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<b>Nureyev combined danseur’s artistry with rock star swagger</b>

One does not have to be a balletomane to applaud Julie Kavanagh’s exquisite biography of Rudolf Nureyev. <b>Nureyev: The Life</b> encompasses Iron Curtain intrigue, artistic derring-do, exotic locales, brazen sex, a valiant fight against a then-mysterious disease and fame in all its celebrity-laden glory. All this <i>and</i> sumptuous exploration of Giselle, Romeo and Juliet, Swan Lake, The Tempest, etc.

A dance critic trained in ballet, who previously detailed the life of choreographer Frederick Ashton (a founding father of classical English ballet), Kavanagh spent nearly a decade working on the book. Nureyev foundations in Europe and America underwrote some research and provided access to rare documents including Nureyev’s KGB file and letters chronicling his love affair with famed Danish dancer Erik Bruhn. The endorsements don’t color the bravura of this work. Alongside lofty dissections of dance and technique there is plenty of dish, revealing the foibles and demons of a brilliant artist.

Running 800 (yes, 800!) pages, and covering five decades, the biography takes wing in the ’50s with Nureyev’s rise as ballet student and star of the Kirov Ballet. With his defection from the Soviet Union, the spotlight grows brighter. Amid the colorful passion of the ’60s, the exotic, charismatic Nureyev catapults to the kind of superstardom reserved for rock stars.

His teaming with the great English ballerina Margot Fonteyn is the stuff of legend. Lines outside the theater stretch around the block; curtain calls are nearly as long as the productions. To see Fonteyn-Nureyev is to bask in nirvana. She was much older and married; he preferred men. But the two may have been lovers. They were definitely soul mates, reaching out to one another in difficult times (in her later years, as she grew ill, he paid many of her medical bills), sharing momentous adventures. Especially vivid: their headline-making 1967 dope bust in San Francisco, which began when a fan invited Nureyev to a freak-out in Haight-Ashbury.

Given his supernova status, Nureyev’s story includes supporting roles and cameos by the likes of Mick Jagger, Bette Davis, Natalie Wood, No‘l Coward, Claus von BŸlow, J. Paul Getty, Princess Lee Radziwill and her sister Jackie Kennedy, Leslie Caron, Michelle Phillips, Bianca Jagger, Martha Graham, Truman Capote, Franco Zeffirelli, Gore Vidal, George Balanchine, Andy Warhol, Mikhail Baryshnikov and Jerome Robbins. There were numerous others, such as Peter O’Toole whose alcoholic excesses Nureyev couldn’t match. And Marlene Dietrich, who ogled him and insisted he drive her home. Imagining himself chained to her bed, he told a friend, If I’m not back in twenty minutes, you come get me! He asked several women to bear his child. But it was men he wanted. He trolled public lavatories and the fetish clubs of downtown Manhattan, propositioned busboys and stole away the handsome young dates of female friends. Careless love brought an ugly price: In 1984 Nureyev came down with pneumonia, a harbinger of what was being called gay cancer the specter of the AIDS plague.

To this day, much about Nureyev’s illness remains secret. He ducked questions about his health, sought care under assumed names and seldom discussed specifics with friends. Moreover, after being diagnosed, he went on to dance, direct, choreograph and conduct. The disease finally got him; he died in 1993. As an iconic artist, however, he continues to take bows. <i>Pat H. Broeske is a biographer whose subjects include another iconic artist, Elvis Presley.</i>

<b>Nureyev combined danseur's artistry with rock star swagger</b>

One does not have to be a balletomane to applaud Julie Kavanagh's exquisite biography of Rudolf Nureyev. <b>Nureyev: The Life</b> encompasses Iron Curtain intrigue, artistic derring-do, exotic locales, brazen sex, a valiant fight against a then-mysterious…

