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BOOKS. AUTHORS. NEWS

By Kurt Rosenstadt.

RECENT PUBLICATIONS

The first sequel to the Barsetshire saga: Miss Glamora Tudor!

Author, Ilil Arbel.

 

New York, NY-A new Barsetshire novel, Miss Glamora Tudor by Ilil Arbel, has been published by the Angela Thirkell Society of North America. It is of major interest to readers of the works of Thirkell and Anthony Trollope. The book begins, “The time is August, 1954, a year and two months after the June coronation of Queen Elizabeth II.”  Author Arbel continues in the tradition established by Angela Thirkell for Anthony Trollope’s characters and their lives in Barsetshire. Angela Thirkell has not yet published Enter Sir Robert, and the characters in Barsetshire are enthralled with the prospect of a movie production starring Miss Glamora Tudor.  “I believe Miss Glamora Tudor is newsworthy,” Arbel commented, “since many devoted readers of the Barsetshire saga expressed their wish to see fresh material about their favorite little corner of the world. In addition, Glamora Tudor has never been on stage in the Thirkell body of work, but she has been imagined by every reader. And here she is in person, surrounded by some of the old and well-loved characters, and new characters which I have added to the cast,” Arbel says. The book is available exclusively through the Angela Thirkell Society. Ilil Arbel is the author of Maimonides: A Spiritual Biography, The Lemon Tree, a dozen other books and many articles, including contributions to Encyclopedia Mythica. About Miss Glamora Tudor: Fiction; The Angela Thirkell Society of North America’s publication; Publication Date: June 2007; Size: 5.5 x 8.5; Author: Ilil Arbel; ISBN: 978-0-9768345-2-6 (pbk); 206 Pages. The Angela Thirkell Society, PO Box 7798, San Diego, CA 92167. http://www.angelathirkell.org Media Contacts: Barbara Houlton sdhoulton@cox.net Kathleen Fish jnkfish@aol.com – 212 696 1169.

"World Who's Who In Jazz, Cabaret, Music and Entertainment": A Platform for Talent and Beauty!

Ms. Suzanne Grzanna graces the cover of "ENTERTAINMENT GREATS FROM THE 1800'S TO THE PRESENT", written by Maximillien de Lafayette.

There are no boundaries for the frightening energy and creative thinking of Maximillien de Lafayette, author extraordinaire and entertainment guru. It is almost unreal and hard to believe that one single man can write 9 gigantic books in one year. De Lafayette did it. He dashed out 6 heavy tomes on showbiz and performing arts, one huge tome on divas, and 2 additional massive books on world culture and foreign affairs. And this is the tip of the iceberg, for he is now in the final stage of editing two more books on entertainment legends and divas of the silver screen and smooth jazz. Last nuance to add to the record, he is the former editor-in-chief of the International News Agency Bureau Chief of the European Journal (Euro-Globe.)

 

Suzanne Grzanna in concert.

His  most recent 3 books were "Best Musicians, Singers, Albums and Entertainment Personalities of the 19th, 20th and 21st Centuries”, "Showbiz, Pioneers, Best  Singers, Musicians and Entertainers From 1606 to the Present", and "Entertainment Greats From the 1800's To The Present." Louise Chambertin, senior editor at Cabaret Ville Magazine wrote: "This work is a tribute to stars and headliners of world showbiz, Jazz and music from the time of the silent films era and gramophone to modern times. Well-written, majestically illustrated and abundant with behind the curtains stories about the early stars and recording artists on and off stage. The delightful saga of this remarkable book begins with its cover; Suzanne Grzanna, a stunning diva and accomplished artist at so many levels conveys the message of the author: The nostalgia of the past with its charm and glorious music blended with today's rhythm fever and glitzy showbiz. Expressing it differently, the golden era of Hollywood, Broadway and Vaudeville bursts out on the pages of the tome and flirts with the madness of modern music. Grzanna seems to echo the beauty and elegance of the era of Cole Porter, Frank Sinatra, Louis Prima and Benny Goodman. However, the book does not sleep under the rainbow of a very distant past. Several reviews and analyses of what is going on today in Manhattan, Hollywood and beyond are abundant. Including charts of CDs sales, market value of entertainers, latest trends in showbiz, Jazz newcomers and rising stars. On the back cover of the book, the "queen of Martini-Opera and musical extravaganza", Molly Brandenburg known also as Peggy Judy dominates the scene. Brandenburg is another super duper star of the musical comedy scene in California. She is fun, mega-talented and larger than life. Both, Grzanna and Brandenburg are perfect for the covers of the book."

