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Book Blog Home | March, 2005 Archives

Another Harry Potter Record
The next book in the Harry Potter series is due out July 16, 2005 and it has already set a new record. Scholastic has announced a record first printing of 10.8 million copies for Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. Harry Potter also set the previous record with a 6.8 million first printing for Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. The Associated Press reports that bookstores are already planning their traditional midnight parties to mark the launch of the new Harry Potter book.

Posted on March 31, 2005
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Find the Latest Shopping Trends

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Pamela Anderson to Showcase Her Bookish Assets
Fox is moving ahead with the new Pamela Anderson sitcom set to debut in April, 2005. The show, called Stacked, centers around former party girl Skyler Dayton (played by Pam) who wanders into a bookstore called The Stacks to look for advice on how to shed her hard-living ways and string of bad boyfriends. The shop's owner thinks she's really superficial, but his brother and co-owner sees past her exterior to the sensitive girl within the sweater and offers her a job selling books (clearly the brother has all the marketing know-how in this family). Now, before you start sniping at us, consider that Christopher Lloyd (Taxi, Back to the Future) has joined the cast and Steven Levitan (Just Shoot Me and Jeffrey Richman (Wings, Frasier) are executive producing. The word is that the writing will be smart and funny. And, if the promo shots from the network are any indication, Ms. Anderson will be selling copies of The Da Vinci Code while wearing Daisy Duke shorts and high heels, which could do wonders for the "Sexiness" factor of independent bookstores.

Posted on March 30, 2005
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Mary Cheney Lands Book Deal
Mary Matalin's new conservative book imprint at Simon and Schuster called Threshold is off to a good start: Matalin has just inked a deal with Vice President Dick Cheney's daughter, Mary Cheney, according to Publisher's Weekly. So what will Ms. Cheney write about? Ms. Cheney will address what it was like to have her sexuality become a focal point of the 2004 presidential campaign and give a behind the scenes look at campaigning. The release date is scheduled in May, 2006. Because Threshold will be a very conservative imprint, it's going to be interesting to see how Ms. Cheney addresses the issue of her being gay and in a committed relationship. Sounds like a bestseller to us, on both sides of the aisle.

Posted on March 29, 2005
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Publishers Put Christian Spin on Chick Lit
MSNBC.com reports that Christian chick lit is a hot market. Christian readers are eagerly buying up the titles that combine Bridget Jones styled single women stories with Christian values. Joan Marlow Golan of Harlequin Publishing told the Today Show how the Christian chick lit is different from the rest. "In the Christian version, it would also be, 'What is God's purpose for me?' The purpose-driven life, that's what they are looking for. 'How do I live authentically in the kind of world we live in?'" said Golan. MSNBC.com also provided an excerpt of the Christian chick lit novel, What a Girl Wants by Kristin Billerbeck.

Posted on March 28, 2005
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Hugo Shortlist is Announced
The Hugo (also known as the Science Fiction Achievement Awards) shortlist has been announced. The nominations for Best Novel are: The Algebraist by Iain M. Banks (Orbit), Iron Council by China Miéville (Del Rey), Iron Sunrise by Charles Stross (Ace), Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell by Susanna Clarke (Bloomsbury) and River of Gods by Ian McDonald (Simon & Schuster). You can see the entire list of nominations in all categories here. The early rumors are that it will be hard to beat Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell.

Posted on March 28, 2005
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Japanese Reading Books on Cell Phones
Will people really read books on cell phones? At first you wouldn't think so, but in Japan people are happily reading on their cell phones thanks to some new technology. Quality displays and fast flipping software allow readers to quickly move text forward in a nonfiction book or novel. MSNBC.com explains:
Several mobile Web sites offer hundreds of novels ? classics, best sellers and some works written especially for the medium. It takes some getting used to. Only a few lines pop up at a time because the phone screen is about half the size of a business card. But improvements in the quality of liquid-crystal displays and features such as automatic page-flipping, or scrolling, make the endeavor far more enjoyable than you'd imagine.
The cell phone book option may soon be available to U.S. readers as well. Random House is already making agreements with a San Francisco company called VOCEL to provide cell-phone readers with access to text from their language study aides and game strategy guides.

