Monday, March 24, 2014

Vintage Movie Classics

Here's a pretty neat idea for classic film fans who also like to read. Vintage has taken a few titles that were made into popular Hollywood films back in the day and reissued them with all new cover designs and forewords from film historians and biographers. Sure, it's all about finding new ways to market old books to new audiences but as marketing goes, this idea is a pretty good one.  As of March 25 four titles will be available, with additional Vintage Movie Classics editions of The Ghost and Mrs. Muir and The Bitter Tea of General Yen slated for release in September.  If your favorite channels are TCM and AMC, Vintage Movie Classics might be your new favorite books.

Titles available March 25:

Alice Adams by Booth TarkingtonBack Street by Fannie Hurst
Cimarron by Edna FerberShow Boat by Edna Ferber

Sunday, February 23, 2014

Review: Madam: A Novel of New Orleans


Madam: A Novel of New Orleans
Madam: A Novel of New Orleans by Cari Lynn

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



Before New Orleans's infamous Storyville red light district, there was Venus Alley. And before Josie Arlington, whose Chateau Lobrano d'Arlington was one of the crown jewels of Basin Street in Storyville, there was little Mary Deubler, one of Venus Alley's anonymous crib girls who would someday be one of the most famous of the Storyville madams.

Madam follows Mary's struggles as one of the nameless underclass, fending off her abusive uncle while keeping her brother and sister-in-law fed and with a roof over their heads. Even at this point, she shows remarkable nerve and initiative when she assumes ownership of her own crib on Venus Alley, and again when she seeks employment with the flashy Lulu White, the unchallenged queen of the New Orleans bordellos. Lulu isn't impressed with what she sees in Mary, but Storyville saloon owner Tom Anderson is, and soon enough Mary has a new business partner, a new name, and a new destiny.

Running parallel to Mary's reinvention is that of a young piano player, Ferdinand LaMenthe, who is juggling professional ambitions of his own against his grandmother's expectations of Creole respectability. The name Ferdinand will eventually choose for himself will go on to be legendary in the history of American ragtime.

Featuring a well-researched cast of real-life characters from New Orleans's colorful past, as well as a vintage photograph to open each chapter, Madam breathes some life back into a brief period that has largely been scoured out of New Orleans's official history.

*This review is of an advanced reader copy provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review*



View all my reviews

Thursday, February 6, 2014

I took the 50 Book Pledge!

I signed up to read at least 75 books in 2014 at the 50 Book Pledge.  So far I'm on track to do a lot more, so I'll give it a look later and revise if I think I can break 100 this year.  The site has giveaways and badges you can earn as you meet your challenge, and adding books to your shelves is as easy as searching for the book's title and clicking add on the shelf page.  I'll be adding this challenge onto my challenges page as well.