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Food Week Author Spotlight – Julia Child

Tuesday, November 20th, 2012

by Pat L. (PitterPat)

 

 

 

Julia Child inspired many Americans to try new cooking techniques over her many years on TV. Julia didn’t learn to cook until she was in her 30’s. She became interested in cooking after marrying Paul Child. In 1948 they moved to France, where Paul worked for the United States Information Agency. Julia fell in love with French food immediately. She attended the famous Le Cordon Bleu cooking school and started teaching other American women how to cook French dishes. In the early 1950’s she started writing a cookbook with 2 friends. That book later became “Mastering the Art of French Cooking, volumes one and two”.

 

 

Decades later she worked with her great-nephew, Alex Prud’homme to write “My Life in France”. It was published in 2006, 2 years after Julia died. This is a wonderful book told in Julia’s voice about the time the Childs spent in France. She describes in wonderful detail special meals they were served, the apartment they lived in, and the French people. Cooking and teaching became Julia’s passion and you can feel it through this book. You also get a glimpse into Julia and Paul’s marriage. They were truly partners and soul mates.

 

 

 

Another book that will give you more insight into Julia is “As Always, Julia: The Letters of Julia Child and Avis DeVoto” by Joan Reardon. Avis Devoto is the person who took Julia’s cookbook manuscript to publishers in the United States. Their letters reveal how much work Julia spent in perfecting each recipe that she wanted published. They also talked about politics and personal situations. Some of it I had a hard time relating to because Avis came from a life that involved hired help and lots of cocktail parties. I felt she wasn’t really in touch with the average housewife of the 1950’s. But again you see Julia’s passion in her letters about the cookbook manuscript.

 

 

 

 

If you have ever seen “Mastering the Art of French Cooking”, you know that the recipes are extremely long and detailed. Julia wanted the books to teach cooks techniques not just a list of ingredients and simple cooking directions. After reading the two books about Julia, I revisited a copy of “Mastering” and had a new appreciation for how the recipes were written. I realized that Julia wanted to be in my kitchen helping me cook. She wanted everyone to enjoy the process of cooking.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even if you don’t consider yourself a big fan of Julia Child, I highly recommend these books. You may also walk away thinking about what are you passionate about in life.

Bon Appétit!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Medieval London – A Guest Blog by Jeri Westerson

Tuesday, November 13th, 2012

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jeri Westerson is one of our very favorite authors here on the PBS Blog. She writes medieval mysteries with an enigmatic, flawed, sexy, and very different protagonist. His name is Crispin Guest and he’s a disgraced knight turned detective on the mean streets of fourteenth century London. Her latest book, Blood Lance was released in October.

 

Blood Lance is the read along book this month in the Historical Fiction Discussion Forum here at PaperBackSwap. She will be joining us there for a Q&A session tomorrow, 11/14. Come join us! Here is a direct link to the Forum LINK

 

 

Fog, a constant drizzle, gray. The miserable cold and dank of London conjures in our minds shadowy figures of Jack the Ripper or the scurrilous deeds of Mr. Hyde. But go back further before street lamps, before the Victorians cast their gloomy sway over the city. A hundred, two hundred, six hundred years before London and Westminster melded together, and you have descended into the shadowy realm of fourteenth century London where my medieval detective dwells.

 

Some cities are made for crime. Chicago, Los Angeles, New York. But I would add London. There’s too much atmosphere, too much history to leave it out. Add in the violence of the medieval mindset and you’ve really got something.

 

Of course, the streets and narrow lanes of the medieval mayhem I love so well are long gone. London was devastated by fires and simply by the whims of Newer, Better, Bigger as time marched on. The medieval London of my darkest imaginings no longer exists. A few foundations, a few churches, but the rest is lost to the name of Progress. Maps serve to give me the claustrophobic feel of constricted alleys and a puzzle of lanes. In fact, one can lay these maps on the Google Earth version of the present day London and nearly match some of it exactly. Even some of the names remain the same. My fictional detective, Crispin Guest, a disgraced knight turned detective and down on his luck, frequents a tavern to forget his troubles, which is located on Gutter Lane…a street that still exists by that name. I love that!

