Do
you live near Boston? I am thrilled, embarrassed, and fretful to report that my friend Suzy
Becker, author of the brilliant One Good Egg and the brilliant and bestselling All I Need to Know I Learned from My Cat (now in its godzillian printing), and her friend Nancy Aronie, and I are going
to be in “conversation” together in May. Less important than the actual going
is the buying of the tickets and the communicating to the Concord Museum folks
that you’re my people, buying tickets because of me, and Suzy and Nancy aren’t
the only people selling tickets.
On Writing, Life, and
the Origin of Chicken Fingers
Thursday, May 15, 2014, 7PM - 9PM
Authors Nancy Aronie, Suzy Becker, and Catherine Newman
invite you to join them for an evening of casual conversation. These
nationally acclaimed authors will read from their own works (and each others’),
share their thoughts on all manner of things, and answer questions – “theirs,
yours, and some real doozies from this year’s MCAS.” Wine and cheese at
7:00 p.m., program begins at 7:15; book signing to follow. $10 Concord Museum
Members, $15 Non-members. Ticket price includes wine and cheese. Tickets may be
purchased online or
by calling (978) 369-9763, ext. 216.
Phew.
Other things.
I
have a piece in the current issue of Brain, Child, and it’s about a
hibernaculum [shudder]. (That's just a link to the "teaser," i.e. a photo of me in pasties.)
Do
you remember how I mentioned Colorku
at the holidays?
Well.
I am reporting back that it is completely excellent. All four of us love it, and
the level of challenge-feeling ranges from a kind of brain-churning competence to
something like a tangled, numbing conviction that that there is something wrong
with your mental processing apparatus. We work on it alone, or in pairs or clumps, and it is
deeply engaging and fun and companionable. I cannot recommend it enough. Plus,
the pieces are painted wood, and there is something very beautiful about them.
The pastel ones remind me of Dutch mints
to the point that I have to actively stop myself
from putting one in my mouth.
Also
from the holidays: my parents gave me (okay, I may have specifically asked for
it) the Roz Chast collection Theories of Everything, and I cannot
say how much pleasure we’ve gotten out it. Okay, maybe I can try to say. No. I
can’t. Only this: every single day after school, Ben and I lie on the couch and
read it together, and every single cartoon makes us laugh. Her memoir is coming
out soon, and I preordered it, which is a strong indicator of my feelings,
given my propensity to loiter around hoping that someone will send me a review
copy of everything. (You can read what looks like an excerpt here.)
Another
book recommendation, this one from Birdy: Wonder by R.J. Palacio. She devoured it in a nearly
unprecedented way. When I asked her to describe it for you, she said, “Like a
review or like a blurb?” Hello, child of
a writer. Here’s what she gave me: "August Pullman tries to make it
through 5th grade with friends, foes, and surprises. It's an amazing book that
you just don't feel like putting down." This is so literally true that
Birdy had to stay home from school one day last week to finish it. Hello, child of a reader. Not that her
description doesn’t totally capture the plot, but, well, it kind of doesn’t
totally, so here’s this from Amazon: “August Pullman was born with a
facial deformity that, up until now, has prevented him from going to a
mainstream school. Starting 5th grade at Beecher Prep, he wants nothing more
than to be treated as an ordinary kid—but his new classmates can’t get past
Auggie’s extraordinary face.” Do you have any book recs for Birdy? She has also
recently read and loved two of my own tween favorites: Bridge to Terabithia and The Brothers Lionheart. (Not that there were tweens back in the dark ages, when
we were wringing out our menstrual rags in a bucket.)
I
myself read and loved Valerie’s Martin’s latest, The Ghost of the Mary Celeste,
which is a historical novel about nineteenth-century ghost ship, communication
with the dead, and Arthur Conan Doyle. The ship itself is, weirdly, kind of the
missing center of the book, not by accident, and it makes for an engagingly
disjointed read, if that makes sense. If you’ve never read anything by her
before, Trespass is my favorite and
is a nearly perfect novel, IMHO. (I wanted to write IHOP.)
Frank Cottrell Boyce. He was not exactly driven to writing by homeliness, if you know what I mean.
Finally,
on a friend’s recommendation we have now listened to more or less everything on
tape by Frank Cottrell Boyce, and we have loved every single book: Cosmic,
Millions, Framed, and the short but wonderful The Unforgotten Coat. He
is English and funny and deeply kind, and the books are all different, but they’re all about the
kinds of awesome, quirky kids who obsessively memorize details of saints’
lives, say, or note in a huge journal every car that passes. Some of our own
recent car trips, even long ones, have passed in a blur of pleasure.
Please, share anything relevant (or irrelevant!). We are, as you know, always looking to read, listen to, and play new things. xo
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