Posted on March 25, 2005
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300 Iraq War Books Published So Far
An article on USA Today points out that total count of books published about Iraq has broken to 300 mark. The article mentions a few of the books that have already been bestsellers like Chain of Command: The Road from 9/11 to Abu Ghraib by Seymour Hersh, Rick Bragg's I am a Soldier, Too: The Jessica Lynch Story and Plan of Attack by Bob Woodward. It also mentions a few Iraq War books that will be on the bookshelf soon: Shane Comes Home by Rinker Buck (William Morrow); McCoy's Marines: Darkside to Baghdad by John Koopman (Zenith) and The Gift of Valor (Broadway) by Michael M. Phillips.

Posted on March 24, 2005
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Silver Lining For Fired CBS Producer
Editor and Publisher reports on a silver lining for fired CBS producer, Mary Mapes. Mapes has landed a high six-figure book deal with St. Martin's Press to tell her side of the Rathergate scandal. The book is tenatively titled--appropriately enough--The Other Side of the Story. St. Martin's said that Mapes "will chronicle what really happened at CBS and reveal the corporate, political and ideological agendas that threaten the integrity of journalists and the news." Ms. Mapes was given a pink slip by the CBS brass on January 10th after an independent panel found that the network had rushed the expose about President Bush's Texas Air National Guard Service without first verifying the authenticity of the infamous "Bush Memo." Ms. Mapes stands by the CBS story and says the documents were not forged. It will be interesting to hear her discuss exactly how that memo landed at CBS.

Posted on March 24, 2005
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Ben Affleck to Direct Film Version of Gone Baby Gone
Ben Affleck is set to make his feature film directing debut for Touchstone Pictures, according to a Walt Disney Company spokesman. He will write and direct the film adaptation of Dennis Lehane's novel, Gone, Baby, Gone. Affleck won an Oscar for co-writing Good Will Hunting with Matt Damon. Lehane's last film adapation was the critically-acclaimed Mystic River, which was directed by Clint Eastwood. Affleck's acting career has certainly had its ups and downs lately and he could really use a hit. Well, we know he can write, so it sounds good to us.

Posted on March 23, 2005
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Da Vinci Code Controversy Continues
Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, a high-ranking bishop for the Catholic Church, has called the Da Vinci Code, a thriller novel by author Dan Brown, "rotten food" and "a sack full of lies against the church". But the BBC reports that Monsignor Jose Maria Pinheiro -- nominated to be bishop of Sao Paulo by Pope John Paul II two weeks ago -- said Cardinal Bertone's views on the best-seller were "personal" and not official church views. In the novel Jesus is married to Mary Magdalene -- which conflicts with the story provided by the Catholic Church. The thriller also portrays the Catholic Church as having hidden this fact and others to diminish women's role in the Church. Readers obviously welcome the conspiracy as the book has sold millions of copies. It also being made into a film starring Tom Hanks as the lead character.

Posted on March 22, 2005
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Mary Matalin to Head New Simon and Schuster Imprint
Mary Matalin, Republican political strategist and wife of Democratic political strategist James Carville has been tapped to head the new--as yet unnamed--conservative book imprint at Simon and Schuster, which will begins publishing in 2006.
"It's the absolute nexus of what I love to do," Matalin told The Associated Press on Tuesday. "I think we're on the threshold of a whole new way of looking at politics and policy and there's something vital about getting those ideas down in book form."

Matalin said she is already working on acquisitions for the new imprint and expects to announce some titles "within weeks." She will not be editing books "line by line," but will provide "conceptual editing" ? suggestions on how to express ideas and broader concepts.
Both conservative and liberal political books have been selling like crazy, but the question is: will the appetite for these kinds of books continue over the next few years? We're thinking yes.

Posted on March 22, 2005
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Wachowski Brothers to Film V for Vendetta
The Wachowski Brothers and Joel Silver, the creators and producer of the Matrix trilogy, have launched production on the action thriller V For Vendetta, starring Natalie Portman, James Purefoy and Stephen Re in Berlin, Germany. Produced by Joel Silver, Andy Wachowski and Larry Wachowski, V For Vendetta is directed by James McTeigue, who served as the First Assistant Director on the Matrix trilogy. Set against the futuristic landscape of totalitarian Britain, V For Vendetta tells the story of a mild-mannered young woman named Evey (Natalie Portman) who is rescued from a life-and-death situation by a masked vigilante (James Purefoy) known only as "V." V ignites a revolution when he detonates two London landmarks and takes over the government-controlled airwaves, urging his fellow citizens to rise up against tyranny and oppression. As Evey uncovers the truth about V's mysterious background, she also discovers the truth about herself -- and emerges as his unlikely ally in the culmination of his plot to bring freedom and justice back to a society fraught with cruelty and corruption. The screenplay by Andy Wachowski and Larry Wachowski is based on graphic novel V For Vendetta (by Alan Moore and illustrator David Lloyd) which was originally published by DC Comics as a ten-part series in 1988.