 

 

But there are still a few locations that can renew your sense of time and place. One obvious structure is the Tower of London. The outer walls and the White Tower within are relatively the same, sans the murky moat that used to surround it, and walking under the arches and sharp teeth of the portcullises you can get a true sense of its medieval origins, if you can ignore the gift shop signs and colorfully dressed tourists. It began life as the castle of William the Conqueror and as a residence of each monarch after him until digs in Westminster were built. Only later did it become the dreaded place of imprisonment for London’s elite.

 

I could name so many places that no longer exist or have been changed so radically from its Victorian counterpart that it is almost not worth the mention. London’s city walls, for instance—the square mile that delineated ancient London—have been obliterated by “new” buildings from the Georgian and Victorian periods and our modern time, and it is only with a helpful handheld guide that you can find its remnants. But a walk into a few structures might bring the medieval back to mind. The Temple Church of the Knights Templar, St. Bartholomew the Great, the Guildhall. Then there is the wonderfully intact Westminster Hall, the great hall that was part of the medieval Westminster Palace, whose footprint is now covered by the Parliament buildings. And, of course, Westminster Abbey, which got a brush up of remodeling in Crispin’s day in the fourteenth century. But remember, those are in what was the city of Westminster, not the London of old.

 

It’s a good thing I can visit medieval London in my imagination. I can well see the crooked, narrow lanes, the towering two and three-story shops and houses precariously leaning into the street. Running gutters wending their way down muddy avenues. Smoke from countless hearths curling along slate and tile roofs. Geese and sheep being herded down from the countryside to the markets. Horses pulling carts. Merchants calling their wares with their carved wordless signs hanging above their heads. The sights, the smells, the sounds.

 

 

And then, deep in the shadows, a dagger flashes and a body falls to the mud. That’s my kind of place.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jeri Westerson writes the Crispin Guest Medieval Noir series. Her latest is BLOOD LANCE, set in London and on London Bridge. Find book discussion guides and an exciting series book trailer on her website www.JeriWesterson.com.

 

 

 

Thank you Jeri! You are the Best!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Banned Book Week – Guest Blog by Author Jeri Westerson

Monday, October 1st, 2012

 

Jeri Westerson is one of our very favorite authors here on the PBS Blog. She writes medieval mysteries with an enigmatic, flawed, sexy, and very different protagonist. His name is Crispin Guest and he’s a disgraced knight turned detective on the mean streets of fourteenth century London. Her latest book, Blood Lance is due out in October.

 

Banned Books by Jeri Westerson

Banned books got me my first book blurb, and I didn’t even have a contract yet.

Let me explain.

I was on my way to my first mystery fan convention, the kind of place I had hoped to someday be on panels once I was a published author. I had just signed with my agent and he was going to be there and suggested I go, too, to schmooze with editors at some of the parties. That sounded like a plan to me. But I also had my own agenda. I was going to talk myself up to as many published authors as I could so I could get a pre-contract set of blurbs to show to prospective publishers. I thought a few well-chosen words from established authors would help editors make that much-needed decision to sign me up.

And surprisingly, it started on the plane ride to the conference (that would ultimately end up in Madison, Wisconsin). I was switching planes in San Francisco. I was wearing a shirt that proclaimed loudly “I Read Banned Books!” Well, sitting there with this billboard on my chest caught the attention of an author who was going to the conference and ended up as my seat mate. We got to chatting and before the end of the flight, award-winning author Cornelia Read had offered to blurb my book. I was off and running.

One more author had given me a blurb at the conference and we had some promising schmoozing with a few editors that led to my agent shipping the manuscript—blurbs and all—to a few publishers. Ultimately, it was St. Martin’s who made the offer and we are ready to release the fifth book in the series together.

And just what was that marvelous blurb that Cornelia gave my first medieval mystery? Here it is:  “Jeri Westerson’s Veil of Lies is a great read, through and through. Her finely wrought portrait of gritty Medieval London is imbued with great wit and poignancy, establishing Crispin Guest as a knight to remember.”

