Books and beer?

Booksandbeer


Amazon blogger and author Jeff VanderMeer has decided it's time to pair brew with books. He asked several authors -- including Arianna Huffington, Elizabeth Hand, Karen Joy Fowler and Michael Chabon -- what they thought was the best beer to accompany their works. The results range from the easily available to the totally fictional.

I agree -- it's high time to consider beer-and-book pairings. A few more:

Rogue's Shakespeare Stout with any Shakespeare play (although the ones in which Falstaff appears, Henry IV Parts I and II and the Merry Wives of Windsor, seem extra-appropriate).

Yuengling with "Sixty Stories" by Donald Barthelme (because he was born in Pennsylvania).

Brooklyn East India Pale Ale with "Bonfire of the Vanities" by Tom Wolfe because, as my grad school colleague (and Semioclast blogger) Jamie Bono says, "It makes you look like a connoisseur even if you drank it for the first time during your freshman year when you didn't know any better -- slightly bitter but proud of it."

What's your favorite?

Carolyn Kellogg

 

Settling in with a cuppa ...

Book_peony

When novelist Lisa See reads a good book, she likes to "curl up with a cup of tea." Which is why it seemed a natural when Celestial Seasonings proposed using her latest bestseller, "Peony in Love," to promote its online book club, Adventure at Every Turn.

"I thought it was a really great match," See said. "First of all, tea and China, they kind of go together. And when I read a book, tea is always involved."

For "Peony," just out in paperback, the Colorado-based tea purveyor put together a fetching box of herbal selections compatible with the 17th century coming-of-age story, along with a variety of suggestions for book club discussions, recipes and decorating ideas. See said the starter kits, usually available only to online subscribers, were in great demand at book signings she gave recently.

Turns out the online demand has been so great (15,000 members and counting), there are no more kits for "Peony" or the club’s first selection in December, "The End of the Alphabet" by C.S. Richardson, according to a Celestial Seasonings spokeswoman. And because the promotional budget has been exhausted, club members will have to content themselves with website recommendations for the next selection, "Pomegranate Soup" by Marsha Mehran.

Celestial spokeswoman Alison Hazlinger said the company's online book club grew out of a detailed survey of customers, 70% of whom said that "reading books" was their favorite leisure activity.

The company's outreach to readers is the same thing publishers, including See's (Random House), are trying to do, the author says. "Book clubs sell a lot of books, and they start a conversation. It's not just about selling one book or one cup of tea, you're reaching five to 15 people at once — and you're starting a conversation."

Kristina Lindgren

 




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