Lafayette was born amid flamboyant musical and artistic milieus. Since a young age, he mingled with legends of the American and European cinema and stars of the French music-hall. Some were close friends to his parents. Illustrious names like Marlene Dietrich, Simone Signoret, Jean Gabin, Sacha Distel, Michele Morgan, Omar Sharif, to name a few. At 16, he wrote his first play "Paris does not believe in tears", and his musical melodrama "Marmara the Gypsy" was produced at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, DC, USA. "Without music, there is no peace in the world. Music pacifies fanatics and  attenuates violence...and without divas, there is no charm, beauty and reveries in our turbulent world," said Maximillien de Lafayette. So, he is in the music business, instead of wearing his robe of lawyer and defending clients before the court. Oh Yes! he practiced law for 15 years! But he gave it up to embrace the magic cosmos of showbiz and scented world of divas! I don't blame him. As a matter  of fact, I envy him.

The Peggy Judy Summer Replacement Show: Peggy's big stage extravaganza at the Company of Angels Theater, with a cast so large it could populate a small South American country. Pictured: the suave and gravity defying Peggy Judy dancers, Mike Luckerman, John Dragon and Dean Cleverdon. Courtesy of Globe Weekly News.

I had a brief look at his latest book "ENTERTAINMENT GREATS FROM THE 1800'S TO THE PRESENT." In fact, I went through few pages of his unedited Adobe version, and the book looks terrific. It is so pretty. But the esthetics are not the major concern of the author. The content is! And the content is overwhelming. Pick up any topic related to early showbiz glorious days and you will find it discussed at length in the book. Ask any question about the divas of stage and smooth jazz, and tons of photos and analogies flash before your very eyes. And to envelop these treasures in the book, de Lafayette's Editorial Board had to find the most suitable artists to grace the cover of the book. They did. They found two gorgeous and multitalented divas, and both are made in the USA!!!! Suzanne Grzanna, a classy singer and saxophonist from Wisconsin, and Molly Brandenburg (aka Peggy Judy). Grzanna is on the front cover of the book, and there is a reason for that. D. Iliescu, the graphic artist was looking for a classy star with a traditional and strong musical background to give the impression that the book is academically traditional. But in the same time, the chosen star had to be innovative and "flavor of the jour," as Iliescu explained. Suzanne Grzanna brought to the cover several  ingredients: Beauty, style, presence and command of music and lyrics. Et Voila, Grzanna is the lady of the cover. The editorial board of the World Who's Who consists of critics, writers and even Parisian haute couture personalities, who are not always easy to please. If you look at the previous covers of the Who's Who, you will find captivating faces glowing on the front and back covers of each volume. And this is intentional. Carol Lexter who recommends artists to the board said "You got to find talent, beauty and uniqueness, all blended together in one person  to create a very special cover...In the past, we had on the covers fabulous people like  Carol Welsman, Lord! she is a knockout and winner of so many jazz awards. Jill Corey was on a cover. Jill is a living legend and she was the favorite of Johnny Carson...Peggy Judy (Molly Brandenburg) appeared twice on two separate covers. And Judy is Judy! There is only one Judy in the business....she is magnetizing...a great lady, a wonderful entertainer...this time we chose Suzanne Grzanna, and we are delighted, because she is a national treasure..."

__________________________________________________________________________

BOOKS AND WOMEN AUTHORS TO REMEMBER: WOMEN AUTHORS AND BOOKS TO REMEMBER. Reviews, history, news and essays

NEWS

Meet Indigo's real youth book wizards. Junior advisory board makes real, big-budget decisions on what gets onto shelves. The Million-Dollar Man is small potatoes. Meet Canada's $110-million teenagers. One of the biggest business stories this year has been the skyrocketing sales of books in children's and young adult categories, which account for a full 14 per cent of the $785.5 million in annual sales at Indigo Books -- the country's largest book retailer...