Posted on March 21, 2005
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Miramax Employees the Last to Know
The future of Miramax Books and its authors has been in limbo during the acrimonious breakup between Miramax's Weinstein brothers and Disney. The Miramax film library will stay with Disney, and it was thought that Miramax Books, including its unpublished authors, would be absorbed into Disney's Hyperion book publishing group. But new rumors say that the Weinsteins want to form their own book imprint, with Simon and Schuster editor at large Rob Weisbach at the helm. Page Six reports on the unhappiness that currently pervades the offices of Miramax Books. Apparently the employees were the last to know.
Miramaxers--or what's left of them--are fuming. "We have no idea what's going on," said one staffer in the book department. "We had no idea Jonathan Burnham was leaving or that Harvey and Bob [Weinstein] wanted to start another book company until we read it in The Post. No one at the company is bothering to tell anyone what's going on. And Hyperion hasn't contacted any of us or the authors."
The word is that several employees aren't waiting to find out what's going on, and are bailing out to other jobs. Let's hope they get it sorted out soon.

Posted on March 21, 2005
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Andre Norton Dead at 93
Legendary fantasy and science fiction author Andre Norton died Friday night at her home of congestive heart failure at the age of 93. She the first woman to be a SFWA Grand Master and to be inducted in the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame. She received Skylark, Balrog, and World Fantasy awards, and was the first woman to win the Gandalf Grand Master of Fantasy award. Her last e novel, Three Hands for Scorpio (Tor) will be released in April. You can read the SFWA's obituary here. She will be greatly missed.

Posted on March 20, 2005
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Pablo Picasso's Poetry
A collection of Pablo Picasso's Surrealist poetry can now be found in The Burial of the Count of Orgaz & Other Poems, coedited by Jerome Rothenberg and Pierre Joris. Like his artwork Picasso's poems were experimental and energetic. A short excerpt of one of Picasso's poems reads: "orange blossom jasmine cabinet perfumed with pine scent little sugar cube stuck sentry-like on point of bayonet drawn from his gaze and bleeding honey from his fingers on the dove's wings burning at lake bottom in the skillet of his eyes shows up exactly at the happy hour with its flower needle pin prick poised to touch the sea's snout blue bull wingèd incandescent spread out at the ocean's rim." In an article about the collection of Picasso's poetry the Christian Science Monitor writes, "The writings are unlikely to remake Picasso's image into that of a poet, at least in the conventional sense. His poems are not deliberate constructions of meaning, but rather rippling Surrealist wordplay."

Posted on March 18, 2005
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Joss Whedon to Write and Direct Wonder Woman Feature
It's official: the comic book heroine Wonder Woman is coming to the silver screen. And, in the best directing news we've heard in a long time, Joss Whedon is directing and writing the feature. Whedon, writer and creator of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, Firefly and the upcoming feature film Serenity, said:
"Wonder Woman is the most iconic female heroine of our time, but in a way, no one has met her yet," Whedon said in a statement. "What I love most about icons is finding out what's behind them, exploring the price of their power. When Joel and I began discussing the character, I realized there is a woman behind the legend who is very fascinating, very uncompromising and in her own way almost vulnerable. She's someone who doesn't belong in this world, and since everyone I know feels that way about themselves, the character clicked for me."
Of course, the big question is: who will play Wonder Woman? After Elektra bombed, we're thinking Jennifer Garner is a non-starter. Other actresses rumored in the Blogosphere to be up for the part are Kim Basinger, Jessica Biehl, Charisma Carpenter, Sarah Michelle Gellar and Jaime King.

Posted on March 17, 2005
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Black Market Books in China
The New York Times has a fascinating piece on the emerging book industry in China. Although technically, selling non-government approved fiction is illegal, China mostly turns a blind eye to the industry. ISBN numbers are illegal, so there's a hopping black market trade in those. Copyright infringement is rampant, much to the annoyance of Western publishers. The populace has a huge appetite for American fiction and nonfiction.
When it comes to exporting culture, not goods, America enjoys a ballooning trade surplus with China. Of the estimated 12,000 translations published here in 2003, nearly half were of American books, a ratio consistent over the past five years. Try naming more than a handful of books by Chinese authors published in America in that time.

