Tuesday, July 17, 2012

What Happened to Sophie Wilder

That’s the question we hope to know the answer to in the finishing pages of Christopher R Beha’s debut novel, What Happened to Sophie Wilder (Tin House Books).

Beha’s wonderstruck writer of a main character, Charlie Blakeman, lost track of Sophie Wilder after they spent their college days in a turbulent relationship fueled by their mutual passion for writing, though he never stopped thinking about her. A serendipitous run-in with Sophie years later baffles him. The once impulsive, wild and free artist is now a devout Catholic, an ex-wife, and an ex-writer.

Sophie disappears from Charlie’s life as soon as she reappears, making her all the more attractive to him, and giving him all the more reason to find her.
As the New York Times points out in their book review, which was mostly positive, Charlie sums up his feelings about Sophie’s character when he describes her swimming in a pool in Connecticut:

“She moved quickly through the pool, though from where I was watching she appeared to do nothing to propel herself, like a bird that stays perfectly still while cutting through the sky. She seemed not so much a body as a shimmering trick of water and light.”

It’s always dangerous to write about a writer; especially since one of the easiest cop-outs for making a first person narrator super duper poetic is by making him or her a poet—surprise.

But the reviews from the New York Times and the San Francisco Chronicle seem to reinforce the idea that Beha’s book isn’t gimmicky. There might even be an intentional meta-writing element in this novel; a writer, Beha, is writing about a writer, Charlie, who seems to be writing about the woman he thinks he might love. What does it all mean?

Perhaps, like Charlie, we have as much control in the present moment as fictional characters do in a novel, which is very little, (Like Stranger than Fiction kind of). Or maybe it’s the exact opposite, and like a novelist, we dictate how our stories end. It’s impossible to say for sure without actually knowing what happened to Sophie Wilder.

-Dominick Sorrentino
Intern




Monday, June 25, 2012

Tin House is "Raising the Roof"!

Exciting news from Tin House Books!

Christopher R. Beha is the author of his newest release What Happened to Sophie Wilder. As reviewed by the New York Times Book Review: "What Happened to Sophie Wilder is about many things -- the New York publishing world, the growing pains of post collegiate life, the rigors of Roman Catholicism -- but at its center its a moving meditation on why and for whom we write." Beha also wrote an essay on the idea of the 'new' new atheists in Harper Magazine, titled "Reason for living: the good life without God".

Beha explains that the 'new' new atheists like Rosenburg whom are writers that take on a more philosophical approach to religion as opposed to past writers like Richard Dawkins who focus mostly on the God vs. science aspects of religion. These 'new' new atheists tackle the important questions such as "what is the meaning of life" and "how should I live my life" by eliminating God as a necessity and facing the questions for what they are, if there are no religious boundaries than life can have as many meanings as [you] decide. Click here to listen to Beha's interview with KUOW radio: http://www.kuow.org/mp3high/mp3/Conversation/ConversationB20120621.mp3

In other news: Parsifal by Jim Kruscoe has been chosen for Mediabistro's Los Angeles Book Club and Misfit by Adam Braver was voted Best Cover at BEA and Tin House recently released The Listeners by Leni Zumas!

To check out more, go to TinHouseBooks.com

Friday, June 8, 2012

Newest Release from Tin House Books

“Parsifal” will be released on July 14th, the newest addition to author Jim Kruscoe’s collection of novels.  Parsifal is a humble man who sets out on a journey to revisit the place where he was born. On his adventure he meets a range of different people varying from a blind person to an interesting young woman named Misty.

Kruscoe’s other Tin House novels include Toward You, Erased, Girl Factor, and Iceland.

Check him out!

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Akashic Books: Two New Releases

Akashic Books, a beloved Benay client, has released two new titles illustrated by Ricardo Cortes.

The first book which is both illustrated and written by Cortes started as a way to teach children about the history of the cocoa bean. However, after an interesting discovery Cortes decided to change paths and instead uncovers the untold past of the Coca-Cola Company in “The Secret History of Coffee, Coca, and Cola”. While there is potential for controversy between Cortes and the company, he remains unscathed and confident.

In the second book, “Seriously, Just go to Sleep”, Adam Mansbach hopes to bring parents and children togetherthe hassles of night time antics are condemned and put to rest.

“Seriously, Just Go to Sleep brings children in on the joke, helping them understand their own tactics and why their parents just want them to go . . . to sleep.”
--Publishers Weekly


Go check them out!

Friday, May 11, 2012

Eskandar has now opened a new store in Los Angeles


Established in 1993 by Eskandar Nabavi, the eskandar womenswear label has grown in success at an unprecedented rate. The signature fluid lines and traditional, voluminous silhouettes, are brought to life with exclusive and luxurious fabrics, for which Eskandar has become renowned world-wide Luxurious cashmere knits now form the core of the collection and are sought out worldwide by loyal customers. Eskandar has now opened a new store in Los Angeles! Go check it out!

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Tubes: A Journey to the Center of the Internet


Tubes is a creative explanation into the Internet's physical infrastructure to help the everyday reader, and daily Internet user understand the physical world that forms the foundation of our cyber-space experience. In Tubes, journalist Andrew Blum writes a revealing a fresh view of the cyber world, that the everyday user may think they understand. A world filled with components, staffed with electricians and supported by engineers who build and maintain our networks. Blum recounts the dramatic story of the Internet, its development, and how it interacts.

Check out what Kirkus Reviews calls “Fascinating and unique. . . . A captivating behind-the-scenes tour of how and where the Internet works. . . . Blum has a gift for breathing life into his subjects.” 

Friday, April 13, 2012

No One by Gwenaƫlle Aubry to be Featured in New York Times Book Review


Another great addition to the Tin House catalog, No One by GwenaĆ«lle Aubry will be featured in this Sunday’s New York Times book review. No One is a fictional memoir in dictionary form that investigates the many men behind the masks, and a unified portrait evolves. "A" describes her father’s adopted persona as Antonin Artaud, the poet/playwright; "B" is for James Bond; and, finally, "Z" is forZelig, the Woody Allen character who could transform his appearance to that of the people around him. Letter by letter, Aubry gives shape and meaning to the father who had long disappeared from her view.