Monday, September 24, 2012

J.K. Rowling's New Novel Tackles Addiction



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Via Glooce





The Harry Potter author's highly-anticipated novel for adults, The Casual Vacancy, depicts heroin addiction and a treatment clinic. 


In her first novel post-Harry Potter, author J.K. Rowling moves from wizards and Hogwarts to drug addiction. The New Yorker has provided the first mini-review of The Casual Vacancy, describing it as "a story of class warfare set amid semi-rural poverty, heroin addiction, and teen-age perplexity and sexuality." The tale is set in the comfortable middle-class town of "Pagford," England, which has a drug-treatment clinic that serves both the town and a neighboring area, The Fields—a neighborhood of public housing and poverty on the edge of a larger town nearby. Right-wing residents of the community seek to rid themselves of the obligation to help the struggling Fields. One of the central characters, the prostitute and drug addict Terri Weedon, is mother to a three-year-old child. The novel draws from Rowling's personal experiences of being surrounded by poverty; she says she now feels free to write "whatever the hell I like." "I am the freest author in the world," she says. "My bills are paid—we all know I can pay my bills—I was under contract to no one, and the feeling of having all of these characters in my head and knowing that no one else knew a damned thing about them was amazing… Pagford was mine, just mine, for five years. I wrote this novel as exactly what I wanted to write."


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    Wednesday, September 19, 2012

    Fifty Shades of Grey author E.L. James writing another erotic tale



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    via glooce


     



    E.L. James, author of the best-selling trilogy Fifty Shades, said on Monday that she hasn’t ruled out writing a fourth book, but is focused on composing another erotic tale and also plans to write a paranormal romance.

    The British author, who’s currently on a book tour in the United States, said she’s rewriting the first book she ever wrote because she just can’t seem to shake the plot line and characters from her mind.

    “It’s still in my head. I want it out of my head. I want it gone,” said James, who wouldn’t reveal much about the story, other than it’s an “erotic tale” that is “more fun” than the trilogy.

    “I also have another thing, which isn’t an erotic tale. It’s more of a paranormal romance, which I’d really like to do as well.”


    For the uninitiated, James’ trilogy Fifty Shades of Grey, Fifty Shades Darker and Fifty Shades Freed follows the racy romance between Anastasia Steele and Christian Grey, a handsome multi-millionaire who introduces her to the erotic pleasures of BDSM (Bondage, Discipline, Domination/Submission, Sadism/Masochism).

    James said that when she finished the third book, she felt she had completed the couple’s tale, saying “I left them in a really, really good place. But there seems to be lots of people clamouring for a fourth book in the trilogy,” said James, whose books have become a publishing sensation, so far selling 31 million copies worldwide.

    When asked about a fourth book, she replied: “We’ll see.”

    First, she said, she’d like to complete the other projects, saying, “There’s lots of voices clattering in my head.”


    James made her comments at a media event in New York City where she promoted the release of Fifty Shades of Grey: The Classical Album, a 15-track compilation featuring classical pieces that inspired her while writing the book, and are referenced in the trilogy. The CD, which includes the “Flower Duet” from Lakmé, Pachelbel’s Canon in D and the aria from Bach’s Goldberg Variations, was released on Sept. 11.

    James always listens to music while writing — in part because she writes in the living room and must drown out the sound of her two teenage sons watching television. But also because “music is so expressive (and) it can help set a scene,” she said, adding she has a lengthy playlist that she turns to for inspiration. When it comes to penning steamy sex scenes, she opts for “Sexy” by the Black Eyed Peas or Bruce Springsteen’s “I’m on Fire.” The partnership between EMI Classics and Random House is believed to be the first time that a CD’s release has been inspired by a book — typically, CD compilations are released in conjunction with a film.

    A movie is in the works — Universal Pictures and Focus Films have purchased the rights to all three books — but EMI Classics has jumped on the bandwagon early. After all, the book’s reference to “Spem in alium,” a 16th-century motet for 40 voices by Thomas Tallis, is credited with its surge to the top of the classical charts this summer in the UK.

