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Tuesday
Jan012013

My Bookstore

- Cristy Meiners, producer

We are independent bookstore people here at the Bob Edwards Show.  Bob’s many speaking engagements and book tours over the years have introduced him to some of the country’s finest, including Oxford, Mississippi’s Square Books, which we featured on the program for a full hour back in 2008.  When Bob handed me a copy of Ronald Rice’s My Bookstore: Writers Celebrate Their Favorite Places to Browse, Read, and Show about a month ago, he said, “If I didn’t already have a copy of this, this would be the perfect Christmas gift for me.”  

Instead, this is our gift to all of you: Bob’s interview with editor Ronald Rice and best-selling writer and now-independent bookstore owner Ann Patchett.  Patchett’s Parnassus Books in Nashville, TN had the kind of coverage that publicists dream about: a photo on the front cover of The New York Times; an interview on The Colbert Report; countless write-ups and interviews.  But a good independent bookstore doesn’t need the backing of a famous writer; it just needs a dedicated community who want to invest in something important.  For we bookish types, there is no finer afternoon than one spent holed up in a favorite bookstore with a big stack of newly recommended books.  My own favorite independents are Ketchum, Idaho’s Iconoclast Books, a new and used bookstore, and Salt Lake City’s Sam Wellers.  Both of these wonderful bookstores used to be much bigger and much more mysterious, but even in their newer sanitized homes, they are still places of discovery and wonder.  

Here is a link to a complete list of the authors and bookstores featured in My Bookstore:

http://www.blackdogandleventhal.com/recentlypublished/mybookstore/   

And here is the list of books Ann Patchett and Ronald Rice recommended during our interview:

The All of It, by Jeannette Haien

Binocular Vision, by Edith Pearlman

Old Filth, by Jane Gardam

 

Friday
Dec282012

This Weekend's Program

Bob Edwards Weekend, December 29-30, 2012

HOUR ONE:

Los Angeles Times columnist Doyle McManus joins Bob to look back at the biggest news events from 2012.

Since it is no surprise that good writers are also good readers, it shouldn’t surprise anyone that these good writers and readers are also passionate advocates for good bookstores.  The title of editor Ronald Rice’s book explains it all: My Bookstore: Writers Celebrate Their Favorite Places to Browse, Read, and Shop.  Rice and writer Ann Patchett talk with Bob about why physical bookstores are important to our society. Patchett co-owns a bookstore in Nashville.

Then, the latest installment of our ongoing series This I Believe.  This week, essayist Debi Knight Kennedy describes what an old seashell taught her about aging gracefully.

HOUR TWO:

It’s been 200 years since the Brothers Grimm first shared their collection of fairy tales with children and adults alike.  The lure of “once upon a time” captured people’s imagination, making Hansel and Gretel, Cinderella, Rapunzel and many others some of the Western world’s most beloved stories.  Harvard professor Maria Tatar edited The Annotated Brothers Grimm and talks with Bob about these enticing and often grisly tales.

Bob talks with Salon.com book critic Laura Miller about the best books of 2012.

Bob Edwards Weekend airs on Sirius XM Public Radio (XM 121, Sirius 205) Saturdays from 8-10 AM EST.

Visit Bob Edwards Weekend on PRI’s website to find local stations that air the program.

Friday
Dec282012

Forthcoming on The Bob Edwards Show

The Bob Edwards Show, December 31, 2012 – January 4, 2013

Monday, December 31, 2012: Gil Scott-Heron’s memoir The Last Holiday is a testament to the extraordinary life of the activist, musician and poet. Scott-Heron is commonly known for his 1970’s hit “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised”. His publisher, editor, and long-time friend, Jamie Byng tells Bob about the book and shares the legacy of Gil Scott-Heron. It’s now available in paperback.

Tuesday, January 1, 2013: Lori Andrews became a consumer activist when she was seven and her Ken doll went bald. She wrote a letter to Mattel and got results. Now Andrews’ attention is focused on online privacy. Her book titled I Know Who You Are and I Saw What You Did: Social Networks and the Death of Privacy has just been released in paperback.  Then, Jonathan Gruber served as a health care reform advisor to Mitt Romney when he was governor of Massachusetts and to President Obama as he worked to pass the national Affordable Care Act.  To help sort through the misconceptions and confusion, Gruber has distilled the very complicated bill into a very simple format: Health Care Reform: the comic book, is now available in paperback.

