THIS WEEK: JOHN JODZIO and CHELSEA MARTIN,
RUMPUS BOOK CLUB DISCUSSION, WILLIAM GIBSON,
MARKOS MOULITSAS, MELISSA STEIN!

 


Events

« February 23, 2010 - March 07, 2010 »
 
02 / 23
Start: 7:00 pm

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Everyone wants to know more about the Middle
East, and Yalo is an
excellent chance to find out. Set in Beirut
during Lebanon's
civil war, this is the bracing story of a man falsely picked up by the police
for terrorism and tortured into a false confession. Written by one of the Arab
world's leading authors, Yalo is a
great book for discussion. We'll try to unwind this complex plot and see what
we can learn from this book about the Middle East
world.

 

Join us on the fourth Tuesday of every month at 7:00
PM in the bookstore for spirited conversation about some of the newest writing
hitting the U.S.
from all over the globe. No foreign language knowledge necessary and no
continental savvy required (but will be appreciated!)  -- just bring your
desire to read some excellent new books, hand-selected for you by the
Booksmith's knowledgeable booksellers. You'll also meet some great new people
(including Scott Esposito and Annie Janusch, who will guide each monthly
conversation. Scott and Annie's work with both The Quarterly Conversation and
the Center for the Art of Translation keeps them apprised on a day-to-day basis
of what's new in world lit, and they're excited to act as your
"interpreters" through these uncharted literary landscapes) and chat
with them about the best new fiction from around the world.

02 / 24
02 / 25
Start: 7:30 pm

 

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Two lovers accidentally create a love potion while making a
batch of Jell-O. An apartment is filled with water as an act of gravity-defying
devotion to an acrobat. At turns blissful, absurd, sexy, and devastating, Marisa
Matarazzo’s stories don’t just push the boundaries of love – they show how very
boundless it is.

 

These interconnected shorts take love to a new level,
another world, where a sex fever can sweep a town and where sex acts are
performed while tied to the raised mast of a sailboat. Falling into love,
swimming, and drowning in it, Matarazzo’s characters often exist in places
where land and water collide: a girl without hands is rescued from the sea by
an oil-rig worker; a boy transplants a fish into the body of a menacing
neighbor; a woman on the rebound has an unexpected encounter with an otherworldly
water engineer…

 

Fusing magical realism and fantastical elements with the
heart of here and now, Drenched is a celebration of the fluid sorcery of love –
in its ardor, its ugliness, all of its uncanny and magnificent manifestations.

 

 

02 / 26
02 / 27
Start: 1:00 pm
End: 7:30 pm

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Piles of unread magazines falling
to the floor and tormenting you?

Never again!

Join Booksmith. local writer Kevin
Smokler, and co-sponsor Shareble
for the First Ever celebration of Magazine Day, a nationwide holiday dedicated to magazines and catching up on the ones you haven't read yet. On the afternoon of February 27, Booksmith will convert itself into a giant magazine reading room. Bring your own unread mags, share them with others when you're done with them, and pick over Booksmith's magazine racks with impunity (but without coffee stains...). 

At 6 PM, we’ll convene a group of magazine publishers and
aficionados to talk about the state of
magazine publishing today
. Joining moderator Kevin Smokler will be Derek Powazek (Fray),  Jen Angel (formerly of Clamor), Jeremy Smith (of the digital Shareble.net), and 

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Andrew Leland (managing editor of The Believer).

 

$5 gets you an all-afternoon reading pass, Philz coffee and yummy
snacks, and take-home mags from the communal already-read pile. And more:
presentations and giveaways by local magazine publishers and discussion groups
will happen throughout the day. Tickets are available at Brown Paper Tickets or
800-838-3006 and in the store.

Magazine Day: Because The Unread Deserve
A Day, Too.

 

 

02 / 28
03 / 1
03 / 2
Start: 7:30 pm

 

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"Eric Puchner's Model Home
is 1980s California
in a nutshell: bright and frantic, giddy and broke, desperate and strong and
always, always moving."

