Category Archives: Authors

Featuring the Film: How Book Adaptations Get Patrons Reading

For many readers, news that their favorite book will be adapted to film can be thrilling. Films bring the words to life, create new worlds and transform beloved characters into living, breathing flesh and blood. Films make us see these books in new ways, especially when artistic license is taken in condensing and enlivening long books into neat, two-hour packages.

And yet… how often have we heard friends lament, or complain ourselves: the book was better! Sure, films are great, but they don’t offer the same inclusion of the book. Watching a film, the viewer is merely an observer, and doesn’t feel everything the character feels, as you would when reading the book. There are no limits, no restrictions, no computer-generated-images trying to suspend your disbelief.

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Katie Couric Discusses Tattoos with Margot Mifflin, author of Bodies of Subversion

Margot Mifflin

Margot Mifflin joined Katie Couric and tattoo artist Stephanie Tamez to chat about the growing popularity of tattoos among American women. Read More »

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Scoreboard, Baby, by Ken Armstrong and Nick Perry, a YALSA Top-Pick

Scoreboard, Baby, by Ken Armstrong and Nick Perry

One librarian on the selection committee called it: “incredibly compelling, fascinating, and disturbing…one of — if not the — best books I read while serving on committee.” Read More »

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Christina Baker Kline’s Orphan Train Packs in Crowds at Folsom

NYT bestseller Christina Baker Kline and librarian Regina Maduell

Serendipity met good planning this February, when Christina Baker Kline visited the Folsom Public Library to speak about her New York Times bestselling novel. Read More »

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Yuma Rallies around The Blue Tattoo and Margot Mifflin

The Blue Tattoo, by Margot Mifflin

This February, the town of Yuma, AZ, united around this year’s One Book Yuma community read selection. Read More »

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Camarillo Library to Welcome Jaime Ford

Jaime Ford’s Song’s of Willow Frost was this year’s Community Read selection for Camarillo Library, located in California. Camarillo was a role model for nearby cities when it adapted “One City, One Book”; a program that encourages all members of the community to join together in reading and discussing one novel.

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New Director Named for Film Adaptation Garth Stein’s Art of Racing in the Rain

The Art of Racing in the Rain, by Garth Stein

Garth Stein’s New York Times Bestseller, Art of Racing in the Rain is moving from page to the big screen, with Thomas Bezucha signed on to direct the film.

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Ruth Ozeki’s A Tale for the Time Being found Inspiration through Destruction

Bridging the gap between cultures is a recurring theme within Ruth Ozeki’s latest novel A Tale for the Time Being. But even as she finished her first draft for the novel, she felt an emptiness that was mirrored in her fictional characters.

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Lisa Genova’s Still Alice set to Film in February, Starring Julianne Moore and Kristen Stewart

Lisa Genova’s Still Alice was a new York Times bestseller and has been translated in 25 languages. As such, it is no surprise to see Hollywood planning a film adaptation – to begin production next month

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Best Selling Travel Writer, Andrew McCarthy, Shares Tips and Insight – Visiting Hawaii!

For Andrew McCarthy, author of The Longest Way Home Honolulu, Hawaii is near and dear to his heart. As a longtime resident, Andrew’s knowledge for all things local is highlighted as part of the “Intelligent Travel” feature of this week’s National Geographic.

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  • Garth Stein: A SUDDEN LIGHT