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<b>Robbins’ fiction was as large as his life</b> Harold Robbins lived life so large he might have stepped out of one of his own racy paperbacks. He loved gambling, gorgeous women and cocaine; had homes in Beverly Hills, Acapulco and the south of France, plus a legendary yacht and a fleet of Rolls-Royces, Jensens and Maseratis. And then there were his lavish parties some of them X-rated. But Robbins’ wasn’t born to wealth. His background was working class, which meant he knew how to please the public. Instead of putting on literary airs he delivered page-turning storylines and sex, sex, sex. Andrew Wilson, who previously chronicled the life of Patricia Highsmith, has interviewed family, friends and acquaintances, and explored archives and court documents for <b>Harold Robbins: The Man Who Invented Sex</b>, a frank look at the not-always-likable man behind the blockbusters. As Wilson details, elements from Robbins’ own life permeated his works, including a search for the mother he never knew. His sexual proclivities likewise drove his fiction to the delight of mass market readers. In 1968, when the <i>New York Times</i> examined the 10 all-time bestsellers, Robbins had penned seven of them. His most famous opus, <i>The Carpetbaggers</i> loosely based on the life of Howard Hughes is the fourth most-read book in history. A former shipping clerk (real name: Harold Rubin), Robbins was a budget analyst for Universal when he got a hankering to become a producer. But producers needed properties, so Robbins set out to write his own. It didn’t hurt that his first book, 1948’s <i>Never Love a Stranger</i>, was deemed obscene and immoral following a Philadelphia vice squad raid. (Robbins and his publisher fought the charges and won.) He went on to write 23 novels, including <i>The Adventurers</i> (1966), <i>Dreams Die First</i> (1977) and <i>Tycoon</i> (1997), as well as several screenplays. (Wilson’s book would have benefited from a chronological listing of Robbins’ works. And it would have been fun to see a compendium of the Robbins’ novels adapted for film/TV. Anyone remember an early Tommy Lee Jones in <i>The Betsy</i>? Or that one of his best books, <i>A Stone for Danny Fisher</i> (1952), improbably became the Elvis Presley vehicle, <i>King Creole</i>?) In the end, Robbins fell victim to his excesses as well as health woes; he died a decade ago at the age of 81.

Robbins’ later works were all but unreadable. But by becoming a brand name, he forever altered the book business. He also paved the way for sex-drenched bestsellers by the likes of Jacqueline Susann and Jackie Collins. Often asked about the appeal of his books, Robbins once said, They’re American stories about the power game. Asked how he succeeded, he had this advice: If you want to be a writer, put your butt in a chair and write! <i>Howard Hughes biographer Pat H. Broeske got to swap Hughes stories with the crusty Robbins during a memorable book signing event.</i>

<b>Robbins' fiction was as large as his life</b> Harold Robbins lived life so large he might have stepped out of one of his own racy paperbacks. He loved gambling, gorgeous women and cocaine; had homes in Beverly Hills, Acapulco and the south of France, plus…

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If it’s ever made into the movie for which it’s already been purchased, Storming the Court may do as much to romanticize lawyers as All The President’s Men did to glamorize journalists. The book tells how Yale law professor Harold H. Koh, a handful of his students and a few fellow lawyers repeatedly went to court against the administrations of George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton to gain the right to provide legal services to a group of Haitian refugees imprisoned in 1992 at Guantanamo Bay.

Thousands of people had fled Haiti following the 1991 military overthrow of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. Some of these the U.S. granted asylum, but most were sent back or confined at Guantanamo. Eventually, the Coast Guard began intercepting the refugees on the high seas and, contrary to the United Nations Refugee Convention of 1951, returning them without the benefit of review.

Author Brandt Goldstein was himself a law student at Yale while all this was going on, but he was not one of the activists. Relying on multiple interviews with the principal players, court documents and contemporary news accounts, he spins out a fast-paced and cinematically vivid thriller. Besides covering the seesaw court actions and the behind-the-scenes struggles accompanying them, Goldstein also presents the concurrent story of Yvonne Pascal, an Aristide supporter who has had to escape without her husband and children and who ends up at the Guantanamo prison camp leading a hunger strike.

Goldstein portrays Koh and his students as impassioned idealists who must take their chances and lumps in a world of harsh and uncaring politics. One of their adversaries is the ubiquitous Kenneth Starr, then Bush’s solicitor general. Koh and company expect the government to be more compliant on the issue of the Haitians once Clinton comes to power. But it isn’t. The little band of advocates win the immediate goal of freeing this particular group of prisoners, including the heroic Pascal. But they fail to set the precedent that due process shall apply to Guantanamo as more recent cases have demonstrated. Still, this is a tale that warms the heart even as it clenches the jaws.

