New books to hit the spot
TOUCHDOWN is a weekly selection of outstanding new titles: books either anticipated or surprising, just out of the carton! Follow the links for more information, to purchase these books or to have them put aside for you.
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22 May 2015
Credit in the Straight World by Brannavan Gnanalingam $32.00
A satirical account of a small Canterbury town through the twentieth and twenty-first centuries and the (mis)fortunes of Frank Tolland and the finance company he founds, as told by Frank's mute brother.
>> An interview with the author.
>> Kicking off the playlist.
One Life: My mother's story by Kate Grenville $30.00
"Nance was a week short of her sixth birthday when she and Frank were roused out of bed in the dark and lifted into the buggy, squashed in with bedding, the cooking pots rattling around in the back, and her mother shouting back towards the house: Goodbye, Rothsay, I hope I never see you again!"
When Kate Grenville's mother died she left behind many fragments of memoir. These were the starting point for One Life, the story of a woman whose life spanned a century of tumult and change. In many ways Nance's story echoes that of many mothers and grandmothers, for whom the spectacular shifts of the twentieth century offered a path to new freedoms and choices. In other ways Nance was exceptional. In an era when women were expected to have no ambitions beyond the domestic, she ran successful businesses as a registered pharmacist, laid the bricks for the family home, and discovered her husband's secret life as a revolutionary.
>> The author talks about the book about her mother.
The End of the Story by Lydia Davis $30.00
Long out of print, Davis' only novel concerns a narrator attempting to arrange her memories of her affair with a much younger man into a novel but beginning to suspect that, due to the elusiveness of memory and the limitations of her understanding, what she thought she knew about her own past is really a sort of fiction.
>> Lydia Davis with Ben Marcus.
The Freedom Maze by Delia Sherman $22.00
When Sophie enters her grandmother's maze one sweltering Louisiana summer in 1960, she does not expect to emerge 100 years in the past, on to her ancestors' sugar plantation, mistaken for a slave. Sophie is about to learn a historical lesson she'll never forget.
Winner of the Andre Norton Award for Young Adult Science Fiction and Fantasy.
The People: The rise and fall of the working class by Selina Todd $29.99
"The People is a book we badly need. It offers a clear, compelling, broadly persuasive narrative of a century of British history as seen through working-class eyes and from a working-class perspective. Todd avoids hectoring, but by the end one is left suitably angry: the people have been screwed. She is a subtle as well as powerful historian." - David Kynaston, Observer
"Compelling." - Owen Jones (author of The Establishment)
"The most interesting academic work on British politics this year." - Independent
Dot and Anton by Erich Kästner $22.00
Another wonderfully child-centric book from the author of the splentastic Emil and the Detectives.
Dot loves play-acting, dressing up her pet dachshund and making up words like 'splentastic'. Her best friend is Anton, who lives in a little apartment and looks after his mother. They share a secret: every night, when their parents think they are asleep, they sell matches and shoelaces on the streets of Berlin with Dot's grumpy governess. But why? The answer involve a villain called 'Robert the Devil', a club-wielding maid, a wobbly tooth, a pair of silver shoes and a policeman dancing the tango.
Nelson Historical Society Journal 7:6 (2014) $25.00
Includes Jim McAloon on Nelson and the First World War, and articles on the Tapawera military camp, WWI nurses, and on the exploration of Upper Takaka by James Mackay Jr in the 1850s.
Kew on a Plate: Recipes, horticulture and heritage by Raymond Blanc $65.00
Raymond Blanc was invited to create a special kitchen garden at Kew to showcase the heritage and botany of the chosen plants as well as uncover their growing and cooking secrets. This book explores how these plants were discovered, brought back by intrepid plant hunters, how they flourished and how they spread to become part of our everyday meals. The Kew gardeners offer their tips and expertise in growing this produce, from carrots to potatoes, rhubarb and gooseberries, apples and peas. Interwoven with these stories are Blanc's detailed tasting notes and recipes.
>> BBCTV. >> The pages in the book are large enough for Blanc's signature.
