News and commentary on books and writers




Friday, December 21, 2007

Always one for a challenge, Alidë Kohlhaas has posted a thorough and thoughtful review of Umberto Eco’s new collection of essays TURNING BACK THE CLOCK: Hot Wars And Media Populism on the Lancette Journal of the Arts website:

The question may arise, why read Eco’s essays about the affairs of state and the media in Italy? My response is, ‘Why not?’ There is a great deal to be learned from these essays addressed to his fellow citizens, yet he draws on the world to make his points… Every essay in this book deserves a detailed analysis, but that will lead to a book-length review. Suffice it to say that I found the essays stimulating, frustrating, exhilarating, and there were moments when I wished I had the ability to comment with such razor-sharp insight as Eco is able to do. There is no telling on which side of the political divide he stands. He demolishes the left as much as the right, and those who stand in the center, whenever they act in ways that are philosophically unacceptable. At the same time, this book informs certain perceptions one has formed on one’s own about Italian politics as they reach us here through our own media.

Click here for the full review

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Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Although cutting is not a very festive subject, it perhaps good to remember that not everyone enjoys Christmas, holidays or time with their family, and that sometimes people find it difficult to deal with their anger and frustration.

COMES THE DARKNESS, COMES THE LIGHT is Vanessa Vega’s inspirational memoir of overcoming cutting, and Charlene Martel, herself a former cutter, has reviewed the book on her blog The Literary Word:

I find it hard to believe that anyone could read this memoir and not be incredibly moved by the content found within.

I am in awe of the strength and courage that it must have taken to share such a secret. Cutting is something that is becoming more widespread and is often seen as shameful or worse, the act of someone mentally ill. I am so relieved that it is finally being brought into the open more. Books of this kind make it easier for people to learn about the subject and hopefully understand it a little more. It certainly gave me some insight and I wish that such a book had been available during those dark periods of my life. At a time when I thought I was the only person in the world who had these urges, when I thought that I was going crazy and hated myself with a passion, I might have learned a lot sooner that I was simply trying to deal with things in the only way I knew how…
It is a ‘must read’ for anyone who cuts or self-injures in other ways, and the people who love them. It is a ‘should read’ for everyone.

Click here for the full review

Click here for Vanessa Vega’s website

Posted by Dan @ 09:05 AM · (3) Comments · Tell a Friend
Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Over at everyone’s favourite Canadian Litblog, BookNinja, Tom McCarthy, author of the excellent REMAINDER and MEN IN SPACE, has a characteristically literary conversation with Kathryn Kuitenbrouwer, Toronto-based author of the much lauded THE NETTLE SPINNER (Goose Lane Editions 2005):

I don’t think literature’s ever dead - or, rather, I think it’s eternally dead, dying, and that’s the precondition for its self-perpetuation.

Click here for Tom and Kathryn’s conversation at BookNinja.

Click here for my most recent chat with Tom on the Raincoast Blog.

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Monday, December 17, 2007
ContestsTeen

Thank you so much to Karen Rivers the author of the XYZ Trilogy for the terrific blog entry below. It’s great to read all of the behind the scenes information about this amazing series!

If you haven’t picked up X in Flight yet I would highly encourage it. Anyone who is a fan of the TV shows Heroes and Supernatural will not be disappointed. For those of you who have read X in Flight only a couple more months until Y in the Shadows is available. Look for it in bookstores everywhere in February.

In the meantime for more fabulous additional content on the series and Karen Rivers herself visit XYZ Website where you will find a What is Your Super Power Quiz, A Poll of what the most popular super powers are, a Q&A with Karen Rivers and a whole lot more.

CONTEST: Visit the XYZ Trilogy and take the What is Your Super Power Quiz. Post what your super power would be under comments and you could win a free copy of X in Flight. Contest closes January 21st.

Good Luck!