If it's ever made into the movie for which it's already been purchased, Storming the Court may do as much to romanticize lawyers as All The President's Men did to glamorize journalists. The book tells how Yale law professor Harold H. Koh, a handful of…
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All the Money in the World: How the Forbes 400 Make and Spend Their Fortunes, by journalists Peter W. Bernstein and Annalyn Swan is published to coincide with the 25th anniversary of Forbes, the book clarifies the difference between those who have money (lots of actors and athletes) and those with genuine wealth (the 400 richest people in the world, according to the magazine). If knowing how the likes of Bill Gates and Warren Buffett garnered their fortunes and what they’ve done with their wealth appeals to you, the Bernstein/Swan team’s exhaustive research will prove quite rewarding.

All the Money in the World is one of the most detailed books you’ll see, with a host of tables, sidebars, factoids, anecdotes and material. Depending on your politics, the fact that some of these people have lost more money in 25 years than many nations of the world could raise in triple that time might be amazing, interesting or appalling. This amalgam of lists, profiles and stories does humanize the Forbes 400, however, showing that even the ultra-wealthy make mistakes in judgment, have bad marriages, family feuds, unexpected setbacks and other problems. All the Money in the World is not just scholarly; it’s also highly readable and provocative.

All the Money in the World: How the Forbes 400 Make and Spend Their Fortunes, by journalists Peter W. Bernstein and Annalyn Swan is published to coincide with the 25th anniversary of Forbes, the book clarifies the difference between those who have money (lots of…
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There’s plenty of debate out there among people far more literate in science and economics than I regarding the merits of neuroeconomics, including questions about whether it’s one discipline or the other or just another fancy term coined to codify otherwise unexplainable behavior. Since Jason Zweig has worked at various times for Time, Forbes and Money magazines, he knows how to simplify fiscal language and explain things in an interesting way, which makes Your Money and Your Brain: How The New Science of Neuroeconomics Can Help Make You Rich a lot more fun than it might sound.

Suggestions for improving your money management behavior range from resisting exposure to such images as stock tickers and closing bells (they provoke pain in the brain) to avoiding decisions based solely on short-term rewards (too impulsive and indicative of a dangerous trend if repeated). Many of Zweig’s recommendations would work for anyone regardless of genetic factors, so even those doubtful of the link between biology and finance can benefit from his advice. Your Money and Your Brain is consistently enjoyable and filled with fascinating facts that will make you pause before making another misguided investment decision.

There's plenty of debate out there among people far more literate in science and economics than I regarding the merits of neuroeconomics, including questions about whether it's one discipline or the other or just another fancy term coined to codify otherwise unexplainable behavior. Since Jason…
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Dog devotees are certain to appreciate the strange-but-true episodes collected in What the Dog Did: Tales from a Formerly Reluctant Dog Owner by Emily Yoffe. A regular contributor to Slate.com who has also written for Newsweek and Esquire, Yoffe starts out as a staunch cat owner, with no intention of having a dog. But one day, in answer to her daughter’s demands, she brings home a rescued beagle the nervous, sensitive Sasha. With this high-maintenance pet on her hands, there’s no looking back for the author who ready or not enters the rocky terrain of canine ownership. Then, quicker than a twitch of Sasha’s tail, the incredible occurs: Yoffe becomes a dog person. Writing with affection, insight and humor, Yoffe chronicles this classic conversion experience. Her initiation into the canine world is both comic and poignant, filled with unforgettable incidents, as she studies to become a pet psychic (in order to telepathically communicate with her animals), trains the poorly socialized Sasha to work as a therapy dog and cares for a succession of needy beagles. Best of all is Sasha’s miraculous metamorphosis from a hopelessly phobic rescue case to a happily adjusted member of the Yoffe household. The perfect ending. Julie Hale’s dog, Howdy, who was rescued from a shelter, is still working on the basics of sit and stay.