    Source 2 3


    Fifty Shades of Grey author E.L. James writing another erotic tale



    NEWS -CINEMA-MUSIC-CELEBRITY-WORLD-

    via glooce


     



    E.L. James, author of the best-selling trilogy Fifty Shades, said on Monday that she hasn’t ruled out writing a fourth book, but is focused on composing another erotic tale and also plans to write a paranormal romance.

    The British author, who’s currently on a book tour in the United States, said she’s rewriting the first book she ever wrote because she just can’t seem to shake the plot line and characters from her mind.

    “It’s still in my head. I want it out of my head. I want it gone,” said James, who wouldn’t reveal much about the story, other than it’s an “erotic tale” that is “more fun” than the trilogy.

    “I also have another thing, which isn’t an erotic tale. It’s more of a paranormal romance, which I’d really like to do as well.”


    For the uninitiated, James’ trilogy Fifty Shades of Grey, Fifty Shades Darker and Fifty Shades Freed follows the racy romance between Anastasia Steele and Christian Grey, a handsome multi-millionaire who introduces her to the erotic pleasures of BDSM (Bondage, Discipline, Domination/Submission, Sadism/Masochism).

    James said that when she finished the third book, she felt she had completed the couple’s tale, saying “I left them in a really, really good place. But there seems to be lots of people clamouring for a fourth book in the trilogy,” said James, whose books have become a publishing sensation, so far selling 31 million copies worldwide.

    When asked about a fourth book, she replied: “We’ll see.”

    First, she said, she’d like to complete the other projects, saying, “There’s lots of voices clattering in my head.”


    James made her comments at a media event in New York City where she promoted the release of Fifty Shades of Grey: The Classical Album, a 15-track compilation featuring classical pieces that inspired her while writing the book, and are referenced in the trilogy. The CD, which includes the “Flower Duet” from Lakmé, Pachelbel’s Canon in D and the aria from Bach’s Goldberg Variations, was released on Sept. 11.

    James always listens to music while writing — in part because she writes in the living room and must drown out the sound of her two teenage sons watching television. But also because “music is so expressive (and) it can help set a scene,” she said, adding she has a lengthy playlist that she turns to for inspiration. When it comes to penning steamy sex scenes, she opts for “Sexy” by the Black Eyed Peas or Bruce Springsteen’s “I’m on Fire.” The partnership between EMI Classics and Random House is believed to be the first time that a CD’s release has been inspired by a book — typically, CD compilations are released in conjunction with a film.

    A movie is in the works — Universal Pictures and Focus Films have purchased the rights to all three books — but EMI Classics has jumped on the bandwagon early. After all, the book’s reference to “Spem in alium,” a 16th-century motet for 40 voices by Thomas Tallis, is credited with its surge to the top of the classical charts this summer in the UK.

    Source 2 3


    Wednesday, September 12, 2012

    Ebook Prices Drop, Man Booker Shortlist & Old Hollywood: Book post!



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    via Glooce

     



    The final agreement in the Department of Justice’s settlement with HarperCollins, Hachette Book Group, and Simon & Schuster gave the publishers 30 days to begin the process of reaching new sales terms over e-books with its e-tailers. HarperCollins was the first to move, reaching deals with e-tailers that it said “are consistent with the final judgment.” The key to those terms, of course, is that e-tailers are free to set prices at whatever level they choose rather than sell e-books under prices set by publishers according to the agency model. HC said it’s up to e-tailers about when and how they want to begin discounting. Amazon began to immediately cut prices; two HC bestsellers, for example, The Fallen Angel and Solo, are now priced at $9.99 (the two titles are also priced at $9.99 on the iBookstore as of September 11). Those titles, however, were still selling at $12.59 and $14.99, respectively, on BN.com this morning.

    S&S had no comment on its talks with e-tailers about new terms, saying it doesn’t discuss negotiations with its customers. Two S&S bestsellers, Paterno and Steve Jobs, were still selling at agency pricing levels this morning. It’s worth noting that on Amazon, the Kindle edition of the HC titles show the “Amazon Price,” while for S&S titles the “Amazon Price” is left blank and the price falls under the “New From” column.

    HBG had not returned an e-mail about its status this morning, but a spot check of some of its top titles showed no discounting on Amazon yet.
    Source


    Novelists who struggled long and hard just to get their books into the shops after a string of rejections by big publishers have joined the more established literary names of Hilary Mantel and Will Self on a Man Booker shortlist which this year celebrates "the power and depth of prose."

