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For gardeners who want to create their own piece of paradise, a good place to start is the massive American Horticultural Society A-Z Encyclopedia of Garden Plants. This exhaustively comprehensive reference book features 15,000 plants from new and exotic specimens to heirloom and garden favorites listed alphabetically by botanical name (a common-name index is also provided for new gardeners). Full-color pictures and concise profiles of each plant written by horticultural specialists are enormously helpful planning tools. Hardiness and heat-zone maps, an extensive glossary and index round out this invaluable reference guide to all things that grow.

Deanna Larson is a writer in Nashville who describes herself as a journeyman gardener.

For gardeners who want to create their own piece of paradise, a good place to start is the massive American Horticultural Society A-Z Encyclopedia of Garden Plants. This exhaustively comprehensive reference book features 15,000 plants from new and exotic specimens to heirloom and garden favorites…
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The workplace can seem like a large dysfunctional family, but Lisa Robyn sees it as a wild, sadomasochistic world where some wield power and others often women succumb to it. Using the discipline of the professional dominatrix, Robyn encourages women to assume mistress roles to gain the psychological upper hand in The Corporate Dominatrix: Six Roles to Play to Get Your Way at Work. Rather than being naughty, these archetypes are just another way to help women think about the command and control dynamic and use their personal power more comfortably at work. Perception is, in some cases, more important than reality in the office, according to Robyn, a former book publishing executive. So the roles she encourages have specific purposes, from the inner- directed goddess, the image-conscious queen and the non-reactive nurse, to the nurturing governess, the always learning schoolgirl and the righteous, battle-ready amazon, allowing women to sharpen their interpersonal skills and achieve their professional fantasies without losing themselves in the process. The trick for women in the workplace is being externally observant and internally resilient, Robyn writes. Playing work roles can allow you to see other sides of yourself and new possibilities in your career path.

The workplace can seem like a large dysfunctional family, but Lisa Robyn sees it as a wild, sadomasochistic world where some wield power and others often women succumb to it. Using the discipline of the professional dominatrix, Robyn encourages women to assume mistress roles…
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The Ides of March is no match for cooped-up gardeners eager to get their fingers into still-frosty earth. A new crop of gardening books should provide fertile soil for spring ideas and plantings.

Gardens are like poems, and two of horticulture’s best poets are George Little and Davis Lewis. These artist-gardeners have created a legendary Eden at their compound on Bainbridge Island, Washington, visited by thousands of pilgrims each year. The gorgeous photographs of their gardens in their first book, A Garden Gallery surprise, awe and thrill, like the best gardens should. Their quirky and beautiful concrete garden sculptures hide in lush and imaginative outdoor rooms that meld ancient Mediterranean, Mexican and tropical influences, and the pictures are accompanied by inventive text about gardening and living the Little and Lewis way. The pair describe their seasonal plans, present favorite plant lists and impart design advice including a wonderful section on water features. But it is their love affair with nature itself that is especially uplifting and lyrical: as they compare a leaf to an Egyptian boat; wax eloquently about their pomegranate sculpture recalling time spent in Greece; and identify the rhythms of light, sound, shape and color in nature, they “don’t shy away from the whimsical” but allow instinct and imagination to flower, creating a paradise profound.

Deanna Larson is a writer in Nashville who describes herself as a journeyman gardener.

The Ides of March is no match for cooped-up gardeners eager to get their fingers into still-frosty earth. A new crop of gardening books should provide fertile soil for spring ideas and plantings.

Gardens are like poems, and two of horticulture's best poets…
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Hannah Seligson is every girl’s BFF in New Girl on the Job: Advice from the Trenches. Aimed at the 20-something female entering the strange subuniverse of work, the book defuses emotional undercurrents in business settings while presenting ideas for turning internships and entry-level jobs into real opportunities. Making a Graceful Entrance: How to Find a Job You Don’t Want to Quit, X + Y: Navigating Female-Male Dynamics at the Office, Bad Bosses, Why Is She Being Such a Bitch and other chapters cover everything from finding to keeping a job. Strong anecdotes from the trenches support the female-tailored techniques like changing the channel after a goof-up, using CYT (cover yourself tactics) to help avert office disasters, and the real take on crying (consider it a tic, and not a huge deal as long as you quickly compose yourself in the bathroom). Slanted to those raised on self-esteem and teamwork buzzwords ( I felt hurt, violated and embarrassed when I heard you talked about me . . . would it be more productive if we both spent less time focusing on interpersonal issues and more time designing Web pages? ) Seligson’s advice is still valuable to any worker bee trying to adjust to life in the hive.