Voices from the Napoleonic Wars: From Waterloo to Salamanca, 14 eyewitness accounts of a soldier's life in the early 1800s edited by Jon F. Lewis $29.99
Tactical Urbanism: Short-term action for long-term change by Mike Lydon and Anthony Garcia $45.00
Short-term, community-based projects - from pop-up parks to open streets initiatives - have become a powerful and adaptable new tool of urban activists, planners, and policy-makers seeking to drive lasting improvements in their cities and beyond. These quick, often low-cost, and creative projects are the essence of the Tactical Urbanism movement.
>> Interesting. >> Nice. >> Fun.
>> A lecture from Lydon.
Dry Bones in the Valley by Tom Bouman $24.99
When an elderly recluse discovers a corpse on his land, Officer Henry Farrell follows the investigation to strange places in the countryside, and into the depths of his own frayed soul.
"Bouman brings his world to life with texture that gives every room and vehicle and person a history and character, keeping us immersed in this mesmerizing and often terrifying story.” - Washington Post
>> The author talks about the book.
>> Playlist: (the wrong detective).
The Mammoth Book of Dieselpunk edited by Sean Wallace $24.99
21 stories from leading practitioners of dieselpunk: an emerging retro-futuristic sub-genre, similar to steampunk, based on the fuel-rich era between the First World War and the start of the Atomic Age, merging elements of noir, pulp, and the past with today's technology (and sometimes a dash of the occult).
>> Playlist: Dielselpunk Overture.
The Story of Alice: Lewis Carroll and the secret history of Wonderland by Robert Douglas-Fairhirst $46.99
Where did Alice stop and Alice begin? What is the relationship between Charles Dodgson, the quiet academic, and his second self Lewis Carroll, storyteller, innovator and collector of 'child friends'? The 'Alice' books are deeply embedded in our experience of childhood. What was their relationship to their own time?
>> Playlist: Alice live at Woodstock, 1969.
Mastering the Art of Vegan Cooking by Annie and Dan Shannon $55.00
200 delicious, achievable recipes, including Korean Kimchi BBQ Burgers, Vegan BLT Mac and Cheez, Sesame and Soy Marinated Mushroom Steaks, and Savannah Pecan Pies. Mmmm.
Living With a Wild God: A non-believer's search for the truth about everything by Barbara Ehrenreich $39.99
Ehrenreich's books manifest her rigorous rationality. How then does she describe and explain a mystical experience she had as a teenager? Is there any place for belief in a rationalist's world view?
>> Lo! She talks.
Since You've Been Gone by Morgan Matson $22.00
Emily's best friend Sloane disappears, almost without a trace - the only thing left behind is a to-do list. On it, thirteen Sloane-inspired tasks that wallflower Emily wouldn't normally do, and definitely not without her best friend. But what if completing the list could bring Sloane back?
>> Well, yes, of course there's a song.
The Game Believes in You: How digital play can make our kids smarter by Greg Toppo $39.99
According to this book, computer games do truly "believe in you". They focus, inspire and reassure people in ways that teachers and parents can't. Games give people a chance to learn at their own pace, take risks, cultivate deeper understanding, fail and want to try again, and, ultimately, succeed in ways that too often elude them at school. Apparently.
>> This book also makes the playlist!
Seed Libraries, And other means of keeping seeds in the hands of the people by Cindy Connor $29.99
With corporations increasingly copyrighting and controlling the character and distribution of food seeds, the operation of seed libraries is important not only to preserve genetic and local variety but as an act of political urgency.
Guitars That Jam: Portraits of the world's most storied guitars by Jay Blakesberg $49.99
Photographs evoking the synergy between famous guitarists and the instruments of their fame, with notes on the guitars' special characteristics.
>> Neil Young and his hazardous necktie.
My Life: It's a long story by Willie Nelson $39.99
Eighty years old and still on the road.
>> Memoir, music and marijuana.
A Dog's World: Homemade meals for your pooch by Asia Upward $27.00
"Homemade dogfood recipes with a human twist." Despite the cute photographs, don't leave this book lying around in your house.