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Saturday, December 15, 2007

Hi readers!  It’s me, Karen Rivers.  I don’t expect you would have guessed that, so there you are.  I’m here today to talk (or blog) a bit about my new series of Young Adult novels:  X in Flight, Y in the Shadows, and What Z Saw.  (Now that I’ve typed that, I’m not sure the third isn’t called What Z Sees.  That’s what having children does to your brain - makes it super-forgetful.) I had a baby girl, Lola, in August, around the same time as X in Flight was released.  Exciting!  It seems like there’s always a lot going on, and usually all at the same time. 

The first book, X in Flight, was a delight to write and a huge departure from what I usually write.  When I write a book, I usually rip a lot of elements for the book out of my actual life.  A lot of things, for example, in the Haley Andromeda books came from my own hilarious experiences (which often weren’t hilarious when they happened, but got funnier when they happened to Haley).  With the XYZ series, I still used different elements swiped from my life and from the lives of people I know:  less of the funny, more of the serious, but both parts are there.  But mostly, this one is all fiction, with a glimmer of me hiding in each character.  I don’t think that’s avoidable!  We all sneak into our own work, sometimes without us even realizing it. 

This time around, my protagonist is both male and African American.  I am neither male nor African American, so it was such a great experience to write the character—someone so different from me on the outside, yet so similar on the inside.  X is a guy who wants to please everyone, who wants to make his mum proud, who wants to measure up to expectations—and that’s really who I was, too, at that age.  My mum (in real life) is a huge fan of Tiger Woods, and so I imagined a character who’s mum also is a huge fan of Tiger Woods, only in a bit of a confusing, expectation-laced way—does she want him to BE Tiger or just be like him? 

When I was in school, there was only one African American boy in our neighbourhood.  I remember once talking with him about what it was like to be a non-white kid in a predominantly-white school.  He told me that he always felt that no one wanted to acknowledge his colour, that he was described as the kid with the dark hair or eyes and that often he wanted to stand up and scream, “I am not insulted if you say I’m black.  I AM and it’s NOT an insult!” His description of the clunky attempts at political correctness when he didn’t know any more than anyone else what was correct and what wasn’t stuck with me.  The more I thought about it, the more I wanted to write about that feeling of displacement, the constant otherness he says he felt and how that parallels how a lot of people—regardless of the colour of their skin—describe how it is to be an adolescent.  We all have different reasons for feeling like we don’t fit in, that’s for sure.  Sometimes it’s because you’re part of a visible minority, but other times it’s something invisible, just something inside that says, “I feel different.”

X is different, that’s for sure, and it’s not because of his colour, it’s because he can fly.  Want to know more?  You’ll have to grab a copy of the book and check it out!  I don’t want to give it all away. 

Raincoast has set up a great website right here where you can read more about the books:

www.raincoast.com/xyz/

And you can always drop by my website (and one day, I swear that I will finish the site, right now it’s very very half-done) or drop me a note at:
www.karenrivers.com

Thanks for reading!  I hope you all have a terrific holiday season.

Best,
Karen Rivers

Posted by Karen Rivers @ 02:23 PM · (0) Comments · Tell a Friend
Friday, December 14, 2007
Contests

If your credit card is maxed out after all that holiday shopping, why not try to win some free stuff?

Here are a few contests for our books that you might like to enter…

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Music Books Giveway on Exclaim.ca

Fill out Exclaim! magazine’s annual Reader’s Poll for a chance to win some rockin music books: Van Halen, Runnin’ Down a Dream: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, The Jim Morrison Scrapbook, Elliott Smith, Tupac Remembered: Bearing Witness to a Life and Legacy, Art of Modern Rock Mini #1: A-Z, and The Art of Modern Rock 2008 Wall Calendar—all in an orange Chronicle Books messenger bag.

Click here for details and to enter.

For more info on the best music books—and some sneak peeks inside—visit raincoast.com/music/.

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Maple Leafs A-Z Contest on InsideToronto.com

Calling all Maple Leafs fans! Enter for a chance to win Maple Leafs A-Z, a picture book that chronicles some of the top players in the team’s history.

Click here for details and to enter.