Cornelia is still a fan, and I’ve added such authors as Julia Spencer-Fleming, John Lescroart, Rhys Bowen, and William Kent Krueger to the Crispin blurb list. And there’s more to love with the release of the fifth book in the series, BLOOD LANCE.

If it wasn’t for banned books, where would I be now?

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You can read more about Jeri’s books (and see all the blurbs) as well as book discussion guides and the series book trailer on her website at www.JeriWesterson.com

Author Spotlight – Jane Austen

Thursday, September 13th, 2012

Author Spotlight Shines on Jane Austen

By Mirah W. (mwelday)

 

 

“I can listen no longer in silence. I must speak to you by such means as are within my reach. You pierce my soul. I am half agony, half hope.”  I swear, I think those are some of the best words in literature.  I mean, dang, Jane!  How long did it take you to come up with that?  Did it just roll off your quill or did you craft for hours how Captain Wentworth would declare his love to Anne?  However it happened, it’s spectacular and it’s purely Jane.

This author spotlight post is pure indulgence on my part.  I love Jane Austen. I’ve read her books multiple times and I could talk about her books all day.  Mayhaps you think I’m crazy because classics are boring.  Oh, my dear reader, don’t pierce my soul!  Jane Austen is timeless.  I said in a previous post if I had to pick someone, living or dead, to eat dinner with I’d want to have Jane sitting at my table.  No doubt Jane and I would talk into the wee hours about life, love, family, society.  She would ‘get me’, I know it.  And perhaps she’d read my mind and read aloud some of her favorite passages from her novels.  I often have wondered what parts she liked best…when Darcy dismisses Elizabeth at the first dance when they meet, when Lady Catherine spews her ‘shades of Pemberley’ nastiness or perhaps when Mr. Tilney and Miss Moreland walk together and talk of books at Beechen Cliff. It’s all amazing and bears the question: where did this creative genius come from?

Jane Austen was born in 1775 to Reverend George and Cassandra Austen at Steventon Rectory.  Jane’s father encouraged education for his daughters and Jane and her sister Cassandra were sent to boarding school when Jane was just eight years old.  Jane kept journals with poems, short stories and plays.  Before 1796 Jane penned Elinor and Marianne, which would later become Sense and Sensibility, her first published work in 1811. And by 1799 Jane completed her first draft of First Impressions, which would later be published as Pride and Prejudice (1813).  In 1800 Jane’s father retired from the clergy and the family left Steventon to live in Bath.  After her father’s death in 1805 Jane became more dedicated to her writing.  Her mother and sister took on more chores and duties so Jane could write freely and her brother began to get her works published. Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice received positive reviews and were followed by the publishing of Mansfield Park and Emma.  In 1816 Jane’s health began to deteriorate but she continued to write in an effort to complete works she’d already begun.  The next year her brother Henry and sister Cassandra took her to get medical treatment but Jane was very ill and sadly passed away on July 18, 1817 when she was only 42 years old.  After her death Henry and Cassandra saw that her final completed works, Northanger Abbey and Persuasion, were published.  It wasn’t until after her death Henry made it known Jane Austen had written the six novels, whose author had previously been anonymous.

Jane Austen was a woman ahead of her time.  She forged ahead with her writing at a time when women were meant to be demure and bend to wills of their fathers or husbands.  Jane’s love life didn’t have the happy ending most of her female characters experience. It is widely believed she loved Tom Lefroy but was kept from marrying him because of his family’s disapproval.  Her other romantic tie was to Harris Bigg-Wither.  Jane actually received and accepted an offer of marriage from childhood friend Harris but later declined because she was not truly in love with him.  Both relationships are mentioned briefly to family members in letters written by Jane herself.

