Want to write a thriller? Put an ø or an å in your name. Following the success of the late Swedish writer Stieg Larsson's Girl with a Dragon Tattoo trilogy, it seems that every publisher's monthly booklist this year has featured an icy thriller by a platinum blond with a fantastically unpronounceable name. Maj Sjöwall, Per Wahlöö, Jo Nesbø, Arnaldur Indriðason, Henning Mankell, Yrsa Siguradottir...
Random House has released four Jo Nesbø thrillers here in the last year alone, with another coming in February, ahead of a tour by the author in March. Some of the New Zealand covers of the Norwegian's books proclaim him "the next Stieg Larsson", which must surely grate when you consider that Nesbø had published at least seven novels by the time Larsson published his first, and has written about 16 novels to Larsson's three.
2. Kathleen MacMahon
Never heard of this Irish novelist? That's because she's never published anything. But that didn't stop UK publisher Little, Brown snapping up her début novel (and an unwritten follow-up) with a £600,000 (NZ$1.2m) advance - almost unheard of for an unknown first-time novelist. MacMahon, a television journalist and mother of two, was apparently so awestruck that she neglected to ask what currency the advance was in.(Even if it had been in Indian rupees it'd still be a good deal for a first-timer.) The book, So This Is How It Ends, is a love story between an out-of-work American banker and his distant cousin, an out-of-work Irish architect. There's still a long time to wait until we see what all the fuss was about - it doesn't come out until mid-2012.
3. Lovers of the classics
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painstakingly scan and upload all 287-odd pages of Pride and Prejudice (especially when dozens of other copies are already online) for no other reason than the desire to share the book with others. And the cool thing about scanned text is that it looks like a real book, complete with dog-eared corners and pencilled notes in the margin. It's the next best thing to the real thing.
4. Whitcoulls
5. Online shoppers
Currently on the British website you could pick up a brand new copy of The Wine of Solitude by Irene Nemirovsky (one of our recommended reads for December) for $21.38, including shipping. Sure, you'll have to wait a week or two for delivery, but at Whitcoulls you'll pay $34.99. Good luck to you, Anne and David Norman.
By Bronwyn Sell | Email Bronwyn