Archive for the ‘Speakers’ Category

Chicago Trib likes new book by Kerrytown mystery panel member

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

Bryan Gruley author of “Starvation Lake” got a thumbs up for his newest book “The Hanging Tree” from the cultural critic at the Chicago Tribune. The Tribune review said the book is “even better than Gruley’s “Starvation Lake”".

The critic gave a hat’s off to what she called “Gruley’s appealing new mystery franchise”. Gruley will have to be in top form for the panel he shares with Steve Hamilton, William Kent Krueger and Craig McDonald.

The Kerrytown BookFest this year features more than 30 award winning Michigan authors along with children’s activities, art and book vendors and an Edible Book Contest. The full schedule is available at www. Kerrytownbookfest.org

Michigan Author of the Year on the 2010 Kerrytown Bookfest program

Sunday, August 15th, 2010

The Michigan Center for the Book, Sleeping Bear Press and the Michigan Library Associaton have announced that John Smolens is the 2010 winner of the Michigan Author Award.

The annual award honors a Michigan writer for his or her contributions to literature based on an outstanding published body of work. Read a review of his newest book, “The Anarchist”, at Mittenlit.com. The following information is from the Michigan Center for the Book:

“The reason this is such a unique honor is because it comes from people who are so committed to the written word.” Smolens said. “Where would we be without it?  I know I’d be lost.  Books, stories, language — these are the rarest, most essential gifts. The fact that someone can walk into a public library and take one of my books down from the shelf is all the compensation I’ll ever need.”
 
Kirkus Reviews notes, “Smolens is especially deft at capturing the rhythms of small-town life and the complexity of his ‘ordinary people.’” In January 2005, the Detroit Free Press selected Fire Point as the best book by a Michigan Author in 2004. The Denver Post, in comparing Smolens’ work to Hemingway, notes “Smolens also takes advantage of the Lake Superior area to great effect…. Smolens has done a superlative job of rendering a place and its people realistically.”

Smolens has published five novels, Cold, The Invisible World, Fire Point, Angel’s Head, and Winter by Degrees; and one collection of short stories, My One and Only Bomb Shelter. His new book, entitled The Anarchist, is a historical novel that depicts the William McKinley’s assassination. His short stories and essays have been in various magazines and newspapers, including Redbook, Yankee, Massachusetts Review, Virginia Quarterly Review, Writer’s Digest, Writer’s Market, The Los Angeles Times, and The Boston Globe.

“John Smolens’ books have dramatically illustrated the lives of everyday people in Michigan towns,” said Karren Reish, Michigan Center for the Book coordinator. “In his deft hands, the atmosphere of a cold northern winter comes alive and gives the reader an insight into our great state.”

Smolens, who lives in Marquette, was educated at Boston College, the University of New Hampshire, and the University of Iowa.  Currently, he is a professor of English at Northern Michigan University.

This year’s award will be presented at the Michigan Library Association’s “Yes We Can!” conference at the Grand Traverse Resort and Spa, in Traverse City on Nov. 9-12, 2010.  Tickets are available to hear Smolens speak at the award-presentation luncheon on Friday, Nov. 12.  For more information and to access the conference registration, visit the Michigan Library Association website.

Previous winners of the Michigan Author Award include Dave Dempsey (2009), Tom Stanton (2008), Sarah Stewart (2007), Steve Hamilton (2006), Christopher Paul Curtis (2005), Patricia Polacco (2004), Diane Wakoski (2003), Nicholas Delbanco (2002), Thomas Lynch (2001), Janie Lynn Panagopoulos (2000), Jerry Dennis (1999), Gloria Whelan (1998), Loren Estleman (1997), Elmore Leonard (1996), Janet Kauffman (1995), Nancy Willard (1994), Charles Baxter (1993) and Dan Gerber (1992).

The Michigan Center for the Book, a program of the Library of Michigan and the center’s affiliates, aims to promote an awareness of books, reading, literacy, authors and Michigan’s rich literary heritage.  New affiliates are welcome.  For more information about the Michigan Center for the Book and its programs, visit www.michigan.gov/mcfb

Ann Arbor author’s new book is getting rave reviews

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

Ann Arbor Michigan author Sharon Pomerantz’s debut novel “Rich Boy” is experiencing some lavish praise from all the right places. A recent full-page review in Entertainment Weekly graded it as an A- and the respected critic Carol Fitzgerald, founder and editor, of Bookreporter.com said it reminded her of Herman Wouk’s masterpiece “Marjorie Morningstar”. A review of the book in Bookreporter.com provides an excellent summary of the new novel.

Entertainment Weekly said ”Rich Boy is told with such page-turning skill that its pleasures, if not deep, feel rich indeed”.

Sharon Pomerantz is a fiction writer and a lecturer at the University of Michigan whose stories have appeared in a variety of liteary journals, including Ploughshares, The Missouri Review, Prarie Schooner, The Michigan Quarterly Review, and The Colorado Review. Her work has been widely anthologized and her story “Ghost Knife” was selected for Best American Short Stories 2003 (Houghton Mifflin). In 1996, her story “Shoes” was read as part of the Selected Shorts series at Symphony Space and broadcast on National Public Radio. A graduate of Smith College and the University of Michigan, Sharon is the winner of four Hopwood awards, a Ludwig Vogelstein grant, and fellowships from the Virginia Center for the Arts and New River Dramatists. As a nonfiction writer, she has written for The Chicago Tribune, The Village Voice, Hadassah Magazine, and many others.