Dog devotees are certain to appreciate the strange-but-true episodes collected in What the Dog Did: Tales from a Formerly Reluctant Dog Owner by Emily Yoffe. A regular contributor to Slate.com who has also written for Newsweek and Esquire, Yoffe starts out as a staunch cat…
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If your pet, like many, displays a host of annoying habits, then it’s time to teach that pesky pooch some new tricks. Filled with innovative training tips you can implement yourself, Kathy Santo’s Dog Sense: Everything You Need to Know about Raising, Training and Understanding the Dog in Your Life can help you guide your pet onto the path of improved behavior. A familiar face on NBC’s Today show, Santo is a New Jersey-based dog trainer who works with more than 100 animals each week. With this invaluable book, she reveals her secrets, offering sympathetic and compassionate advice in chapters focusing on commands, equipment, etiquette and specific behavior issues. Yes, there is hope for that seemingly irredeemable dog, and Santo offers it here. The concerns she covers in the book include incessant barking, begging, digging, aggressive social behavior and the canine tendency to chew on (only) valuable items. Spend some time with Santo, and she’ll help you get to the bottom of your pet’s problems.

Julie Hale’s dog, Howdy, who was rescued from a shelter, is still working on the basics of sit and stay.

If your pet, like many, displays a host of annoying habits, then it's time to teach that pesky pooch some new tricks. Filled with innovative training tips you can implement yourself, Kathy Santo's Dog Sense: Everything You Need to Know about Raising, Training and Understanding…
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Solving crimes has never looked easier, and thanks to TV dramas such as CSI and Bones, and documentaries including Forensic Files and high-tech, highly hyped explorations (is that mummy really Queen Nefertiti?), we’re all armchair forensic scientists. In truth, many cases don’t wrap with a denouement. Though corpses and skeletal remains provide clues, body language isn’t always so easily decipherable. But it is compelling, as detailed by Dr. Bill Bass and co-author Jon Jefferson in Beyond the Body Farm.

Forensic anthropologist Bass created the now-famous Body Farm. Located in a woodsy area near the University of Tennessee Medical Center, it is an official dumping ground for bodies which are allowed to decompose and then are studied by forensics students. Patricia Cornwell popularized the place with her 1994 novel The Body Farm. It got nonfiction treatment when Bass and Jefferson (a science writer) teamed for 2003’s Death’s Acre. Now the authors take us on a journey beyond the farm’s perimeters detailing cases involving biting, burning, shooting, knifing, plane crashes and more.

This book is scientifically authoritative, as well as accessible to mainstream crime buffs though not for the squeamish. Some cases are heartbreaking; at least one is downright weird. That would be the 2006 exhumation of performer J.P. Richardson Jr., better known as The Big Bopper, singer of Chantilly Lace. Dead since the 1959 Iowa plane crash that also took the lives of Buddy Holly and Richie Valens, the Bopper was dug up at the request of his son who was curious about the extent of his father’s injuries (due to some notions involving a gun that was on board the ill-fated plane). Bass expected to find a decomposed corpse, but when the coffin lid was popped, he found himself staring at a near-perfectly preserved Bopper, complete with vintage crew cut. Bass, who gave kudos to the embalmer, had to use a portable X-ray system to decipher the injuries which didn’t include a gunshot wound. Case and coffin closed. Biographer and reporter Pat H. Broeske has worked as a producer for Court TV.

Solving crimes has never looked easier, and thanks to TV dramas such as CSI and Bones, and documentaries including Forensic Files and high-tech, highly hyped explorations (is that mummy really Queen Nefertiti?), we're all armchair forensic scientists. In truth, many cases don't wrap with a…
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In an effort to better understand the fixation, the fascination, the downright adoration that dogs and only dogs seem to prompt within us, humor writer Alfred Gingold offers Dog World and the Humans Who Live There. Gingold, who has covered the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show for Slate.com and The New York Times, is the proud owner of a Norwich terrier named George, and in his new book, he chronicles his special relationship with this beloved pet. Taking the reader step-by-step through the adoption and training processes, Gingold recounts his history with the pint-sized George in a way that’s instructive as well as artful. If the author seems unduly preoccupied with George, that’s because he is, and therein lies the key to this tribute to man’s best friend. But Gingold moves beyond his own personal canine encounters to examine the larger cultural significance of the dog, providing commentary on dog racing, dog shows and dog accessories and memorabilia. He also includes helpful information on feeding and breeds, and an appendix with suggestions for further reading. This is a delightful look at the dominance of the dog, at the singular way dogs hold sway over the human heart. Julie Hale’s dog, Howdy, who was rescued from a shelter, is still working on the basics of sit and stay.

