Mystery, Sci-Fi, and Cooking Awards Dished Out

May 26, 2011

Mystery, science fiction, and cooking fans have plenty to pore over this month as the Edgars (named after Edgar Allen Poe), the Nebulas, and the James Beard Foundation prizes were distributed to many hardworking authors.  These are all significant awards in their respective categories. Steve Hamilton won Best Novel for The Lock Artist and Chicagoan Sara Paretsky received a Grand Master award for overall achievement.  Connie Willis took the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America’s top prize for Blackout/All Clear, about time-travel lab workers who get stranded in WWII. And lastly, for the food/cooking area, one of my favorites, Andrew Colman won Best Cookbook of the Year for The Country Cooking of Ireland and in the Writing and Literature category Richard Sax took home the goods for “Save the Deli.” (He’s written an excellent cookbook on baking, Classic Home Desserts, that EPL owns.)

Shira S.



CHICAGO LITERARY HALL OF FAME Announces 2010 Inductees

December 4, 2010

The inaugural ceremony for The Chicago Literary Hall of Fame took place on Saturday, November 20, 2010, at Northeastern Illinois University. Six writers, Nelson Algren, Saul Bellow, Gwendolyn Brooks, Lorraine Hansberry, Studs Terkel, and Richard Wright were inducted. Relatives and friends of the honorees accepted the awards. The hall will be housed in the historic Cliff Dwellers Club until it finds a permanent home.

Mary B, Reader’s Services


International Thriller Writers announce awards

September 14, 2010

The fifth annual awards from the International Thriller Writers was announced several weeks ago in NYC. Twist Phelan won for her story ” A Stab in the Heart.”  ( EPL owns a few of her novels, some of which I am currently investigating!) Phelan is an endurance athlete and former trial attorney.

Barbara Vey, an editor/blogger from Publishers Weekly described the banquet for the above mentioned awards. Scroll down this post for the awards for Amazon’s “Worst Reviews.”

Shira S.



Women’s History Month: Baseball Been Very, Very Bad to Her…But It’s Made Amends

March 11, 2010

In another instance of a woman belatedly getting  due credit for her work, the Society for American Baseball Research (SARB) decided to acknowledge Dorothy Jane Mills, right, as co-author with her late husband, Harold Seymour, for a highly influential three-volume history of baseball that she co-wrote and for which he took sole credit. This New York Times feature tells how Mills, 81, fumed for 50 years while her role in writing the book remained unknown.This month, SARB finally righted that wrong when they honored Ms Mills and Mr Seymour as joint recipients of the Henry Chadwick Award, which is given to the sport’s finest researchers. (Mary B., Reader’s Services)


Act Locally, Read Globally

February 14, 2009

mapThree Percent is a website dedicated to news, reviews, and information about contemporary international literature. The site gets its name from the fact that only about 3% of all books published in the United States are works of translation, and only a fraction (0.7%) of those books are literary fiction or poetry. These figures add up to literally a world of lost words and information. As ever-increasing globalization shrinks our world and blurs its borders, it is important to preserve and share in the unique cultures and ideas of other nations, and one of the best ways of doing this is by reading the literature of their peoples. Three Percent has recently announced its annual Longlist and Shortlist nominees for the best translated works of poetry and fiction of 2008. The winners will be announced on February 19th. You can find many of the finalists on our shelves here at the library. So stop by your local branch and read your way around the world.


Read the Book, See the Movie, Watch the Oscars!

February 6, 2009

oscarIt’s Oscar time again.  The 81st Annual Academy Awards will be held in Los Angeles on February 22, 2009. As usual, Hollywood once again went to the bookshelves this year for source material. Many of this year’s nominated films are adapted from books and stage plays, including four of the five films nominated for Best Picture. So as you head off to the theater, cast your ballots, and plan your Oscar parties, why not check out some of the books that started it all? Among the nominees are:

imp_curious_case_of_benjamin_buttonThe Curious Case of Benjamin Button was originally a short story by F. Scott Fitzgerald, written in 1921. It can be found in Fitzgerald’s short story collection. The film’s Oscar nominations include: Best Actor, Best Supporting Actress, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Picture.

 

imp_doubtDoubt was a 2004 off-Broadway play by John Patrick Shanley. The film’s Oscar nominations include: Best Actress, Best Supporting Actor, two Best Supporting Actress nominations, and Best Adapted Screenplay.

 

 

frost-nixon-official-posterFrost/Nixon was also a play, written in 2006 by the British dramatist and screenwriter Peter Morgan. The Film’s Oscar nominations include: Best Actor, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Picture.

 

 

imp_reader_ver2The Reader was a 1995 novel written in German by the writer Bernhard Schlink. It has since been translated into 39 languages, and was a bestseller in Germany and the United States. The film’s Oscar nominations include: Best Actress, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Picture.

 

revroad1

Revolutionary Road was the first novel by Richard Yates. It was a finalist for the  National Book Award in 1962. The film’s Oscar nominations include: Best Supporting Actor.

 

 

mainVikas Swarup is a diplomat and an author. His first novel, 2005’s Q and A was the basis for the film Slumdog Millioniaire. In addition to the film, the book has also been turned into a radio play and a stage adaptation, and has been translated into 36 languages. The film’s Oscar nominations include: Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Picture.


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