Lauren Wein, the associate rights director for Grove Atlantic, says she has been surprised at the range of titles the Chinese have bought from Grove, including The Hungry Gene, about obesity, and a book by the experimental gay writer Dennis Cooper. But for the most part, "China wants the heavy hitters, like Sex and the City and Cold Mountain." After all, she says, "They still have On the Road to publish."


Posted on March 16, 2005
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Donut Consumption Defies Diet Logic
10 billion donuts are consumed in the United States each year despite their non-appearance on the food pyramid and in major diet guidelines. Why? People like the taste and can't resist them. But there is more to donuts than just the tase. Sally Levitt Steinberg, author of the new donut reference, The Donut Book: The Whole Story in Words, Pictures & Outrageous Tales, recently told USA Today in an interview just why donuts are so appealing. Sally said:
The answer is not in their taste; it's about their shape. The circle is so universal, and the doughnut is very appealing physically and metaphorically. Of course, there are doughnuts that are not shaped in circles, and fritters are really doughnuts, but we don't categorize them like doughnuts. The doughnut is in a class by itself; it transcends mere food appeal.


Posted on March 15, 2005
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Harry Frankfurt on The Daily Show: No B.S.
Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at Princeton University and eminent philosopher Harry Frankfurt blew the lid off The Daily Show's record for most number of swear words uttered in a half-hour segement last night. The brainy prof has a new book out from Princeton University Press entitled, On Bullsh**. It was a funny segment; Jon Stewart has quite a few serious authors on his show who good-naturedly go along with the show's fake news format for the joy of being questioned by the sharp Stewart and the inherent coolness factor bestowed on those who are guests. Professor Frankfurt thinks that BS (our polite euphemism for the title of his book) is pervasive in our society, and that it's different from lying. BS, the professor argues, is actually worse than lying, because the liar at least knows what the truth is. The BS-artist, on the other hand, has no regard for the truth at all. Stewart equated that to the torrent of political spin the public hears now, and the professor had to agree that we're drowning in it. That naughty Professor Frankfurt should sell many books; who can resist showing off their intellectual chops and pepper their conversation with the word "bullsh**" at the same time?

Posted on March 15, 2005
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Catherine Crier Writes About Peterson Case
ReganBooks, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, has published A Deadly Game: The Untold Story of the Scott Peterson Investigation, by journalist, former judge, and legal analyst Catherine Crier with Cole Thompson. The host of Court TV's Catherine Crier Live, Crier has covered the case since the disappearance of Laci Peterson in late December 2002. The book is already ranked #11 on Amazon.com. "A Deadly Game is the definitive account of this complex and disturbing case," said Judith Regan, President and Publisher of ReganBooks. "Catherine Crier's reporting goes far deeper than all previous journalistic treatments, offering countless new revelations into both Scott Peterson and the investigation that brought him to justice."

Posted on March 14, 2005
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Peter Pan Flies Again
The Book Standard reports that Peter Pan is about to fly again--with a new author. It was announced at the London Book Fair that award-winning children's author Geraldine McCaughrean has been given the go-ahead to write the authorized sequel to Peter Pan. The copyright to the book is owned by the trustees of Great Ormond Street Children's Hospital, who launched a search to find the perfect author to take over the series. Ms. McCaughrean has won the Whitbread Children's Book Award three times, most recently for Not the End of the World (Oxford University Press). She has written more than 130 books and plays. Ms. McCaughrean has one chapter and a synopsis written, and says she'll be finished by the end of 2005. Of course, everyone is curious to know the plot. Ms. Caughrean says that the story will be set in the 1930s and would have themes of exploration and dressing up-?"on the grounds that a child, when dressing up, becomes someone else in a way we lose in adulthood."