Wednesday, January 2, 2013: On November 18, 1978, more than 900 people killed themselves in a jungle in Guyana. A book titled A Thousand Lives: the Untold Story of Hope, Deception, and Survival at Jonestown tells the story of five of those who willingly followed pastor Jim Jones to South America and to their own demise. Author Julia Scheeres joins Bob to discuss the tragedy.

Thursday, January 3, 2013: Lawrence Powell is a professor emeritus in Tulane University’s Department of History – so who better to write about the first 100 years of New Orleans?  His latest book is titled The Accidental City and it covers the period from the first hunters, trappers and explorers in the region through the end of The War of 1812.  Then, Bob talks with Joey Burns, a founding member of the band Calexico. Burns will discuss the band’s music, branded by some as “desert noir,” Calexico’s homebase of Tucson, Arizona, their ideas for immigration reform and why they decided to record their latest CD in New Orleans. Calexico’s seventh studio album is called Algiers.

Friday, January 4, 2013: Doyle McManus, Washington columnist for the Los Angeles Times, joins Bob to discuss the latest political news.  Next, for fans of the hit PBS Masterpiece series Downton Abbey the wait is almost over.   January 6th kicks off the third season of the Emmy award-winning series, letting viewers finally find out what happened to their favorite residents of the English manor house.   Bob talks with actor Jim Carter, who plays Carson, Downton’s ever-steady butler and actor Rob James-Collier, who plays Thomas, the villain viewers love to hate.  Then, the latest installment of our ongoing series This I Believe.

Saturday
Dec222012

Best Music of 2012

[PRODUCER’S NOTE:  Click the name for the artist’s website, the title of the album for a link to purchase it on Amazon and click the song title for a link to hear a sample or to buy a download.]

 

Selected and Written by Rolling Stone contributing editor Anthony DeCurtis

 

The Beach Boys

Album: That’s Why God Made the Radio

Song: That’s Why God Made the Radio

For their 50th anniversary, the Beach Boys made an unabashedly nostalgic album that acknowledges many decades have passed since the group’s AM radio heyday, but celebrates those times anyway. Brian Wilson and Mike Love even reconciled for this milestone, though their reconnection was shortlived. The melancholy at the heart of these celebrations of beauty and hedonism already lay at the heart of all the Beach Boys hits – and at the heart of California, the troubled paradise at the end of the American journey westward.

 

The Rolling Stones

Album (single): Doom and Gloom

Song: Doom and Gloom

The Stones, of course, are another legendary band celebrating a 50th anniversary, which they’re doing with a new greatest hits set called GRRR!, a handful of live shows in London and New York (with more likely to come next year) and a roaring two-sided single. As things go with the Stones, one song is Mick’s (“Doom and Gloom”) and one is Keith’s (“One More Shot”), but both are propelled by definitive Stones guitar riffs. The battling brothers appear to have mended their relations, and on stage the group that called itself “the greatest rock & roll band in the world” is on fire.

 

David Byrne & St. Vincent * (sadly this song and discussion were cut for time from our PRI show)

Album: Love This Giant

Song: I Should Watch TV

It wouldn’t seem as if they’d have much in common. David Byrne, the legendary founder of Talking Heads, is twice the age of relative newcomer Annie Erin Clark, who calls herself St. Vincent. But they share a fondness for grounding big ideas in accessible pop settings, and a genial willingness to see the surreality in everyday situations, and to see the familiar in the genuinely surreal. Brass arrangements teeter on the edge of chaos, while funk percussion chatters beneath them. Byrne and St. Vincent, wander through our and their lives like anthropologists, marveling at everything they encounter, as if they were seeing it for the first time. 

 

Fiona Apple

Album: The Idler Wheel…

Song: Jonathan

Fiona Apple stands as a reminder that talent actually counts for something. Every time she releases an album, it’s surrounded by some sort of controversy. (She recently cancelled a tour because her dog is dying.) But each of her four albums is a strong, seductive statement, this one especially so. The songs here are as raw as it gets, and musically stripped down. The song “Jonathan” is about Apple’s former boyfriend, the writer and actor Jonathan Ames. “I don’t want to talk about anything,” she sings, and then, characteristically, she talks about everything.

