Showing posts with label awards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label awards. Show all posts

Thursday, April 21, 2016

It's International Dublin Literary Award Time!

Behold! The Richmond Public Library Nominees for the International Dublin Literary Award!

It's time once again to nominate a few good books for the International Dublin Literary Award. Since we've already sung the praises of our three nominees for The Award on this blog, I thought I would recommend some "readalikes" for our picks to you. The thing about books like these, the books that stand out as completely outstanding, award-worthy, one-of-a-kind and all that, is that they can be tough to compare to anything else. For A Little Life, I would look for other literary novels featuring complex characters, friendship and love, haunting secrets, abuse and trauma. A search for "five-star, gut-punchingly sad, haunt-you-forever, fiction" not surprisingly does not compute, and looking under subject headings like Families--Fiction, Bildungsromans, and Domestic Fiction just doesn't quite cover it. As I mentioned in an earlier review, Yanagihara's second, and thus far most massive melancholy masterpiece, is a bit of a tough sell when people ask me for a personal recommendation, even though it is easily one of the best books I've ever read. Maybe if I just hand a box of tissues over with the book people will get the idea.
So much tissue.
Anyway, NoveList to the rescue! This neat service ties in with our OPAC to deliver you the kind of nuanced "appeal terms" normal people (read: not librarians?) might use to describe the "feel" of books, from now on referred to as BookFeel™*. Search iBistro for a favorite book, click on the entry and scroll down to see what terms NoveList uses to characterize books, and what they might suggest for you to read next. Example:
All of these things appeal to me.

While you decide whether or not you can handle the agonizing beauty that is A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara, check out the much slimmer I Refuse by Per Petterson (2014), Did You Ever Have a Family (2015) by Bill Clegg, and Aquarium (2015) by David Vann. These each share much of the same BookFeel and are thematically kin, with a heavy emphasis on "heart wrenching".

While you wait for The Fishermen by Chigozie Obioma, try The Lowland (2013) Jhumpa Lahiri and Dust (2014) by Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor. NoveList uses the following BookFeel to characterize The Fishermen:

  • Character-driven
  • Haunting, Atmospheric
  • Lyrical
I would not have immediately come up with The Lowland to pair with The Fishermen but after examining the relative BookFeel I would score this comparison a 3.9 out of 5 on my completely arbitrary personal scale. 





The Sympathizer is seriously not to miss, but also be sure to pick up Dragonfish (2015) by Vu Tran, and All our Names (2014) by Dinaw Mengestu.

BookFeel for The Sympathizer:

  • Character-driven
  • Leisurely paced
  • Sardonic, Moving, Bleak
  • Stylistically Complex, Compelling 
You had me at sardonic. 

A side note, these are my personal picks for a Sympathizer readalike because NoveList recommended Purity by Jonathan Franzen and Panic in a Suitcase by Yelena Akhtiorskaya, neither of which I wanted to second. (I just didn't really like them, OK?) While Dragonfish and All Our Names are quite different in style and narrator, both are highly original fiction dealing with identity and immigration, secrets, and cultural historical touchstones experienced from multiple perspectives.
Also: Whatever, Franzen.

*Bookfeel is a word (I think I might have) made up to describe the appeal of a book. See also: Mouthfeel, a word I hate because it is gross. Ew.
It's like you've known me forever, iBistro. 
Before you run off, check out the Dublin shortlist of nominees for the 2016 award. You'll see a few blog favorites on the list, and a few more you might enjoy.

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Get Excited--It's time for YAVA 2015!

On Wednesday, October 21st the Richmond Public Library will be host to a celebration of best-selling, award-winning Virginia authors of books for middle school age and young adults. Now in its third year, YAVA, which stands for Young Adult Virginia Authors, is more than an event—it is also an award.

The Richmond Public Library YAVA Award will be presented to the winner and two honorable mentions during the 2015 YAVA Book and Author Party. The selection process included open reader’s choice voting and final selection from the top 3 winners, is made possible with support from the Richmond Public Library Foundation. The selected list of 14 titles was narrowed down to three by popular vote. From those three the winner will be decided by this year’s judge, Secretary of Education Anne Holton, life-long advocate for children and families and former first lady of Virginia.