Posted on March 14, 2005
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Name Neil Gaiman's Cruise Ship
Bestselling author Neil Gaiman is auctioning off for charity the chance to name a cruise ship in his next book, Anansi Boys (William Morrow), which is due out in September, 2005. The auction is on Ebay, and proceeds benefit the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, the non-profit organization which specializes in the defense of First Amendment related cases on behalf of comics authors and retailers. The CBLDF is one of Neil's favorite charities, so that makes sense. But why auction off the rights to name a fictional cruise ship, you might ask? The author's explanation:
"I've got to name a currently unnamed cruise ship in Anansi Boys. I have no idea what to call it, and, a couple of days ago, realised that my utter lack of inspiration could do good things for the CBLDF. If you wish, you can bid to have the ship named after you, your loved one, your dog, or even your favourite word."
So, there you have it. The auction ends March 18th, so unsheath your credit card and enter the fray. But please give the mysterious ship a good name.

Posted on March 13, 2005
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William Joyce and the Robots
Bestselling children's author William Joyce collaborated with director Chris Wedge of Ice Age fame to create a new world populated entirely by robots for the new animated feature film, Robots, which is garnering good reviews. Robin Williams supplies the voice of Fender, the sidekick to the star robot named Rodney who tries to stop a dastardly plot to replace all the aging robots with shiny new ones. Williams improvised many of his lines and steals any scene he is in. In a recent interview, Joyce shared his thoughts about which character in the film are most like him:
I think that I?m a little bit like Mr. Bigweld the guy who made up the whole city because I had to make up and invent so much of what was in the movie and in this world. And then, I?m a lot like the little character called the Wonderbot, who is always trying to get in the middle of things and help things out and make things work, and he keeps getting beat up, and smacked around, and bashed in, and smushed, and he keeps coming back.

I?m a little like Rodney Copperbottom, the hero of the movie, because Rodney comes from a small town and goes to a big city because it?s his dream to be a great inventor. And I came from a small town, and I went to the big city, Los Angeles and New York, so that I could write books and make up stories, and do movies.
Robots is in theaters now.

Posted on March 12, 2005
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Cranium Moves Into Book Publishing
Writenews.com reports that Little, Brown Books for Young Readers and Cranium, creators of the popular Cranium games, have team up for a line of books for children. The program will start in September 2005 with The Cranium Big Book of Outrageous Fun. Some of the games and puzzles in the new book include: "Hold the Mold," which invites kids to check out the grossest stuff in their fridge and make scientific observations; a mini-Cranium Conga guessing game; purple Cranium clay; 100 mini game cards; a sand timer; a sign in book to discover fun facts about family and friends; and many other activities to inspire children's imaginations.

Posted on March 10, 2005
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A Greenlight For Horton Hears a Who
It looks like moviegoers are in for more Dr. Suess. 20th Century Fox inked a deal with Audrey Geisel, widow of Theodor Geisel, the creator of Dr. Seuss. The film will be animated, which should elicit a sigh of relief from anyone who saw the ghastly live action film, The Cat in the Hat. We believe that the best way to enjoy Dr. Suess is to read the books, though.

Posted on March 10, 2005
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I am Pencil Wins Awards
Children's book author Sam Swope is winning award for his book, I am Pencil (Henry Holt). I am Pencil recently won a Books for a Better Life Award and a Christopher Award. After Swope gave a workshop to a third-grade class in Queens he was so enchanted that he "adopted" the class for three years and taught them to write stories and poems. The class included twenty-eight students and almost all were new Americans. His class included students fom twenty-one countries and Swope was drawn deep into their real and imaginary lives, their problems, hopes, and fears. I Am a Pencil tells the story of his years with this diverse group of students.

Posted on March 7, 2005
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Jennifer Aniston to Star in Wanted
The Book Standard reports that Jennifer Aniston has signed to star with Oscar-winner Meryl Streep in the film adaptation of the novel Wanted by Kim Wozencraft (St. Martin's Press). The story revolves around a Texas female cop goes to prison after being framed for drug trafficking. She then teams up with her hippie cellmate in a plot to escape. Plan B (Aniston's production company with estranged husband Brad Pitt) will produce, with Sheldon Turner set to write the screenplay. Jennifer Aniston and Meryl Streep in a prison-break movie. Works for us.

Posted on March 7, 2005
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Woody Harrelson Offers Organic Living Advice
Woody Harrelson, an Oscar-nominated actor who is also know to love raw-food, yoga and oxygen bars, has written a book advising people about how to live an organic lifestyle. The book is called, How To Go Further: A Guide to Simple Organic Living. The book is based on a documentary film about a tour Woody Harrelson took with his friends, a yoga instructor and vegetarian chef, in a bus powered by hempseed oil.