Alan Alda: "I think the guy who winds up at the end of the book would say, 'Destiny is just what happens." Alan Alda titled his new book Never Have Your Dog Stuffed -- and Other Things I've Learned. But rest assured he didn't write it as a guide for self-improvement. He doesn't aim to be your guru. "I tried to tell as good a story as I could," he sums up. The resulting narrative, at 224 pages, is as lean as its author, and as engaging, and as flush with ideas and observations. "There are things that were very, very difficult to put into words," says Alda, at 69 an entertainment veteran actor who had written numerous screenplays but never a book. "That was what I had the most fun with - the things that don't want to go into words...

Da Vinci Code author Dan BrownDa Vinci publisher in court case, Two authors are launching a High Court action against the publishers of The Da Vinci Code, which they say infringes upon their ideas. Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh are suing Random House, claiming the bestseller lifts from their 1982 book The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail.  A High Court hearing will be held next week, followed by a trial next year. Random House was unavailable for comment on the claim that Brown stole the idea that Jesus had a child...

BOOKS: LATEST NEWS  

Alan Alda: "I think the guy who winds up at the end of the book would say, 'Destiny is just what happens."

 

Alan Alda titled his new book Never Have Your Dog Stuffed -- and Other Things I've Learned. But rest assured he didn't write it as a guide for self-improvement. He doesn't aim to be your guru. "I tried to tell as good a story as I could," he sums up. The resulting narrative, at 224 pages, is as lean as its author, and as engaging, and as flush with ideas and observations. "There are things that were very, very difficult to put into words," says Alda, at 69 an entertainment veteran actor who had written numerous screenplays but never a book. "That was what I had the most fun with - the things that don't want to go into words. "But the hardest part was how to take a life and make it one simple story, not just a bunch of anecdotes. I didn't like the idea of writing a memoir or an autobiography. I only put in stuff that moved the story forward." The story: One man's advancement toward accepting the uncertainties of life. Letting go, notes Alda, is a drawn-out process, "so you don't just decide to do it. You have to creep up on it. Practice it. Get used to it. "I think the guy who winds up at the end of the book would say, 'Destiny is just what happens. " Alda should know. A lot has happened for that guy this year. He got an Oscar nomination for his role in Martin Scorsese's The Aviator, a Tony nomination for his Broadway performance in David Mamet's Glengarry Glen Ross, and an Emmy nomination for The West Wing, in which he plays flinty Republican presidential hopeful Arnold Vinick. He continues this season on the NBC political drama, and, for its Nov. 6 episode, Sen. Vinick will square off against the Democrat (Jimmy Smits) in a debate aired live. Which candidate will succeed President Bartlet (series star Martin Sheen) by season's end? " I wouldn't spoil the surprise even if I knew," Alda replies when pressed for details about his contractual commitment to the series. But then, flashing his incandescent grin, he pledges to remain "as long as necessary to turn this great country around." When he isn't shuttling to Los Angeles to shoot the series, Alda leaves his Long Island home to hit the campaign trail for Never Have Your Dog Stuffed. Its first sentence establishes the book's matter-of-fact, often darkly witty tone. "My mother didn't try to stab my father until I was six, but she must have shown signs of oddness before that," Alda writes. He was the son of a mentally ill mother and an actor father, Robert Alda, who was subject to the vagaries of show business during a career that ranged from the hardscrabble vaudeville circuit to Broadway in the original production of Guys and Dolls. All in all, it was a dizzying childhood for Alan. But by age nine, he had decided he would be an actor, too, setting the stage for his push-pull life of embracing make-believe while defiantly inquiring into how things really are. He is a man in love with facts and verifiable truth (his decade as the gung-ho host of Scientific American Frontiers makes that clear). But he has also studied what it means to yield control to forces beyond reason.