 – Daniel Handler, author of Adverbs

 

Eric Puchner’s Music Through the Floor was one of the
best-received story collections in years. His debut novel, a sweeping yet
intimate story of the American dream in remission, viewed through the
microscope of a single family, proves yet again just “how exhilarating it is to
come across a young writer as technically gifted and emotionally insightful as
Eric Puchner” (The New York Times Book Review)

 

The Zillers – Warren, Camille, and their three children –
live the good life in a gated Southern California
neighborhood, but the sun-bright veneer hides a starker reality. As Warren desperately tries
to conceal a failing real estate venture, his family falls prey to secrets and
misunderstandings, both hilarious and painful, that open fault lines in their
intimacy. Their misguided attempts to recover their former closeness, or find
it elsewhere, lead them into late-night burglary, improbably romance, and
strange acts of betrayal. When tragedy strikes, the Zillers are forced to move
to one of the houses in Warren’s
abandoned development in the desert. By turns tender and disturbing, irreverent
and profound, Model Home is a masterful display of Eric Puchner’s
prodigious gifts and penetrating insight – both into the American family and
into the imperfect ways we try to connect.

 

 

03 / 3
Start: 7:30 pm

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As an active person, Helene Jorgensen decided to enjoy a
hike in the mountains one afternoon while attending a conference in Montana. Warned by
friends to beware of bears, Jorgensen was attacked by a creature much more
menacing -- the Rocky
Mountain wood tick. Sick
and Tired
is the story of Jorgensen’s subsequent illness and her
descent into the quagmire that is the American health care system.

 

Returning home from her trip, Jorgensen is quickly
debilitated by a mysterious illness and sets out to find a diagnosis and cure.
Along the way, she is seen by countless doctors, none of whom seems to be able
to diagnose her accurately. She undergoes two surgeries, is forced to quit her
job as a labor economist, and is saddled with countless bills and denied
payment for claims. Jorgensen quickly learns that the health care system does
not work; finally diagnosed with Lyme disease, she struggles for years to
receive proper medical treatment.

 

Based on the author’s notes and observations, statistics,
and survey data, Sick and Tired details the health care system’s failings
and lays out arguments to fix it. As an economist, Jorgensen takes a critical
look at conflicts of interest between doctors, pharmaceutical companies,
diagnostic laboratories, and insurance companies that restrict treatment
options and increase patient charges.

 

While millions of Americans negotiate the health care
system, and try to make sense of health care reform, Helene Jorgensen’s saga
will prove an important consideration in the national debate. Her voice will
bring hope as she provides advice about how to seek better and more affordable
medical care from physicians, health plans, and elected officials.

03 / 4
Start: 7:30 pm

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Ignatius Martin Perrish spent the night drunk and doing
terrible things. He woke the next morning with a headache, put his hands to his
temples and felt something unfamiliar, a pair of knobby, pointed protuberances.
He was so ill—wet-eyed and weak—he didn’t think anything of it at first, was
too hungover for thinking or worry. But when he was swaying over the toilet, he
glanced at himself in the mirror above the sink and saw he had grown horns
while he slept.

The second son of a renowned musician and doting mother, Ig Perrish has a
privileged life and expectations of a bright future with his childhood
sweetheart, Merrin Williams. But life takes an unexpected dark turn when Merrin
is brutally killed and suspicion falls hard on Ig.

A year passes, but Ig is nowhere near over his grief or his rage . . . feelings
that come to a head in a lost evening of alcohol and hate. When he wakes
the next morning he discovers that he has undergone a surreal transformation,
and is in possession of an incredible power. It isn’t long before he turns his
terrible new abilities towards vengeance. Unfortunately Ig is about to learn
that when
it comes to revenge, the devil is in the details . . .

