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We Excuse my absence, the details of which I will not bore you with. Christchurch! How are you doing? For those not aware (which won't be many because most of you are Kiwis according to my Google analytics)...

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PANZ News: Outstanding shortlist announced for PANZ... Outstanding shortlist announced for PANZ Book Design Awards AUCKLAND, 3 May 2010. New Zealand’s exceptional book design talent is showcased in the shortlist announced today for the 2010 Publishers Association...

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Ask BookieMonster a question I thought I'd give you a chance to ask me a question - about pretty much anything I write about! Want to know why I hate Ian McEwan? Want to know something about Trade Me? Want to know why I started...

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Winter, begone! Hello sunshine... I really need to work on my headline writing. Aaaaaanyway, spring will be here tomorrow! Officially, though looking outside at grey skies I am not entirely sure spring knows that it is expected. Traditionally...

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What's BookieMonster Reading? The Scandal of the Season... Oh, but reading has been a hard road recently. Why? I don't really know but I was in one of those "good book" slumps. As in, I couldn't find one to just latch on to and absorb without having to think too...

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What’s BookieMonster Reading? The Scandal of the Season by Sophie Gee

7

Category : Book Reviews, BookieMonster News, Featured, What's BookieMonster Reading?

The Scandal of the SeasonOh, but reading has been a hard road recently. Why? I don’t really know but I was in one of those “good book” slumps. As in, I couldn’t find one to just latch on to and absorb without having to think too hard about it.

Because my brain has been sort of mush. And I have been busy.

But never fear, Bookies, I have plans afoot to provide you with more fantastic writing about books… all to be revealed, soonly. (See, I used “soonly”. This is not a word. But I am a flippertigibbert and I do not have time to come up with real words for you.)

However, The Scandal of the Season – just what I needed, it turns out. This is light without being pointless fluffy drivel. In fact, it’s not really that light but it is good reading. It is page-turning reading for people who have a thing for 18th century literature (that being me, thanks to a brilliant university lecturer who introduced me to thinking about history as people not events and therefore totally knowable through literature).

The Scandal of the Season is about the true life events behind Alexander Pope’s classic society poem The Rape of the Lock. Gee does this fantastic trick of turning the whole standard “18th century shallow society” trope on its head – revealing the people behind the characters and the obvious, but often overlooked, conclusion to that trope – that those people were as much victims of their society as they were perpetrators of and colluders in it.

Did that sentence make sense?

All this book needed were costume pictures, because by god some of the clothes sounded fantastic. Plus they drink chocolate first thing in the morning. Yes please.

Anyway, my Bookie readers, you have also been quiet recently. What are you reading? Are you liking it?

Heartfelt congratulations to Dame Judith Binney

Category : Book Trade News

What can we say, except a HUGE congratulations to the wonderful Dame Judith Binney on her 2010 NZ Post Book of the Year win.

I keep writing sentences and deleting them as seeming unfitting – all I can think of is “bloody good choice”.

:)

BookieMonster’s Father’s Day Gift Generator!

Category : BookieMonster News, Books for Sale, Featured

Father’s Day is almost here! And aren’t Dads just great to shop for? They’re always so easy, right, you know exactly what to get them, there’s always something they need…

Ahem. Sorry, I was lost in some strange parallel universe there for a minute. Dads are awful to shop for. You never know what to get them. You want to get them something that tells them how amazing you think they are, yet doesn’t look like something you made in Standard 3 with macaroni.

So they end up with another BBQ tool set. *sigh*

BookieMonster's BookshopFear not, gentle readers! BookieMonster’s here to save the day with our handydandysuperduper Father’s Day Gift Generator! Just scan the detailed “Dad Descriptors” and choose the nearest fit to your Dad, click on the link, and before you know it it’s Father’s Day and you can present your gift with little-to-no embarrassment.

And, helpfully, we’ll keep running these over the next few days so you can keep checking back for more ideas. :)

Get purchasing! Those perfect presents don’t buy themselves you know!

Win books with BookieMonster! What the Dog Saw or Cannibal Jack or Family Album

7

Category : BookieMonster News, Competitions, Fun Stuff, New Releases

Competition time! Hurrah!

I am going to giveaway my review copies of three wonderful books that I lurrrrved and you will too!

Family AlbumCannibal Jack cover

I wish I could make my photos look purdier. Anyway…

Yep – What the Dog Saw by Malcolm Gladwell, Cannibal Jack by Trevor Bentley aaaaaand Family Album by Penelope Lively! I’m going to give these away individually so you have three chances to win! Does that make sense?

That’s right, three brandspanking new release great reads. So to enter please fill in the form below.  That’s all you have to do!

But if you’re really keen you can also get extra entries by:

  1. Leaving a comment on the blog during the time the competition is running.
  2. Purchasing a book from us on Trade Me – visit http://www.trademe.co.nz/Members/Listings.aspx?member=1998646 to check out our aaawwwesome range of books for sale – new and secondhand! You can tell us what you’ve bought in the form below and every purchase gets you another entry.

Competition is only open to New Zealand residents (or at least, I can only post winnings within New Zealand, sorry), and runs from the time this post is up until midnight Sunday August 29. Judges decision is final and we reserve the right to change details if mistakes have been made.

And we WILL email you if you have won, and make an announcement post, so please check back on Monday 30 August for announcement and look out for an email (coz we aren’t dirty spammers, oh no). :)

So get browsing, get filling in, get commenting…

Your Name (required)

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Yes! I'd love to receive the amazing super-duper BookieMonster monthly email newsletter! Sign me up, baby.

Optional: I have also shown my deep love and appreciation of BookieMonster and purchased the following auctions from Trade Me - so give me an extra entry please! (Please enter auction numbers or book titles purchased.)

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Book Review: What the Dog Saw by Malcolm Gladwell

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Category : Book Reviews, BookieMonster News, New Releases, What's BookieMonster Reading?

What the Dog Saw and other adventures by Malcolm Gladwell, Penguin, RRP $30, ISBN 9780141044804, Available now.

What the Dog SawYou can always count on Malcolm Gladwell to deliver an entertaining and informative read – the one problem is when you gather the shorter essays in a long form like this it starts to look a little repetitive.

But, honestly, when you’re dealing with journalism/essay-writing as good as this that becomes a small distraction. Gladwell just has a great knack for taking odd subjects (the history of the birth control pill, reading a mammogram, the secrets of informercial hawkers, plagiarism) and making them engaging for everyone.

Because what he’s really about here is not the subjects themselves, per se. He’s not a journalist in the traditional reporter sense, or even in the traditional features writer sense. Gladwell is definitely an essayist and what he’s essaying is what goes on inside brains. Not just human brains, we’ve got dog brains here also, but mostly human brains. (“Braaaains”)

Gladwell is a consummate observer of people and interpreter of their words and their actions. And in many of these essays he shows us how the ways in which we think can link the most seemingly disparate things that we do (e.g. interpreting mammograms and interpreting intelligence photos from foreign countries).

And he knows how to serve up a page-turner. This is great writing, fun to read and damn interesting to think about for several weeks afterwards. In the words of the man himself:

Good writing does not succeed or fail on the strength of its ability to persuade. Not the kind you’ll find in this book, anyway. It succeeds or fails on the strength of its ability to engage you, to make you think.

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