14 May 2015
No Relation by Thomas Pors Koed $30.00
Written (by a P&B staff member) against the grain of contemporary New Zealand fiction, this book of short stories challenges preconceptions about reading, writing and the construction of character. How are readers affected by what is not related, by what is withheld, by what has been potentised by exclusion or by the impossibility of inclusion?
>> Some photographs from the launch on Tuesday (#4 has links to the playlist (apparently books these days need a playlist)). Thank you to everyone who came.
Haerenga: Early Maori journeys across the globe by Vincent O'Malley $15.00
From the late eighteenth century, Māori travellers spread out from New Zealand across the globe. They travelled for a variety of reasons – curiosity, adventure, commerce, political missions or duress – and were part of an international movement of Māori of surprisingly large scale. Most travellers eventually returned home, bringing something of their own ‘new world’ experiences with them. These remarkable experiences of voyaging and discovery, presented across a series of vignettes, also form part of the wider history of Māori and Pākehā encounter.
Song of the Ghost in the Machine by Roger Horrocks $25.00
"After more than twenty thousand days in this world I'm back to basics. My body is dated equipment and I ride it as though I've borrowed it for the day, taking its senses on a test flight."
A freewheeling philosophical poem interrogating what it is to be aware of one's place in the world.
>> Did you hear Roger Horrocks on the radio?
>> Radio review by the ever-perceptive Greg O'Brien.
Great Modern Artists, A to Z by Andy Tuohy and Christopher Masters $35.00
This striking, design-led reference book features Andy Tuohy's portraits of 52 key modern artists, rendered in each artist's own characteristic style - including Aleksandr Rodchenko in trademark green and red, Andy Warhol as a classic repeated print, and Marc Quinn as a frozen blood head in a box. With text by art historian Christopher Masters.
Changing Lives by Janice Marriott and Virginia Pawsey $39.99
Friends since high school, Marriott and Pawsey reconnected after 30 years and, shortly afterwards, began writing to each other about their respective lives, publishing Common Ground and Common Table together. After their last book, Common Lives, each of them, unpredictably and somewhat radically, changed their lifestyle. Janice became a grandmother and shifted from Wellington to Auckland to be closer to her family, and Virginia and her husband sold the family farm and built a new house on a smaller property closer to town. How did their lives change so dramatically, and how has this affected them both personally and philosophically? Most importantly, what about their gardens and kitchens?
On Coming Home by Paula Morris $15.00
"The declamatory return; a homeland as a “wearying enigma”. This all makes sense to me. The New Zealand that’s home to me may be a place of sheep and rugby and number-eight wire, whatever that is, but it’s also none of those things. Am I still a New Zealander?"
The Age of Earthquakes: A guide to the extreme present by Shumon Basar, Douglas Coupland and Hans Ulrich Obrist $28.00
The world is changing faster than we ever thought it would and our attempts to grasp the present leave us holding onto the past. Meanwhile the future is pressing at us, hard. The internet has not only changed the way our brains work, it is changing the structure of the planet. In the style of Marshall McLuhan's hugely influential The Medium is the Massage, this little book uses image and typography to poke a needle in the eye of global digital storm.
Cover by Peter Mendelsund $120.00
Mendelsund is responsible for some of the most memorable contemporary book cover designs. In this book he shows the full range of his portfolio and gives insight into his design process. The inclusion of cover designs that didn't make it is particularly interesting.
>> You can see some of his work here (but the book is much more interesting).
The Lie Tree by Frances Hardinge $19.99
Faith's father has been found dead under mysterious circumstances, and as she is searching through his belongings for clues she discovers a strange tree. The tree only grows healthy and bears fruit if you whisper a lie to it. The fruit of the tree, when eaten, will deliver a hidden truth to the person who consumes it. The bigger the lie, the more people who believe it, the bigger the truth that is uncovered. The girl realizes that she is good at lying and that the tree might hold the key to her father's murder, so she begins to spread untruths far and wide across her small island community. But as the tree bears more and more fruit, she discovers something terrifying - that her lies were closer to the truth than she could ever have imagined.
