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Get Library Books on Your Kindle

I swear I had this idea a year ago…

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We still love books, but an e-reader is much nicer on the arms than Freedom.

I have been waiting very impatiently for this arrangement, but the time has come. You can now borrow ebooks from the Seattle Public Library and King County Library System and read them on your Kindle, according to the Seattle P-I. Yessss. The public library has download instructions on its site, spl.org, (under Library Collections), but here’s the gist:

If you have a library card number, you can download digital ebooks, audio books, video, and music onto your computer or e-reader. All you do is pick a title and click “Send to Kindle.” After 21 days, the download automatically returns to the library, so no late fees, and no slogging up that nasty hill to 5th Avenue to get to SPL. You can also borrow from the Project Gutenberg collection, which includes 15,000 titles (lots of classics, Twain and Shakespeare) that never expire.

According to csmonitor.com, roughly 11,000 community libraries are participating. And apparently, Amazon is just catching up to its competitors. Digital lending service OverDrive, which supports this new deal with Amazon, already offers Nook and Sony Reader owners some access to public libraries.

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Tags: Books & Talks, Seattle Public Library, Amazon, Kindle

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

This Week’s Literary Events: Sex, Drugs and Rock ‘n’ Roll

Need a little vice in your life? We’ve got you covered.

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Rock star name: Nikki Sixx. Real name: Frank Carlton Serafino Ferrana Jr.

Sex What happens when every woman in town stops wanting sex? Find out when Meg Wolitzer reads from her new novel about that unlikely occurrence, The Uncoupling, tonight at 7 at the Seattle Public Library (free).

Drugs Recovering addict Nic Sheff did something even braver than deal with his meth addiction—he let his dad David write a book about it (the bestselling Beautiful Boy). Nic responded with his own memoir, Tweak, and the recovery process continues in his new book for young readers, We All Fall Down: Living with Addiction. Hear him talk on Thursday, April 14 at 7:30pm at Elliott Bay Books (free).

Rock ‘n’ Roll Mötley Crüe bassist Nikki Sixx married two different Playboy bunnies and has multiple Xs in his last name. That’s graduate-level rock star; must be why he’s signing his latest book, This is Gonna Hurt: Music, Photography, and Life Through the Distorted Lens of Nikki Sixx, at the University of Washington Book Store. See him Wednesday, April 13 at 7pm (free with book purchase).

Don’t forget: Caroline Kennedy reads from her new collection of poetry tonight at 7 at Third Place Books, and paleontologist Donald Johanson talks about his discovery of the 3.2-million-year-old “Lucy” fossil tonight and tomorrow at Benaroya Hall.

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Tags: Elliott Bay Book Co, Books & Talks, University Bookstore, Seattle Public Library, Third Place Books

Books & Talks

5 Ways to Celebrate National Poetry Month

Get your verse on with Billy Collins, Henry Rollins and that guy named Neruda.

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Got a problem with poetry? Yeah, Henry Rollins didn’t think so.

Throw on your beanie, beatnik, it’s National Poetry Month. Here are a few choice offerings from around the city:

—Standouts from Port Townsend’s Copper Canyon Press come to Town Hall on Tuesday, April 5 for Always Beginning: A National Poetry Month Reading. The event, featuring Chris Abani, Chase Twichell, Lucia Perillo, and Jean Valentine, benefits the nonprofit publisher; tickets are $25.

—If anyone dares doubt that verse can be masculine, Henry Rollins will beat some spoken-word knowledge into their skull at the Triple Door. Hear the former Black Flag frontman on Wednesday, April 6; tickets are $35.

Billy Collins is that rarest of birds—a poet making a good living off his work. The former U.S. Poet Laureate is back for his second Seattle engagement in five months, this time reading from his brand-new collection of poems at Elliott Bay Books on Wednesday, April 6. This event is free.

—Bring your own genius-level work to the Green Lake Branch of the Seattle Public Library on Saturday, April 9; Copper Canyon cofounder William O’Daly will warm up the crowd with a Pablo Neruda reading (his translation) at 4pm, followed by an open-mic session. Don’t worry, everyone pales next to Neruda.