He had an early brush with that as a boy when his dog died suddenly and his dad, in a misguided attempt to console him, had the creature stuffed. "Stuffing your dog," Alda writes, "is more than what happens when you take a dead body and turn it into a souvenir. It's also what happens when you hold on to any living moment longer than it wants you to." Of course, that experience didn't stop him from sending away for a mail-order course in taxidermy a few years later. "There was a lot of stuff in there, and most of it was gooey," he found before abandoning his effort to preserve an owl's carcass. At 21, Alda wed a pretty clarinetist named Arlene, with whom he soon had three daughters (and now shares seven grandchildren they dote on). But the family's early years were marked by false starts and dead ends in his drive to find acting success. In his mid-30s, he struck gold as Dr. Hawkeye Pierce in the beloved comedy M*A*S*H, whose finale after 11 seasons -- airing on Feb. 28, 1983 -- was seen by nearly 106 million viewers and remains the highest-rated telecast in TV history. But rather than playing doctor two years ago, Alda was on the receiving end of emergency surgery for an intestinal obstruction while in Chile doing a segment for Scientific American Frontiers. It was an operation with which he was professionally acquainted, he writes -- although, as Hawkeye, "all I operated on was a piece of foam rubber." He came through the procedure OK, and "when I woke up," he says now, savouring the memory, "was I glad to be there! I was almost manic about being alive. "Then I started going back over my whole life, and I began to realize how connected the whole part of my early life was to this euphoria I was feeling. I really did want to understand everything that went before, and see what I could learn from it." Never Have Your Dog Stuffed is the outcome -- Alda's learning process deftly put in story form; reflections galore, but no how-to advice. "Letting somebody else tell me what to think is a way of stuffing the dog," he says with a laugh. "My telling somebody else what to think is the same thing."-F. More

 

Mesmerizing... A total literary triumph.” The London Monthly Herald

 

“Dangerously captivating....One of the 10 best novels of the year." World Art Celebrities Journal

 

“A fabulous writer with an astonishing romantic clarity...Add ‘Silent Lies’ to your collection of treasures. Rating: 5 stars out of 5" The International Herald Daily News

 

"This is an excellent first book." The Historical Fiction Review

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THE DRAMA AND SUSPENSE BOOK OF THE YEAR.

  • Silent Lies by M.L. Malcolm
  • Hardcover:  6 x 9, 336 pages
  • Publisher: Longstreet Press (USA) (November 2005) ISBN: 1563527502
  • US List Price: $24.95 
        Our Price: £12.54  (amazon.co.uk)
     
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    Best of the Decade... So Far
    If Tom Friedman can call his latest book a "Brief History of the Twenty-First Century," we thought we could take a more modest look back and make some early choices for the best books of the decade so far. Yes, you'll find The World Is Flat there, along with dozens more of our editors' picks and customers' favorites since 2000, including list-toppers like Life of Pi and Random Family. See our choices and your bestselling favorites:
     

      See all the lists in Best of the Decade... So Far

     

    Meet Indigo's real youth book wizards
    Junior advisory board makes real, big-budget decisions on what gets onto shelves

     

    The Million-Dollar Man is small potatoes. Meet Canada's $110-million teenagers. One of the biggest business stories this year has been the skyrocketing sales of books in children's and young adult categories, which account for a full 14 per cent of the $785.5 million in annual sales at Indigo Books -- the country's largest book retailer. What you may not know is 10 teen bookworms help determine which authors get a piece of that nine-figure pie, empowered to make or break any would-be Harry Potter before it ever hits store shelves. Given exclusive access to pre-release books, the hand-picked members of Indigo's junior advisory board -- five of whom were announced this month, five of whom are "emeritus" advisers from 2004 -- liaise with the company's buyers throughout the year to help steer them toward the best bets in new youth titles. "Our picks and our opinions on books do influence not only how many copies are bought by the store, but also if they're (bought) at all," says Riley Tickles, a 14-year-old emeritus adviser from Calgary. "It has been one of the best experiences of my life so far." According to Heather Reisman, chief executive at Indigo, the company wouldn't snub a novel that deserved exposure. But if the junior advisory board members are all holding their noses, she says: "the difference in the amount of exposure and promotion (the book gets) can be quite significant." Last year, for example, Reisman says a particular title -- which came "highly, highly touted" by its publisher as the next big thing -- was only judged lukewarm by Indigo's senior reviewers. When the junior advisory board also gave it a collective thumbs-down, the book was taken off the fast track.