Posted on March 5, 2005
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Lose Weight Like Oprah Does
Everyone has seen how fabulous Oprah looks after her weight loss and the man who started it all is fitness trainer and all-around nice guy Bob Greene. Now his latest book, Bob Greene's Total Body Makeover: An Accelerated Program of Exercise and Nutrition for Maximum Results in Minimum Time (Simon & Schuster), is selling like gangbusters. Greene appeared on the Oprah Winfrey Show on Valentine's Day, and teamed up with McDonald's to promote healthy eating. Through April, McDonald's is offering a coupon to get 60% Greene's book by ordering it through his website. The coupon and a fitness brochure are available at McDonald's restaurants now. Greene's new program takes 12 weeks, and covers the physcial aspects of eating and exercising, but also covers the psychological aspects of dieting. He tells Amazon.com:
There's no doubt that Total Body Makeover is a more aggressive approach. I want to push the reader and challenge their capabilities. I want the participant to achieve results more quickly and avoid the loss of motivation that sometimes occurs when one loses weight via exercise and eating in moderation. My programs are often compared to programs that use dieting or restrictive eating as their focus. You really can't make this comparison since, in my opinion, you can't get a "total body makeover" by dieting alone. By dieting alone, not only are you avoiding the health, fitness and aesthetic benefits that exercise provides, you also set yourself up for failure since your metabolism slows in direct proportion to the amount of calories that you cut out.


Posted on March 5, 2005
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Authors Team up for Tsunami Book
Some bestselling authors have contributed to a new book, called New Beginnings, that will aid victims of the Tsunami that struck Southeast Asia. The the book includes first chapters of 16 authors' forthcoming books. Authors in the book include Stephen King, Helen Fielding, Margaret Atwood, Scott Turow, Maeve Binchy and Ian McEwan. Project director Jonny Geller told the BBC, "To glimpse the opening chapter of your favourite author's new work before it is published will be an unprecedented experience for their fans." The release of the book coincides with World Book Day. All proceeds from the sale of the book will go to the Indian Ocean tsunami earthquake charities.

Posted on March 3, 2005
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Winners of Name Ann Coulter's Next Book Contest Announced
The Washington Post reports on the results of the Center for American Progress' "Name Ann Coulter's Next Book" Contest. The winner is Ryan Sniatacki, 26, who submitted: Roosevelt: Wheelchair-Riding, America-Hating Terrorist. Here's a few of the Honorable Mentions: Help: I'm Out of Liberal People, Places and Organizations to Hate, Democracy: The Liberal Plot to Feed Your Children to the Poor, and Ann: Doesn't Eat, Shoots, and Never Leaves. Never let it be said that Ms. Coulter has no sense of humor. She responded to the Post by email with her own suggestions: It Takes a Village to Raise a Kid With A.D.H.D., Rage Issues, and an Eating Disorder, Their Eyes Were Watching God and Banning Him From Public Schools, The Dan Rather Code and He's Just Not That Into Jews: The George Soros Story (yikes!). Somehow, we don't think her publisher is going to go for that last one.

Posted on March 2, 2005
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Jason Alexander Writes Children's Book
Jason Alexander will be publishing a new picture book called Dad, Are You the Tooth Fairy? (Scholastic) in May of this year. Writenews.com reports that the book is based on a conversation Alexander had with his son, Gabriel Apparently, Gabriel asked Jason Alexander a tricky Tooth Fairy question. Alexander said, "This story is an example of the magic that can happen when parents are able to communicate positively with their children," said Mr. Alexander. "My son wanted the truth, but he clearly didn't want something precious taken away from him. I was happily able to give him both, in a story that both conveyed a magical tale, but also demonstrated my love for him. Ultimately, I believe if you care for the hearts of your children, their heads will be just fine."

Posted on March 1, 2005
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Pulp Fiction for Stephen King
Stephen King has agreed to write the lead title for Winterfall LLC's 2006 Hard Case Crime line. The new line of pulp fiction paperback crime novels features cool retro/noir covers by such artists as Robert McGinnis, who did the posters for the original Sean Connery James Bond movies. King's contribution to the series will be entitled The Colorado Kid, and tells the story of two veteran newspapermen and their investigation into the mysterious death of a man on an island off the coast of Maine. Other authors who are featured in the line are Lawrence Block, Max Allan Collins, Ed McBain, Donald E. Westlake, Erle Stanley Gardner and Donald Hamilton.

Posted on March 1, 2005
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