—No time for live poetry? Stop playing Angry Birds and download the National Poetry Month’s official app, which will deliver some daily culture to your iPhone.

Also this week: Back in 2007, Jackson Holtz had the Barefoot Bandit beat, tracking the movements of Colton Harris-Moore across Washington for the Everett Herald. Hear him discuss his book Fly, Colton, Fly: The True Story of the Barefoot Bandit at Elliott Bay Books on Tuesday, April 5. Earlier that day at the Seattle Mystery Bookshop, Jacqueline Winspear signs her eighth installment in the Maisie Dobbs series, about a post-WWI private investigator, at noon.

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Tags: Elliott Bay Book Co, Poetry, Books & Talks, Seattle Public Library

Books & Talks

Ten Reasons Publishers Say No to Your Book

And other tips on how to get published from local ladies in the know.

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From left: Kerry Colburn and Jennifer Worick will help you publish, not perish.

You’d have thought local authors Kerry Colburn and Jennifer Worick were touting secrets to better hair and eternal life last Thursday, because the sold-out crowd at Hotel 1000 was engrossed. Notebooks out, pens scribbling furiously, like we were taking notes from Moses on the mountain…if Moses already had a two-book deal with Random House for The 10 Commandments: Slab One and Two. Between the two of them, Colburn and Worick have published more than 30 books—including Worick’s bestseller The Worst-Case Scenario Survival Handbook: Dating & Sex and Colburn’s nonfiction titles How to Have Your Second Child First and Good Drinks for Bad Days—in addition to working as editors at Chronicle Books and Running Press, respectively. They’ve been on both sides of the trenches, and have emerged with practical tips for fledgling authors, delivered with a bit of sass and a mom’s encouragement.

“We want you to pull the trigger, rip off the Band-Aid and sell your book,” Worick enthused.

In their three-part publishing seminar, they cover everything from creating a book proposal (“You don’t have to send a whole manuscript”) to self-publishing to understanding advances and royalties (“Stand for nothing less than a 5 percent royalty!”). It was useful stuff, even for someone who’d already started a proposal (my collection of short stories is languishing in an envelope beneath my desk). Thursday’s “The Business of Books: Navigating the World of Publishing” discussion ended with—what else—a top 10 list.

Ten Reasons Publishers Say No to Your Book

1. Too much competition.
2. Too similar to a book that’s already out.
“Avoid going up against the Category Killer—a book that overwhelmingly dominates its genre.”
3. Too small in sales potential.
4. Too narrow in scope.
“We call this ‘magazine article syndrome.’ It’s a story that doesn’t have the legs to run long, like ‘Planning a Wedding When You’re Over 40 and on Jury Duty.’”
5. Not enough author recognition.
“Publishers are looking for authors who are specialists, with an area of expertise and a base of fans and contacts.”
6. Beyond author’s capabilities and/or credentials.
7. Poorly written.
“This is self-explanatory.”
8. Too expensive to produce.
9. Outside our purview.
“In other words, we don’t publish sci-fi/young adult/children’s books/romance/etc.”
10. Not remarkable, surprising, or unputdownable enough.

Fear No. 10? We all do. But it’s a four-letter word this duo doesn’t want to hear. They’ll lead a free, abbreviated version of their publishing talks at Seattle Public Library’s Central Library on Saturday, April 2, from noon–1pm. They’ll also run the same three-part series this April through June ($40 a session/$99 all three); find out more at bizofbooks.wordpress.com.

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Tags: How To, Books & Talks, Seattle Public Library, Publishing

Books & Talks

David Brooks Gets Inside Our Heads at Town Hall

Ponder life’s questions with a New York Times all-star, or check out this week’s other literary events.

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New York Times columnist David Brooks knows why you are the way you are.

If you’ve been plagued by existential questions lately—the “Who am I?” and “Why did I do that?” sort, not “How could Butler only be an 8 seed in the NCAA tourney?”—consider heading to Town Hall tonight, March 21, at 7:30. Writer and social commentator David Brooks has a few things to say on the matter of our existence.