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Playboy Prize Pack from Raincoast Books on Showcase.ca

Enter for a chance to win Playboy Blondes, Playboy Brunettes, Playboy Redheads and Playboy Helmut Newton.

Click here for details and to enter.

Also watch for another contest in the next couple of months on Showcase.ca, to win the GIGANTIC Playboy: The Complete Centerfolds. This thing weighs 32 lbs, and you need a suitcase to carry it in. That’s a LOT of girls.

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Good luck!

Posted by Siobhan @ 12:35 PM · (0) Comments · Tell a Friend
Thursday, December 13, 2007

imageCrafty? Creative? Curious? Here are some books that will delight anyone with a passion for crochet, knitting, sewing, or anything hands-on.

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imageKYUUTO! JAPANESE CRAFTS! AMIGURUMI! (Chronicle Books).

Kyuuto! = Cute! Japan crafters know their stuff, especially when it comes to cute crafts like amigurumi (small crocheted creatures so cute you could cry). Chronicle’s Kyuuto books are translations of Japanese craft books, so you won’t have to order the books from overseas—and then try to figure out the patterns based on pictures alone!

Also check out KYUUTO! JAPANESE CRAFTS! LACY CROCHET!

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SOFTIES: Simple Instructions for 25 Plush Pals by Therese Laskey, foreword by Leah Kramer (Chronicle Books).

Softies, plush, stuffed animals… whatever you call them, SOFTIES is an adorable collection of sewn creations from acclaimed artists from around the world—plus instructions and patterns to make your own! SOFTIES was compiled by Therese Laskey, the creator of the blog Softies Central, with a foreword from Leah Kramer, founder of Craftster.org.

* See some photos from the book on Not Martha.

*Download a pattern for one of the softies from Craft magazine’s blog.

* Meet some of the colourful characters in the book in this SOFTIES video! Ha!

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FIELD GUIDE TO KNITTING: How to Identify, Select, and Create Virtually Every Stitch by Jackie Pawlowski (Quirk Books).

FIELD GUIDE TO KNITTING is a great little stocking stuffer ... that will also teach you how to darn those stockings! (Sorry, I couldn’t resist.) This is a great little comprehensive guide full of tons of stitch patterns plus other essential knitting advice.

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CRAFT INC.:  Turn Your Creative Hobby into a Business by Meg Mateo Ilasco (Chronicle Books).

If you’re thinking of turning your craft from a hobby into a business, CRAFT INC. will be your guide. It’s full of information on business basics like setting prices, plus inspiring interviews with craft superstars such as Lotta Jansdotter and Jill Bliss, who offer real-world advice.

* Read Print & Pattern‘s review of the book (with some great photos of the lovely interiors).

* Read an interview with the author, Meg Mateo Ilasco, on WhipUp.

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THE GUERILLA ART KIT: Everything You Need to Put Your Message out into the World by Keri Smith (Princeton Architectural Press).

For a good dose of inspiration, check out THE GUERILLA ART KIT. Created by artist Keri Smith, THE GUERILLA ART KIT is full of fun ways to make your mark on the world, though always in a non-harmful and non-intrusive way. Rather than grafitti, Keri Smith’s ideas of guerilla art are things like throwing seed bombs to plant random gardens in the city, or creating fortune-cookie-style fortunes for other people to find. Just the kind of things that brighten up someone’s day.

* You can see a sneak peak inside the book on Book By It’s Cover.

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Still crafting the perfect present? Perhaps our other Gift Guides will help.

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Wednesday, December 12, 2007

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Chronicle has posted a great Stationery Gift Guide for 2007 on their blog. If you’re a paper-fiend of just a fan of pretty things have a look!

Chronicle works with some fantastic artists and designers to create their stationery, including Sukie, Hammerpress, Lotta Jansdotter and Rex Ray.

Posted by Siobhan @ 04:32 PM · (0) Comments · Tell a Friend

image Here are some of the most creative and visually interesting books of the year—perfect the “right brain” thinkers on your list.