"The Lie Tree is brilliant: dark, thrilling, utterly original. Everyone should read Frances Hardinge. Everyone. Right now." - Patrick Ness
Church of Marvels by Leslie Parry $38.00
New York, 1895. It's late on a warm city night when Sylvan Threadgill, a young night soiler who cleans out the privies behind the tenement houses, pulls a terrible secret out from the filthy hollows: an abandoned newborn baby. His discovery unleashes an incredible chain of events. The Night Circus meets Water for Elephants meets The Crimson Petal and the White!
"This quite literally marvellous novel takes you on a hallucinatory ride through old New York, until the four threads of its protagonists' lives tangle and tighten like a noose. Irresistible." - Emma Donoghue (Room)
"A triumph." - Jessie Burton (The Miniaturist)
Lillian on Life by Alison Jean Lester $38.00
"The 'bold and sassy' fictional Lillian reflects on life through her random memories about her childhood, teenage years, college days, touring days, her parents, lovers and death. The book is a very relatable, personable, funny, interesting and real account of a 1930-vintage woman's life. Each chapter is standalone, and they are in random chronological order, a disconnection that I think suits this rather random but eminently readable book." - Lynn
The Ship by Antonia Honeywell $38.00
In the (near) future, even Lalla's parents' high-security home can't protect them from the global crisis. When London burns, 500 'chosen' escape aboard a ship. Lalla is one of them, but where are they going? What secret is her father hiding? What is the price of salvation?
"Honeywell’s debut is ambitious and well written and provides endless possibilities for debate." - The Guardian
Fall of Man in Wilmslow by David Lagercrantz $37.99
"This is an amazing novel about the life and death of Alan Turing. It starts with his suicide and with the young DC Leonard Corell investigating his death. As Leonard starts to delve he becomes confounded by the official secrecy over Turing's war record. When he realises that Alan Turing was no ordinary man and was a brilliant mathematician, he begins to see a possible way out of his humdrum ordinary life. A great read that builds slowly and comes to an amazing ending. I haven't yet read the Alan Turing: The Enigma by Andrew Hodges, but now of course I must, even if it is just to compare fiction with fact. As an aside, the author of this novel, David Lagercrantz, has been chosen to carry on and finish the Steig Larsson ‘Millennium’ novels." - Peter
Fashion Visionaries by Linda Watson $69.99
Featuring 75 of the world's most legendary designers, this book presents the story of fashion through the fascinating personal lives and innovative collections that have shaped the field over the past century.
Landfall 22: Aotearoa New Zealand arts and letters $29.99
Essays! Poetry! Fiction! Drama! Art! Criticism!
>> Ten things to like about #229.
Incomplete and Utter History of Classical Music by Stephen Fry $34.99
A riotous, rambling and incomplete history of classical music, complete with leg measurements.
If the Oceans Were Ink: An unlikely friendship and a journey into the heart of the Quran by Carla Power $29.99
The friendship between a secular American journalist and a madrasa-trained sheik, and their study and discussion of the Quran provides a welcome antidote to contemporary prejudice and the wars being fought in their names.
Shocking Paris: Soutine, Chagall and the outsiders of Montparnasse by Stanley Meisner $39.99
For a couple of decades before World War II, a group of immigrant painters and sculptors, including Amedeo Modigliani, Marc Chagall, Chaim Soutine and Jules Pascin dominated the new art scene of Montparnasse in Paris. Art critics gave them the name "the School of Paris" to set them apart from the French-born (and 'less talented') young artists of the period.
Shotgun Lovesongs by Nickolas Butler $19.99
Four childhood friends from rural Wisconsin attempt to recapture their childhood closeness.
"There are books that perform the literary equivalent of grabbing you by the throat and shouting at you to listen, and there are books, such as Nickolas Butler’s Shotgun Lovesongs, that creep up on you slowly, winding their way into your mind until their story is that you hear. An unashamedly sentimental hymn to those who lives we too easily overlook, a beautifully written, big-hearted celebration of the enduring power of different kinds of love." - The Independent
The Glorious Angels by Justina Robson $38.00
On a world where science and magic are hard to tell apart, a stranger arrives in a remote town with news of political turmoil to come. And a young woman learns that she must free herself from the role she has accepted. Robson's sci-fi is exciting and philosophically questing.
