bookpagedev

Review by

Many of today’s brides and grooms are looking beyond a traditional church wedding for unique ceremonies that reflect their personalities. They’ll find a wealth of ideas and inspiration in Simple Stunning Weddings: Designing and Creating Your Perfect Celebration. Just what is a simple stunning wedding? According to author Karen Bussen, it’s a celebration in which the location is key. Bussen focuses on 12 different potential wedding spots, including a restaurant, a vineyard, the beach and a farm.

The lush color photos alone are enough to inspire any bride uncertain about what she wants in a wedding, but Bussen makes Simple Stunning Weddings even more user-friendly by suggesting colors, materials, flowers and general feeling for each locale. For example, the vineyard reception features grape colors, fine linens and a bacchanalian theme. An at-home wedding highlights casual, flea market-inspired table settings and flowers from the garden, such as daisies and tulips.

Bussen has done her homework, explaining the logistics behind booking each type of site: an inn most likely will have off-season times with cheaper rates; a botanic garden is probably public, but might require a donation to use the space. Readers also can purchase a companion workbook with helpful organizational tips.

Many of today's brides and grooms are looking beyond a traditional church wedding for unique ceremonies that reflect their personalities. They'll find a wealth of ideas and inspiration in Simple Stunning Weddings: Designing and Creating Your Perfect Celebration. Just what is a simple stunning…
Review by

If you are anticipating the 14th of February with about as much eagerness as a visit from the Grim Reaper, I Hate Valentine’s Day offers a hilarious antidote for the red-heart blues. Author Bennett Madison begins by lamenting the loss of innocent fun the holiday once brought in childhood when “at the end of the day, you had a box full of cards one from each and every person in the class, including sworn enemies. That was the rule.” He goes on to offer an adult guidebook for not only surviving the day, but enjoying it (albeit at times perversely), once more. “It will only take a small attitude adjustment,” he quips, “a lot of quick thinking, and a few shots of Jack Daniels.” The eight brief chapters include “Emergency Dating,” with tips on Internet resources, creative dating and people to avoid no matter how desperate you are for a date; “Hell Night,” complete with a quick quiz to rate your romance quotient and some atypical ideas for where to go and what to do; and “Wallowing When All Else Fails,” with lists of videos and songs sure to wring a good, cathartic, cry out of you. There’s even a troubleshooting section to help out with any problems you might encounter on Valentine’s Day, such as V-Day stalkers, unwanted proposals and bad hair/acne/mysterious rashes. Madison’s funny take on the holiday is sure to keep your Valentine’s Day expectations under control. Linda Stankard writes from Nanuet, New York.

If you are anticipating the 14th of February with about as much eagerness as a visit from the Grim Reaper, I Hate Valentine's Day offers a hilarious antidote for the red-heart blues. Author Bennett Madison begins by lamenting the loss of innocent fun the holiday…
Review by

Dr. Neil Clark Warren, the founder of eHarmony.com, a popular dating website that’s made many successful matches, has assembled his relationship advice in a new book. Like the eHarmony website, Falling in Love For All the Right Reasons: How to Find Your Soul Mate takes finding the right person very seriously, and sets marriage as the ultimate goal of any relationship. After more than 37 years as a psychotherapist (and even more years of marriage), Warren has identified 29 dimensions necessary to relationship success. Among these are family backgrounds, anger management, traditional versus nontraditional personalities, sexual passion, artistic passion and ambition. One of the most striking aspects of Warren’s approach is his belief that it’s essential to match your partner on most, if not all of the 29 dimensions. He writes, “I must confess that I have never seen a great marriage in which the couple were not matched on at least twenty-five or twenty-six of the twenty-nine dimensions.” In other words, opposites may attract, but finding someone who is a lot like you gives you a far better chance of building a lasting relationship. And Warren admits there is one more factor to consider besides the 29 dimensions chemistry. “If the twenty-nine dimensions are the engine on which your marriage will travel long-term, chemistry is the key that will crank your motor and keep it going.” Linda Stankard writes from Nanuet, New York.

Dr. Neil Clark Warren, the founder of eHarmony.com, a popular dating website that's made many successful matches, has assembled his relationship advice in a new book. Like the eHarmony website, Falling in Love For All the Right Reasons: How to Find Your Soul Mate takes…
Review by

Lady Emily Ashton is thrilled to finally be out of mourning for her late husband Philip and enjoying the social season in Victorian London. The brainy, headstrong beauty has developed a keen interest in Greek artifacts and passes many enjoyable hours educating herself at the British Museum.

But Emily’s orderly life is disrupted when a new face among the aristocracy, a rather odd man who claims to be the direct descendant of Marie Antoinette and Louis XVI, becomes a suitor. Then a mysterious cat burglar begins stealing precious gems that once belonged to the French queen. Murder soon follows and Emily is forced to face the realization that the daring thief is stalking her.

A more pleasant challenge for Emily is the ardent pursuit of her husband’s best friend, the dashing Colin Hargreaves. Emily is intensely interested in Colin but also enjoys her freedom and all the attention that comes with being a beautiful and wealthy young widow. Perhaps Emily’s biggest challenge is her domineering mother, who believes that her daughter should be focusing her energies on finding a new husband preferably a titled one and has even enlisted the queen’s help in convincing Emily to wed.