YAVA attendees will be able to meet and mingle with 14 celebrated Virginia authors: Gigi Amateau, Tom Angleberger, Anne Blankman, Bill Blume, Martina Boone, Lana Krumwiede, Sara McGuire, Jodi Meadows, Sara Raasch, Madelyn Rosenberg, Wendy Shang, Steve Watkins, Kat Spears, winner of the 2015 YALSA award for Best Fiction, and this year’s Newbery Honor recipient Cece Bell.

The event is free and the public is invited to enjoy an evening of music, refreshments, lively discussion, book sales and signings, prize raffles, and more.

Wednesday, October 21, 2015
6 – 8:30 pm
Richmond Public Main Library
101 East Franklin Street


Breakaway by Kat Spears 
Conspiracy of Blood and Smoke by Anne Blankman
Dante of the Maury River by Gigi Amateau

El Deafo by Cece Bell
Gidion's Blood by Bill Blume
Ice Like Fire by Sara Raasch

Ghosts of War: Lost at Khe Sanh by Steve Watkins
Nanny X Returns by Madelyn Rosenberg
The Orphan Queen by Jodi Meadows

Persuasion by Martina Boone
Star Wars. Beware the power of the dark side!: an original retelling of Star wars: Return of the Jedi by Tom Angleberger
The Way Home Looks Now by Wendy Wan-Long Shang

True Son by Lana Krumwiede
Valiant by Sarah McGuire

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Take home a Pulitzer this weekend

FICTION
The orphan master's son : a novel / Adam Johnson.
The orphan master's son [(CD) sound recording] / Adam Johnson.
The orphan master's son [eBook] / Adam Johnson.
Nook. Fiction. The orphan master's son / Adam Johnson.
A diverse yet consistently masterful collection of stories that explore Jewish identity and questions of modern life in ways that can both delight and unsettle the reader.
finalists What we talk about when we talk about Anne Frank / Nathan Englander.
The snow child : a novel / Eowyn Ivey.
HISTORY
Embers of war : the fall of an empire and the making of America's Vietnam / Fredrik Logevall.
A history of the four decades leading up to the Vietnam War offers insights into how the U.S. became involved, identifying commonalities between the campaigns of French and American forces while discussing relevant political factors.
finalists The barbarous years : the peopling of British North America : the conflict of civilizations, 1600-1675 / Bernard Bailyn.
Lincoln's code : the laws of war in American history / John Fabian Witt.
BIOGRAPHY
The Black Count : glory, revolution, betrayal, and the real Count of Monte Cristo / Tom Reiss.
Traces the story of the mixed-race swordsman and father of novelist Alexandre Dumas, discussing his rise to the French aristocracy, his military triumphs, and the adventures that inspired such classics as The Three Musketeers and The Count of Monte Cristo.
finalists Portrait of a novel : Henry James and the making of an American masterpiece / Michael Gorra.
The patriarch : the remarkable life and turbulent times of Joseph P. Kennedy / David Nasaw.
GENERAL NONFICTION
finalist
Behind the beautiful forevers / Katherine Boo.
Behind the beautiful forevers [large print] / by Katherine Boo.
Behind the beautiful forevers [eAudiobook] / Katherine Boo.
Behind the beautiful forevers [eBook] / Katherine Boo.
Behind the beautiful forevers [(CD) sound recording] / Katherine Boo.
An engrossing book that plunges the reader into an Indian slum in the shadow of gleaming hotels near Mumbai’s airport, revealing a complex subculture where poverty does not extinguish aspiration.
POETRY
Stag's leap / Sharon Olds.
In this wise and intimate telling--which carries us through the seasons when her marriage was ending--Sharon Olds opens her heart to the reader, sharing the feeling of invisibility that comes when we are no longer standing in love's sight; the surprising physical bond that still exists between a couple during parting; the loss of everything from her husband's smile to the set of his hip. Olds stands before us, curious and brave and even generous toward the man who was her mate for thirty years and who now loves another woman.