Welcome to the Chunkster Reading Challenge - a challenge which satisfies those readers who like their books fat and chunky!
Showing posts with label Featured Book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Featured Book. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Featured Book for July: The Emperor of Lies by Steve Sem-Sandberg

The Emperor of Lies by Steve Sem-Sandberg
ISBN 9781250007636
672 pages
Picador (July 3, 2012)

We are happy to introduce THE EMPEROR OF LIES by award-winning author Sem-Sandberg (translated from the Swedish by Sarah Death) as this month's Chunkster Challenge feature book. I am currently reading this amazing novel and I am riveted. Watch for my review later this month.

FROM THE PUBLISHER:
In February 1940, the Nazis established what would become the second-largest Jewish ghetto in the Polish city of Lódz. Its chosen leader: Mordechai Chaim Rumkowski, a sixty-three-year-old Jewish businessman and orphanage director. From one of Scandinavia's most critically acclaimed and bestselling authors, The Emperor of Lies chronicles the tale of Rumkowski's monarchical rule over a quarter million Jews. Driven by a titanic ambition, he sought to transform the ghetto into a productive industrial complex and strove to make it —and himself — indispensable to the Nazi regime. Drawing on the chronicles of life in the Lódz Ghetto, Steve Sem-Sandberg captures the full panorama of human resilience and asks the most difficult questions: Was Rumkowski a ruthless opportunist, an accessory to the Nazi regime driven by a lust for power? Or was he a pragmatic strategist who managed to save Jewish lives through his collaboration policies? 
 "Fiction of true moral force, brilliantly sustained and achieved...I find it difficult to think of any book that has had such an immediate and powerful impact on me...Brave and brilliant."—Hilary Mantel, author of Wolf Hall


"A resolute masterpiece, The Emperor of Lies looks for truths in the great domain of dissolving syntax and shadows we call history....A great achievement."—Sebastian Barry, Salon

The novel won the esteemed August Prize in 2009.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Steve Sem-Sandberg was born in 1958 and divides his time between Vienna and Stockholm. He is a Swedish novelist and literary critic living in Stockholm and Vienna. He has published many books in Swedish, including De ansiktlösa (novel, 1987), I en annan del av staden (essays, 1990), En lektion i pardans (novel, 1993), Theres (novel, 1996), Allt fögängligt är bara en bild (novel, 1999) Prag (No Exit) (essays, 2002), Ravensbrück (novel, 2003), Härifrån till Allmänningen (novel, 2005), and De fattiga i Łódź (novel, 2009). The latter has been translated into numerous languages, including English (The Emperor of Lies), German (Die Elenden von Łódź) and French (Les Dépossédés). In 2009, he was awarded both De Nios Stora Pris and the August Prize, two of Sweden's most prestigious literary awards.

Would you like to win a copy of this work of historical fiction?  

Go to THIS POST to enter to win one of FIVE books being offered by the publisher (contest is open to US mailing addresses; you do NOT need to be a participant in the Chunkster Challenge to enter).

FTC Disclosure: Book giveaways and featured book articles are NOT paid promos. Although books for giveaway will be supplied by the publisher (in most cases), The Chunkster Challenge administrators do not accept payment to host these special events.

Book Giveaway: The Emperor of Lies by Steve Sem-Sandberg

The Emperor of Lies by Steve Sem-Sandberg
ISBN 9781250007636
672 pages
Picador (July 3, 2012)


Thanks to the generosity of Picador, we are thrilled to be able to give away FIVE copies of this book. Please read the details of the giveaway carefully to enter. We will randomly choose five winners at the end of the contest period.

GUIDELINES OF GIVEAWAY:

  • Entrants must have a United States mailing address.
  • You do NOT need to be a participant of the Chunkster Challenge, but if you are, you will get an extra entry in the contest.
  • Contest is open from July 4th through July 20th at 5:00 pm PST. Comments will be closed at 5:00 pm on July 20th.
  • Five winners will be randomly chosen to win a finished copy of the book. Books will be mailed directly to the winners from the publisher.
ENTER TO WIN

Please read carefully!
  • Each comment on this post must include a legitimate email address so that we may contact you if you win.
  • To receive ONE entry in the contest, please leave a comment on this post indicating why you are interested in reading the book.
  • If you are a participant in the Chunkster Challenge, you may receive a second chance to win by leaving a second comment telling us you are a participant.
  • Receive a third chance to win by either sharing this post on Facebook OR tweeting about the contest. Leave a third comment telling us you did one of those things.
Please make sure you leave a comment for each chance (if you just leave one comment, you only get one entry).