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HAND JOB: A Catalog of Type by Michael Perry (Princeton Architectural Press).

Easily one of my personal favourite books of the year, HAND JOB is a collection of hand-drawn type. It’s becoming more and more popular, used in design work, advertising, album covers, clothing design and more. Michael Perry, who is himself a creator of fantastic hand-drawn type, has compiled top hand-drawn typographers from all over the world in one visually stunning package.

Click here for some photos of the book’s interior, and an interview with the Michael Perry on Book By It’s Cover.

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TAKING THINGS SERIOUSLY: 75 Objects with Unexpected Significance by Joshua Glenn and Carol Hayes (Princeton Architectural Press).

Everybody has one of these: an seemingly ordinary object that you treat like the crown jewels. TAKING THINGS SERIOUSLY features 75 of these items--from a soda bottle to a rubber pig, from a death mask to a shrivelled artichoke--that people have collected and kept. If you’re looking for quirky, original and compelling book, TAKING THINGS SERIOUSLY is it.

Many of us invest ordinary objects with other sorts of extraordinary significance, too. My friend Tony crams a U.S. Navy 100-pound practice bomb into his tiny workspace for much the same reason that Greg, a colleague of mine at the Boston Globe, displays a wobbly wooden Santa in his kitchen year-round. These doohickeys are actually fossils, petrified evidence of a vanished epoch (young adulthood). Other writers, thinkers, designers and artists of my acquaintance cherish things—sunglasses found at a yard sale, a colored-sand-filled glass clown, a one-eyed ceramic frog—for equally irrational reasons.

--Joshua Glenn on DesignObserver

Here’s a short excerpt from the book on DesignObserver.

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imageTO INFINITY AND BEYOND: The Story of Pixar Animation Studios (Chronicle Books).

Every movie I see from Pixar just amazes me. Did you see how REAL the rats’ hair in Ratatouille looked? (Yeah, I know, a little TOO real for rats in the kitchen...) TO INFINITY AND BEYOND is the definitive book on Pixar, chronicling it’s 20 year-history. The book is (of course!) gorgeous to look at, full of concept art, storyboards, and snapshots, plus interviews with the people who made it all happen.

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WHITE RAPIDS by Pascal Blanchet (Drawn & Quarterly).

For another visual treat, open up WHITE RAPIDS. Written and illustrated by award-winning Québécois cartoonist Pascal Blanchet, WHITE RAPIDS is graphic novel that blends fact and fiction to tell the story of a Canadian town is forced to shut down after the local water and power company closes. WHITE RAPIDS is retro artwork at its best.

Click here to read some reviews and here for a sneak peak.

UPDATE: Pascal Blanchet was interviewed by Jian Ghomeshi on CBC Radio One’s ‘Q’ on Monday Dec 5th. Click here to listen to the interview (it’s towards the end of the podcast).

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Still designing the perfect gift? Maybe some of our other Gift Guides will help.

Posted by Siobhan @ 04:08 PM · (1) Comments · Tell a Friend
Monday, December 10, 2007

imageAre you in the holiday spirit yet? Here are some books that will bring that holiday glow into all parts of your home, from your rooftop to your dining table to your bedside table.

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HOLIDAY HERO: A Man’s Manual for Holiday Lighting by Brad Finkle (Chronicle Books).

Want to be the brightest house on the block? HOLIDAY HERO is a humourous and helpful book that shows you, step-by-step, how to out up your Christmas lights, from a simple string to full-on Rudolph and all his reindeer pals prancing in lights across your rooftop.

Watch the Holiday Hero video interview with the author, which shows off some of his bright ideas.

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SERIOUSLY SIMPLE HOLIDAYS: Recipes and Ideas to Celebrate the Season by Diane Rossen Worthington (Chronicle Books).