    "Their recommendations are taken very seriously," she says. "So instead of doing a big buy on that book, we just tested it in a number of stores. It didn't do well." Less than a month into his new gig, 15-year-old adviser Bobby Hanson is already enjoying the sense of importance that comes with the position. "We represent the greater body of youth, so our opinions are heard by the executives and the buyers and what not," says Hanson, a Vancouver teen who was reading encyclopedias when he was just four years old. "I'm pretty sure we have fairly large power." Also joining the advisory panel this month are Victoria's Kristie Foreman, 13, Katie Hillman, 16, from Halifax, Toronto's Madeleine Cummings, 14, and Adam Moscoe, 13, of Ottawa. Continuing emeritus advisers include Hannah Drew, 15, from London, Ont., Aaron Martin, 12, of Surrey, B.C., Katrina Sklepowich, 15, from Winnipeg, and Charlottetown's Megan Stewart, 17. Indigo's junior advisory board, in its second year of operation, is what a focus group would look like on steroids. The kids have more influence, a greater hand in the business, and get more compensation for their time -- in this case, a $1,000 gift card, an iPod Mini, a trip to Toronto and their own personalized section in Chapters and Indigo stores across the country. A youth-oriented retail website is also in the works to help meet the needs of this growing audience. This year, retail of kids books is up 37.6 per cent, with the biggest growth showing up in the nine- to 16-age segment. Remove Harry Potter from the equation and sales in that category are still up an impressive 21 per cent. "There isn't any other (bookseller) in Canada doing this. In the world, nobody is doing this," says Reisman. "Kids don't necessarily make the best book critics, but they are the best able to reflect what their peers are thinking. When you're 13, you know what it feels like to be 13." Debi Andrus, assistant professor at the University of Calgary's Haskayne School of Business, says rival companies would be smart to take notes. "One of the problems with a number of retailers whose target is young people is that they often try to put themselves into the shoes of (teens) rather than listening to them," she says. "(Reisman) is known for doing things differently. Once again, she has found a way to include the voice of a significant audience in her decision making." - M. Harris.

    Straight into Darkness

    Faye Kellerman

    Book Cover

    Pub. Date: August 2005

    FROM OUR EDITORS

    This exciting offshoot of the Peter Decker/Rina Lazarus mystery series transports us back to Nazi-ridden Munich in the 1920s. Homicide detective Axel Berg's search for a triple murderer is hampered at every turn by power politics and private agendas.

    FROM THE PUBLISHER

    AS NIGHT DESCENDS,
    A KILLER AWAKENS
    With ten consecutive New York Times bestsellers, Faye Kellerman is truly a "master of mystery" (Cleveland Plain Dealer). Now she turns her acute eye on 1920s Munich, a war-wounded city rocked by political agitation and stalked by a nameless, barbaric butcher.Lustmord-the joy of murder. The terrifying concept seems apt for the brutal slaying of a beautiful young society wife dumped in the vast English Garden. Homicide inspector Axel Berg is horrified by the crime...and disturbed by the artful arrangement of the victim's clothes and hair-a madman's portrait of death.Berg's superiors demand quick answers and a quick arrest: a vagrant, the woman's husband, anyone who can be demonized will do. When a second body is discovered, the city erupts into panic, the unrest fomented by the wild-eyed, hate-mongering Austrian Adolf Hitler and his Brownshirt party of young thugs.
    Berg can trust no one as he relentlessly hunts a ruthless killer, dodging faceless enemies and back-alley intrigue, struggling to bring a fiend to justice before the country-and his life-veer straight into darkness.

    Barnes & Noble.com - www.bn.comBarnes & Noble.com - www.bn.com

     

    Iconic Shakespeare portrait likely not him

    An Elizabethan portrait thought by many to depict the young William Shakespeare is not the bard, experts at the National Portrait Gallery have concluded.