GOOD LUCK!!

FTC Disclosure: Book giveaways and featured book articles are NOT paid promos. Although books for giveaway will be supplied by the publisher (in most cases), The Chunkster Challenge administrators do not accept payment to host these special events.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Overseas - Book Review


“You said you had the feeling we’ve met before. That’s not exactly true, but it’s not exactly false either.”

“What do you mean? When did we meet?”

“You asked me my last name before. I told you I couldn’t tell you, because you wouldn’t believe me. Possibly you still won’t.”

“Why wouldn’t I believe that? After everything else?”

“Because my name is Kate Ashford. And I’m your wife.” – from Overseas
 Kate Wilson is living in Manhattan, working as a Wall Street analyst in 2007. Her life is fast-paced and drums with the excitement of the financial world. When she meets Julian Laurence at a business meeting, she is immediately taken with his handsome good looks, extraordinary intellect, and a manner which is at once old fashioned and romantic. As their relationship heats up, not only is Kate surprised by how fast and hard Julian has fallen for her, but she begins to suspect that their love may have started a long, long time ago in France during WWI. How does the life of Captain Julian Ashford from decades before connect to the Julian Kate knows in the twenty-first century?

The past collides with the future in Overseas, the debut novel by Beatriz Williams who knows how to spin a tale so enthralling that the pages almost turn themselves. Romance, intrigue, dark secrets and betrayal…this book has it all. As I was reading, I was reminded of the Outlander series by Diana Gabaldon. Like Gabaldon, Williams sets the reader down in a place of long ago, throws in a splash of time travel, and thrills her reader with a romance which transcends time.

Williams writes her story from the first person point of view of Kate – a decidedly modern woman who finds herself wooed by a very romantic and devastatingly gorgeous guy. Kate is smart and funny, a woman who thinks that love in the twenty-first century cannot take the place of climbing the career ladder…until she meets Julian.

The story unspools mostly in the present time, with some interspersed chapters set in France during WWI. Williams is a talented storyteller – just when I thought I knew the plot, she put a nice little spin on it which kept me reading to discover the ending.

I do not read a ton of romance – but I do love a good historical novel and Overseas was a terrific balance of the two. Readers will need to suspend some reality for this book…but, those who allow themselves to sink into the lives of Julian and Kate will be richly rewarded with a good, old-fashioned romantic journey through time.

I predict that this novel will make Beatriz Williams a new favorite for readers who love the romance and historical fiction genres. Full of sizzle, this memorable story of love is an addictive read…and an admirable first novel.

Recommended.
  • Quality of Writing:
  • Characters:
  • Plot:
Overall Rating:

FTC Disclosure: I received this book from the publisher for review.

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

WINNER: Overseas by Beatriz Williams



Congratulations to Laura at Chasing Cappuccinos who is our winner for the novel OVERSEAS by Beatriz Williams!

I'll be contacting you, Laura, for your mailing address. Thanks to those who entered...I hope you'll consider purchasing the novel!

Watch for my review of the book later this month...

Monday, April 30, 2012

Beatriz Williams: Author Guest Post and Giveaway


Overseas by Beatriz Williams
464 pages
ISBN 978-0399157646
Putnam Adult (May 10, 2012)

Today I am delighted to share a guest post by author Beatriz Williams along with a give away of her debut novel, Overseas.

Beatriz Williams is a graduate of Stanford University with an MBA from Columbia. She spent several years in New York and London working first as a corporate and communications strategy consultant, and then as an "at-home producer of small persons." She now lives with her husband and four children near the Connecticut shore, where she divides her time between writing and laundry. Overseas is her first novel.

Learn more about Williams and her work by visiting the author's website. You may also find the author at her blog, on Twitter and on Facebook.

When I requested a guest post by Beatriz Williams, I was asked to suggest some topics. After reading about her new book, I thought exploring the topic of Love in the 21st Century would be an excellent choice...and Beatriz agreed, writing:
Wendy, let me first say how thrilled I was when I saw your list of suggested topics for this guest post! You really understood what I was trying to convey with the love story between Julian and Kate -- namely, the vast distance between courtship and love a hundred years ago and the way it plays out today, and what that means for young men and women. I'm so excited to have the opportunity to natter on about it here -- thank you!
So, I am very happy to present this guest post to all of you - ENJOY!