Diane Rossen Worthington is a James Beard Award-winning broadcaster and the author of 18 cookbooks, including the bestselling SERIOUSLY SIMPLE. Now Diane’s back to tackle holiday cooking… with ease. Full of timesaving tips, wine and cheese pairings and menus for hosting holiday parties, SERIOUSLY SIMPLE HOLIDAYS includes yummy recipes such as Apple Clafouti and delish drinks such as Cranberry Mimosas.

Here are a couple of sample recipes from the book:

- Chicken-Vegetable Soup with Herbed Matzo Balls

- Sour Cream-Vanilla Cupcakes

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THE BIBLE: Genesis, Exodus, The Song of Solomon illustrated by Marc Chagall (Chronicle Books).

Celebrated artist Marc Chagall began illustrating the Bible in 1931, and it became his lifelong passion. This beautiful, bright volume includes more than 130 pages of his works, paired with three books from the Old Testament. Chagall’s illustrations reflect his Jewish heritage and his view of the complex relationship between God and man, presaging many of the subjects and themes in his later work

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WHERE, OH WHERE IS SANTA CLAUS? by Lisa Wheeler, illustrated by Ivan Bates (Harcourt).

This is beautifully illustrated, heartwarming Christmas picture book set in the North Pole—full of reindeers, snow and Santa… oh wait, where IS Santa? Will he be found in time to make deliveries on Christmas Eve?

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OLIVE, THE OTHER REINDEER: Deluxe 10th Anniversary Edition by J.otto Seibold and Vivian Walsh (Chronicle Books).

OLIVE, THE OTHER REINDEER is 10 years old—can you believe it? Olive is now a Christmas classic, and this deluxe 10th anniversary edition celebrates the milestone with sparkles galore, flaps to lift, spots to scratch and sniff ... and even a POP-UP grand finale!

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Still looking the perfect gift to put under the tree? Have a look at our other gift guides.

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Friday, December 07, 2007

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The next best thing to a plane ticket, here are some books for the travel bugged…

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THE AFRICA BOOK: A Journey through Every Country in the Continent (Lonely Planet).

From Cape Town’s gleaming shopping arcades to the remote tribes living on Lake Turkana’s shores to the dire realities of war and famine, this is the most comprehensive and beautiful coffee-table book on Africa ever published. Packed with amazing photos, THE AFRICA BOOK also includes stimulating essays, plus facts and figures for each country.

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THE ASIA BOOK: A Journey through Every Country in the Continent (Lonely Planet).

THE ASIA BOOK is a comprehensive exploration of this captivating continent of contrasts, from the tropical beaches of Bali to the frozen slopes of Everest. Hugely ambitious and stunningly beautiful, it covers Southeast Asia, Northeast Asia, the Indian Subcontinent and the Himalayas, Central Asia and the Middle East.

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LONELY PLANET BLUELIST 2008: The World’s Hottest Trends, Destinations, Journeys and Experiences (Lonely Planet).

Want to know where to find the eeriest places to sleep behind bars, or where to view the most volatile volcanoes? The greatest film festivals around the globe? Leading travel authority Lonely Planet compiles all the world’s hottest trends, destinations, journeys and experiences into BLUELIST 2008.

For more info on BLUELIST 2008, visit lonelyplanet.com/bluelist.

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SIGNSPOTTING 2: More Absurd & Amazing Signs from around the World compiled by Doug Lansky (Lonely Planet).

A great stocking stuffer for travel fiends, SIGNSPOTTING 2 is a hilarious collection of inadvertently entertaining (real!) signs. Click here for a peek inside the book.

Also check out the original SIGNSPOTTING.

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PSYCHOGEOGRAPHY by Will Self, illustrated by Ralph Steadman (Bloomsbury UK).

And for the most quirky travel book on the list, PSYCHOGEOGRAPHY is a collaboration between award-winning writer Will Self and legendary gonzo illustrator Ralph Steadman that explores the effects that the physical environment has on the emotions and behaviours of individuals. Will Self went swimming in the Ganges and surfing on a tsunami. On a recent trip to Toronto this Fall, he also walked from the airport to downtown. Yes, walked.