The Mountain Can Wait by Sarah Leipciger $38.00
Set in a stunning but scarred Canadian landscape, The Mountain Can Wait is a story of fathers and sons and the heartache they cause each other, in the tradition of Annie Proulx.
"Written with painfully nuanced care that displays affection for nature and the laconic, working-class characters, the result is not a cheerful read but genuinely moving." - Kirkus
Bomb by Sarah Mussi $19.99
When Genesis goes on a blind internet date, she just wants to get over her ex-boyfriend Naz. She just wants someone to like her again. But when Genesis wakes up the morning after the date, she can't remember a thing. She doesn't know where she is, or how she got there. And she can hardly move because she is strapped into some kind of body armour. Before she has time to figure it out, she receives an order through an earpiece stuck in her ear. And then a voice sounds in her head: 'You have been chosen for an assignment. The vest you're wearing is packed with high explosives. And with one mobile call we can detonate it.' Eek.
Pies and Tarts by Stephane Reynaud $29.99
Reynaud travelled throughout France to assemble the regional variations of his favourite cased foods.
Pyramid Valley and Beyond: Discovering the prehistoric birdlife of North Canterbury, New Zealand by Richard N. Holdaway $32.00
Describes the original avifauna of North Canterbury as revealed by the fossil evidence in the Pyramid Valley site and other sites in the area, gives the history of the Pyramid Valley site and its environment, and relates the past environment and avifauna to the present landscape.
Why the Germans? Why the Jews? Envy, race hatred and the prehistory of the Holocaust by Gotz Aly $29.99
Tracing the prehistory of the Holocaust, from the 1800s to the Nazis' assumption of power in 1933, Aly claims that German anti-Semitism did not originate with racist ideology or religious animosity, as is often supposed. Instead, he asserts that it was rooted in a more basic emotion: material envy. Resenting the success of the urban, well-educated Jewish minority in the rapidly modernizing world, Germans embraced compensatory theories of Jewish racial inferiority.
Old Man's Ghosts by Tom Lloyd $38.00
Some men can never outrun their ghosts. Enchei thought he'd found a home at last - a life of quiet obscurity far removed from the horror of his military days. After a decade in the Imperial City his mistakes have been few, but one has now returned to haunt him. As Narin's pregnant lover comes to term, life has never been so perilous. There couldn't be a worse time for a nightmare to be unleashed on the Imperial City, but luck's rarely been on Narin's side.
"A hugely assured modern fantasy novel." SFX Magazine
Quiet Impact: How to be a successful introvert by Sylvia Loehken $29.99
Can the special strengths introverts have be harnessed to achieve the kinds of success valued by extroverts?
Surviving Year Zero: My four years under the Khmer Rouge by Sovannora Ieng $35.00
The story of one man's survival of the genocide and terror that eviscerated Cambodia in the 1970s tells the stories of millions.
The Spice Box Letters by Eve Makis $25.00
Journalist Melina Knight longs to know why her grandmother, Mariam, so rarely speaks about her family and childhood. When Mariam dies suddenly, she inherits her grandmother's journal and handwritten letters stashed in a wooden spice box, cryptic treasures written in Armenian, Mariam's mother tongue. On a spring break in Cyprus, Melina meets Ara, a young Armenian man, who agrees to act as translator. Melina unearths a family secret that changes her life and lays the ghosts of her grandmother's turbulent past to rest.
Born Survivors: Three young mothers and their extraordinary story of courage, defiance and survival by Wendy Holden $39.99
Among millions of Holocaust victims sent to Auschwitz II-Birkenau in 1944, Priska, Rachel, and Anka each passed through its infamous gates with a secret. They were newly pregnant. What was the fate of these three and the children they carried?
Peers Inc: How people and platforms are inventing the collaborative economy and reinventing capitalism by Robin Chase $38.00
How is the internet reshaping the economy? Is it undermining capitalism or making it more durable?
Calling all crafters!!
We have a special selection of books on craft and crafting available for a limited time only. Come in and have a look!
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