Graphic Novel Friday: Ghost World: Special Edition
by Omnivoracious.com at 5:12 PM PDT, September 11, 2008
The Amazon editors and writers you read on Omni every day aren't the only ones reading hungrily around here. One of our book buyers, Alex Carr, is back to provide a rundown of the recently released comic, Ghost World: Special Edition. On Friday, August 29, Fantagraphics Books in Seattle celebrated the 10th anniversary publication of Daniel Clowes’ Ghost World by holding an exhibition of the artist’s work. Clowes was on hand to talk to fans, sign miscellany, and usher in the release of Fantatgraphics’ Ghost World: Special Edition. The original, 80-page graphic novel is pure Clowes, and in an age of revisiting best-left-preserved stories and turning them into “special editions,” it’s hard not to feel squeamish lifting a juiced-up 230+-page hardcover. Would Enid and Rebecca, the oft-imitated (see also: Juno) and cynical-to-a-fault main characters accept such a retread? Clowes and Fantagraphics wisely dispel any fears with a cover graphic of Enid exclaiming “Look at us—we’re totally special!” The main theme of two best friends growing up and apart as adulthood looms is left untouched, while the surrounding details bloom. Fantagraphics and Clowes have assembled seemingly every fringe supplemental involving the graphic novel ‘s journey from pencils to feature film, beginning with a new introduction by Clowes and a two-page Where Are They Now? piece that dishes up ambiguity on the ultimate fate of Enid and Rebecca. Original sketches, photo references, gags, throwaways, rarely-seen strips, jackets, rejected cover designs, original art with overlays, and more follow the story’s end. What follows next is the 100+ page, Oscar-nominated screenplay by Clowes and Terry Zwigoff, complete with its own introduction, strip, annotations, and further esoterica. Watch for Clowes’ pen-and-ink rendition of Christina Ricci in the role of Enid before Thora Birch made it her own in the 2001 film (which also featured an early Scarlett Johansson as Rebecca). Also on hand at the exhibition were a limited number of signed prints from page 79 of Ghost World, available for purchase. The exhibition runs through Oct. 7, 2008, but if you miss it, the special print can be viewed here. Taken out of context and enlarged, it reminds readers why the everyday glimpse into the lives of two coming-of-age characters has resonated for ten years, and why it will continue to haunt thanks to the very fine film and newly-released, special edition graphic novel. - Alex Carr The Ultimate Birthday Present for "Harry Potter" Fans
by Omnivoracious.com at 6:46 AM PDT, July 31, 2008
In celebration of Harry Potter's birthday (who happens to share a birthday with his creator, J.K. Rowling), this morning, millions of Harry Potter fans around the world woke up (or will soon wake up) to some very exciting news: the announcement of the worldwide release of The Tales of Beedle the Bard, a very special book of five fairy tales written to supplement the Harry Potter series. In December 2007, Amazon was fortunate to come into possession of one of the original copies and it was our privilege to share images and reviews of this incredible artifact. Available in a standard edition and a collector's edition, which is exclusive to Amazon.com, these new editions of The Tales of Beedle the Bard will be available on December 4, 2008. The Standard Edition features all five fairy tales from the original The Tales of Beedle the Bard, an introduction and illustrations by J.K. Rowling, and commentary on each of the tales by Professor Albus Dumbledore. Housed in its own slipcase--made to resemble a wizarding textbook found in the Hogwarts library--the luxuriously packaged Collector's Edition includes metal corners, clasp, and skull; a reproduction of J.K. Rowling's handwritten introduction; commentary on each of the tales by Professor Albus Dumbledore; and 10 additional illustrations not found in the Standard Edition (or the original). In a press release Rowling said: "There was understandable disappointment among Harry Potter fans when only one copy of The Tales of Beedle the Bard was offered to the public last December. I am therefore delighted to announce that, thanks to the generous support of Bloomsbury, Scholastic, and Amazon (who bought the handwritten copy at auction)--and with the blessing of the wonderful people who own the other six original books--The Tales of Beedle the Bard will now be widely available to all Harry Potter fans."
