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Archive for the ‘Reviews’ Category

Andrew Brown’s Coldsleep Lullaby Kills in Germany

Coldsleep LullabyAndrew BrownAndrew Brown‘s Sunday Times Fiction Prize winner, Coldsleep Lullaby, has been published in Germany by BTB, an imprint of Random House/Bertelsmann, as Schlaf ein, mein Kind. Mechthild Barth is the translator, and her version of Brown’s brilliant thriller has been killing ‘em in Deutschland.

The book made it on the KrimiWelt Bestenliste, a list for the best new crime novels (German and translated), released by ARTE TV (a nationwide newspaper and radio station), debuting at number 9:

Zwei Handlungsstränge, die Brown parallel laufen lässt, ohne auf eine der beliebten „Verknüpfungen“ von „damals“ und „heute“ zu setzen. Zwei Stränge, die erst ganz am Ende des Buches miteinander zu tun haben – aber das weiß nur der Erzähler und damit der Leser; die Figuren wissen es nicht. Daraus entsteht eine grausame Pointe. So etwas ist ungewöhnlich, weil explizit literarisch, nicht genre-üblich.

And the book was reviewed on national radio last week (a summary of the German follows):

Ein paar hundert Jahre früher, im späten 17. Jahrhundert zur Zeit des berühmten holländischen Gouverneurs Simon van der Stel, Namensgeber von Stellenbosch, “Mischling” und Initiator des Weinanbaus am Kap: Eine junge Sklavin wird von einem für die Kolonie unersetzbaren Weinanbauspezialisten vergewaltigt und gedemütigt. Sie wehrt sich.

Zwei Handlungsstränge, die Brown parallel laufen lässt, ohne auf eine der beliebten “Verknüpfungen” von “damals” und “heute” zu setzen. Zwei Stränge, die erst ganz am Ende des Buches zusammenkommen – aber das weiß nur der Erzähler und damit der Leser; die Figuren wissen es nicht. Daraus entsteht eine grausame Pointe. So etwas ist ungewöhnlich, weil explizit literarisch, nicht genreüblich.

Says one of Zebra Press’ sources, the “review is extremely positive: ‘teriffic’, ‘very literary, very well written, like the stroke of a brush’, stating that [Coldsleep Lullaby] cleverly uses patterns of the crime novel but is not a typical crime novel… it’s brilliant how [Brown] – throughout the plot – looks at the characters through different focal widths with his complex literary lens… the reviewer [Thomas Wörtche, a very renowned crime novel expert in Germany] says: the fiction… stands for itself, is unique. And if we were looking for an author to compare it to, it would maybe be Patricia Highsmith”.

Well done to Brown – here’s hoping Coldsleep Lullaby keeps the whole nation of Germany awake at night!

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So Close: from Blog to Book

A publisher’s take on a trend in the world of books.

Where do books come from? Traditionally publishers find them pressed into their hands at book fairs, standing out in slush piles or singled out by the words of a trusted contact; writers can expand them from well-received magazine articles, thrash out their outlines over boozy lunches or piece them together in private, only showing them when they are almost fully formed.

Now there’s a new way to make and find books. It’s private but exposed, it’s author-centric but communal, it’s reader-friendly but unrestrained – it’s blogging. Publishers have been nervous about what effect the internet will have on book publishing, but, for now, instead of books dying out publishers are finding books online. Internationally, publishers are turning blogs into physical books, mainly memoir-style stories like Julie and Julia by Julie Powell, The Intimate Adventures of a London Call Girl by Belle de Jour and Baghdad Burning by Riverbend.

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