Love in the 21st Century 

by Beatriz Williams 
 
At a cocktail party the other night, the subject of Spreadsheet Guy came up for discussion. You may have heard of him: some poor geek of an investment banker who organized his dating contacts from Match.com into an Excel spreadsheet of eye-watering sophistication, complete with color coding and alphanumeric scoring. As spreadsheets go, it was a work of art. His only mistake, according to my friends at the party? He forwarded it -- heaven knows why -- to one of the women on the list.

So much has changed from the start of the First World War through the calamitous, miraculous century that followed, and nothing more profoundly than the conduct of courtship. When the idea for Overseas -- a brilliant young British infantry officer, in the doomed tradition of Rupert Brooke and Julian Grenfell, walking the streets of modern-day Manhattan -- first appeared in my brain, I wanted to dismiss it. I've always considered myself a writer of historical fiction, drawn to the intricate virtues of the past, and had never even tried a contemporary voice.

But the lure was irresistible. In Julian, I had the personification of romantic Edwardian youth -- dashing heedlessly off to slaughter, writing poetry amid the rats and mud -- now deposited into the irony and cynicism of twenty-first century Manhattan. In Kate, I had an independent young woman immersed in the casual dating scene of college and Wall Street, whose expectations of men had fallen so low she'd given up on the little dears altogether. What would happen when these two opposite poles came together?

To modern ears, Julian's expressions of chivalry and romanticism may seem excessive. In fact, they're largely culled from the historical record. In 1915, Vera Brittain wrote to her fiancé Roland Leighton, expressing impatience that he'd been kissing her photograph goodnight when he'd never kissed her in person. He wrote back from the trenches: "When it is all finished and I am with her again the original shall not envy the photograph. The barrier which She seems to have found was not of reserve but rather of reverence. But may it not perhaps be better that such sweet sacrilege should be an anticipation rather than a memory?"

Roland would be killed eight months later by a German sniper, at the age of twenty.

Naturally,Vera (an early feminist) found such rituals of courtship confining. But from where we stand at the opposite end, as men organize their romantic prospects into spreadsheets, ranked according to perceived physical beauty, the notion of sex and love as something sacred, not be undertaken lightly, seems breathtakingly...well, sexy.

What do you think? Has courtship changed for the worse since the summer of 1914? Or does our increased freedom balance out any loss of romance? What's your experience of love in the 21st century?

**********************

WIN A COPY OF OVERSEAS
Contest open from May 1, 2012 - May 9, 2012 (at 5:00 pm PST) 

I am thrilled to be able to offer one lucky reader a copy of Overseas by Beatriz Williams. Please read the following carefully to be entered in the giveaway. 

The contest is open internationally. If the winner is from the US or Canada, the publisher will be sending you a copy of the book; if the winner is outside of the US or Canada, your book will come directly from us.

There are several ways to enter this contest - and you may do any or all of them for additional chances to win with ONE exception - you MUST be signed up for the Chunkster Challenge to get at least one entry into the contest. If you have not signed up, you may do so by visiting this post and using Mr. Linky OR by leaving a comment on that post saying you are signing up. It is not too late to sign up for the challenge!

So to simplify:

For ONE entry, please sign up for the Chunkster Challenge, and then come back here and leave a comment telling me you are signed up and wish to be entered in the contest (if you are already signed up, just leave a comment saying "I'm signed up, enter me."

Additional entries may be earned and a comment should be left on this post for each additional entry:
  • Tweet about the contest with a link to this post. Be sure to include Beatriz in the tweet by using @bcwilliamsbooks
  • Visit Beatriz's facebook page, like it, and post to her wall answering any of the questions posed in her guest post above (about love in the 21st century) 
  • Blog about the contest with a link back to this post
You will get extra chances by doing each of the above (so you can earn up to 3 extra chances).

I will randomly select ONE winner after 5:00 pm on May 9th and announce their name here on the Chunkster blog. If you have not given me a way to reach you (ie: by leaving me your email address in your comment), then you will have to contact me within 5 days of the announcement or I will draw another winner.

Clear as mud? Any questions, please use the contact form on this blog to contact us!

GOOD LUCK!!!