    The Grafton portrait, which shows a dark-haired, high-browed young man in a rich scarlet jacket, has appeared on the cover of books about the writer. Gallery experts dated the painting to 1588, when Shakespeare was 24 -- the age given by an inscription on the picture for its subject. But they said Friday that there was no other evidence to suggest the portrait, owned by the University of Manchester, was of the playwright. Curator Tarnya Cooper said it was unlikely Shakespeare, then a young actor and writer, would have been able to afford a garment as expensive as the one in the painting. "We believe that Shakespeare left Stratford-upon-Avon following the birth of twins in 1585," Cooper said. "One possibility is that he joined a travelling theatre troupe and it is very unlikely that in 1588, Shakespeare would have been able to afford a costume of this type." Cooper said the painting had helped nurture the image of a sensitive, brooding young poet popularized by the film Shakespeare in Love -- "a beautiful young man with a sensitive and passionate face, of a character with an incredible emotional range." Painted in oils on an oak panel by an anonymous artist, the Grafton Portrait is named for one of the Dukes of Grafton, who is said to have owned it. The gallery is restoring and authenticating three portraits purportedly of Shakespeare in preparation for its Searching for Shakespeare exhibition next year. Using x-rays, ultraviolet light, microphotography and paint sampling tests, scholars at the gallery concluded in April that one of the best-known Shakespeare portraits -- the so-called Flower portrait owned by the Royal Shakespeare Company -- was also a fake. Scientific analysis revealed the painting dated from the 19th century. Next, experts will examine the Chandos portrait, which is in the gallery's own collection. Only two likenesses of Shakespeare are widely accepted as authentic: a bust on his tomb in Stratford's Holy Trinity Church and an engraving used as a frontispiece to the Folio edition of his plays in 1623.

    FROM OUR EDITORS

    Medical examiner Sarah Linton and her ex-hubby, Jeffrey, are out in the Georgia woods, discussing their past infidelities, when they make an unsettling discovery: the corpse of a beautiful young girl who was buried alive. Their search for her story and the culprit lead them first to a farming collective favored by ex-cons and then to a fanatical nondenominational church. As always, author Karin Slaughter leads readers into thickets of suspicion, then springs a trap.

    FROM THE PUBLISHER

    "Brilliant plotting, relentless suspense," raved the Washington Post. "A new synonym for terror," crowned the Detroit Free Press. The critics agree: no one writes suspense like Karin Slaughter, whose thrillers featuring medical examiner Sara Linton and her ex-husband, police chief Jeffrey Tolliver, have propelled her to the top of bestseller lists the world over. Now Slaughter fuses her unmatched grasp of forensic science and a mastery of complex relationships in a riveting tale of faith, doubt, and murder. The victim was buried alive in the Georgia woods--then killed in a horrifying fashion. When Sara Linton and Jeffrey Tolliver stumble upon the body, both become consumed with finding out who killed the pretty, impeccably dressed young woman. And for Sara and Jeffrey, a harrowing journey begins, one that will test their own turbulent relationship and draw dozens of lives into the case. Lena Adams is one of them. A Grant County detective for years, she has her own reasons for being drawn to this case and a fierce drive to see justice done. For these three people, who have each seen the darkest side of human nature, the body of the murdered girl is but the first in a series of shocking and sordid revelations.
    Now, as Jeffrey and Sara narrow the field of suspects, they must confront their own doubts and indiscretions, while Lena Adams sees herself reflected in the frightened eyes of a battered woman who may be the key figure in the case. As Faithless builds to a stunning and unforgettable climax, Karin Slaughter masterfully brings together strands of interlocking lives, family secrets, and hidden passions with one astounding truth: the identity of a killer who is moreevil and dangerous than anyone could have guessed.

     

    Format: Hardcover | Paperback - Large Print | Compact Disc
     
    Pub. Date: August 2005

     

    Da Vinci publisher in court case

     Two authors are launching a High Court action against the publishers of The Da Vinci Code, which they say infringes upon their ideas.

    Da Vinci Code author Dan Brown

    Photo: The Da Vinci Code has made author Dan Brown a household name.

    Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh are suing Random House, claiming the bestseller lifts from their 1982 book The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail.  A High Court hearing will be held next week, followed by a trial next year. Random House was unavailable for comment on the claim that Brown stole the idea that Jesus had a child. A spokeswoman for Baigent and Leigh said the authors had been struck by alleged similarities to their history book. She said: "The basis of their case is theft of intellectual property. "There are huge chunks of The Da Vinci Code which they say is lifted from their book." The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail was recently reissued through Century, part of the Random House group. It features "cryptically coded parchments, secret societies, the Knights Templar" and links them to "a dynasty of obscure French kings" and the Holy Grail. It also claims that Jesus and Mary Magdalene married and had a child together.Audrey Tautou

    Photo: Audrey Tautou will co-star in the film, due out next year.

