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  • Q & A with Deborah Ellis

    Deborah Ellis’s new novel, My Name Is Parvana is a follow-up to her Breadwinner trilogy about 11-year old Parvana, who disguises herself as a boy in order to work and support her family, and her friend Shauzia’s struggle to get out of an Afghan refugee camp.

  • Q & A with Lemony Snicket

    Lemony Snicket returns, this time narrating his own story, rather than that sad saga about the Baudelaire orphans. The four-book series, titled All the Wrong Questions, begins with Who Could That Be at This Hour?, in which readers meet Lemony at age 12, as he embarks on his first mission for whoever it is he works for.

  • The Big Uneasy: PW Talks with Ed Kovacs

    The murder of a U.S. government “black projects” engineer in New Orleans propels Good Junk, Ed Kovacs’s second novel featuring PI Cliff St. James.

  • Life at the End of the World: PW Talks with Andri Snaer Magnason

    Icelandic author Andri Snaer Magnason laments the world’s energy crisis and failing environmental policies in every project he touches. The novel LoveStar is his latest manifesto.

  • Extraordinary Children: PW Talks with Andrew Solomon

    Andrew Solomon’s new book from Scribner, Far from the Tree, is a behemoth worth every one of its 976 pages.

  • Q & A with Jasper Fforde

    Best known for his literary spoofs starring detective Thursday Next, British author Jasper Fforde dips into the YA pool with The Last Dragonslayer, first in a trilogy about an orphan who finds herself in charge of a boarding house/employment agency for wizards and magicians. Fforde spoke with Bookshelf while in Atlanta as part of a month-long U.S. tour, about his inspiration for the new series.

  • Video: Daniel Handler on Lemony Snicket and 'Who Could That Be at This Hour?'

    Bestselling author Daniel Handler talks about his relationship with Lemony Snicket and his new book, 'Who Could That Be at This Hour?'

  • Q & A with Stephen Savage

    Stephen Savage, whose latest book, Little Tug, is out this month, shares the story of his artistic beginnings.

  • Off the Grid: PW Talks with Jared Diamond

    Pulitzer Prize–winning author and UCLA professor of geography Jared Diamond applies his experiences and research in The World Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn from Traditional Societies?

  • God Is the Gift of Desperation: PW Talks with Anne Lamott

    Anne Lamott fans who can’t get enough of her trademark humorous-neurotic-spiritual voice will thank their Higher Power for a second book this year from the essayist and novelist. (Earlier in 2012 Lamott published Some Assembly Required, about unexpectedly becoming a grandmother.) Help Thanks Wow: The Three Essential Prayers is what you would get if you crossed Brother Lawrence’s religious classic The Practice of the Presence of God with a Tina Fey routine.

  • Father Doesn't Always Know Best: PW Talks with Robert Gottlieb

    Former Knopf and New Yorker editor–in-chief Robert Gottlieb illuminates Charles Dickens’s family life in Great Expectations: The Sons and Daughters of Charles Dickens.

  • Steamboats, Mermaids, and the Hudson River: PW Talks with Mark Siegel

    Produced over the course of nine years of research, writing, and drawing, Sailor Twain, the story of mysterious doings on a 19th-century steamboat plying the Hudson River, is a debut graphic novel by Mark Seigel, author of graphic nonfiction as well as children’s books, and editorial director of First Second Books, Macmillan’s graphic novel imprint.

  • Who or What Done It? PW Talks with Peter F. Hamilton

    In Great North Road, space opera master Hamilton blends near-future science fiction with a pair of murder mysteries.

  • Thin Man Encore: PW Talks with Julie M. Rivett

    Return of the Thin Man, edited by Dashiell Hammett scholar Richard Layman and Hammett’s granddaughter Julie M. Rivett, collects the two Dashiell Hammett screen stories that became the films After the Thin Man (1936) and Another Thin Man (1939).

  • Q & A with Bob Balaban

    Actor, producer, and director Bob Balaban has appeared on stage, on TV, and in nearly 100 movies, including Midnight Cowboy, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, and Gosford Park. In 2002, he added "author" to his impressive list of credits, with his six-book McGrowl series for middle-graders. Now Balaban makes a new foray into fiction with Boy or Beast, the launch title of the Creature from the Seventh Grade series.

  • Skyships Ahoy: PW Talks with Beth Ciotta

    In the steampunk series launch Her Sky Cowboy, Beth Ciotta pairs up explorer Amelia Darcy and airship pilot Tucker Gentry in an alternate Victorian England invaded by 1960s time travelers.

  • A Surprising Kind of Art: PW Talks with Blake Butler

    With Sky Saw, HTML Giant editor Blake Butler evokes a nightmarish apocalypse with meticulous, claustrophobic prose.

  • Q & A with Lucy Cousins

    The last time British author and illustrator Lucy Cousins, who has more than 30 million books in print worldwide, visited this side of the pond was to celebrate the 10th birthday of her most famous creation, Maisy. That was in 2000, just after Maisy debuted in her own TV series on Nick Jr. So when Cousins arrived for a brief visit earlier this month, PW jumped at the opportunity to catch up with her.

  • The ''Ruff'' Road to Recovery: PW Talks with Lisa Edwards

    Lisa Edwards was looking for candy—not another canine companion—when she made a fateful stop on her way home one Halloween. But a sign that read “Puppies: $49.99” drew her attention to Boo, a clumsy pup who turned out to have poor eyesight and an uncanny ability to bond with Dog’s best friend. In A Dog Named Boo, Edwards chronicles her life with animals and Boo’s evolution into a therapy dog.

  • Titian Rediscovered: PW Talks with Sheila Hale

    In the epic biography Titian: His Life, journalist Sheila Hale illuminates the life of both the Renaissance painter and the history of Venice.

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