Tag: literature

  • Celebrate Black History Month

    February is Black History Month, and the Times Union Books Blog will be celebrating by highlighting one book each day from the rich African-American literary tradition.

    From slave narratives to the latest best-seller from Eric Jerome Dickey, and with plenty of essays, poems and novels in between … from writers like Frederick Douglass, Gwendolyn Brooks, Gloria Naylor, Toni Morrison and many more … there’s much than just one book per day.

    This is where you can help. Which text from the African-American literary tradition do you think everybody should read?

    Send an e-mail with the name of the title, the author, the reasons why you think the text is a must read, and your name and a little bit about yourself to the Books Blog moderator, Michael Janairo, at mjanairo@timesunion.com.

    Or just respond to this post with the same information.

    Then check out the Books Blog at http://blogs.timesunion.com/books to see what other people are recommending.

    For ideas, you may want to check out

    This Library of Congress site. 

    This PBS site.

    This Gale-Thompson research site. 

    The African-American Literature Book Club

    The Martin Luther King Jr. Papers Project

  • Audio books review “World War Z”

    “World War Z,” by Max Brooks. Read by a full cast. Abridged, 6 hours. Random House Audio. $29.95.

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  • Audio books review “Between Georgia”

    “Between, Georgia,” by Joshilyn Jackson. Read by the author. Unabridged, 9 hours. Hachette Audio. $31.98.

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  • Audio books actress dies

    Kate Fleming voiced more than 250 audio books, including an award-winning performance for Ruth Ozeki’s “All Over Creation” in 2004. She was killed during the recent flooding in Seattle. You can read her obit here.
    And you can learn more about her company, Cedar House Audio, here.

  • Steven King on audio books

    I’m not alone in my enjoyment of audio books! Here’s Steven King’s take on them from an October Entertainment Weekly.

    Some critics — the always tiresome Harold Bloom among them — claim that listening to audiobooks isn’t reading. I couldn’t disagree more. In some ways, audio perfects reading. One friend of mine likes to tell the story of how she got so involved in Blair Brown’s reading of Sue Miller’s Lost in the Forest that she missed her turnpike exit and ended up in Boston. Another swears he never really ”got” Elmore Leonard until he listened to Arliss Howard reading The Hot Kid and heard the mixed rhythm of the dialogue and narration.

    The book purists argue for the sanctity of the page and the perfect communion of reader and writer, with no intermediary. They say that if there’s something you don’t understand in a book, you can always go back and read it again (these seem to be people so technologically challenged they’ve never heard of rewind, or can’t find the back button on their CD players). Bloom has said that ”Deep reading really demands the inner ear…that part of you which is open to wisdom. You need the text in front of you.” Here is a man who has clearly never listened to a campfire story.

    He even includes his top ten.

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  • Audio Books: A confession

    audio-books.jpgHi.

    My name is Mike J.

    And I’m a fan of audio books.

    Now, some people don’t take audio books seriously. True, it isn’t reading, it’s listening. But isn’t that a kind of throwback to pre-literate days of childhood, of being read to by an adult? Or even further back, of an oral tradition that, in the West at least, goes back to Homer?

    Of course, if you’ve read my audio books reviews in the Times Union (which should be available here), you’ll know that I’m not listening to classics, but a mix of contemporary fiction and nonfiction. As someone who pretty much reads words all day for a living (as a slot editor and book reviewer) and who has about a 30-minute commute each way, audio books are a good driving distraction, and a way to zone out while I’m at the gym.

    Most of the books I’ve listened to have come from the library. For years, it has been my chief enabler. It’s made me a big fan of Elmore Leonard and Michael Connelly.

    This past year, one of the more delightful surprises was Joshilyn Jackson’s “Between Georgia.”

    One I’m looking forward to is the New York State Theatre Institute’s “Sherlock’s Legacy.”

    Are there are audio-bibliophiles out there? What are some of your favorites? Next week, I’ll post what I think was the best audio book I listened to this year.