Thursday, July 29, 2010

Cape Town Book Fair



TPH is counting down the days to Cape Town Book Fair as I get ready to meet up with Cam in the Mother City and after that a holiday in the fairest Cape. In the mean time while we get down to book business I have selected some eye candy book post to keep you busy until our return to the web waves. And for those of you who can't join us this weekend at the book fair, we will report back as soon as the post holiday blues ware off.

See the programme for the weekend here

We are taking the train down to Cape Town and this means ample hours of reading and my companion ...Girl who kicked the hornets nest.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Man Booker longlist and Sunday Times Literary Awards announced



As per the Man Booker website:

The longlist includes:

Peter Carey Parrot and Olivier in America (Faber and Faber)

Emma Donoghue Room (Pan MacMillan - Picador)

Helen Dunmore The Betrayal (Penguin - Fig Tree)

Damon Galgut In a Strange Room (Grove Atlantic - Atlantic Books)

Howard Jacobson The Finkler Question (Bloomsbury)

Andrea Levy The Long Song
(Headline Publishing Group - Headline Review)

Tom McCarthy C (Random House - Jonathan Cape)

David Mitchell The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet (Hodder & Stoughton - Sceptre)

Lisa Moore February (Random House - Chatto & Windus)

Paul Murray Skippy Dies (Penguin - Hamish Hamilton)

Rose Tremain Trespass (Random House - Chatto & Windus)

Christos Tsiolkas The Slap (Grove Atlantic - Tuskar Rock)

Alan Warner The Stars in the Bright Sky
(Random House - Jonathan Cape)


(image: The Guardian)
Click here to view the Booker longlist in pictures


Back on home soil the winners of the Sunday Times Fiction Award and the Alan Paton Literary Prize were announced. Congratulations to:

High Low In-Between by Imraan Coovadia (Fiction Award) &
The Strange Alchemy of Life and Law by Albie Sachs (Alan Paton Award)




The Strange Alchemy of Life and Law

Publisher: Oxford University Press
ISBN: 9780199571796
RRP: R220












High Low In-Between
Publisher: Umuzi
ISBN: 9781415200704
RRP: R200

Bookshelf Porn

If you are anything like me, a self confessed bookshelf pornographer and watcher, you will spend hours on Bookshelf Porn. Its purpose is to stimulate, inspire and feed the frenzy of your addiction...enjoy and try not to drool too much on your computer.



(image: swissmiss)

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

An act of betrayal

Byatt’s latest novel is an ambitious work that relives the end of the Victorian era in search of an explanation for World War I. What it finds, as well as delivers, is betrayal.

The Children’s Book by AS Byatt
Publisher: Chatto & Windus / ISBN: 9780701183905 / Price: R300.00


The Children’s Book, as indicated by the title, is about children and childhood. It begins when two boys, Tom Wellwood and Julian Cain, find a third boy, Philip Warren, squatting in the South Kensington Museum. This sets the scene for an intricate exploration of British society, and in particular the family unit, in the years leading up to World War I.

As one might expect, with this epic vision behind it, Byatt’s latest novel is nothing if not ambitious. It begins in 1895 as Philip is introduced to the Wellwood family and then apprenticed to volatile master craftsman Benedict Fludd. It follows these characters, their families and their acquaintances until 1915, when the war has decimated the British male population.

There is a common theme of children betrayed by the adults who love them and are supposed to protect them. These betrayals are sometimes inadvertent and unforeseen, sometimes the product of the passions and, most often, the result of pure selfishness. This theme is set against the cascade of events which led up to World War I, which, it is implied, was the selfish betrayal of one generation by another, too.

Its vision is its downfall. The Booker Prize-shortlisted The Children’s Book is perhaps too ambitious. It boasts what Publisher’s Weekly describes as an “unaccountably large cast”, and a web of plots and sub-plots interwoven with historical fact. This web and the characters caught in it could have filled out four or five different novels, in which the author might have paid more attention to the themes, the characters and the intricacies of plot.

Yet, The Children’s Book remains undeniably intriguing. Each of Byatt’s novels possesses the same compelling mix of intellect, empathy and insight, tracing themes such as the distinction between art and reality from one work to the other. In her latest work, the author’s preoccupations are thankfully not drowned by the scope of the task, only diluted. There can be no question why the novel was shortlisted for the Commonwealth’s most prestigious literary award, just as there can be no question why it lost.

If you enjoyed this book, you should read: other books by A.S. Byatt, including Bable Tower and The Biographer’s Tale, but not Possession; as well as other Man Booker Prize-shortlisted novels, particularly Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel (the winner) and Summertime by J.M. Coetzee.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

African Booker



Olufemi Terry was announced as the winner of this year's Caine prize for African Fiction , aka the African Booker, for his short story titled Stickfighting Days. Terry was born in Sierra Leone and currently resides in Cape Town.

