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Nominate-best-2010

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An enjoyable reading list
By DEIRDRE FULTON  |  September 16, 2009

 FALL09_books_main

WEST ENDER Andrew McNabb, who lives in Portland, will appear on Wednesday.

Need a break from all that required reading this fall? You're in luck. In addition to autumn's amazing offerings on bookshelves everywhere (the coming months will see new releases from Lorrie Moore; Jonathans Franzen, Lethem, and Safran Foer; Margaret Atwood; Philip Roth; and A.S. Byatt), greater Portland will host events to reinvigorate our appreciation of the written word. Here's a round-up of some of the season's most-promising literary happenings (they'll tide us over until LeVar Burton starts his Reading-Rainbow-for-adults Webisodes!).


Andrew McNabb | The Body of This | September 16

From the Phoenix review of the Portlander's book: "McNabb's brief stories (there are 28 total in this slim volume) are full of detailed physical descriptions of both interior and exterior terrains. The characters struggle to find their places, in the world at-large and in relation to other people. They are immigrants, elderly people, city mice gone country, and lovers. In many cases, they interact rather clinically, both with each other and with their surroundings. This is a collection that strives to dissect and distill, to remind us that disparate parts and individual sensations are the bricks that comprise the buildings of our lives. It's not a comforting read, but it still has something of a celebratory feel; it revels in, as one character puts it, 'The beauty and surprise of pure human potential!'"

Portland Public Library Brown Bag Lecture Series | Wednesday, September 16 @ 12 pm | Community Television Network | 516 Congress St, Portland | Free (bring your lunch!) | 207.871.1700 | portlandlibrary.com


Sherrie Flick | Reconsidering Happiness | September 23

The start of this debut novel feels pensive, moody, and restless — which makes sense, given its subjects: young women looking for roots, looking for answers, looking for lives. The book has garnered praise from early reviewers; the author will read and sign copies of her book in Portsmouth as part of a brief New England tour.

Wednesday, September 23 @ 7 pm | RiverRun Books | 20 Congress St, Portsmouth, NH | Free | 603.431.2100 | riverrunbookstore.com


Nicholson Baker | The Anthologist | October 1

A modern master of literary fiction (and a Mainer, at that!) will travel from his home in South Berwick to read from his latest, The Anthologist (Simon and Schuster), in Portland on October 1. After his recent non-fiction outings — Human Smoke: The Beginnings of World War II, the End of Civilization (Simon & Schuster, 2008) — Nicholson Baker has returned to his novelish roots with a story about a struggling poetry enthusiast who's recently lost a lover. With the trademark brilliance he showed in The Mezzanine and Vox, Baker picks apart bizarro minutiae to expose larger thought-themes, to examine neuroses and personal histories. Here's a teaser; The Anthologist's opening salvo:

"Hello, this is Paul Chowder, and I'm going to try to tell you everything I know. Well, not everything I know, because a lot of what I know, you know. But everything I know about poetry. All my tips and tricks and woes and worries are going to come tumbling out before you. I'm going to divulge them. What a juicy word that is, 'divulge.' Truth opening its petals. Truth smells like Chinese food and sweat."

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Related: Which was fine, Learning curve, Dead like me, More more >
  Topics: Books , Barack Obama, Portland Fall 2009, Lorrie Moore,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY DEIRDRE FULTON
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  •   SLAM DUNK SEASON  |  February 03, 2010
    Back in the fall of 2008, WJAB sports guy Chris Sedenka hosted Red Claws bigwigs Jon Jennings and Bill Ryan Jr. on his afternoon radio show. They were solidifying their plan to bring an NBA development league basketball team to Portland, Maine, a scheme that — in other circumstances, under others' supervision — had been previously unsuccessful.
  •   BEHIND THE SCENES AT PORTLAND’S NEW MOVIE-MAKING FACILITY  |  February 04, 2010
    If local moviemakers can’t depend on better financial incentives to foster the film industry in Maine — and they can’t, in this budget climate — they can at least focus on creating the infrastructure to support future endeavors.
  •   POWER OF PLACE  |  January 29, 2010
    I'd arranged the trip (Dogtown is about an hour and a half south of Portland) because I was planning to write about Elyssa East's new book, Dogtown: Death and Enchantment in a New England Ghost Town.
  •   BUS FARES SET TO CLIMB  |  January 27, 2010
    A quick primer on local bus fares and ridership, and whether (and how) to raise those numbers.
  •   BACK TO SCHOOL  |  January 20, 2010
    Some of us know (or think we know) our paths from a young age. We follow those trails through 12 years of school, and then four (plus) more. Some of us don't. We flounder, we search, we know what we want but we don't know how to achieve it. The crucial component in all these scenarios? Education.

 See all articles by: DEIRDRE FULTON

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