    The six books in contention for the £50,000 prize came from what the chair of judges, Peter Stothard, called "an exhilarating year for fiction – the strongest, I would say, for more than a decade".

    Mantel's Bring Up the Bodies, a follow-up to her 2009 Booker-winning Wolf Hall, is now one bookmaker's favourite to take a prize that would make her the first British novelist to win more than once. Judges had compared it to her first instalment of the Thomas Cromwell story and "noted her even greater mastery of the method", said Stothard.

    Ladbrokes made it 9/4 favourite but it is far from a shoo-in. She faces Self's widely admired novel Umbrella; books from two debut novelists in the shape of Jeet Thayil and Alison Moore; and two novelists – Tan Twan Eng and Deborah Levy – who have been rejected time and again by mainstream publishers.

    Tan is shortlisted for his second book, The Garden of Evening Mists, a beautifully immersive story of love and guilt which takes readers on a slow journey through the brutal second world war Japanese occupation of Malaya, the post-war emergency and more recent settled times. Stothard said the book's central character, Aritomo, once Hirohito's gardener, was "one of the most memorable characters in all the 30,000 or so pages we've read this year".

    Tan is published by the small Newcastle-based company Myrmidon and he recalled on Tuesday just how many times his first novel, The Gift of Rain, had been rejected.

    "I was turned down by almost all the publishers in the UK. They said it was difficult to market and they didn't know what to do with it and it was Myrmidon who were brave enough to take a chance on me."

    He said there was no bitterness. "I quite understand it – I'm an outsider so to break into the British publishing scene takes a lot of work and a lot of perseverance. I quite understand that when publishers are confronted with something slightly different they would balk at the extra step they might have to take to market the book."

    The Gift of Rain was longlisted for the 2007 Booker and the rejections have at least led to a happy partnership. Tan, who divides his time between Kuala Lumpur and Cape Town, said there was no question of Myrmidon not publishing his second. After hearing the news, he said: "I'm screaming inside with joy, great excitement."

    Levy is shortlisted for her first novel since Billy and Girl 15 years ago and she too struggled to get a publisher. The result was publication by the new subscription publisher And Other Stories, which was set up with the express purpose of getting undeservedly rejected writers out there.

    She recalled the rejections in 2008. "It was widely admired and all the rest of it but the feeling was that it was too literary, not commercial enough."

    It was "a really big blow", she said, but like the Tan novel it has clearly worked out well and the book is now going to a wider audience because Faber has stepped in as co-publisher.

    Levy said she was "thrilled" to be shortlisted and it enabled her to thank all the bloggers, tweeters and independent bookshops who have championed her book which centres on two middle-class families sharing a French holiday villa and a stranger in their midst.

    Last year's Man Booker shortlist decision was dominated by the judges' quest for "readability", and Self's novel is probably the polar opposite of that. Umbrella, the story of a victim of the sleeping sickness epidemic at the end of the first world war, is a 400-page book without paragraphs or breaks or chapter divisions. Stothard said readers who persevered would be rewarded. "This novel is both moving and brainy and we place it on the shortlist with the conviction that those who stick with it will find it much less difficult than it first seems."

    The list is completed by the Indian poet Thayil's first novel, Narcopolis, set among the opium dens of 1970s Bombay; and Moore's The Lighthouse, about a man trying to find himself on a walking holiday, which continues the success of small publishers in this year's prize as it comes from the stable of Cromer-based Salt.

    The judging panel this year consisted of the academic and literary critic Dinah Birch, the historian and author Amanda Foreman, the academic and writer Bharat Tandon, and the actor Dan Stevens, who has been reading furiously on the set of Downton Abbey.

    The shortlist meant there was no place for books including Nicola Barker's The Yips and Michael Frayn's Skios. But they are in distinguished company. This year's prize has been notable almost as much for who has not made it as those who have – no Martin Amis, Rose Tremain, Zadie Smith, John Lanchester, Peter Carey, Ian McEwan, John Banville, Howard Jacobson or Pat Barker.

    Stothard said they had made their decision by "argued literary criticism". He added: "We read and we reread. It was the power and depth of prose that settled most of the judges' debates and we found the six books most likely to last and to repay future rereading. These are very different books but they all show a huge and visible confidence in the novel's place in the renewing of our words and our ideas."

