Blogs and Stories
A Sneak Peek at Fall Books
As Book Expo America begins today, Sara Nelson previews the buzziest books—including new works from Jane Smiley, Jeannette Walls, and Lorrie Moore—and the hottest authors.
Book Expo America, which begins today at the Javits Center in Manhattan, is the book industry’s time-honored way of introducing the big fall books and authors to the bookselling world—which ultimately passes them on to readers. Newly revamped with days full of seminars and meetings—but fewer exhibitors and off-site parties and celebrations—recession-era BEA is still a destination for authors, booksellers, publishers, and those who love them. But if you can’t make it, never fear. Here are seven things you don’t even have to go to know.
- Pat Conroy, whose long-awaited novel, South of Broad, is a big book for Doubleday, won’t be making it to the fair. He was scheduled to appear at the Book Author luncheon and on a panel, but has withdrawn after a recent surgery. Liars’ Club author Mary Karr will fill in for him at the Saturday author lunch, and Empire Falls novelist Richard Russo will appear on the Friday Literary Lions panel.
- Every year, several publishers are asked to name and promote their “big books” of the fall. Usually it’s a big surprise and you have to attend the “Buzz Panel” to learn about them. But this year, the titles are listed on PublishersMarketplace.com. My favorite from this list, Leila Meacham’s debut novel Roses, reads like a high-end Thorn Birds; the other that’s been buzzed about, pre-Buzz, is This Is Where I Leave You, by Jonathan Tropper.
My favorite from this list, Leila Meacham’s debut novel Roses, reads like a high-end Thorn Birds.
- Kids and young-adult books, which was one of the few categories that grew this year (11 percent, according to Nielsen BookScan ), will continue to be hot—thank you, Stephenie Meyer—with the most interesting offering at BEA being Stella Lennon’s The Amanda Project: Book 1, which has, yes, an interactive digital component.
- Speaking of kids' books, BEA 2009 will be proof positive that everybody thinks they can be a children’s author these days. Galleys expected to be hot: kids or young-adult novels from Jane Smiley, Mike Lupica, and Adriana Trigiani.
- Fewer publishers are renting the (very expensive) booths at the Javits Center, with some—like Macmillan, which encompasses Farrar, Straus & Giroux, St. Martin’s and others—preferring to rent tables in the agents’ center and spare expense. (Insiders say exhibitors are down a whopping 25 percent.) The usual big-bash HarperCollins and Knopf parties are no more, though Knopf’s has been transplanted to a cocktail gathering on Friday at the beloved Strand bookstore downtown. HarperCollins, for its part, is sponsoring a cocktail reception in tribute to the late Michael Crichton, the house’s “friend and inspiration.”
- Though much has been made of the “scaling back” at book fairs in general and this one in particular, there are still plenty of gabfests to be had—though several seem overlapping, at best. We can’t help but wonder how dyed-in-the-wool booksellers react to the whole new section of the floor (and of the panel schedule) dedicated to “digital.”









I caught Lorrie Moore on CSPAN. What a bitter, dirty-mouthed piece of work. No wonder she's a darling of the left.
This fall's best book is Whiskey Heart by Rachel L. Coyne (New Rivers Press)
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