Hannah Seligson is every girl's BFF in New Girl on the Job: Advice from the Trenches. Aimed at the 20-something female entering the strange subuniverse of work, the book defuses emotional undercurrents in business settings while presenting ideas for turning internships and entry-level jobs…
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Moving from lunch in the dorm cafeteria to lunch at Chez Henri with the boss is a transition that green professionals can make with the help of Work 101: Learning the Ropes of the Workplace Without Hanging Yourself. Author Elizabeth Freedman, an MBA and corporate career consultant, gets nitpicky with the newly hired, helping draw the fine lines of the workplace, like the difference between dress casual and too casual, or what you meant to say in e-mail vs. what you actually said. Her business rules cover all aspects of work conduct, from making a great first impression, building relationships with bosses and co-workers, showcasing strengths in meetings, mastering business communication and getting promoted or leaving a job without setting a bridge on fire. The corporate survival strategies are amusing and crucial for the young and hapless (if you have to ask, forget both the thong and Hawaiian shirt on casual Fridays) and help the experienced readjust their business hats, too.*

Moving from lunch in the dorm cafeteria to lunch at Chez Henri with the boss is a transition that green professionals can make with the help of Work 101: Learning the Ropes of the Workplace Without Hanging Yourself. Author Elizabeth Freedman, an MBA and…
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For young people who find academia, the perfect job and social status elusive, there’s Faking It: How to Seem Like a Better Person Without Actually Improving Yourself from CollegeHumor.com contributors Amir Blumenfeld, Ethan Trex and Neel Shah. Whether it’s wearing a sweatshirt from an Ivy League school you never attended or carrying a dog-eared copy of a classic you never actually read, The important thing isn’t who you are; it’s who people think you are. Irreverent humor that mocks both the slacker lifestyle and the Uber professional suggests how to skimp on group projects, talk like you have an MBA, fake an injury to get out of playing sports, and appear to be well-cultured. Faking It is a must for the college grad who needs a good laugh while transitioning into the real world.

 

For young people who find academia, the perfect job and social status elusive, there's Faking It: How to Seem Like a Better Person Without Actually Improving Yourself from CollegeHumor.com contributors Amir Blumenfeld, Ethan Trex and Neel Shah. Whether it's wearing a sweatshirt from an…

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Landing that first job can seem as intangible as a medieval knight’s quest, especially when 85 percent of entry-level job candidates are poorly prepared for the job search process. In Getting from College to Career: 90 Things to Do Before You Join the Real World, Lindsey Pollak gives obtainable action-oriented tips versus a step-by-step plan to hone the job-search process. While some tips stick to traditional advice (#80 Buy a Dark Suit), others ask career-seekers to consider what they want from a first job, examine current business trends and think outside of the box (#59 Perform Five Minutes of Stand-Up). With exercise boxes to customize these thought-provoking tips, real-life stories from young people who survived their job searches and an appended list of associations, websites and organizations for young professionals, Getting from College to Career gives college students and recent grads the edge on entering the work force.

Landing that first job can seem as intangible as a medieval knight's quest, especially when 85 percent of entry-level job candidates are poorly prepared for the job search process. In Getting from College to Career: 90 Things to Do Before You Join the Real…
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Katharine Hepburn died in 2003, four years shy of what would have been her 100th birthday. But if she missed the milestone, the rest of us can now celebrate her centenary, with the cleverly enlightening How to Hepburn: Lessons on Living from Kate the Great. Author-essayist Karen Karbo, who has written novels for both adults and middle-schoolers (kids might know her Minerva Clark mysteries), and nonfiction titles including the stirring The Stuff of Life: A Daughter’s Memoir, infuses biographical and historical data, film trivia and contemporary acumen into a lively homage that underscores why Hepburn’s name should be a verb.

Hepburn certainly personified the value of hard work and perseverance. The woman with the now-legendary cheekbones, who won four Best Actress Oscars, was once savaged by critics, deemed box office poison and assailed for her unique looks. Success-hungry types, who want what they want now, should take note. Karbo also finds Hepburn-inspired guidelines in topics including fashion (the first woman to wear pants, Hepburn dressed for comfort), diet (she ate five different veggies for dinner), athletics (long before health clubs, Hep was a daily swimmer and avid golfer) and relationship decorum. As in: Keep your private life private (ˆ la Hepburn and her great love, Spencer Tracy).

In this, the girls-gone-wild era replete with terminology such as booty- licious, hottie and smokin’ it bears reminding that Hepburn’s favorite adjective for herself was fascinating. Which helps explain why, a century after her birth, she still enthralls, as actress, role model and book subject.

