom McCarthy, who saw a lot of success with his novel Remainder, is now publishing a nonfiction study of the comic books about Tintin, the young Belgian reporter, entitled Tintin and the Secret of Literature (available). For more, see the review in the current Bookforum:

McCarthy’s answer, mercifully, is no. Comic books are not literature, he contends; Hergé’s groundbreaking books, which, as interviewer Numa Sadoul has noted, “take up an or­ig­inal and autonomous ground between drawing and writing,” are especially not literature. To read them with reverence would be a terrible mistake. Which is not to say that Tintin harbors no secrets. On the contrary, the oeuvre, as McCarthy demonstrates with hermeneutic élan, is full of mysteries, the most important of which is Tintin the character’s relationship to literature itself.

David Ohle's The Pisstown Chaos sounds just strange enough to be interesting, a novel about "disease and forced relocation." It involves decreed de- and re-coupling every five years and, parasitic infections, and someone called Revered Herman Hooker.

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Guests

Christopher Miller, author of The Cardboard Universe: Five of Christopher Miller's Favorite Books About Imaginary Authors
Joshua Henkin, author of Matrimony: Joshua Henkin's Ten Terrific Novels About Writers, Writing, and the Writing Life, Writing About Writing
Christina Thompson, editor of Harvard Review: How Many Times Must an Author Write the Same Book?
Neus Arqués, author of Un hombre de Pago: On Translations or the Pursuit of the Domino Effect
Jennifer Epstein, author of The Painter from Shanghai: Rewriting Motherhood: Why Career and Home Do Balance (at Least, for Me)


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