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Overseas by Beatriz Williams - May 2012 Book Feature

Overseas by Beatriz Williams
464 pages
ISBN 978-0399157646
Putnam Adult (May 10, 2012)

I am delighted to introduce you to our May book feature. Overseas by Beatriz Williams is a debut novel which mixes intrigue and adventure with a generous dollop of romance and is getting early raves in the literary world. Here is the book description from the publisher:
When twenty-something Wall Street analyst Kate Wilson attracts the notice of the legendary Julian Laurence at a business meeting, no one’s more surprised than she is. Julian’s relentless energy and his extraordinary intellect electrify her, but she’s baffled by his sudden interest. Why would this handsome British billionaire—Manhattan’s most eligible bachelor—pursue a pretty but bookish young banker who hasn’t had a boyfriend since college?
The answer is beyond imagining . . . at least at first. Kate and Julian’s story may have begun not in the moneyed world of twenty-first-century Manhattan but in France during World War I, when a mysterious American woman emerged from the shadows of the Western Front to save the life of Captain Julian Laurence Ashford, a celebrated war poet and infantry officer.

Now, in modern-day New York, Kate and Julian must protect themselves from the secrets of the past, and trust in a true love that transcends time and space.
  Early Praise:

"A sensational debut! OVERSEAS is a heady blend of wit, charm, and romantic sizzle, all wrapped around a tantalizing mystery that will constantly surprise and delight readers."
—Anne Fortier, New York Times-bestselling author of Juliet

“Overseas is an irresistible combination of romance, history, and imaginative storytelling. Set against the tumultuous backdrop of World War I and the glittering lights of today’s New York financial world, Beatriz Williams creates a memorable story of a timeless love. . . . I can’t wait to see what she does next!”
—Karen White, New York Times–bestselling author of The Beach Trees

Have I made you curious? Go ahead and read an excerpt from the book here.

Check out this fabulous interview with the author at Publisher's Weekly where she gives a little insight into the novel.

********************************

I am happy to tell you that we are going to be giving away a copy of this book to one lucky reader in May - I hope you'll come back on May 1st to read a terrific guest post by the author and enter to win a copy of the book!

Monday, January 30, 2012

WINNER of The Street Sweeper by Elliot Perlman

 The Street Sweeper by Elliot Perlman

I used Random.org to select a winner from all the participants of the Chunkster Challenge in 2011 and 2012. I used the links on the Mr. Linky sign up pages (readers who signed up in comments had to comment on the giveaway post to be included - but we did not get any comments).

Congratulations to Gilion at Rose City Reader

I've sent you an email, Gilion. Please respond to that with your snail mail address so the publisher may send you your book!

For those of you who did not win, I hope you'll continue watching this blog for future giveaway opportunities. And I hope you  will consider picking up a copy of The Street Sweeper, too!

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Book Giveaway - THE STREET SWEEPER by Elliot Perlman

The Street Sweeper by Elliot Perlman
ISBN 9781594488474
640 pages
Riverhead (05 Jan 2012)

Thanks to the generosity of the publisher, we are delighted to offer a copy of The Street Sweeper by Elliot Perlman to one lucky winner. Please carefully read the information about how to enter the contest below!!!

First, let me give you a little information.

ABOUT THE BOOK.

From the Publisher:
Lamont Williams is a paroled felon looking to turn his life around, working as a street sweeper at a large city hospital and searching for his estranged daughter. Adam Zignelik is a struggling, nontenured professor, paralyzed by looming failure, his life falling apart around him. He discovers a cache of recordings of previously unheard voices reaching out from a horrific past, voices that can both save his career and bring him back to the woman he loves. At the same time, Lamont forges an unlikely friendship with a dying man, who, having lived through those horrors, has a crucially important story to tell and to preserve. The worlds surrounding these two men, their families, their pasts, their potential futures, swirl in and out of history as the forces of the Holocaust, the American civil rights movement, Chicago unions, and New York City racial politics combine in a thrilling cross- generational literary symphony.

The acclaimed author of Seven Types of Ambiguity, Elliot Perlman weaves the narratives of Lamont and Adam-and their myriad connected friends, lovers, and families-into an ambitious, masterful depiction of the power that memory has over our lives.
Read Wendy's review.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Elliot Perlman was born in Australia. He is the author of the short-story collection The Reasons I Won't Be Coming, which won the Betty Trask Award (UK) and the Fellowship of Australian Writers Book of the Year Award. He is also the author of two previous novels: Three Dollars (1998, and Seven Types of Ambiguity (2003) which was shortlisted for the 2004 Commonwealth Writers Prize (Best Book), the 2004 Queensland Premier's Literary Awards (Best Fiction Book), and 2004 The Miles Franklin Award.


