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Books & Talks

Dave Eggers Hosts the What to Read in the Rain Party

Our local writing center is getting national attention.

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Student authors will be on hand to sign books, getting their first taste of delicious fame.

The question and answer are the same: Hmm, what to read in the rain? Make it What to Read in the Rain, an anthology produced by nonprofit 826 Seattle.

The writing and tutoring center will release its second edition of student and adult work on Sunday, with a milk toast to celebrate (in champagne flutes, natch). Dave Eggers, author of A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, will be on hand; he’s the founder of the nationwide 826 chain, and he’s bringing local comic artist David Lasky to the free event.

What to Read in the Rain is placed in hotels across the city, where rain-delayed tourists can read student poetry and fiction (including tales of robotic chickens) in addition to new work by Tom Robbins and local scribes Karen Finneyfronk and Garth Stein.

The party doubles as a thank you from the center to their community for their latest achievement, the 2011 National Arts and Humanities Youth Program Award for stellar after-school programs. Michelle Obama handed out the prize personally in early November to 11 organizations from across the country, but only New York and Seattle had two recipients apiece (shout out to Seattle’s Young Shakespeare Workshop). It’s hard to compete with the Emerald City—especially when our nonprofits offer rocket parking on the roof.

The What to Read in the Rain publication party runs 1–3pm at 826 Seattle on Sunday, Nov 20.

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Tags: Books & Talks, Books, Books & Authors, Family Friendly

Books & Talks

Q&A: Chris Cleave, Author of Little Bee

We talk books, Bin Laden, and cracked-out squirrels.

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“Squirrels on crack and writers on caffeine are both tragic and funny.” — Chris Cleave

London-based author Chris Cleave flies into town this week to talk about his 2009 novel Little Bee, the year’s Seattle Reads pick by Seattle Public Library. Though the Brit’s book topics tend to be heavy—refugees, terrorism—he manages levity with each. To wit: We chatted about squirrels on crack and Osama bin Laden before he arrived.

Last time you were in Seattle, you seemed to really enjoy our coffee culture. Are you looking forward to another caffeine spree this time around?

A few years back when I was living in Brixton, in South London, the neighborhood had a lot of problems with wild-eyed, overconfident squirrels. There was a rumor circulating to the effect that the squirrels had become adept at locating, unearthing and consuming the supplies of crack cocaine judiciously buried in parks and gardens by local users. In truth I’ve no idea how they got that way—maybe it was just an attitude thing—but the squirrels were pretty funny in the way that any hopped-up, three-inch-high herbivore is inherently comic. Anyway, that diminutive, confused, supercharged creature? That was me after my eighth coffee of the day on my last trip to Seattle. I just had no idea how strong you guys make the stuff up there, and I completely overdosed. I wrote a piece about it.

You’ve said Little Bee is about “the horror of being alive in a world where atrocities happen.” What do you hope readers will take away from this work?

The novel is about a refugee and what I learned while researching it—and what I hope people will take away from it—is that our lives here in the West, while often very hard, are rarely impossible. On a planet largely characterized by suffering, we are comparatively lucky. Even when we do not currently have a job, at least we have the right to seek work. Even when we cannot currently afford foreign travel, at least we have the right to hold a passport… These are things we often take for granted… If people take away a second thing from the book, I hope it might be the idea that we are not powerless to help refugees.

Your first book, Incendiary, is a novel-length letter from a grieving mother to Osama bin Laden. Do you think recent events will change the way the book is read?

I try to think how my protagonist, the bereaved mother, would have reacted to the news of bin Laden’s death. The letter she writes to him is an effort to make him understand what he has done in murdering her son… She writes: “I want you to understand what a human boy is from the shape of the hole he leaves behind.” … When dealing with evildoers, death alone does not bring closure. It seems with bin Laden, it was simply not possible to effect a capture—his death was the best available outcome. However, it means there will never be an opportunity to point a high-definition camera at his face while he is asked the two questions the bereaved victims would really like answered: “Why did you do it?” and “Do you truthfully feel no remorse?”

Will your next project tend more toward comedy or drama?

A good book should accommodate both comedy and tragedy. I think life makes us only one promise—that it will break us all—and I think we can make life only one promise in return: that we will not take it personally… If we can wrestle moments of humor from its jaws and laugh in its face, then we come out of the process with more dignity than life does. This, for example, is why squirrels on crack and writers on caffeine are both tragic and funny.

