Tuesday, January 2, 2007

Nancy Pearl

Reader's Voice aims to give people a few good reading tips.
I've started 2007 by moving here to the blogosphere. My website is still running, but I'm running a blog version as well from now on.
The January issue of Reader's Voice features the books of Nancy Pearl, in which she recommends thousands of other books. I went along to see Nancy Pearl speak at the Brisbane Square Library, Brisbane, on December 16.
Also I give a few reading tips for people who are fans of authors like Hunter S. Thompson and Jack Kerouac, and are maybe looking for more books along these lines.

*****
The city was full of Christmas shoppers on the Saturday morning of December 16. But about a hundred people were seated on several rows of chairs on the ground floor of the new Brisbane Square Library. At least 90 per cent of the audience were women, mostly aged 50-plus.
They watched as one of the librarians walked up to a plinth and spoke into a microphone, welcoming the audience to the new library which she said had about 110,000 books. She talked about Nancy Pearl, the Seattle-based librarian and author, who had traveled to Brisbane by ship from Auckland, and who was heading to Melbourne after this appearance. The librarian told everyone to welcome Ms Pearl, and the audience applauded as Ms Pearl stood up from one of the seats in the front row of the audience, and went up to the mic.
Ms Pearl told stories about her life as a librarian, broadcaster, and reader. She said one of the roles of a librarian was to preserve the best of the books of the past, and she talked about her books, Book Lust, and More Book Lust in which she recommends thousands of books.
She said she wrote Book Lust after being contacted by a publisher at Sasquatch Books with the idea. Book Lust featured a list of 1800 books she recommended, in 175 quirky categories. She said the manuscript of the book went through the usual process of going to the copy editors and content editors, but that she kept adding more books to the manuscript. Finally the publisher said enough, and that the book was going to press. Sasquatch Books published Book Lust in 2003. But Nancy Pearl said that after the book was published, she’d wake up at three a.m. remembering books she’d left out. And on book tours people would ask her why she had omitted certain books. Plus the publisher asked for a Book Lust 2, so she wrote More Book Lust which recommended another 1200 titles.

During her speech, Ms Pearl mentioned a few titles of books she’d loved over the years. She said she had been on the 20-minute bus ride from Seattle to the university for her radio book show when she read the opening line of The Paperboy (1995), a first person novel by Pete Dexter. She said she literally fell in love with the book, almost experiencing physical symptoms to that effect. Ms Pearl said The Paperboy had real characters, and was grungy, awful, and scary. Even though Pete Dexter’s novel Paris Trout (1988) won the National Book Award for fiction, it was The Paperboy she loved, she said.
Ms Pearl said Rose Macaulay was one of her all-time-favorite authors, and she mentioned The Towers of Trebizond which combined all three of Ms Macaulay’s great loves: travel, the Anglican Church, and animals. It was her final novel, and strongly autobiographical, dealing with the conflict between adulterous love and the Christian faith. Regarded by some as her masterpiece, the novel won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize in 1956.
Ms Pearl said she was also fond of Notes from a Small Island by Bill Bryson.
And she recommended the Civil War novel Andersonville by MacKinlay Kantor.

Also in her speech she talked about the four potential doorways readers have into a book: story, language, character, and setting; every reader will enter through one doorway. She said books with the most doorways were usually the ones that lasted as there were so many ways for readers to enter it.
With The Da Vinci Code, story was the entry point or doorway - with lots of action and thrills. The same went for books by Lee Child or Matthew Reilly. She said with most literary awards, like the Booker, the door to the novels was language. But she said the majority of readers entered books through the story doorway.
If you remembered what doorway you liked, it would help you find books you enjoyed, Ms Pearl said. After the talk and question time, the audience were invited to morning tea set up a few metres away, where they had a chance to meet Ms Pearl and buy her books. Then there was the new library to check out, and the librarian's promise of 110,000 books.

-copyright Simon Sandall.

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