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Still searching the globe for the perfect present? Check out our other Raincoast Gift Guides.

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imageThis weekend, San Francisco is going to get UGLY.

Which is a good thing.

Chronicle Books is proud to co-sponsor the second annual Ugly Con! Ugly Con is, of course, Comic Con for Uglydoll fans. And the fans are a-plenty… last year, the line started forming at 6am. Dolls, drawings, paintings, prints, contests, costumes .... all at Giant Robot SF. The Uglydoll creators also will be there to sign anything Ugly.

If you don’t know what the fuss is all about, check out the Ugly Dolls website as well as Chronicle’s Ugly Dolls stationery line (the fuzzy-covered Hey Ugly! Ice Bat Journal is my favourite!).

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imageHere are some gift ideas for people who love nature, being outdoors, or even just pottering around in the garden…

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THE HUMAN, THE ORCHID, AND THE OCTOPUS: Exploring and Conserving Our Natural World b y Jacques Cousteau and Susan Schiefelbein (Bloomsbury USA).

Ten years after his death, the words of iconic explorer and environmentalist Jacques Cousteau are brought to life in THE HUMAN, THE ORCHID, AND THE OCTOPUS. An environmentalist ahead of his time, Cousteau remarks on the impact of human activity on the world’s oceans and highlights our responsibility to protect the earth.

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BIRD SONGS FROM AROUND THE WORLD by Les Beletsky, with audio from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology (Chronicle Books).

Birders, listen up! BIRD SONGS FROM AROUND THE WORLD not only includes information and illustrations of 200 birds, it also houses built-in digital audio that plays 200 individual bird songs (20 seconds each). This book was immediately a favourite in-house here at Raincoast. ("Hey, is there a Kookaburra in the office?")

If you want to hear what the sounds are like, check out The Macaulay Library bird sounds page.

Also check out the original BIRD SONG: 250 North American Birds in Song.

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THE GARDEN AT NIGHT: Private Views of Public Edens by Linda Rutenberg (Chronicle Books).

Easily ones of the most beautiful coffee table books of the year, THE GARDEN AT NIGHT is not your typical photography book about flowers and plants. Montreal photographer Linda Rutenberg visited 20 public and botanical gardens across North America AT NIGHT (!), and captured hauntingly beautiful portraits of flora surrounded by darkness.

To see some images from the book, visit the author’s website.

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JEKKA’S COMPLETE HERB BOOK: Revised Edition by Jekka McVicar (Raincoast Books).

If you’re more hands-on about the garden, take a look at JEKKA’S COMPLETE HERB BOOK. Crowned the “queen of herbs” by Jamie Oliver, Jekka McVicar includes eveything you need to know about herbs—from history and cultivation, to their many uses.

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For more book suggestions, check out our other Raincoast Gift Guides.

Posted by Siobhan @ 11:48 AM · (0) Comments · Tell a Friend
Wednesday, December 05, 2007

imageIf you you’re looking for the perfect gift for a musician, a music lover, or someone who’s just addicted to Guitar Hero… here are some books that will rock their world.

VAN HALEN: A Visual History 1978-1984 by Neil Zlozower (Chronicle Books).

Let’s face it, you miss the high-kicking, guitar blazing, stadium-shaking, good old days of rock and roll. Oh, and let’s not forget the spandex. VAN HALEN is a photo-rich tribute to the legendary band from their friend and photographer, Neil Zlozower. Click here to look inside the book.

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RUNNIN’ DOWN A DREAM: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers by Tom Petty (Chronicle Books).

This is Tom Petty by Tom Petty. RUNNIN’ DOWN A DREAM is a personal volume that includes hundreds of photographs, many never before published, plus a selection of souvenirs and keepsakes from Petty’s personal archives, Petty’s own personal recollections, new interviews that have never before been published and personal tributes from artists and rock luminaries close to Petty, including Cameron Crowe, Johnny Depp and Stevie Nicks.

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THE JIM MORRISON SCRAPBOOK by James Henke (Chronicle Books).