Jane’s novels are like manna for me.  Having a bad day, read some Jane.  Feeling like life is kind of crappy, read some Jane. Need just a little pick-me-up, read some Jane and call me in the morning. And I don’t even have to read the entire novel, sometimes I can just read my favorite parts, like the letter from Wentworth to Anne I quoted at the beginning of this post.  Maybe I’m biased by being married to a sailor, but Persuasion is my favorite.   I mean, really, how could even the most cold-hearted sod read that and not feel a little flutter of love?  Impossible, I say.

Jane expresses love, hate, friendship and pride in a way that is incomparable.  She puts the truths of society and humanity into words that can’t be ignored.  Take this little gem from Emma:  ‘Vanity working on a weak head, produces every sort of mischief.’  Preach it, Jane!  I think themes about vanity and pride are in all of Jane’s novels.  How often do we discount others, even ourselves, because of pride or vanity?  How many opportunities do we miss because we think we’re too good or not good enough to deserve the chances?  Pride and vanity were interfering with people’s happiness in the days of Jane Austen and it’s still happening today.

Another common theme in Jane’s novels is being true to self.  I think of Edward Ferrars in Sense and Sensibility who wants a quiet life in spite of his mother’s plan for public greatness.  In a conversation with the Dashwoods he provides these words of wisdom: “I wish, as well as every body else, to be perfectly happy; but like every body else, it must be in my own way.”  Bravo, Jane! Jane, a woman who didn’t live the way society dictated she should, eloquently reminds us all we need to be true to ourselves in order to find our happiness.

I daresay Jane’s novels are just as relevant today as they were when they were first published.  Think your family troubles are dragging you down?  Read Mansfield Park…now that family has issues.  Think your love life is complicated?  Try walking in Colonel Brandon’s boots…he has had it rough.  The point is we’re not alone.  Jane Austen observed life, her life and the lives of those around her, and documented life and all its complications in the pages of her novels.  Her novels serve as proof we are not the only ones who stumble, make mistakes, succeed and find love in the most unexpected places.  In my opinion, dear reader, being timeless is the mark of a classic.  And no one is as classic as Jane.

 

 

 

       

 

 

        

 

 

 

Book Lover’s Week – Guest Post from Author Jess Lourey

Wednesday, August 8th, 2012

In celebration of Book Lover’s Week, a guest post from one of our very favorite authors, Jess Lourey!

For the Love of Books by Jess Lourey

 

 

Let’s be honest. None of us would be at this site, reading this blog, if we didn’t love books. I mean feel-like-you’re-losing-a-friend-when-you-turn-to-the-last-page-of-an-amazing-book, usually have more books on your to-be-read pile than items on your grocery list, know that the book will always be better than the movie (except, possibly, with the exception of Princess Bride) LOVE books. Admit it. This describes you. It also describes me.

 

I love book so much that I decided to write them. I started with mysteries because, frankly, Janet Evanovich wasn’t writing fast enough. I’ve been kind enough to receive starred reviews from Library Journal and Booklist for my series, the latter writing of my latest, November Hunt, “It’s hard to make people laugh while they’re on the edge of their seats, but Lourey pulls it off.” Writing mysteries is a blast, and my eighth one in the Murder-by-Month series, December Dread, comes out this October.

 

Somewhere in the midst of writing these mysteries, and reading every book that crossed my path, I had this thought: what if I could actually enter a book? I mean honest-to-goodness cross swords with Porthos, or go diving with Captain Nemo, or play ball with Scout and Jem, or build a raft with Huck Finn? WHAT IF?!? From that question grew the first in my new young adult series, called The Toadhouse Trilogy: Book One.

Here’s a description:

Aine (pronounced “Aw-nee”) believes herself to be a regular teenager in 1930s Alabama, but when a blue-eyed monster named Biblos attacks, she discovers that the reclusive woman raising her isn’t really her grandmother, that fairies are real, and that she’s been living inside a book for the past five years. With her blind brother, Spenser, she flees the pages of the novel she’s called home, one terrifying step ahead of Biblos’ black magic. Her only chance at survival lies in beating him to the three objects that he desires more than life.

