Home » 2011 » July (Page 5)

NPR Interviews Maureen Johnson and Meghan Cox Gurdon

It’s very late, so this is very short.

A few days ago, Meghan Cox Gurdon, the Wall Street Journal children’s book critic who authored the article “Darkness Too Visible”  and YA author Maureen Johnson, who originated #YASaves in response, were interviewed by NPR. Nobody changed anybody’s mind, of course, but if you have 45 minutes or so to listen, there is a podcast available for your listening pleasure… or annoyance, depending on your feelings about darkness in YA fiction.

Enjoy!

Gasp…The “H-Word” Appears in the Wall Street Journal!

What can I say? It wasn’t in the title, and maybe it was accidental, but in Friday’s Wall Street Journal, Alexandra Alter, in her article “A Crime Wave in Publishing”, used… the “H-word”. You know the one I mean.

While Ms. Alter’s focus was on crime fiction, apparently that’s too narrow a focus for most publishers, who now throw a whole bucket full of genres under the heading “suspense”. Ms. Alter specifically mentioned Mullholland Press, a new imprint at Little, Brown. Mullholland’s lineup includes a horror novel (gasp!) by the writers of Saw, and is looking for books in a variety of genres, including…

…supernatural thrillers, hardboiled detective fiction, espionage, horror, dystopian thrillers, and high concept adventure fiction.

They’re looking for the next James Patterson, but who knows, maybe they’ll find the next Stephen King. Kudos to Little, Brown and Mulholland Press’ editor John Schoenfelder for having the vision to notice that  “those books” (as an editor from Knopf referred to them in an earlier WSJ article– see my response here) have a hungry audience. And to Ms. Alter, who distinguished horror fiction from other genres, including supernatural fiction.

One day maybe she’ll write a whole article.

New and Improved!

To make things easier for our readers, we’ve made some changes to our blog format for both this blog and the MonsterLibrarian update blog. We now have buttons so you can follow us on Twitter, Facebook, and any other RSS feeders.

We hope you’ll help us out as well. MonsterLibrarian.com is staffed completely by volunteers, and the costs come out of our pocket.  In hopes of covering some of our costs,  we’ve started carrying ads from Google on both blogs, under the Search box on the upper right side of the page. We’ve tried to make them as unobtrusive as possible so they don’t distract you. If you’ve been reading our reviews for awhile, you’ve also probably noticed the “Buy from Amazon” button under the publication information for each review. If you like our site you can either click on one of the ads or, if you’re intrigued enough to buy a book we’ve reviewed,  click on the Buy from Amazon button at any review.

Oh… and look for a new feature, coming soon… I’ll let you all know when, so you can check it out and let us know what you think!