HOW TO WIN A COPY

The facts about the giveaway:
  • Contest is open from January 21, 2012 to January 29, 2012. A winner will be announced on January 30, 2012 here on the blog.
  • This is an International contest (if the winner is from the US or Canada, the publisher will be sending you a copy of the book; if the winner is outside of the US or Canada, your book will come directly from us)
 To ENTER the contest:
  • To be eligible, you MUST be signed up as a participant in either the 2011 or the 2012 Chunkster Challenge. People who are signed up for BOTH the 2011 and the 2012 challenge will receive two entries in the contest. Please note, the 2011 challenge is now closed for new sign ups, so you must have signed up previously for that one. You still have time to sign up for the 2012 challenge - the giveaway is open until 5:00 pm (PST) on January 29th and as long as you sign up by then, you are entered.
  • IF you have signed up through Mr. Linky, you do not need to do anything else - you are entered! PLEASE DO NOT leave an additional comment here!
  • IF you do NOT have a blog and have signed up through comments, you MUST leave a comment on this post telling us you are signed up. If you are signed up for BOTH 2011 and 2012, please leave us TWO comments on this post. PLEASE PROVIDE YOUR EMAIL FOR US TO CONTACT YOU.
  • If you have questions about eligibility or how to sign up, please use the commenter form here. DO NOT leave questions in the comments on this post!!
  • Want an extra chance to win? Blog about this contest and leave a comment on this giveaway post with a link to your post about the contest.
 How we choose a winner:
  • We will randomly draw ONE winner from the sign up links for 2011 and 2012 and from all comments on this post on January 29th and announce their name here on the blog. If you have contact information on your blog, or you have left us a comment with your email address (if you do NOT have a blog), we will also contact you via email. You will have five days to respond to us to claim the book. If we do not get a response within five days, we will draw another name.
  • Please consider subscribing to our blog so that you will know if you have won!
GOOD LUCK!!!! 

FTC Disclosure: Book giveaways and featured book articles are NOT paid promos. Although this book for giveaway is supplied by the publisher, The Chunkster Challenge administrators have not accepted payment to host this giveaway or to feature this book.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Guest Post - Author Elliot Perlman

The Street Sweeper, by Elliot Perlman

Today author Elliot Perlman joins us on the Chunkster Challenge blog with a special guest post. Vasilly and I are thrilled to have him here - and we hope you will enjoy this feature which gives wonderful insight into the inspiration for his latest novel and the process of writing a book of this length. First a little about Mr. Perlman:

Elliot Perlman was born in Australia. He is the author of the short-story collection The Reasons I Won't Be Coming, which won the Betty Trask Award (UK) and the Fellowship of Australian Writers Book of the Year Award. He is also the author of two previous novels: Three Dollars (1998, and Seven Types of Ambiguity (2003) which was shortlisted for the 2004 Commonwealth Writers Prize (Best Book), the 2004 Queensland Premier's Literary Awards (Best Fiction Book), and 2004 The Miles Franklin Award.

Many thanks to Mr. Perlman for taking the time to craft a guest post for us!


In the early 2000s I was living in New York across the street from the mini-metropolis that is Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. Patients came to the giant hospital from all over the world for treatment there. Visitors, bewildered, sad or numb, came from all over the world too.

I used to catch the bus at a stop outside the hospital and see the hive of activity and the interaction of seemingly disparate people of different ages, socio-economic groups and educational levels, people of different races, ethnicities and nationalities, all milling around each other. So stressed were the visitors and many of the staff that they chain-smoked to alleviate their stress out on the street besides patients in wheelchairs.

To a writer observing this scene, the multitude of smokers outside the cancer hospital, people of all different backgrounds forming an instant but transient community, all of this is the gold that sends one off in search of the goldmine that is the answer to the question, “What if an unlikely friendship was to blossom out of all of this?”