    The Da Vinci Code, derided by critics and the subject of furious religious debate, won best book at this year's British Book Awards. The novel sees an art historian follow a trail of codes and puzzles to explore claims that Jesus and Mary's bloodline survives to this day. A film is being made by director Ron Howard and starring Tom Hanks. Baigent and Leigh wrote their book with a third author, Henry Lincoln, who is not taking part in the legal action due to ill-health. In August, Brown won a court ruling in New York against writer Lewis Perdue, who claimed The Da Vinci Code plagiarised elements of two of his novels, Daughter of God, published in 2000 and 1983's The Da Vinci Legacy. Perdue sought to block future distribution of the book and forthcoming film, as well as $150m (£84m) in damages, but the judge said  any similarity was based on "unprotectable ideas".

    BOOKS AND ENCYCLOPEDIAS BY MAXIMILLIEN DE LAFAYETTE

    Nation Rating and Rank Order of United States Colleges and ...
    ... Universities by Jean Maximillien De LA Croix De Lafayette, et al - order it online
    now! This book is recommended. This title is a bestseller among newer books. ...
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      Find maximillien+de+lafayette in these categories:Books (21)
    Lafayette's English-French Lexion How to Learn Seven Thousand Words in Less Than Thirty Minutes by J. Maximillien De Lafayette
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    The International Book of World Etiquette, Protocol and Refined Manners by Jean-Maximillien Dde Lafayette
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    How Foreign Students Can Earn an American University Degree Without Leaving Their Country by J. Maximillien De Lafayette
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    How Not to Fail in America by J. Maximillien De Lafayette (Editor), Academic Press (Hardcover - December 1991)
    Credentials Academic Equivalency and New Trends in Higher Education Worldwide by J. Maximillien De Lafayette
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    The Secret Book of Nations: How People in One Hundred and Fifty Countries Can and Would Help or Destroy Your Life (The World Today Series, Volume 1) by Jean Maximillien De Lafayette
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    Worlds Best and Worst Countries: A Comparative Study of Communities Societies Lifestyles and Their People by Maximillien J. De Lafayette
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    Comprehensive Guide to the Best Colleges and Universities in the United States by Jean-Maximillien De LA Croix De Lafayette
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    Nation Rating and Rank Order of United States Colleges and Universities by Jean Maximillien De LA Croix De Lafayette, et al
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    Google is sued by book publishers

    Woman arranges a book shop display

    Photo: Google reckons its plans will raise awareness and sales of books

    Internet search engine Google is being sued by a group of book publishers over plans to put millions of titles online. The Association of American Publishers, which includes firms such as Penguin, has filed a suit in New York claiming Google will infringe their copyrights. As part of its Print Library Project, Google plans to index and scan millions of books from five major libraries. Google countered that the lawsuit was "short sighted", claiming its idea will lift exposure and demand for books. The legal action came after months of talks failed to hammer out an agreement. "We spent so much time on this I think half of our board ended up having trouble with their families because of cancelling vacations," said Patricia Schroeder, president and CEO of the Association of American Publishers. The group is not the only one to take exception to Google's literary aspirations. Last month, a US writers' group sued Google also claiming its plans to digitise the books infringed author copyright. Google said it has been taking into account the concerns of publishers and authors.

    No damages: Once the texts are digitised, users would not be able to download or print the whole book, but would be able to view a few sentences from each. Copyright holders have until 1 November to contact Google and get their titles removed from the list of those books to be scanned. However, the publishers say that does not go far enough and want the whole process to stop and have called on the court to grant them an injunction claiming they are suffering "continuing, irreparable and imminent harm". The legal action has been brought by five companies in all, and along with Penguin Group USA, there are McGraw-Hill, Pearson Education, Simon & Schuster and John Wiley & Sons. They are seeking legal costs, but no damages.