--BTP
In topics: Advance Copy, Collector's Edition, Exclusives, Fantasy, Harry Potter, Literature, Harry Potter
Win a Weekend with J.K. Rowling's "The Tales of Beedle the Bard"
by Omnivoracious.com at 2:05 PM PDT, April 9, 2008
Calling all Harry Potter fans! • What songs do wizards use to celebrate birthdays? An Amazon.com committee will select 10 semi-finalist submissions (based on creativity and writing style) from each of two age categories: 13-17 and 18-and-over. Amazon.com customers will determine the two finalists and Grand Prize winner by voting for their favorites. But hurry--submissions will be accepted through 11:59 p.m. PDT April 22, 2008. If you haven’t already, take a look at The Tales of Beedle the Bard: Five Tales, Seven Copies, One Book: J.K. Rowling's Tales of Beedle the Bard
by Omnivoracious.com at 4:38 PM PST, December 13, 2007
As you may have heard, J.K. Rowling has created a new book of fairy tales, but unlike her last book, which has reached print runs in the tens of millions, this one has a very limited edition: seven. Handwritten and illustrated by Rowling herself and bound in morocco leather, silver ornaments, and semi-precious stones, The Tales of Beedle the Bard is a collection of five wizarding fairy tales. (The tales played a crucial role in the plot of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows after Dumbledore left them to Hermione Granger, but only one of them, "The Tale of the Three Brothers," was included in the story.) Of the seven copies, Rowling gave six to "those most intimately involved" with the Potter books (names as yet unknown), and the last was auctioned off this morning at Sotheby's in London, with proceeds going to The Children's Voice, an organization cofounded by Rowling that campaigns for children's rights. The book, which according to the AP was expected to sell for around $100,000, ended up selling for 1.95 million pounds (or, given the state of the U.S. dollar these days, $3.98 million). The buyer was unknown at the time of purchase, but later today was revealed to be ... Amazon.com. So needless to say, you can now read more about the book on our site, including some lovely photographs, a few of which I've added below. And there's an already-busy discussion board, where we (and our customers) are answering as many questions as we can about the book. --Tom Gifts for Book Lovers from "InStyle" Magazine
by Amazon Newsstand at 2:25 PM PST, November 26, 2007
With the holiday season now officially in full swing, it's time to figure out what the heck to get those special folks in your life. Fortunately, there is no shortage of magazines with comprehensive gift guides to help you find that just-right gift. This week's featured gift guide comes from the editors of InStyle magazine. While InStyle may not be known for its literary prowess, they have compiled a pretty unique, fun list. If you've got someone on your list who collects books, loves books, or just needs to read more, here is a list of great options for book lovers, featured in the December issue:
-- Noelle On the Road, 50 (or 56) Years Later
by Amazon.com Bookstore at 4:54 PM PDT, August 20, 2007
As you might have heard, this is the 50th anniversary of the publication of Jack Kerouac's Beat bible, On the Road. Kerouac, who spent the rest of his short career trying to live up to, or live down, his blockbuster book, might be glad he doesn't have to witness the festivities, but his readers should be happy to be here. As anyone who's turned one of those big round numbers knows, birthdays can feel arbitrary and absurd, but they often bring good things, in this case new editions and new looks at a book that has turned out to live far beyond its fleeting moment. The Library of America has welcomed Kerouac as the first Beat writer in its red-white-and-blue ranks (unless you want to count Paul Bowles) with Jack Kerouac: Road Novels 1957-1960, and Viking, the original publisher of On the Road, is publishing three books: a 50th anniversary edition of On the Road, On the Road: The Original Scroll (the full text of Kerouac's famous 120-foot scroll that he typed a draft of the book on in one three-week sprint six years before it was published), and Why Kerouac Matters, a short new tribute from John Leland, author of Hip: The History, that argues that On the Road is not the book we've thought it was these 50 years. On our pages for the anniversary and scroll editions, we have some nice extras, including Kerouac's hand-drawn map of the cross-country travels that were the basis for the book and Gilbert Millstein's prescient original New York Times review, which is reprinted in the anniversary edition. Two of my favorite critics, David Gates in Newsweek and Luc Sante in the New York Times Book Review, have long, appreciative pieces on the anniversary books this week. What I love is that they both pick out the same famous line to compare between the draft and the final version, and they completely disagree about it. Here's how it reads in the 1951 scroll:the only people that interest me are the mad ones, the ones who are mad to live, mad to talk, desirous of everything at the same time, the ones