Katharine Hepburn died in 2003, four years shy of what would have been her 100th birthday. But if she missed the milestone, the rest of us can now celebrate her centenary, with the cleverly enlightening How to Hepburn: Lessons on Living from Kate the Great.…
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<b>Wilsey’s mom gets the last word?</b> Oh the cleverness of it all. Two years ago, <i>McSweeney’s Quarterly</i> editor Sean Wilsey vented about his wealthy, dysfunctional family in <i>Oh the Glory of It All</i>. Now, Wilsey’s mother Pat Montandon, who took considerable battering in his memoir, has <i>her</i> say. <b>Oh the Hell of it All</b> confronts her son’s accusations, while detailing her rags-to-riches to woman-on-a-mission journey. Never boring, often compelling, it underscores the power of tenacity.

A fixture of the San Francisco social scene, Montandon made her mark as a newspaper columnist and local television host, and as wife of butter magnate Al Wilsey. They seemed to have it all. Why, for her 50th birthday he threw her a surprise party at Trader Vic’s (he wore a tux, she was in Dior) and presented her with a pair of emerald and diamond earrings. He dropped a bomb eight days later: He wanted a divorce.

He married her best friend; the friend’s husband married romance novelist Danielle Steel. Montandon was left shell-shocked, financially unstable and so suicidal she contemplated a jump off the top of her penthouse, with her son. That’s not a good idea mom, he told her.

She didn’t start at the top. Daughter of a fundamentalist Oklahoma preacher, Montandon was waitressing in California when she met and married a farmer and military man. She was 18. A dozen years later, the newly divorced Montandon moved to the Bay Area where she managed department stores and threw talked-about theme parties. The attractive blonde dated Sinatra (he called her Patty Baby ) and ever-so-briefly married famed attorney Melvin Belli, who took her to Tokyo for a Shinto wedding ceremony. Columnist Herb Caen dubbed the union Thirty seconds over Tokyo. After the collapse of the dream marriage to Wilsey she became involved in homegrown post-Cold War diplomacy. She formed a foundation that takes kids to foreign countries to ask world leaders for peace and was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for her efforts. And eventually, she and her son found a kind of peace in part, by writing their respective takes on the struggle of it all.

<i>Pat H. Broeske is a biographer and a frequent contributor to the Arts & Leisure section of</i> The New York Times.

<b>Wilsey's mom gets the last word?</b> Oh the cleverness of it all. Two years ago, <i>McSweeney's Quarterly</i> editor Sean Wilsey vented about his wealthy, dysfunctional family in <i>Oh the Glory of It All</i>. Now, Wilsey's mother Pat Montandon, who took considerable battering in his memoir,…

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The largest slave rebellion in U.S. history took place in the New Orleans area in January 1811. This resistance was much greater than the better-known revolts led by Nat Turner and Denmark Vesey, yet it is little-known because law enforcement officials and plantation owners declared it “criminal activity” rather than a revolt, and documentation has been hard to come by.

Fortunately for those of us who want to know as much as we can about American history—good and bad—historian Daniel Rasmussen uses extensive original research and superb narrative skill to vividly recount what happened in American Uprising. Beyond the story of approximately 500 men who yearned to be free and were willing to put their lives on the line to achieve it, Rasmussen’s book is about the expansion of the United States and how greed and power worked to distort America’s highest ideals.

Rasmussen provides a many-sided picture of events set in a violent era when most slaves, because of the harsh conditions in which they lived and worked, did not survive beyond a few years after their arrival from Africa. New Orleans was the most diverse, cosmopolitan city in North America at that time, but it was also a sugar colony whose economy was based on slave labor. The white elite—French, Spanish and American—was caught up in petty disputes and failed to realize that the primary conflict at the heart of the city was not between the French and the Anglo-Americans but between the white elite and the huge African underclass. By 1810, slaves made up more than 75 percent of the total population, and almost 90 percent of households owned slaves.

Two slaves, Kook and Quamana, decided soon after they arrived from Africa in 1806 to begin plotting rebellion. Over time, they developed an elaborate network of trust with other slaves of similar mind, including Charles Deslondes, an ambitious, light-skinned black man who had risen quickly through the ranks to become a slave driver for a planter with a reputation for cruelty. After years of elaborate planning, always in secret, the not-very-well-armed slave army headed for New Orleans with the intention of establishing a black republic, much as the slaves of Saint Dominique (now Haiti) had done not long before. Betrayal and bad luck, however, led to grave and tragic consequences, and this dream was never realized.

Rasmussen carefully gives the historical context of events and deftly traces the movement of both the slave rebels and those opposed to them—the planters, the militia and the law enforcement officials—who saw the slaves as terrorists about to shatter what they considered to be the natural order of things. He shows that the immediate effect of the uprising, in fact, was to strengthen the institution of slavery, and explains that the slave rebels of 1811 were just among the first victims of a drive to eliminate any threats to American power, which would later include the Trail of Tears and the Mexican War.