Click here to read his remarkable short story Stickfighting Days

(image: Caineprize.com)

Adaptation

Publisher: Vintage
ISBN: 9780099512790

RRP: R126.95


What is it about Ian McEwan’s novels that lure and invite film makers to translate them into films? I could write an essay’s worth of reasons but won’t bore you with my personal groupie like tendencies towards his oeuvre. Whatever the case may be it has been reported that McEwan’s On Chesil Beach is going to be his third book that will be adapted for the big screen. The Daily Mail writes that non other than the amazing Carey Mulligan (who appears to have great taste in authors, next up on her list Never let me go) has been cast for the female lead and that Sam Mendes will be sitting in the director's seat for this highly anticipated version of the brilliant novella. I could hardly contain my excitement when I first read this. Sam Mendes did an astounding job at bringing to life Richard Yates hauntingly troubled tale about a young couple’s desperate actions against conformity in 1950’s America in Revolutionary Road. His direction brought out some of Kate Winslet’s and Leonardo Dicaprio’s finest performances in a story that was driven by tension filled dialogue and the on screen effectiveness of a lack thereof.


On Chesil Beach in its turn tells of a couple in England who’s relationship and wedding night, in 1962, carries the weight of their inability to communicate their sexual fears, insecurities and expectations. It is a story rife with underlying tension of which Sam Mendes and Ian McEwan are undoubtedly the masters of portraying. McEwan has adapted On Chesil Beach himself. And seeing that the novella is a mere 166 pages long, hopefully they will be able to add every possible detail of the unfolding events into the film version, a critical point which die hard fans are always keen to judge on.





Publisher: Vintage
ISBN: 9780099481249
RRP: R145

Both
Enduring Love (2004) and Atonement (2007) have been turned into successful movies although the former did not receive as much wide spread and critical attention as the latter. Even though the film version of Enduring Love made some criticised changes to original novel it remained a vivid, scary and beautiful portrayal that managed to capture the spirit of the original and was undoubtedly filled with all the trademarks of a McEwan creation and was incredibly well acted. The powerful use of colour in Enduring Love was very effective and as within his books left vital moments, important to the story development, forever imprinted in my mind.




Publisher: Vintage
ISBN: 9780099429791
RRP: R145

For me personally, in both film and novel one of the most beautifully written scenes in English literature has to be the ‘fountain’ scene in Atonement. Watching it play out on film left me without a doubt that McEwan was indeed deeply involved in its adaptation. It was the scene which McEwan has revealed was written before he had written one word of the rest of the novel and from this scene sprung the inspiration for rest of Atonement as we know it. Filming Atonement was always going to be an epic attempt and the complex thought process and musings of Briony Tallis, one of McEwan's most interesting and thought provoking characters, was itself going to be the film's hardest obstacle to translate due to the genre’s inherent limitations where the story is primarily narrated by the camera. Nonetheless the film in its own right turned out an acclaimed and worthy success.



Publisher: Vintage
ISBN: 978009946968

RRP: R126

It leaves me wondering if Saturday will be soon to follow, I can almost imagine within my minds eye how powerful the ‘forced poetry reading’ scene could be on screen...


(image: Carey Mulligan via zimbio.com)


Thursday, July 8, 2010

Apologies for the lack of post(s) this week

Due to maintenance on some fibre optic cables linked between Africa and India, our service provider had some problems providing frequent, if any access to the internet this week. This and the last week of football madness has hampered any attempts at writing and posting. New post and features should be up next week! Happy weekend from TPH

Friday, July 2, 2010

March of the Penguin

Happy belated 75th Birthday Penguin Books.



The influence of Penguin Books as a recognizable iconic brand on popular culture is as irrefutable as their approach to publishing and their impact on the paperback design as we know it today. The initial two and half cents editions with their three horizontal bands, colour coded to match to a particular series, have become sought after jewels for book collectors and lately a springboard for art and decor inspiration. Not only does Penguin Books publish great classics and new exciting, contemporary and award winning authors but they seem always as in 1936 one step ahead in their design aesthetic approach for book covers. Here is a small ode to the publishing giant and a demonstration of how the mighty Penguin has infiltrated art, design, culture and our everyday existence.

ART


Harland Miller, artist and writer, has approached the iconic Penguin classic in a rather humouristic, hard hitting satirical way which refuses to be ignored and is allegedly adorning the walls of one Sir Elton John. Browsing through them I can not help but snort with unapologetic laughter at some while simultaneously admiring them. Read more on Harland Miller at Whitecube, Millers London Gallery and his interview with The Guardian




COVER DESIGN
Penguin has taken cover design into a new direction with a collaborating initiative aimed at saving lives. They have partnered with RED™ in their ongoing effort to raise funds to eliminate AIDS in Africa. The campaign which reads 'These books saves lives' has commissioned designers to rejacket 8 of the Penguins' most well known classics to form part of the Penguin Red Editions series.

Some of my favourite of these designs are:


GREAT EXPECTATIONS
ISBN:9780141194363
Charles Dickens R140.00
‘The most nakedly haunting book Dickens ever wrote’ Guardian


THE SECRET AGENT
ISBN:9780141194394
Joseph Conrad R110.00
‘Elevated the spy story into literature in a way that would inspire Greene
and le Carré’ Observer

For more information on the Penguin Red Editions click here

MEMORABILIA


Postcards from Penguin is a collection of 100 postcards featuring some of Penguin's most iconic book covers spanning over seventy years. Mine has just arrived and it is hard to choose which ones will adorn my wall or be sent off to equally bookish friends.



Postcards from Penguin
ISBN: 978014104468
R 230

There are also coffee mugs and even deck chairs inspired by Penguin covers for the die hard fans, just reach for the Google search button.

(images: Remodelista, In between days, Apartment Therapy)