    The winner will be announced on 16 October.
    Source



    Internet regulars know Emma Straub, an effervescent young writer and bookseller from New York who has been accused of being the nicest person on Twitter.

    In her debut novel, “Laura Lamont’s Life in Pictures,” tells a classic tale of fame and family set in the Golden Age of Hollywood. Aspiring actress Elsa Pitts arrives in Los Angeles in the 1930s; she quickly goes from comely Midwestern blond to glamorous brunette. Of course the name -- Elsa Pitts -- had to go. Probably faster than the hair.

    In preparing to write the book, Straub started by watching a lot of old movies. That wasn’t enough, however; like her heroine, she had to come to Los Angeles.


    Straub will read from “Laura Lamont’s Life in Pictures” at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Skylight Books. She answered our questions about how she got to know Hollywood.

    Jacket Copy: “Laura Lamont’s Life in Pictures” tells the story of a starlet in Hollywood’s gilded age. Was that always the book’s setting?

    Emma Straub: Absolutely -- the setting and the story were intertwined from the start. There would be no earthly way to tell Laura's story without Hollywood. There are actors everywhere, of course, but there are only Movie Stars in Hollywood.

    JC: When you began writing, did you plan to come visit L.A.?

    ES: I'd been to L.A. maybe 20 times before, over the years, but it's such a sprawling, giant place, I knew I had to do some serious research before attempting to write about it. I was most concerned with making sure I understood the studios, and the sort of places actresses like Laura would inhabit, but I did feel like I needed a much deeper understanding of the city itself. I took a few research trips -- a couple of short ones, and then one long one, a whole month.

    JC: You thank the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science’s Margaret Herrick Library in your acknowledgments. What it like doing research there?

    ES: It was dreamy. The place is quiet as a tomb, which is exactly how I like to work. The librarians are helpful, even if, like me, you walk in like a total idiot and say "I need to learn about Hollywood between 1938 and 1980." Ha! They helped me make sense of their exhaustive collection.

    JC: Did you visit any specific places to get a sense of the city’s past?

    ES: I went to Paramount, and to Warner Brothers, and to Sony, the former MGM. I went to Union Station, and the Biltmore, and the Hollywood Bowl. I went to half a dozen movie theaters. I ate at Yamashiro. I wanted as many specific places in my head as possible. Of course, when writing fiction, all of that blurs out and becomes something new. The research only gets you so far.

    JC: Were there any Laura Lamont haunts you would have liked to visit in person, but couldn’t?

    ES: I didn't get to as many of the old-school L.A. restaurants as I wanted to, but blame that on Gjelina and all the different kinds of avocados at the farmers' markets. I also would have liked to spend more time at the studios, but that's more for geeky fan-girl purposes.

    JC: Did anything about the city surprise you?

    ES: As a New York City native, I was raised to look down on Los Angeles. You know, Biggie vs Tupac, etc. [Jacket Copy: Clearly Tupac is superior. Please] I think the biggest surprise for me, over the course of the last few years, is how much I really love it. My older brother is smart and has lived in L.A. since he was 18. If my husband had his druthers, we would be living somewhere near the Arclight. Or maybe living at the Arclight.

    JC: Did anything you discovered here change the course of your novel?

    ES: There are a lot of things I discovered in L.A. that changed various aspects of it, sure. I think the whole book would have been impossible without the research I did at the Herrick. It's hard to pick out individual things -- Irving Green, my character who is based on Irving Thalberg, wasn't in the first draft. That's a big one.

    JC: Are there any commonalities between a studio actress of the 1940s and a young writer today?

    ES: Hope? Devotion? I think both actors and writers are starry-eyed, and require a laser focus simultaneously. It's so hard to do anything creative, to really devote yourself to it fully. That's what Laura wanted to do, to work and work and work until she felt like she could make sense of her life, and the lives around her, and that's what I'm trying to do, too.
    Source
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    Friday, September 7, 2012

    15 Strange Claims Naomi Wolf Makes About Vaginas



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    Via Glooce



    In her new book, gender-politics author Naomi Wolf says vaginas can control our minds, make us more creative, and feel “vaginal grief.”

