Roddy Doyle?
'Beneath You'
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
I think that's him.
The endless non-fiction whale chapters are actually very funny. You have to imagine Ishmael saying everything in such a dry droll way that you're almost, but not quite, certain he is kidding.
Count me as another Catalog of Whales fan.
now I'm sitting here wondering why it took 6 years to release the next book when it sounds like it was already written 6 years ago
It was almost finished 6 years ago. "Almost" being, it seems, an entirely subjective term.
The Snapper is the other movie in the trilogy, iirc.
George R.R. Marting had alot of book 6 years ago but then he or the publisher decided it should be two books which meant, not just cutting off his writing where he was at but a bunch or rearranging and rewriting and addition of chapters. He talks about the process here - if you're interested.
ETA: I should say that there is information about what POV characters are in ADWD and which ones are not.
I love Roddy Doyle, though. TB, good point. You know, I tried, with Moby Dick, cause y'all(and David Simon) list it as a favorite. I at least waded in, which is better than the whole looking-at-it-and-deciding it's boring thing I did before. Points for effort?
There were a couple books publishers were really pushing on Tuesday at BEA, and three of them might be of interest:
Eoin Colfer's first adult novel, Plugged. (He is adorable, small, with bright white hair and a beautiful Irish speaking voice, by the way.)
The Rules of Civility, by Amor Towles, a first-time novelist who seems terribly Back Bay. It's about a young woman in 1938 Manhattan, and looks really good. Beautiful cover, too.
The Snow Child, by another first-timer, Eowyn (!) Ivey, a native Alaskan. It's set in 1920s Alaska, too.
At my first BEA in 1999, they were handing out a new book by an author nobody had heard of: Cold Mountain by Charles Frazier. Four months later, it hit the #1 on the bestseller list.
Back Bay?