that never yawn or say a commonplace thing ... but burn, burn, burn like roman candles across the night. and here's the final 1957 version: the only people that interest me are the mad ones, the ones who are mad to live, mad to talk, mad to be saved, desirous of everything at the same time, the ones that never yawn or say a commonplace thing ... but burn, burn, burn like fabulous roman candles exploding like spiders across the stars and in the middle you see the blue centerlight pop and everybody goes 'Awww!' Sante prefers the scroll's more stripped-down version, calling Kerouac's additions "eager-beaver poeticizing." Gates, though, argues, "This is Kerouac finding his true voice and true subject: beyond the trite Roman candles to the explosion, the spiders, the stars--and then the deflationary exhalation." I think I'm with Sante on this one (although I do like the addition of "mad to be saved")--what do you think? I asked John Leland a few questions about his new book and about Kerouac, but this post is long enough already, so I'll post his answers separately. --Tom
Daily Book News
by Amazon.com Bookstore at 11:41 AM PDT, May 10, 2007
Tony Blair steps down after 10 years. Want to know something about his assumed successor, Gordon Brown, who's been waiting in the wings for almost that whole time? UK books here, here, and here. And in the tradition of JFK and John McCain, he's written a book on Courage. A little late on this, but Sarah Weinman, mystery-book blogger whose is "probably the only person among litbloggers, book reviewers and other literary types whose first language is Yiddish," gives a somewhat contrarian take on Chabon's Yiddish Policemen's Union. (Via Maud Newton) Speaking of YPU (and aren't we all--I'm in the middle of reading it myself), Max at The Millions blogs about limited editions, including the apparently quite gorgeous, wood-boxed Yiddish Policemen's Union we have for sale for only $116.99. It does not appear, however, to include the superduperest tchotchke included in the fancy prepublication package the publishers sent out: a District of Sitka World's Fair shot glass, complete with a 50 ml bottle of plum brandy (see page 2 of the novel). Three-time novelist and five-time Jeopardy champ Arthur Phillips answers questions at the Elegant Variation. One note: when asked the "best author we've never heard of" he cites, without explanation, this excellent hoaxer, whom I celebrated in this space last year. USA Today reports on a Hill-bio throw-down among prestigious imprints: when Geoff Shandler, Little, Brown editor of Jeff Gerth and Don Van Natta's Her Way (the one with Clinton facing left on the cover), wondered how "objective and critical" Knopf, publisher of A Woman in Charge (Hillary facing right), can be, given that they publish Bill, legendary Knopf publicity director Paul "Bogie" Bogaards shot back, "It's ludicrous for Little, Brown to suggest that. They should be very careful if they're going down that road." --Tom
The "New" Tolkien, and Alan Lee's Best Cup of Coffee Ever
by Amazon.com Bookstore at 10:26 PM PDT, April 17, 2007
Today marks, along with the birth of Amazon Daily as our new blog platform, the publication date of The Children of Húrin, the "first complete book by J.R.R. Tolkien in three decades." The book is not completely new--parts of the material has appeared in The Silmarillion, among other places--but it is the fullest retelling available of the third of Tolkien's "great tales." It was "completed" by Tolkien's son Christopher, but only in the sense that he brought its existing strands together from his father's published and unpublished writings: every word in the book is Tolkien's. As we've noted in a couple recent posts, the early reviews are coming in this week. Today, Lev Grossman in Time writes that once you get past the "faux-archaic diction," "it's a huge pleasure to be back in Middle Earth, and to see people and places that Tolkien only alludes to glancingly elsewhere. There's plenty of lore for the scholars and superfans, and there's no shortage of elves and dwarves and mighty smiting for the casual fan." The new book includes illustrations (a dozen of them in full-page color) by Alan Lee, who was already a famed fantasy illustrator (for his early collaboration, Faeries, as well as his Tolkien editions) before he won an Oscar as the conceptual designer of the somewhat successful film trilogy. On our page for the new book, you can see two of Lee's new illustrations as well as an essay on how the full tale came to be published by Adam Tolkien, J.R.R.'s grandson and Christopher's son. And we have a short Q&A there with Alan Lee, but there's one question that we saved for the blog:Amazon.com: Lastly, on a blog you wrote about your tour for The Lord of the Rings Sketchbook, you mentioned that you had the best cup of coffee of your life during your visit here to Seattle. Have you been able to match it since? It turns out he captured that very moment, and he sent along the photographic proof: ![]() Visitors to Seattle wishing to repeat it for themselves can stop by here. --Tom, Amazon Bookstore
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