    1.A vagina is not happy without a penis.
    "A happy heterosexual vagina requires, to state the obvious, a virile man."

    2.Your vagina makes you a goddess. Or rather, "The Goddess."
    "Throughout this book, I will be referring to a state of mind or a condition of female consciousness I will call, for ease of reference, but also for the sake of the echo, 'the Goddess.' [...] I am carving out rhetorical space that does not yet exist when we talk about the vagina, but which refers to something very real."

    3.Foreplay is called "the Goddess Array."
    "The autonomic nervous system prepares the way for the neural impulses that will travel from vagina, clitoris, and labia to the brain, and this fascinating system regulates a woman's responses to the relaxation and stimulation provided by 'the Goddess Array,' the set of behaviors a lover uses to arouse his or her partner."

    4.The vagina can control the mind.
    "Once one understands what scientists at the most advanced laboratories and clinics around the world are confirming — that the vagina and the brain are essentially one network, or 'one whole system,' as they tend to put it, and that the vagina mediates female confidence, creativity, and sense of transcendence — the answers to many of these seeming mysteries fall into place."

    5.The vagina evolved to help women reach nirvana.
    "The mystical or transcendental potential of female sexuality [...] allows women to connect often, and in a unique way, even if just for brief moments, with experiences of a shining, 'divine,' or greater self (or nonself, as Buddhists would say) or with a sense of the connection among all things. Producing the stimulation necessary for these mind-states is part of the evolutionary task of the vagina."

    6.Uteruses can think.
    "I experienced some of the 'thoughts' of the uterus myself."

    7.The vagina is the meaning of life.
    "It is not so surprising that when the neural pathways from brain to vagina are damaged, one feels that life has less meaning; truly, the well-treated vagina is a medium that releases, in the female brain, what can be called without exaggeration the chemical components of the meaning of life itself."

    8.Women need love more than men, because of vaginas.
    "To respect the central paradox of the female condition — the sexual/emotional need of the vagina and cervix — might mean that we need to face the fact that women are, in a sense, more easily addicted to love and good sex with the person who triggers that heady chemical bath, than men are."

    9.Vaginas get depressed.
    "[...] between one woman in five and one woman in three seems to be suffering from something very like sexual, or even like vaginal, depression."

    10.They feel grief.
    "[...] I wanted to be sure I was isolating 'vaginal grief' from general physical grief."

    11.Sex for women (but not for men) is all about the "mind-heart-body connection."
    "The most destructive thing that men are being taught about women is that the vagina is just a sexual organ, and that sex for women is a sexual act in the same way it is for men. But neither gender is being taught about the delicate mind-heart-body connection that, it turns out, is female sexual response."

    12.Men told women not to touch their vaginas because they were too powerful.
    "Given the dopamine-vagina-brain nexus, it is not unreasonable in retrospect to understand that an ideology would arise — however subconsciously — that would increasingly rigorously keep these same newly educated, middle-class Western women, who were seeking and gaining so many new rights, from understanding how their own vaginas even worked, and that would indeed punish them in many ways for even considering touching their vaginas and clitorises in ways that would activate more unruly dopamine."

    13.The vagina has an imagination.
    "In the 1940s, Anais Nin, Henry Miller's lover and contemporary, worked in the sexual-transcendentalist tradition of the female modernists, who revered the imaginative potential of the vagina."

    14.Porn will ruin your vagina.
    "Female masturbation to porn can desensitize women themselves to their own vaginas."

    15.And your man, whom you need for your vagina.
    "[...] we are discovering that porn diminishes rather than heightens libido over time; that its effect on the phallus is ultimately unmanning and depressive; and that its effect on the vagina is a short-circuiting of the intense erotic potential — which means, also, the intense creative potential — inherent in every woman."

    Many of Wolf's chapter and section titles are also a bit bizarre. A sampling:
    "Porn and Vaginal Illiteracy"
    "Help Her Go Into An Orgasmic Trance State"
    "Modernism: The 'Liberated' Vagina"
    "Is The Vagina An Addict?"
    "The Self-Defining Vagina Of The Second Wave"
    "The Blues Vagina"

    Source
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    Wednesday, September 5, 2012

    Book movies: 7 novels that should be adapted



    NEWS -CINEMA-MUSIC-CELEBRITY-WORLD-

    Via Glooce

    Take one look at this fall's most highly anticipated movies, and you'll find a ton of exciting book adaptations: Leo Tolstoy's "Anna Karenina," Yann Martel's "Life of Pi," Victor Hugo's "Les Misérables," David Mitchell's "Cloud Atlas," and of course, J.R.R. Tolkien's "The Hobbit."

