If you have passed by our newly established MysteryPeople section, you'll notice a new display: New Crimes. We now have an area for the latest in the latest in mystery and crime fiction. Each week, you can take a look at what's new from gentlemen sleuths to down and dirty criminals.
Category: BookPeople Community
Barry’s Top 40
An impressive list from BookPeople's elder statesman, Barry Baker: I have spent the better part of the last 20 years as a professional book buyer (including used, rare, new and remainder titles). 10 of those years here at BookPeople. I was also a frequent visitor in the 70s to Grok Books on San Antonio Street (and Oat Willies at the front of the building). So I have a pretty fair idea of what constitutes a good read and what doesn't. Here are my personal picks of 40 "good reads" from the last 40 years (and all of them are still in print).
Elizabeth’s Top 40
Elizabeth is our main book buyer and inventory manager. Here's her list: Forty Books - In no particular order.
My favorite 40 books (for now)
My humble addition to the 'favorite 40 books' game we've got going here at BookPeople. Still feel like I'm leaving some big ones out. P.S. Don't forget about the party on Saturday. -Peter
40 books for 40 years
Here's another top 40 list to celebrate our 40th Anniversary. This is from Alison Kothe-Nihlean, the very capable and lovely head of marketing and events at BookPeople: When trying to pick my 40 favorite books, instead of going with "literary merit" (although many of these are considered to have a lot of that), I went with the 40 books that made the biggest impression on my life. I split my list into two groups: the books that have moved me as an adult, and the ones I read as a child that made me who I am. In no particular order...
In honor of our 40th, Our Top 40
In honor of our 40th Anniversary (don't miss our celebration this Saturday!) we're asking our staff to submit their top 40 favorite books. Any genre, any author, good taste, bad taste, it doesn't matter. Just the top 40 books that matter to them, in order of importance. We'll be posting several of these, and our first comes from Brian Contine, a well known contributor to this blog.
Ben Folds/Nick Hornby ‘Lonely Avenue’ CONTEST
Good news for Ben Folds fans...or Nick Hornby fans...or just fans of cross-media collaborations: Alt piano-rocker/song-writer Ben Folds recently collaborated with veteran British novelist Nick Hornby on an album, Lonely Avenue, where Hornby wrote all the lyrics and Folds supplied the music. Wait...writers and musicians...together? How can that be? Luckily, here's a video that explains the whole thing:
The birth of MysteryPeople, our store within a store
In the last three years, BookPeople's mystery section has grown into something special. Our stock as well as our sales have increased-- especially with titles like Reed Farrel Coleman's Moe Prager series, and some you can't find at other stores. Mystery authors like CJ Box and Craig Johnson now make this store a stop on practically every book tour they have. We've attracted more fans of the genre, even from outside the city, to where it feels like we're becoming Austin's de facto mystery bookstore. So we've decided to make it official. On November 7th we're launching our own mystery bookstore within a bookstore, MysteryPeople.
Staff Reviews: Adam Levin’s THE INSTRUCTIONS
Kester’s review of Adam Levin’s The Instructions (from the always dependable McSweeney’s press) is the first of several from our staff. The book has really taken hold here at BookPeople, and to give you a sense of it’s immensity and presence (it’s a real big book), we’ll publish several different perspectives. I know what it’s like to believe a thing that lots of people think is crazy to believe. In my case, it is that there is a God, that that God has a Son, and that that Son died and then, three days later, wasn’t dead anymore. It is the craziest thing that I believe wholeheartedly. I mention this, because it shapes how I come at a book like Adam Levin’s The Instructions. That isn’t to say that you have to be religious or even to believe in God to enjoy it. You don’t. But it made me empathize with Gurion Macabee (a boy who may or may not be the messiah) all the more. This is the story of a boy who struggles to know what it is he’s meant to do and who it is he’s meant to be. A boy who feels a high degree of confidence that he is the messiah, but a willingness to admit that he can’t really know until he knows. You know? It’s that kind of struggle, a knowing unknowing, that make faith the exciting adventure that it is. I’m pretty sure I’m right…but what if I’m wrong? I have to live into the truth of what I believe in order to discover whether it is true, but what if I give my whole life to that truth only to discover it’s a lie? This is the risk of faith. To watch that risk play out in the life and mind of a twelve-year-old boy is a marvelous and sometimes frightening thing.
RJ Rozan Q&A with Hard Word Book Club
OCTOBER 29TH - HARD WORD BOOK CLUB DISCUSSES RJ ROZAN'S ABSENT FRIENDS WITH CALL IN FROM AUTHOR One of the things crime fiction conveys better than any genre is loss. A human being's extinguished existence is what usually sets the plot in motion. Whether a detective questioning those who knew the victim or a hard boiled hero out for revenge, the protagonist tours through a void, seeking tangible answers to give some sense of meaning. SJ Rozan's Absent Friends is a prime example of this.




