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05.07.2008 11:17 am

Meeting Michael Chabon and more

Post-Dispatch Book Editor

Sue Dittmar goes to as many author events as she can. A mom living in St. Charles County (she’s also trained as a librarian), Sue also runs several book reading groups. She offers this amusing eyewitness report from Michael Chabon’s recent visit: 

On Saturday May 3 Michael Chabon was at the St. Louis County Library Headquarters. I had been looking forward to the appearance since spotting the listing in the Left Bank Books monthly calendar. I noted the doors opened at 6:00 pm and that meant (to me) a lot of people were expected. When I arrived, I thought I had the wrong date or screwed something up. There were hardly any cars in the parking lot! I went in and found there were few people already in the front rows but nothing like I had expected. I guess I was early or something because by the time Donn Marsh stepped up to the
microphone the place was pretty full.

I don’t know why but I thought Michael Chabon (Shay-bon) was 6 foot 4 and muscular. I sort of inferred that from the publicity picture you see on the back of his books. Well, he isn’t. But that isn’t to say he is a shrinking violet. Chabon stepped up to the microphone and told us he was royally sick of reading the beginning of his book. He opened “The Yiddish Policemen’s Union”  to the middle and began to read about his hardboiled and lackluster detective Meyer Landsman.

We were transported to an Alaska that was cold, dark and seemingly without hope or good food. Chabon’s book is full of ironic details and puns, insider jokes and outside ones too. You actually have to read some of the sections out loud in order to understand what is so funny. The tone Chabon used was of a noir film voiceover and it
totally fit. His voice brought to life the outlandishness of the whole
situation!
I got the feeling during the questions that Chabon wasn’t totally
comfortable talking about himself or his work. He would listen to the question and then talk for a while  -  maybe answering the question, maybe not.
One question was about poorly written nonfiction and what his advice would be to the struggling person. Answer: get better. His favorite author is Raymond Chandler. As Chabon read “Policemen’s Union”  you could hear the Chandler influence. He also has been working on scripts with Scott Rudin. I guess Chabon is more comfortable meeting people one on one because when I went
through the signing line, he was a very charming person and seemed to be grateful readers came to see him.

 I plan on reading this book, but probably when a book group has it for a selection.

On Tuesday May 6 I went to the monthly meeting of the Sisters in Crime book group, Make Mine Mystery. We had local author Ryan Jones talking about his first book, “Datashark.”  We gather at Main Street Books in St. Charles.
Anyone is welcome to come and enjoy the evening. If you are computer literate you ought to take note of this book. Jones presents a situation where a normal human being is put in a very extraordinary situation. He paints a picture of government computers being hacked everyday by people inside and outside the United States. What would happen if someone decided to use your computer to blow up an electrical plant or cause your cell phone
to trigger a bomb? According to Jones, these things could possibly happen.

This is an exciting ride but I will admit it gets a little confusing and
dense after a while. Now I like computers and what they have done for me but do I really need to know the intricate workings of so and so agency or what computers a hacker uses to break into a database? I also had to keep a character crib sheet. My attention did wander a lot but he did have some cool action sequences.
Until the next author arrives….

Sue Dittmar
So many books, so little time.

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6 comments

Comments are closed.

Great review and observations on the author. Sounds as though she has good people skills.

Prudy

— Prudy Seibert
3:20 pm May 7th, 2008

You’ve taken us to the event with you, and now I’m off to read more of Chabon’s work — thanks for the reminder about a good author.

— Mary Garrett
11:40 am May 8th, 2008

Datashark is a from a vanity press here in St. Louis that charges a reading fee for your novel (No serious press would do this) and then a 2.50 a page charge to “edit” the book for publication. This press really degrades the hard working authors in the area that get published by finding legitimate book publishers.

This also illustrates how vanity presses have deluted the pool of local writers. The few remaining bookstores like Main Street Books should do a better job of one, idenifying serious local writers, and two, discouraging, for their own credibility as a bookstore, self-published writers from appearing in their stores.

The name of the press is Neshui Publications and it is used by several “local” professors to self-publish their books to keep tenure.

Please do not encourage this sort of dialogue in your book blog, Ms. Henderson. Otherwise, you also, will continue to lose credibility.

Nancy Lyons

— Nancy Lyons
8:11 am May 9th, 2008

Happy to see your blog. Good one, as always, you make a book sound interesting and we want to read it.

— marcella
1:35 pm May 9th, 2008

In response to Nancy: I am told that Neshui Publishing has gone out of business. I do believe that the “Datashark” book is self-published, but that is a growing field. And yes, it’s a sticky, complex area. Years ago there was a clear line between traditional publishing and self-publishing. Now it’s not so clear. (Also, this note on the book is far from being laudatory.)
No, I wouldn’t want this Web area to be only about self-published books. But many St. Louisans are interested in self-publishing, so maybe they need to hear about the pitfalls and the rewards, if any. Also, do book buyers recognize the difference between self-published and not? I.e. if the book is available in the bookstore, do buyers always know what’s what?

— Jane Henderson
2:18 pm May 9th, 2008

I guess your opinion and questions on self-publishing explains a question I had, why the Post does reviews of self-published books when other major newspapers have a policy against it.

I don’t agree with this at all. I personally feel self-publishing is a costly exercise in vanity and belongs in the business section, not the book section. There are simply too many quality presses throughout America that are no longer acknowledged in the press.

It degrades the quality of even a newspaper book section to consider self-published authors on the same level with serious authors who compete with thousands of manuscripts to get their book placed.

Also, it is very easy to find out if a book is self-published. It’s a simple exercise in clicks on google.

You should do your homework, set a policy against self-published books, and improve the quality of your book section.

I personally would much rather see articles on how major publishers,
literary presses, small and large, select their lists of books for publication than still another local author going through Publish America for their over blown techno legal thriller or coffee table history book.
Okay! I’m off my soapy box!

— Nancy Lyons
4:15 am May 10th, 2008