 

Carly Rae Jepsen

Song: Call Me Maybe

Psy

Song: Gangnam Style

Two near-novelty singles proved virtually ubiquitous, prompting references from the unlikely likes of Barack Obama, Alan Simpson and Colin Powell. Each of them is fun and strangely effective in yielding so willingly to parody and condescension that, in a kind of cultural martial arts move, the energy to dismiss only prolongs their lives. That they’re both much smarter and better put together than most people realize is part of the reason why.

 

Jack White

Album: Blunderbuss

Track: Missing Pieces

Just when Jack White sets aside his countless band projects and finally makes his solo album, it turns out to be as idiosyncratic as everything else he has done. Rather than revealing an “essence” of some kind, White plays around with styles and approaches – opening the album with the keyboard and electronic riffs and beats of “Missing Pieces.” When the Grammys nominated Blunderbuss for Album of the Year, a friend asked me if I thought it deserved that status. “I’m not sure it’s going to live for the ages,” I said. “But Album of theYear? Absolutely.”

 

Frank Ocean

Album: Channel Orange

Song: Thinking ‘Bout You

Frank Ocean’s debut got a big lift when he admitted to having relationships with men, and the media covered the revelation with endless fervor and curiosity. Ocean was associated with an underground hip-hop collective and has worked with the likes of Jay-Z, Kanye West and Beyonce. It’s not a world that’s always so accepting of homosexuality, but Ocean was embraced and supported. So much was made about the pronouns in the songs, that it was all too easy to overlook their sensual appeal, regardless of which gender you prefer.

 

Macklemore

Album: The Heist

Song: Starting Over

I realize that we’re supposed to support politically correct rap, but too often it’s, well, a little boring. So much of listening to hip-hop is bound up in grappling with the violence, materialism, misogyny and homophobia in it that it can come to seem like that’s point of the music. But the white Seattle rapper Macklemore has made an album that makes gay rights, recovery and thrift shops sexy and compelling. On “Starting Over” he describes falling off the wagon, going to a meeting and meeting a girl who tells him that his music is the reason for her own sobriety. He’s humiliated, and makes that complicated encounter vivid, edgy and somehow inspiring.

 

Alicia Keys

Album: Girl on Fire

Track: Brand New Me

Alicia Keys’ fourth album continues her impressive musical development. She seems more confident than ever here, modernizing her sound with electronic beats but keeping her words, her lush piano playing and her bracing voice at the center of her songs. “Brand New Me” reassures both her fans and herself. After all her success, she’s still pushing and exploring – and reinventing herself.

 

Beth Orton

Album: Sugaring Season

Track: Poison Tree

Beth Orton first made her mark as an English folkie who blended her songs with electronic beats. Now twenty years on, she’s returned to her folk sources with songs that address the historic concerns of English romantic poetry – the movements of nature and the seasons, the efforts of individuals to discover their place in the natural world, and to reconcile their internal emotions with some kind of external reality. On “Poison Tree” Orton takes an unsettling William Blake poem and crafts a perfect – that is, equally unsettling – musical interpretation of it.

 

 

Friday
Dec212012

This Weekend's Program

Bob Edwards Weekend, December 15-16, 2012

HOUR ONE: 

Los Angeles Times columnist Doyle McManus joins Bob to discuss the latest political news.

Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Timothy Egan recounts the life and career of the turn-of-the-century’s most famous photographer, Edward Curtis.  Egan’s book is titled Short Nights of the Shadow Catcher: The Epic Life and Immortal Photographs of Edward Curtis.

Then, the latest installment of our ongoing series This I Believe.

HOUR TWO:

Ralph Nader, named by The Atlantic as one of the 100 most influential figures in American history, joins Bob to discuss current affairs and his new book The Seventeen Solutions: Bold Ideas for Our American Future.

As the son of jazz guitarist Bucky Pizzarelli, John Pizzarelli grew up surrounded by music royalty.  Benny Goodman and Les Paul were regular guests in their home, and John has performed with the likes of Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, Rosemary Clooney, James Taylor and Paul McCartney.  Pizzarelli is a talented musician leading a band of his own now and shares stories from his life with Bob.  His musical memoir is titled World on a String.

Bob Edwards Weekend airs on Sirius XM Public Radio (XM 121, Sirius 205) Saturdays from 8-10 AM EST.

Visit Bob Edwards Weekend on PRI’s website to find local stations that air the program.