Who he is You know how Sarah Palin uses catchy slogans and TV spots to spread her right-wing message? Brooks is the opposite kind of celebrity conservative. He writes intellectual columns for the New York Times, and even dared to say ‘Barack Obama should run for president’ back in 2006. (And not just because he hoped Obama would crash and burn. Because he actually liked the guy.)

Why he’s talking Back in 2001, Brooks wrote the social study Bobos in Paradise (think Stuff White People Like for the cocktail-party set). Now he’s releasing The Social Animal: The Hidden Sources of Love, Character, and Achievement (March 2011, Random House), which looks at the unconscious and social influences on a fictional American couple. He’ll talk about human nature and success—and why we’re not really in control of our destiny at all. Cheery thought! Tickets ($5) are available at the door starting at 6:30 (cash or check only).

Also this week Music journalist-turned-pickup artist Neil Strauss signs his new book Everyone Loves You When You’re Dead at the University Book Store at 7pm on Tuesday. Sci-fi goddess Ursula K. Le Guin reads her poetry at Seattle Public Library’s Central branch on Wednesday (free event), and Seattle’s Garth Stein, author of The Art of Racing in the Rain, is the featured guest at Thursday’s fundraising dinner Words Matter at the W Hotel, in support of Seattle Arts and Lectures. Tickets are $150.

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Tags: Town Hall, Books & Talks, University Bookstore, Seattle Public Library

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

Entertainment, Inc.

The Downtown Library Is Ready for its Schmooze-Up

Hollywood lights up the Cool House for one high-concept evening. Anyone else want to throw a party?

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Matt Hooper, co-chair of Bullivant’s entertainment group (left), and author-of-the-hour Robert Dugoni mingle under the girders and the stars.

Photo: Trevor Locke, courtesy Bullivant Houser Bailey

By day, the eastern alcove on the tenth public floor of Seattle’s downtown library, aka the Betty Jane Narver Reading Room, is an aerie for people who don’t have a lot of other places to go, Seattle’s loftiest homeless-friendly lounge. Last Friday night it looked more like a scene from The Player. Bullivant Houser Bailey, a multi-city West Coast law firm with an expanding entertainment practice and an imaginative style of hospitality, had rented the space for a high-octane meet-and-mingle between Hollywood hustle and Seattle corporate muscle. APA, the Agency for the Performing Arts, joined in, ferrying up the players on a private jet. Cultural cover was provided by the bestselling local mystery author Robert Dugoni (an attorney himself) reading from his new novel. Classic RKO films beamed on two overhead screens while the president of RKO Pictures schmoozed below, along with reps from the Weinstein, Summit, and Paradigm studios. But the underlying, not-so-ulterior, motive was to enlist local companies in “strategic brand integration partnerships” with movie and TV productions. Forget product placement—that’s so ’90s. Now brands are built into the movie right from the pitch, and vice versa. “Think The Romantics and J.Crew, Mad Men and Banana Republic, or Transformers and Camaros,” read the invitation.

Culture Fiend didn’t overhear any deals getting cut. But it was thrilling and a bit disorienting to see a familiar space work so well for an unexpected use. One guest wondered why the library hadn’t been used as a movie set. Indeed, with its soaring girdered trapezoids and twinkling nighttime cityscape, it seems readymade for a skyline chase scene or futuristic cliffhanger. Perhaps a remake of North by Northwest, or the movie of one of Dugoni’s novels?

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Bullivant’s Erica Krikorian, Connie Sue Martin, and Janet Kim Lin are either checking out the view or catching an overhead flick.
Trevor Locke

The Rem Koolhaas/Josh Ramos-designed library is already enjoying a second career as an all-purpose event venue. “Do you remember the old library?” snorts spokesperson Andra Addison, recalling its dowdy ‘60s predecessor. "You couldn’t get authors to come there." But today’s Cool House hosted 450 private events last year, from computer classes to swank parties and lit-star book readings, plus 49 nonprofit and 384 library-sponsored gatherings. The $160,000 rent the private sponsors paid was a welcome boost in hard times, but just a nick in the 8.5 percent cut in the library’s budget announced Monday. “We’d love to have more parties,” says Addison. “All spaces in the central library can be rented.”

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Tags: Parties, Seattle Public Library, Hollywood

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