One of the first chances readers in Michigan will get to hear Pomerantz will be at the Kerrytown BookFest September 12 in Ann Arbor Michigan. Pomerantz will be on a panel with four other Michigan authors discussing historical fiction. She joins moderator William Whitbeck (“To Account for Murder”); Michigan Notable Book Authors: Donald Lystra (“Season of Water and Ice”) and Steve Amick (“Nothing But a Smile”) and Michigan Author of the Year John Smolens (“The Anarchist”).  Pomerantz will be among good company at Kerrytown joining scores of award winning authors including three National Book Award finalists.

Writing in Bookreporter.com, Fitgerald particularly pointed out that “Rich Boy”  was a book she had been looking for that “envelops readers into a setting and period like “Mad Men”. “Rich Boy” follows protagonist Robert Vishniak, a middle class kid, who becomes part of what was once called New York “high society” with each decade richly layered with historical elements. Readers will find themselves making comparisons to “The Great Gatsby” and Tom Wolfe’s “The Bonfire of Vanities”.

O Magazine in describing the book, said something like “an old fashioned drama about a poor boy who makes good, but feels bad about it”. Don’t we all? And the jacket should win an award unto itself.

Kerrytown author has new book ready for the BookFest

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

If you could come up with a phrase to describe the type of writing mystery authors Bryan Gruley, William Kent Krueger, Steve Hamilton and Elizabeth Kane Buzzelli are writing it would be Up North Noir. Gruley’s newest book “The Hanging Tree” which is pure Up North with all its unusual conventions and the charms which you can only find in small towns has his protagonist Gus Carpenter tossed into a decades-old maelstrom. Gruley will be at the Kerrytown BookFest September 12.

The following review first appeared in the Lansing City Pulse.

Two words are in the back of the mind of every author after the debut novel is published: sophomore slump.

At a book signing and reading last year at Schuler Books & Music in Okemos, mystery author Bryan Gruley was asked by a former co-worker from The Detroit News if the thought ever crossed his mind that he had only one book in him.

“He asked that question very innocently,” Gruley said, “but that very afternoon I had turned in the manuscript for my second book to my editor. We both knew it sucked.”

Gruley who won the prestigious Strand Magazine Critics Award for mystery writing and was nominated for the Edgar Award for his first book “Starvation Lake” did what he had to do: He threw out the second manuscript and started over.

“I had my sophomore slump,” he said, “but you won’t get to see it.”

For readers, that was a great decision. Gruley’s second book, “The Hanging Tree,” is a masterpiece of detective fiction, with the right amount of blind alleys that leave the outcome always in doubt. The author, who is the Chicago bureau chief for The Wall Street Journal, has topped his first book while capturing the essence of a hockey-crazy Michigan small town.

Gruley retained his “Starvation Lake” protagonist, Gus Carpenter, a small town newspaper editor and now amateur detective, who returned to his hometown to regroup after a major league scandal at his former news job.

Gruley said what was missing in the discarded manuscript was “heart,” and he set out to find it by rereading his own book and then two books by noted mystery writer Dennis Lehane (“Gone, Baby, Gone,” “A Drink Before The War”). Gruley, who is also a dedicated amateur hockey player, d i s c o v e r e d from his reading that he had forgotten to tell stories.

In his “real” second book he details the tragic story of Carpenter’s second cousin, Gracie, a hometown girl who leaves for the big city, returns home 20 years later and then, six months later, ends up hanging from a tree. Was it suicide, or was it murder? For Carpenter, who was like a brother to Gracie during high school, solving the mystery becomes a personal mission.

Along with the dramatic tension, Carpenter’s love life is cranked up a bit in this second book, His rekindled relationship with his high school sweetheart, Darlene, also a deputy sheriff, is complicated when her estranged husband, a hockey nemesis of Carpenter, shows up to reclaim his wife.

This isn’t the only new development in Carpenter’s life: A newspaper story he wrote about a proposed new hockey rink in Starvation Lake divides the town and threatens his job.

Although the hockey action takes something of a back seat in his second novel, there’s enough on-ice and off-ice chicanery (and an appearance by the Zamboni) to satiate hardcore fans. But the unraveling of Gracie’s life and her untimely death on the community’s hanging tree is center ice.

Gruley said an actual “Hanging Tree” — covered with twisted shoes, boots and tennis shoes — on U.S. 131 near Kalkaska was the inspiration for the story. He first saw the tree while on assignment for The Wall Street Journal.

Although Carpenter does take one detour downstate to piece together Gracie’s former life, Gruley deftly creates a sense of place of the northern Michigan he knows and loves. Not only does Gruley’s father still have a cottage in the region, but early in his newspaper career Gruley worked at an Antrim County Weekly newspaper. (more…)