American Uprising is certainly difficult to read in places because of the grim nature of the subject, but anyone interested in slavery in the U.S. or in the history of our country will find it illuminating as we strive to better understand our past.

 

The largest slave rebellion in U.S. history took place in the New Orleans area in January 1811. This resistance was much greater than the better-known revolts led by Nat Turner and Denmark Vesey, yet it is little-known because law enforcement officials and plantation owners declared…

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Mother of the bride can be an exhilarating yet somewhat thankless role: Mom helps foot the bill and plan the event, then stands back on the big day in her bland mother-of-the-bride dress. Even Dad gets a first dance with the bride.

In It’s Her Wedding But I’ll Cry If I Want To Washingtonian lifestyle editor Leslie Milk puts moms of the betrothed front and center. Milk offers sage advice on a variety of likely hurdles a mother of the bride will face. She also includes several hilarious lists, including five reasons why your daughter doesn’t want to wear your wedding dress (reason no. 5: “She thinks it makes her look just like you.”) Milk writes in an authoritative, been-there-done-that tone that is both informative and fun. And about that mother-of-the-bride dress: she even includes a chapter on how to pull off a stylish yet tasteful look.

Mother of the bride can be an exhilarating yet somewhat thankless role: Mom helps foot the bill and plan the event, then stands back on the big day in her bland mother-of-the-bride dress. Even Dad gets a first dance with the bride.

In…
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It’s hard to believe that an underground fire in an abandoned mine raged for decades beneath the northeastern Pennsylvania town of Centralia. Spewing toxic fumes and generating hellish temperatures, the fire also ignited heat among longtime residents. Should they stay or should they vacate? And in the matter of the latter, who should pay? After all, the folks here had a median annual income of $9,000. The Day the Earth Caved In: An American Mining Tragedy is a meticulous account of the tangled saga of hometown, history and Reagan-era governmental red tape. Author Joan Quigley, a former business reporter for the Miami Herald, and a descendant of coal miners, uses her own family history to illustrate the stubborn determination of those who have toiled in the anthracite coal region of Appalachia. Via Centralia, she charts the coal industry’s highs and lows. It was in 1962, following the collapse of the industry, that the Centralia fire erupted at a garbage dump landfill. In ensuing years, federal and state agencies and the community bickered over possible remedies. In late 1973, a three-year $2.8 million effort was pronounced a success. Months later, a five-foot diameter hole appeared in the surface, erupting with smoke and steam. A turning point came in 1981 when a 12-year-old boy was swallowed by a sinkhole with temperatures of 160 degrees. He managed to survive by clinging to the roots of a tree. Afterward, the press descended on Centralia NBC News, People magazine, Nightline which further polarized the town. Ironically, there’s no mention of the fire in the time capsule that was buried during the Centralia Centennial in 1966. Instead, it includes a Bible, a souvenir booklet about the town, a miner’s carbide lamp and lumps of coal. When it’s opened in the year 2016, former residents of the former town are expected to attend. Though Quigley’s narrative can be confusing when it jumps back and forth in time, there’s no quibbling with her attention to detail. Especially vivid are the diverse townsfolk who struggled over the fate of their hometown.

Pat H. Broeske is a biographer and a segment producer for Court TV.

It's hard to believe that an underground fire in an abandoned mine raged for decades beneath the northeastern Pennsylvania town of Centralia. Spewing toxic fumes and generating hellish temperatures, the fire also ignited heat among longtime residents. Should they stay or should they vacate? And…
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While most of us mere mortals could never afford a lavish wedding fit for royalty, we still like to see what one looks like. Preston Bailey, event planner to the stars, indulges the masses with Preston Bailey’s Fantasy Weddings, a gorgeous book filled with truly fantastic wedding designs. Bailey is the designer responsible for Donald Trump’s latest wedding (scheduled for Jan. 22) and the fairytale wedding of Joan Rivers’ daughter Melissa. He also did the flowers for Oprah Winfrey’s lavish 50th birthday bash.

From the Godiva Chocolate Fantasy to the Hamptons Countryside Fantasy, Bailey spares no expense (and he doesn’t skimp on the flowers, either: one rain forest-themed reception features huge pineapples made entirely of roses. In another, towering bamboo shoot centerpieces are topped with orchids).

Yes, it’s all very over the top, but Bailey makes it fun with his chatty prose, in which he recounts each event with obvious pleasure. And you can get great design ideas from this book. Bailey makes common-sense suggestions, such as incorporating the design elements of the reception space into the decorations.

While most of us mere mortals could never afford a lavish wedding fit for royalty, we still like to see what one looks like. Preston Bailey, event planner to the stars, indulges the masses with Preston Bailey's Fantasy Weddings, a gorgeous book filled with…

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