My favourite feature of THE JIM MORRISON SCRAPBOOK is that it’s an interactive scrapbook: you can remove and examine mementos and personal documents detail Morrison’s life, from handwritten lyrics and poetry to his last will. The book also includes rare photographs from the Morrison estate, exclusive interviews with surviving family and Doors members, plus a 60-minute CD that includes five minutes of unreleased spoken-word poetry from Jim Morrison.

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ELLIOTT SMITH by Autumn de Wilde, with a foreword by Beck Hansen and Chris Walla (Chronicle Books).

ELLIOTT SMITH is a beautiful tribute to the musician, created by his close friend, photographer Autumn de Wilde, and authorized by Smith’s family. It includes a CD of unreleased live acoustic performances, 200 photos and conversations with Smith’s surviving friends, family and fellow musicians such as members of the bands Death Cab for Cutie and Nada Surf. Click here to look inside the book.

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THE ART OF MODERN ROCK MINI #1: A-Z by Dennis King (Chronicle Books).

Think of this as an alphabet book for adults. Adults who like to rock. Filled with the best poster art, THE ART OF MODERN ROCK MINI #1: A-Z includes all the key artists and studios, from Mark Arminski to Alison Zawacki, as well as poster genres and top bands. All the artwork is conveniently arranged from “Anarchy” to “Zombie”. (D is fotr Devil Girl, O if for Octopus, R is for Roller Girl...)

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For more info on all these books—and to enter our Chronicle Music Contest with Exclaim! Magazine—visit raincoast.com/music/

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If none of these books struck a chord with you, check out our other Raincoast Gift Guides.

Posted by Siobhan @ 04:02 PM · (0) Comments · Tell a Friend
Tuesday, December 04, 2007

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THE COUNTRY COOKING OF FRANCE by Anne Willan (Chronicle Books).

This big, beautiful, luscious cookbook will bring a little bit of France into your home. Written by Anne Willan—an award-winning cooking teacher, food writer, and the author of more than 30 cookbooks—this book is winning over the hearts (and stomachs) of everyone who reads it…

* A New York Times Notable Cookbook
* A USA Today Gift Guide pick
* A top cookbook in the December 2007 issue of Bon Appetit

Want to know more?
* Watch a video about the making of this book.
* Try a recipe from the book: Potato cake with cheese and bacon

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CRUST: a book and DVD by Richard Bertinet (Kyle Cathie Ltd).

Richard Bertinet’s last book, DOUGH won the Julia Child Award for First Book, the IACP Best Cookbook of the Year award, a Guild of Food Writers’ award and a James Beard Foundation award.

Now he’s back with CRUST, a guide to making more delicious breads, from sourdough, to croissants, to brioche. CRUST is also packed with stunning photos and a 30-minute DVD that gives additional guidance on techniques as well as showing recipes step-by-step.

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MY LAST SUPPER: 50 Great Chefs and Their Final Meals: Portraits, Interviews, and Recipes by Melanie Dunea (Bloomsbury USA).

If you were to die tomorrow, what would be your last meal? Who would prepare it? Where would it take place? Who would sit with you at the table? This is a game that chefs have been playing amongst themselves for decades. MY LAST SUPPER pairs famous chef’s dream meals with Vanity Fair-style portraits (just wait till you see the photo of Anthony Bourdain...)

* Read the review in The New Yorker.

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NO RESERVATIONS: Around the World on an Empty Stomach by Anthony Bourdain (Bloomsbury USA).

Speaking of Anthony Bourdain… NO RESERVATIONS is Anthony Bourdain’s uncensored journal of his travels for his Travel Channel show, No Reservations. Where can you get good fatty crab in Rangoon? How do you tell a Frenchman his baguette is invading your personal space?

* Listen to Raincoast’s podcasts with Anthony Bourdain (recorded for his previous book, THE NASTY BITS): Part 1, Part 2, Part 3.

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Still hungry for more books? Click here for more Raincoast Gift Guides.

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