 

Joe Hill’s debut novel, Heart-Shaped
Box
, was an instant New York Times
bestseller, hit national lists including the Wall
Street Journal
and USA
Today
, and garnered praise from sources as diverse as the Washington
Post, Locus, Romantic Times
, and James Rollins. It also won the
Bram Stoker Award and the International Thriller Writers Award for best first
novel. In Entertainment Weekly, Neil
Gaiman named Craddock McDermott, the “vengeful ghost that came with the suit in
Heart-Shaped Box,” one of the Top 10 New Classic
Monsters. Hill’s collection of macabre short stories, 20th
Century Ghosts
, received the Bram Stoker Award, the British Fantasy
Award, and the International Horror Guild Award for Best Collection. In
addition, various individual stories from the collection have won awards,
including the World Fantasy Award for the novella “Voluntary Committal.”

 

Extremeley cool video featuring Joe Hill as himself and the devil!

 

Joe
talks about Horns at ComicCon
.

 

Read notes, interviews,
and more on Joe’s website
.

 

Preferred seating tickets available with the purchase of
a copy of HORNS
at The Booksmith from February 17 while supplies last.

03 / 5
Start: 6:30 pm
End: 9:30 pm

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BOOKSWAP:

EAT, DRINK, TALK (and
SWAP BOOKS!)

 

Our second Book Swap of 2010 might just be the most fun
you've had at a bookstore, ever -- so don't miss it.  Join special author
guest Allison Hoover Bartlett (The Man Who Loved Books Too Much), along
with other smart, creative lit-minded souls of the city. Enjoy good company, swell
atmosphere, delicious Reverie food, free-flowing wine, wise discourse and
hilarious anecdotes.  Bring a book -- one you loved but can part with – and
be ready to passionately tell others why you love it so -- and we'll cook up
some good, smart fun. You'll also receive a 20% off discount card!

Author Holly Payne says the Book Swap is "The most unique book event I’ve
ever participated in."

Space is very limited -- these events sell out, so we urge you to get your
tickets well in advance! As always, tickets must be purchased in advance, in
the store, or at Brown
Paper Tickets
(or phone 800-838-3006).

 

 

03 / 6
03 / 7
Start: 4:00 pm

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Critically acclaimed Turkish novelist Elif Shafak’s second
novel in English, THE FORTY RULES OF
LOVE
, a huge bestseller in her native Turkey, is lyrical, exuberant and
sure to please fans of The Bastard of
Istanbul
, which was described by USA
Today
as a “Turkish version of The Joy Luck Club” and by The Nation as a “brave, ambitious book.”
 

 

Deftly weaving two parallel narratives together, through
employing the structure of a novel within a novel, THE FORTY RULES OF LOVE tells the story of an American housewife by
the name of Ella Rubinstein who is trapped in an unhappy marriage. She takes a
job as a reader for a literary agent and finds her life transformed after
becoming engrossed in her first project: reading and reporting on a work of
fiction describing the three year encounter (1244-1247) between the mystic Sufi
poet Rumi and the controversial whirling dervish Shams of Tabriz. As Ella reads
the manuscript (and the reader follows along with her), her relationship with
the author -- a novelist by the name of Aziz Zahara, who lives in Holland -- soon
begins to mirror that of Rumi and Shams.  

 

For Ella, the spirit of Shams lives in Zahara and as the two
fall in love, she is guided not only by her own heart, but by Sham’s lessons,
or rules, which are directly taken from the ancient philosophy of Sufism. The
basis of Sufism is unity of all people and religions, and the presence of love
in each and every one of us. As the fortieth rule states: “A life without love
is of no account. Don’t ask yourself what kind of love you should seek,
spiritual or material, divine or mundane, Eastern or Western…Love has no
labels, no definitions. It is what it is.”  

 

Elif Shafak was
born in France and spent her
teenage years in Spain
before returning to Turkey.
She holds a Master of Science degree in Gender and Women’s Studies and earned
her Ph.D. in Political Science from the Middle East Technical
University. She has been
a visiting scholar in the US
and has been featured widely in the press both in the US and abroad.
Shortly before the publication in America of her most recent novel, The Bastard of Istanbul, Shafak was
brought to trial by nationalist lawyers in Turkey who accused her of insulting
Turkish identity for comments that some of the fictional characters made in the
book. The case attracted worldwide attention and she was eventually acquitted.
She lives in Istanbul
with her husband and two children.  Read The
Independent (UK)’s interview with Shafak
.

 

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