One chapter book reviews: Short, chapter 18

People read novels for two major reasons: for a good yarn, first and foremost, but also to be immersed in a world that’s different from the one they occupy — not just to learn about how it works, but to feel it, to experience its dramas and to know the…

One chapter book reviews: Pukka

Much like God dictated the Bible to its various writers, a dog named Pukka dictated Pukka to its author, Ted Kerasote. Or at least that’s the conceit. The follow-up to Merle’s Door, a book someone named Elizabeth Marshall Thomas called “The best book ever written about dogs” (so the book…

One chapter book reviews: Hooking up with Tila Tequila

Perhaps more than ever in this reality show age we live in, it can be difficult to know what the hell famous people are even famous for — and nobody, besides maybe Paris Hilton, exemplifies that “famous for being famous” phenomenon better than Tila Tequila. In her completely un-clamored-for memoir,…

Steve Katz on mythology, memory and mining

Recently, there have been a slew of ill-advised memoirs from people far too young and inexperienced to share their stories with the world. Steve Katz doesn’t have that problem. The 75-year-old Denver author started writing his memoir five years ago, and it has since become a collection of over 100…

One chapter book reviews: The Wishing Trees

You can’t judge a book by its cover — and it just goes to show you, because the cover of The Wishing Trees, by John Shors, is pretty awful. Decked out in pink with an apple blossom and a soft-focus photo, it might as well be an advertisement for a…

One chapter book reviews: The Propheteer, chapter six

Perhaps more than any president in recent memory, and like so many truly terrible people, George W. Bush was fond of playing up his godliness — apparently, if you fold your hands and screw up your face like you’re solving a Rubik’s Cube for long enough, that’ll get you the…

Tonight: Colorado mavens of vampire lit at Highlands Ranch Library

If you like the idea of combining Vampires with sex in literature but think Twilight is ass-clown hackery for prudes, then Vampire Nite is where you want to be tonight. And if you don’t, why the fuck not? Vampires are awesome. Sex is awesome. What’s there not to like? Anyway,…

Shutter Island author Dennis Lehane talks books and libraries

The critically acclaimed author of Shutter Island, Dennis Lehane, believes in supporting libraries. Last evening, he spoke to a crowd of roughly eleven hundred at the Mile Hi Church in Lakewood as a part of the free Jefferson County Distinguished Author Series in which he explained why libraries are so…

Amy Frykholm brings an ancient mystic to life at Pomegranate Place

Pomegranate Place is in one of those old mansions you find throughout the Capitol Hill neighborhood, a relic of another era. It looks like a place where a benevolent secret society might meet. But it’s a women’s center and on the cool dusky evening of Friday, October 15th, it was…

Tucker Max on empathy, assholery and getting older

Tucker Max is living the dream. Since his early twenties, the author of Assholes Finish First has been getting blackout drunk, chasing women and generally indulging every hedonistic whim toward the end of compiling the stories of his wild and often shockingly hilarious exploits (one ends in him covered in…

Justin Bieber and Hilary Duff: Tweening literature for the masses

Since time immemorial, it’s been a tradition of mega-stardom: Actors become musicians and musicians become actors. Less common, though, is the musician/actor-turned-writer — and probably for a good reason: Writing is hard and not very glamorous, and also, they only let you out of your cage once every three weeks…

Me, Myself and Why: Announcing the winner of this week’s book contest

In MaryJanice Davidson’s new book, My, Myself and Why?, the self-proclaimed “inventor of paranormal chick-lit” takes a run-of-the-mill FBI agent main character and gives her dissociative identity disorder — otherwise known as multiple personalities. But that isn’t just a challenge she has to face: “They’re not solving crime in spite…

One chapter book reviews: Gray Matter, chapter 21

For all intents and purposes, it’s pretty clear from the book jacket that Gray Matter, by local author Nick Pirog, is a crime novel. Just the cover, which features a red, black and white color scheme and a stylized illustration of the Seattle skyline, was enough for me to guess…

MaryJanice Davidson, creator of paranormal chick-lit, plugs a new series

MaryJanice Davidson turned the chick-lit world upside-down in 2004 with the release of Undead and Unwed, which follows the story of a fashionista-secretary-turned-queen-of-the-vampires; since then, she’s been exploring the boundaries of paranormal literature combined with the world of shoes, shopping and romance. Her latest offering is Me, Myself and Why?,…