Media/Reviewing, Publishing, Industry news

This witty and wise piece will render you near-catatonic with delight and admiration

Over on the CBC Arts website, Andre Mayer looks at the fine art of book blurbing, and he leads off with a doozy of an example from Dave Eggers.

Writing about Adverbs, a new adult short-fiction collection from his pal Daniel Handler (known to some as Lemony Snicket), Eggers serves up this bit of prime nonsense: “Anyone who lives to read gorgeous writing will want to lick this book and sleep with it between their legs.”

Counters Mayer: “Reading Adverbs, I felt no such impulse. But perhaps that’s a personal shortcoming — maybe I don’t feel books as intensely as Eggers. At any rate, he exercises creative licence the way most of us exercise our lungs.”

There are more examples from Eggers and others — some chummy, some lazy, some so over-the-top as to be meaningless — and Mayer makes some nice sport of them. He also talks to Canadian publishing types (Craig Pyette from Random House and Noelle Zitzer from HarperCollins Canada) about what makes a good blurb.

Related links:
Click here for the CBC Arts story on blurbing

Have your say:




The latest book pics from Flickr

Jeff Blackman

moose calls

Introduction

Committee with Boyden

signing

WLU Drummers

Monia Mazigh Book Launch

Monia Mazigh

Audio Interview with Joseph Boyden

Dusty Owl Workshop

Alexandra & Grampa Joe Clark

Sally Armstrong

Hope and Despair

Halloween Vampire Librarians

M G Vassanji & Neil Wilson

View all photos