Chris Cleave discusses Little Bee at Seattle Public Library’s Central Library on May 13 at 7pm. He also meets readers at public libraries across the city from May 12–14. For more info, go to spl.lib.wa.us. UPDATED 5/11/11. Cleave will also be at the Sorrento Hotel on May 12, 8:30pm, for Night School.

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Tags: Interview, Books & Talks, Seattle Public Library, Books & Authors

Books & Talks

Dan Savage, Terry Miller Take ‘It Gets Better’ On the Road

The book tour comes home to Seattle tonight.

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I remember hearing the news about Rutgers student Tyler Clementi’s suicide last September—how he jumped from the George Washington Bridge after fellow students streamed video of him in bed with another man. I didn’t know his pain, but it still left me raw. He must have felt so alone.

But you don’t need to feel helpless, says Seattle’s Dan Savage and his partner Terry Miller. That same month, they created a YouTube video titled, simply, “It Gets Better” (see below), in which they told their own stories about coming out and encouraged LGBT youth to stay true to themselves in the face of bullying—because life does indeed “get better.” The video got more than 1 million hits, and counting.

It spawned the It Gets Better Project, with 10,000 video messages of support coming from people around the world, celebrities gay and straight (Tim Gunn, Ellen DeGeneres, Anne Hathaway, Sarah Silverman), politicians, even President Obama. And on March 22, Savage and Miller kicked off a book tour in New York behind a new collection of essays, It Gets Better: Coming Out, Overcoming Bullying and Creating a Life Worth Living. Watch the video below for highlights from the book, which is on sale now. Proceeds go to charities that support LGBT youth.

If you can’t make it to Town Hall tonight (March 29) to hear KUOW reporter Liz Jones interview Savage and Miller about the project, there’s a Portland event scheduled for April 21. Find out more on the Making it Better blog.

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Tags: Books & Authors, Seattle Writer, Dan Savage

Books & Talks

Russell Simmons’s Best Self-Help Quotes

The hip-hop mogul has a new book full of them—here’s a preview.

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Russell Simmons’s secret to a happy life: yoga, meditation, and “staying on your grind.”

Hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons—who went from being a pot dealer in Queens to cofounder of Def Jam Records—isn’t afraid to share his secrets to making it big. Before he reads from his new self-help book, Super Rich: A Guide to Having It All, tomorrow night at Seattle Public Library, get to know some of his best tips to eternal happiness:

I define super rich as the state of needing nothing. We naturally wake up in the morning and decide on what we’re going to give as opposed to what we’re going to get. FOX Detroit

I used to think anxiety and insomnia drove me to success. But it was the stillness that let me be good at anything. When you extend the seconds of stillness, that’s when you’re able to think and learn. Express Night Out

I can say I’m mostly happy. Compared to what? Am I eternally blissful? No. But do I find moments when I’m ecstatic about being alive? Yes! And I have those moments more and more often the more I meditate, practice yoga, and live by these principles. The Aquarian

Some people talk about changing careers, what they need is a change of heart. I want to encourage people to change their heart when they go to work—do a good job, excel. It makes you happy. Seattle P-I

Happy is something that is not based on the outside forces. It’s something from inside. And when you’re calm and you’re in a state of needing nothing, it’s a place of operation and of abundance. CNN.com

Struggle is your great teacher. I’m an older person. I was a drug dealer. I was a gang member and a lot of other things. My evolution has been gradual. The Aquarian

The ideas, if they’re new, ain’t shit til you start to execute them. I’m sitting here with Jinx da Juvy, the rapper. He got shot four times total. Now he’s 24 years old, he’s finishing college, and he’s been through a lot of shit. He’s on his hustle right now, he’s bugging me right now with his new record right this minute. He’s making videos, and he’s in school and he’s here. He didn’t quit. So, how do you make it? You stay on your grind. Rolling Stone

Russell Simmons reads from Super Rich: A Guide to Having It All on Thursday, February 24, at 7pm at Seattle Public Library’s Central Library.

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Tags: advice, Seattle Public Library, Books & Authors, Celebrities in Seattle

Books and Talks

Slugger Gordon Snails it Again

Seattle’s chronicler of creeping critters takes a quick spin in the very slow lane.

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Illustration by Karen Luke Fildes.

The Secret World of Slugs and Snails: Life in the Very Slow Lane by David G. Gordon. Sasquatch Books, $14.95.