As she undertakes her strange and dangerous odyssey, Aine must choose between a family she doesn’t remember and her growing attraction to a mysterious young man named Gilgamesh. Only through treacherous adventures into The Time Machine, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, A Tale of Two Cities, and the epic Indian saga The Ramayana will she learn her true heritage and restore the balance of the worlds… if she can stay alive.

 

Pretty exciting, yes? I sure felt thrilled to write it, and I hope you enjoy reading it.

 

Click for a high-res book cover

 

To learn more about author Jess Lourey please visit her websites: www.jesslourey.com/toadhouse and www.jesslourey.com

And stay tuned to the PBS Blog for an Author Interview with Jess about her new book.

 

Rest In Peace Maeve Binchy

Tuesday, July 31st, 2012

(May, 28 1940 – July, 30 2012)

 

My mother hoped I would meet a nice doctor or barrister or accountant who would marry me and take me to live in what is now called Fashionable Dublin Four. But she felt that this was a vain hope. I was a bit loud to make a nice professional wife, and anyway, I was too keen on spending my holidays in far flung places to meet any of these people. The future leaders of society did not holiday on the decks of cheap boats, or work in kibbutzim in Israel or mind children as camp counsellors in the United States. She abandoned this hope on my behalf and got great value out of my escapades in foreign parts. I wrote marvellous long rambling letters home from these trips, editing out the bits they didn’t need to know, bits about falling in love with highly unsuitable foreigners. In fact my parents were so impressed with these eager letters from abroad they got them typed and sent them to a newspaper and that’s how I became a writer.

 – From Maeve Binchy’s Website,  www.maevebinchy.com

 

Would any of us know as much as we do about Ireland if it weren’t for this amazing author? Her first novel, Light a Penny Candle was published in 1982 and became a best seller.  It was rejected five times by publishers. She went on to publish many more books and short stories and sold 40 million books worldwide.

 

         

 

         

 

       

 


Due for release in October 2012

 

 

 

Author Spotlight – Andrew Gross

Friday, July 20th, 2012

One of our very favorite authors here at the PBS Blog is Andrew Gross.
In August 2001, Andrew Gross was kind enough to agree to an interview with Diane G for us.
And now with his newest book release, 15 Seconds: A Novel, he is coming to Georgia to sign books just for us PBSers! (Well not really, he is on a book signing tour for other people too!)

 

By Diane G. (icesk8tr)

For those of you who enjoyed the Author interview with Andrew Gross that was run on the blog on August 11, 2011, you could have a chance to meet him and get a signed copy of his new book titled “15 Seconds”. I live in the Atlanta area, and he has never come here for a book signing, and I am so excited that he will finally be here!! Maybe he will be in an area near you!

His new novel is the story of how a life can be destroyed in just an instant! I can’t wait to get a copy of this book and read it! The description of the book is as follows:  Henry Steadman is a successful Florida plastic surgeon on his way to deliver a keynote address at a conference when his world falls apart. Stopped by the police for a minor traffic violation, the situation escalates and he is pulled from his vehicle, handcuffed, and told he is under arrest. Several other police cars arrive and the questioning turns scary, but after it subsides, and Henry is about to move on, the officer is suddenly killed in his car and there is only one suspect: the very person he was about to arrest not ten minutes before. Henry! When a second friend turns up dead, Henry realizes he’s being elaborately framed. But in a chilling twist, the stakes grow even darker, and he is unable to go to the police to clear his name.

http://www.andrewgrossbooks.com/15seconds.htm

I know I will be there to meet him in Atlanta, anyone joining me?

July 22, 2012
Atlanta area
3:00pm Eagle Eye Bookshop
2076 N. Decatur Rd.
Decatur GA.

 

So, who wants to go to a book signing on Sunday? We will be at Eagle Eye Bookshop about 2:30pm, if anyone in the Atlanta area wants to meet up there. We will be the people with the PaperBackSwap totes!

 

 

 

 

We are giving away an autographed copy of Eyes Wide Open by Andrew Gross to a member who comments here on the Blog.

A winner will be picked at random. Good Luck! and hope to see you on Sunday!