Archive for the 'Booknoise Books' Category

Green Party of Tennessee

Posted in Booknoise Books, Garbage Land, In the News on October 27th, 2005

Green Party news

If you’re in Nashville on November 8th you may want to stop by the Downtown Public Library, where the Greens will be discussing Elizabeth Royte’s “Garbage Land,” as well as establishing criteria for nominating and endorsing candidates.

A review of the Tapir’s Morning Bath

Posted in Booknoise Books, Review, The Tapir's Morning Bath on October 25th, 2005

bootstrap analysis: book review: the tapir’s morning bath

One of the amazing things about the internet (and how many times a day do I say this?) is the way it skews time. Not because so many inconsiderately neglect to date their posts, but because stuff lingers.

Elizabeth Royte published the Tapir’s Morning Bath in 2001, but a reader who knows the subject (field biologists in the rain forest doing their work, deciding if research or political advocacy is more important) found the book recently and wrote a very understanding review just this week.

If you’re Elizabeth, isn’t that excellent?

Spook named a New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice

Posted in Booknoise Books, Spook on October 24th, 2005

“A diligent, cheerful account of efforts to learn whether science can show that there is (or isn’t) life after death.”

Entertainment Weekly gives Spook an A-

Posted in Booknoise Books, Review, Spook on October 22nd, 2005

“Roach proved her fine sense of humor in 2003’s strangely amusing and
uncreepy Stiff, her affectionate look at human cadavers. Here, she
delves back into death, searching for scientific proof of an afterlife.
She heads to rural India to interview reincarnation subjects, handles a
piece of alleged ectoplasm at Cambridge University’s library, and
enrolls in an English school for mediums. Along the way, she asks all
the familiar questions that plague the death-obsessed: ‘What happens
when we die? Does the light just go out and that’s that…? Or will
some part of my…me-ness persist?… What will I do all day? Is there
a place to plug in my laptop?’ Alas, she doesn’t find the answers. But
Roach is such a smart and breezy companion that it’s enough to watch
her realize that in the end she might not need them.”

BRIC / Brooklyn Information & Culture :: The Rotunda Gallery >> Post-Everything

Posted in Booknoise Books, Garbage Land on October 20th, 2005

The Rotunda Gallery

An evening of Readings and Performance tonight, featuring (among others) Garbage Land author Elizabeth Royte.