In an effort to better understand the fixation, the fascination, the downright adoration that dogs and only dogs seem to prompt within us, humor writer Alfred Gingold offers Dog World and the Humans Who Live There. Gingold, who has covered the Westminster Kennel Club Dog…
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<b>Life lessons for Father’s Day</b> Tom Mathews’ <b>Our Fathers’ War: Growing Up in the Shadow of the Greatest Generation</b>, is a moving look at the struggles between combat veterans of World War II and their sons. Mathews breaks through the unwritten code of silence to reveal the emotional turmoil of these veterans and shows how their experiences altered their views of life, family and their role as fathers. The book is an emotional tour of traumatic pasts and strained relationships (few more so than Mathews’ own fractured connection with his father, a veteran of the 10th Mountain Division’s bloody Italy campaign). For the civilian, it is a rare window into the shocking hell of war, confessed by men who descended into it and returned, wounded in body, mind and soul, unable and unwilling to explain their experiences to those they should be closest to. To read this book is to understand that the sacrifices of war don’t always end when the combat does, and that even victory can leave scars that cross generations.

<i>Howard Shirley is a son and a father.</i>

<b>Life lessons for Father's Day</b> Tom Mathews' <b>Our Fathers' War: Growing Up in the Shadow of the Greatest Generation</b>, is a moving look at the struggles between combat veterans of World War II and their sons. Mathews breaks through the unwritten code of silence to…
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In the second Supper Club Mystery, James Henry and his fellow dieters, the Flab Five, are not meeting with much success on their low-carb plan. A new ice cream shop, Chilly Willy’s Polar Pagoda, has opened in Quincy’s Gap, Virginia, and it’s loads more appealing than eating what they should. Praline sundaes or low-fat popcorn: What would you choose? But newcomer Veronica Levitt has a start-up business of her own, and she’s bent on getting the Flab Five to join her at Witness to Fitness. When a deliberately set fire consumes Chilly Willy’s and takes the life of an employee, James and his friends are on the case. J.B. Stanley’s Fit to Die will appeal to anyone who’s experienced the horror of dieting.

In the second Supper Club Mystery, James Henry and his fellow dieters, the Flab Five, are not meeting with much success on their low-carb plan. A new ice cream shop, Chilly Willy's Polar Pagoda, has opened in Quincy's Gap, Virginia, and it's loads more…
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Claire Malloy’s 16th adventure, Damsels in Distress, is full of fun. Farberville, Arkansas, is overrun with eccentric would-be knights who are members of the Association for Renaissance Scholarship and Enlightenment and preparing for a Renaissance Fair. Claire can only hope the event will inspire people to buy medieval bestsellers at her bookstore. When murder and arson disrupt those plans, Claire is ready to investigate she’s feeling jittery about her upcoming wedding to police Lt. Peter Rosen and welcomes the distraction. Joan Hess has a deft hand with dialogue and does a fantastic job with the repartee between Claire and her teenage daughter, Caron. Full of humor and a very human set of characters, Damsels in Distress is a strong addition to Hess’ long-running series.

Claire Malloy's 16th adventure, Damsels in Distress, is full of fun. Farberville, Arkansas, is overrun with eccentric would-be knights who are members of the Association for Renaissance Scholarship and Enlightenment and preparing for a Renaissance Fair. Claire can only hope the event will inspire…
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Folk art expert Benni Harper’s boss, Constance Sinclair, is convinced that her friend Pinky’s death said to be caused by heart failure was no accident. With Pinky gone, there’s an opening in San Celina’s tony 49 Club, and Constance knows that a spot in the exclusive group could motivate a social climber to murder. She insists that Benni, who is busily preparing for both the opening of an exhibit at her quilting museum and a visit from her far-from-friendly mother-in-law, investigate. Though reluctant to accept, Benni not only solves the mystery with aplomb, she also discovers the truth about the reclusive artist whose painting is the centerpiece of her new exhibit. Agatha Award winner Earlene Fowler does an excellent job balancing the elements of a traditional cozy with a sense of danger and more than a little humor. The 13th installment in this series does not disappoint readers will be delighted by Tumbling Blocks.

Folk art expert Benni Harper's boss, Constance Sinclair, is convinced that her friend Pinky's death said to be caused by heart failure was no accident. With Pinky gone, there's an opening in San Celina's tony 49 Club, and Constance knows that a spot in…

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