    In fact, it seems that MOST of the exciting debuts past and present were adapted from well-respected or inventive novels. If you peruse The Guardian or Modern Library's lists of the best novels of all time, you'll notice that the majority have been transformed into big-screen hits (or big-screen flops, like Kurt Vonnegut's "Slaughterhouse-Five," in spite of critical and authorial acclaim).

    Still, there are a few literary big-hitters that have yet to make their way to film. Franzen's "The Corrections" is a prime example - although the National Book Award-winning novel was optioned by Scott Rudin, HBO announced in May of this year that they wouldn't turn the pilot until a full series.

    There are other big-wig books that are currently in the process of being adapted, such as Salman Rushdie's "MIdnight's Children" and Michael Chabon's "The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay," but Franzen's flop should remind you that it's not rare for projects to remain indefinitely in production purgatory.

    Here are seven books that we'd like to see adapted into movies: 



    "The Brief, Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao" by Junot Diaz
    We might be biased because it's our book club pick, but we think this novel, with its romance, cultural insights and humor, would lend itself well to the screen.

    Jorge Garcia (of "Lost" fame) would be the perfect Oscar Wao, and Penelope Cruz, with a little aging makeup, could play Oscar's knockout, hot-headed mother.



    "Room" by Emma Donoghue
    Donoghue's Booker-nominated story is about a woman who has been abducted, and her five-year-old son, who has never left the confines of the room in which they are forced to live.

    A movie adaptation could either take the psychologically thriller route, or it could delve into the magical realism component of the story - Jack's imagination and ability to form positive connections with items in the room are what keep his spirit alive.

    Asa Butterfield, the boy who brought "Hugo" to life, could play Jack, and Christoph Waltz could play the sinister abductor, Old Nick. 



    "Bluebeard" by Kurt Vonnegut
    "Slaughterhouse-Five" was adapted in 1972, but it was a box-office flop. Guillermo del Toro was rumored to be working on a remake in 2011, but his hands are tied at the moment.

    We suggest an adaptation of one of Vonnegut's lesser-known works instead, such as "Bluebeard," the story of an aging Armenian artist who struggles with survivor's syndrome, romance, and his rivalry with a Jackson Pollock-like painter.

    A chipper journalist makes camp in his home, pressuring him to write his memoirs, which are full of observations that could make for a pleasant, slower-paced film starring Javier Bardem.



    "The Catcher in the Rye" by J.D. Salinger
    Although every actor and director under the sun has been dying to partake in a "Catcher in the Rye" adaptation, Salinger was notoriously opposed to the idea. However, there is hope. In a 1957 letter, he wrote:

    "Firstly, it is possible that one day the rights will be sold. Since there's an ever-looming possibility that I won't die rich, I toy very seriously with the idea of leaving the unsold rights to my wife and daughter as a kind of insurance policy. It pleasures me no end, though, I might quickly add, to know that I won't have to see the results of the transaction."

    We'd love to see Andrew Garfield or Nicholas Hoult ("A Single Man," "X-Men: First Class") try to tackle Holden. 



    "One Hundred Years of Solitude" by Gabriel García Márquez
    Although this saga about the Buendía family would make an epic and magical film, García Márquez has never approved of offers to buy the rights to his work. Gael Garcia Bernal would make for an excellent lead as the eager and imaginative José Arcadio Buendía.



    "Things Fall Apart" by Chinua Achebe
    This dramatic tale about the downfall of an African society due to British colonialism, and, subsequently, one of its hyper-macho leaders, Okonkwo, would make for a tragic yet enjoyable movie.



    "City of Glass" by Paul Auster
    Auster's stories about a detective fiction writer who becomes a private investigator would make for a mind-bending and humorous flick. Robert Downey Jr. or James Callis could play the witty, neurotic Daniel Quinn. 


    SOURCE
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