Seattle science writer David G. Gordon has made a career of celebrating squishy and crunchy critters most folks only notice when they eat, squash, or try to exterminate them—from oysters and geoducks to spiders, cockroaches, and edible insects. This is a man who’s been invited to Singapore to give a grub-grilling demonstration. Gordon’s latest follows the slimy trail blazed by his popular Field Guide to the Slug. It’s partly a reprise, revisiting the shell-less stars of that trim volume. But Gordon extends his malacological horizons (you try saying that) to shelled snails, both natives and the more familiar European species that were imported for eating and stayed to eat our gardens.

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Because they ravage fewer plantings and have less yuck appeal than slugs, snails haven’t also become Northwest icons. Gordon tries to sex them up here, but theirs is a slow crawl to glory. A quarter of The Secret World is field guide, a “Gastropod Gallery” of species. Its usefulness suffers, however, from limited illustrations—ink sketches by Gordon’s wife, Karen Luke Fildes, none in color. A black-and-white banana slug is like a silent fanfare.

Still, where but in this genial miscellany will you learn that…
• Snails and slugs travel by surfing on their own slime.
• 18th-century pharmacists treated consumption with snail water, whose ingredients also included earthworms and wormwood.
• South Korean researchers recently discovered a tumor-suppressing compound in East African land snails.

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Stop this man before he cooks again?


Taildropper slugs really do; they sacrifice their tails to escape predators.
• Likewise the jumping slugs, which writhe till they hop.
• UC-Santa Cruz students reportedly voted 15-to-1to make their mascot the banana slug rather than sea lion.
• A dash of yeast makes beer traps even more irresistible to slugs.

I’m only surprised Gordon didn’t include more recipes, or note my favorite bit of local malacology: that early German and Italian immigrants used slugs as escargot substitutes (in garlic butter, of course). I’ve been working up the nerve to try that. Perhaps the Invertebrate Chef has another cookbook in the works?

David G. Gordon will read from The Secret World of Snails at
Elliott Bay Book Company, Sat, Jan 8, 2pm
Village Books, Fairhaven/Bellingham, Sun, Jan 23, noon
PNW Flower & Garden Show, Seattle, Sun, Feb 27, 2pm
Sky Nursery. Shoreline, Sat, March 5, 11am
Third Place Books, Lake Forest Park, Thurs, March 10, 7pm

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Tags: Books, Books & Authors, Slugs, Snails

Book Review

Love Burns

Marriage is a refuge in Valerie Trueblood’s new story collection. Or maybe not.

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Say this for Seattle’s Valerie Trueblood: she knows how to sink a hook in the first sentence of the first story in a collection: “When she was twenty, Francie Madden shot and killed her husband Gary. He had joined the Seattle police force six months before, and she shot him with his service revolver.”

Nothing else in Marry or Burn, Trueblood’s new suite of 12 tales about matrimony and its discontents, is quite so stark or violent. Its characters’ relationships with each other, and with the world generally, seem at once fragile and fated. Marriage is a refuge in an unsteady world, but hardly a certain one. A doctor whose lover has just died takes retreats to his old, now his ex-wife’s, country cabin, where the ex’s current boyfriend shows up with another woman. A teenage boy has an undefined breakdown and an uneasy encounter with his school’s basketball coach—the married father of his mother’s new baby. The parents of a woman whose nuptial clock is ticking fret over three prospects proffered by an immigrant matchmaker. They seem like three versions of Mr. Wrong but all turn out, in their very different ways, to be Mr. Right.

That story, “Suitors,” is the only one that wraps up so neatly and reassuringly. Other drift off dreamily or arrive just short of the sort of the illumination prized in lit classes. The Seattle-based Trueblood, the author of one novel (Seven Loves) and a contributing editor for Poetry magazine, deals in fine shadings of memory, motive, and, it sometimes seems, motivelessness. And she’s not afraid to push short-story conventions to explore them. Her tales are dense and elusive, more novelistic sketches than Carveresque miniatures, switching tenses, viewpoints, even protagonists mid-story. Characters and settings range widely, though they’re grounded in a Northwest suspended somewhere between country and city, frontier and cosmopolis—a world Trueblood knows well. One woman realizes she’s reached “that stage between all the good ones being taken and the return of those same men, divorced, like salmon coming back up the river.”

Trueblood’s similes crackle, working like mini-climaxes. “Your mind can rush you like a tackle” sums up one character’s predicament. And another’s: “Who can be sure what is being felt? Love, like so much helium blown into a balloon.

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Tags: Books & Authors

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