From here came the answer that was the seed for The Street Sweeper. We see the beginning of an unlikely relationship between two men who, statistically should never have met. One of them is an African American janitor, a wrongly-convicted recently released ex-con, the first ex-con to be put on six month probation in a pilot program to help ex-cons re-integrate into society, a man desperate to keep his job, find his young daughter and get his life back on track. The other is an old white man battling cancer, a Jew in his eighties with only wisps of hair and thick European-accented English, a Holocaust survivor. He’s a survivor of the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp and even rarer than that, he was a member of the Sonderkommando, those Auschwitz prisoners forced by the Nazis on pain of death to work in the gas chambers and crematoria.

In a 21st century survival story these two men will need each other in ways neither of them could ever have imagined. And this is only the very beginning.

I often get asked where the beginning comes from and if I know at the beginning how long the book will be or how long it’s going to take me to write it. Perhaps it’s a mistake on my part but when starting one of my books I don’t really think very much at all about the length. Somehow, and it happens variously, I get the idea for a story, what you might call a plot outline, and I start making notes. I might start doing some research. I’ll read something, hear something, go somewhere and watch people, interview someone and then the plot really starts to take shape. Nowhere in any of this do I start thinking about length. Given the length of my most recent two books, you’d think I would have (or at least I should have) given some specific thought to the question of length. Seven Types of Ambiguity took me almost 4 years to write and I think it weighs in at about 230,000 words. The Street Sweeper is a bit shorter but took longer, in large part because The Street Sweeper required more research than my 3 previous books put together.

The Street Sweeper took about 5 ½ years to write. In addition to all the reading that I had to do for it there were the interviews. I interviewed people all over New York; historians at Columbia, ex-cons, social workers, lawyers. Then the story took me to Chicago, specifically to the Illinois Institute of Technology where David Boder, the inspiration for my character, the academic psychologist Henry Border, had taught and researched. Then I interviewed former students of his enrolled then in his masters program working on the “Adjective- Verb Quotient”. Then I went to the all-important South Side of Chicago to see where the meat works were and where my African American Chicagoans lived. I had the good fortune to be shown around there by a charming African American gentleman then in his 80s who was able to tell me about life in that time at that place. I interviewed people in my hometown, Melbourne, Australia. Then of course there were my trips to Poland and particularly the 6 trips to Auschwitz. I found a guide at the Auschwitz State Museum who went from being a trusted guide to a friend and confidant. To him I confided the wartime plot. He gave me great encouragement urging me to tell this story. Not only that but he introduced me to the last surviving Polish Jewish member of the Sonderkommando. It was this man’s wartime experiences that became the basis for my character, Henryk Mandelbrot, the Holocaust survivor in the New York hospital who befriends the African American ex-con.

I knew it wouldn’t be a short book but that didn’t bother me or faze me in any way. As a reader I’ve enjoyed works of all lengths but so many of the books that influenced me, as a writer and perhaps even as a person were, now that you force me to consider it, long books. As a young man I was a devotee of much 19th Century fiction; Dickens, George Eliot, Thomas Hardy, Victor Hugo, Emile Zola and the Russians of course. Even when I moved into the 20th century, many of my favourite books were long ones; Vasily Grossman’s Life and Fate and Robert Musil’s, The Man Without Qualities. It’s such an incredible comfort to discover a new favourite writer or a long book in which you just want to lose yourself, to immerse yourself. Whatever else is going on in your life, you know the book is there waiting for you with characters you already know and about whom you want to know more. But to be honest, I’ve also read a lot of short stories and poetry of various lengths and one of my books, The Reasons I Won’t Be Coming, is a collection of short stories so I don’t think I’m fixated on length. I have to admit though that one of the short stories in The Reasons I Won’t Be Coming, the last one called, “A Tale in Two Cities”, is about 100 pages. That’s probably quite long for a short story. Now you’ve got me thinking!

© Elliot Perlman 2012 

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Featured Book for January: The Street Sweeper by Elliot Perlman

The Street Sweeper by Elliot Perlman is being released today through Riverhead/Penguin and it is our featured book this month here on The Chunkster Challenge. At 640 pages it definitely qualifies as a chunkster! Watch the blog mid-month for a guest post by the author...which will be followed up with a giveaway of the book. To be eligible to win, you must be signed up either for the 2011 or the 2012 Chunkster Challenge.

In the meantime, check out this video interview with Perlman about the writing of his book:




FTC Disclosure: Book giveaways and featured book articles are NOT paid promos. The Chunkster Challenge administrators have accepted no payment (except for a review copy of the book) to feature this novel.