In A Poisoned Season, author Tasha Alexander continues the adventures begun in her debut novel, And Only to Deceive. Emily, who is at times arrogant, yet somehow sympathetic, and the large cast of characters (both above- and below-stairs) give fascinating insights into the society of the late 19th century. Unfolding at a leisurely pace, A Poisoned Season draws the reader into the glittering Victorian age with its society balls, Worth gowns, hansom cabs and proper manners. Throw in a complex mystery with several intriguing twists and you have the ingredients for a charming historical cozy with a clever heroine readers won’t soon forget. Dedra Anderson writes from Highlands Ranch, Colorado.

Lady Emily Ashton is thrilled to finally be out of mourning for her late husband Philip and enjoying the social season in Victorian London. The brainy, headstrong beauty has developed a keen interest in Greek artifacts and passes many enjoyable hours educating herself at the…
Review by

Jane Austen’s Guide to Dating, by Lauren Henderson, offers an Englishwoman in America’s perspective on love. When Henderson moved to the States several years ago, her new friends gave her advice about how to play the dating game here advice like, “Don’t call men back for at least three days! Five is ideal!” About to lose someone she was genuinely interested in, she abandoned the advice being given to her and turned to the wisdom on dating and relationships found in the novels of English author Jane Austen. Henderson came up with 10 rules inspired by the romances of Austen’s characters and applied Rule No. 1 (very satisfactorily) to her own situation: “If you like someone, make it clear that you do.” She writes: “Austen repeatedly emphasizes the opinion that a woman who likes a man should make her preference for him clear without, naturally, going overboard.” This guideline came from Catherine Morland’s successful pursuit of Henry Tilney in Northanger Abby, and the rest of the 10 common-sense rules cite characters and events from Austen’s other novels that back them up. It’s interesting to see how 19th-century writing can inform 21st-century relationships. Part of the fun of this book is taking the quizzes, “Which Jane Austen Character Are You?” and “Which Jane Austen Character is the Man You Like?” There are book summaries for the Austen Uninitiated or to refresh your memory, and character descriptions so you can read about the character you are most like and the one you would likely like most. Linda Stankard writes from Nanuet, New York.

Jane Austen's Guide to Dating, by Lauren Henderson, offers an Englishwoman in America's perspective on love. When Henderson moved to the States several years ago, her new friends gave her advice about how to play the dating game here advice like, "Don't call men back…
Review by

<B>When chocolate isn’t enough: how to add love to your life</B> <B>Dateworthy: Get the Relationship You Want</B>, by Dennie Hughes, author of <I>USA Weekend’s</I> RelationTips column, begins with a section designed to determine your own dateworthiness a "Check Yourself Check-Up" and a process for leaving bad baggage behind. Hughes illustrates her points throughout the book with a "Dating Story" from her own life, and she doesn’t shy away from the tales with unsavory endings either. This is someone who has been there, done that, messed up and lived to go out again on many wonderful dates. Her chapter titles include, "The Good, The Bad and the Salvageable," "The Ten First-Date Commandments" and "The Exclusive on Exclusivity." Alternately serious and funny, Hughes offers useful pointers such as, "Just because you spent one of the most amazing hours with someone doesn’t mean you know him," and "You’re less likely to lose control if you’re sporting control tops." Her comprehensive take on modern relationships is a great guide to finding your perfect match, or to smoothing out the rough spots in your current relationship.

<I>Linda Stankard writes from Nanuet, New York.</I>

<B>When chocolate isn't enough: how to add love to your life</B> <B>Dateworthy: Get the Relationship You Want</B>, by Dennie Hughes, author of <I>USA Weekend's</I> RelationTips column, begins with a section designed to determine your own dateworthiness a "Check Yourself Check-Up" and a process for leaving…

Review by

Tired of being embarrassed every time you take your less-savvy friends or clueless parents out to see the latest action-hero blockbuster adapted from a comic book? Hide your face no more now you can school those newbies in the nicest way possible. The gorgeous new Comic Book Encyclopedia has the lowdown on just about every comic book ever created, as well as the folks who created them. From Archie to X-Men, from R. Crumb to Art Spiegelman, you’ll find long-lost histories and little-known details about all the important heroes, villains, artists and writers in the comics world. Open the book to any page, and KAPOW!, you’ll find glossy, gorgeously reproduced artwork and a spirited mini-essay on some aspect of comics. The book covers everything from early progenitors like Ned Pines’ Thrilling Comics to more recent milestones like DC’s infamous Superman #75, containing the much-publicized and of course temporary death of the Man of Steel. There are sections on underground comics (with nods to Mad’s Harvey Kurtzman and Basil Wolverton and Zap’s Robert Crumb) and graphic novels (including Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons’ seminal Watchmen and Frank Miller’s unparalleled Batman epic The Dark Knight Returns) that whet the reader’s appetite and provide a roadmap for further exploration. Goulart’s affection for the medium is obvious. A lifelong aficionado and acknowledged expert, he writes with exactly the right combination of authority and irreverence, never looking down at his subject but making it clear that sometimes, certain plot developments cross the perilously thin line between innovative and just plain silly. The book makes an excellent reference work, but most of all, it will make you want more. You’ll be tempted to rush to your local comics shop and dig through the back-issue boxes for hours, searching happily for the sources of the magic preserved in its pages. Becky Ohlsen taught the rest of us at BookPage everything we need to know about comics.

Tired of being embarrassed every time you take your less-savvy friends or clueless parents out to see the latest action-hero blockbuster adapted from a comic book? Hide your face no more now you can school those newbies in the nicest way possible. The gorgeous new…
Review by

There’s a button in my desk drawer. It’s in the drawer because please don’t tell anyone I have no idea how to sew it back on. That is, I had no idea. After reading The Experts’ Guide to 100 Things Everyone Should Know How To Do, I now know how to sew on a button and do 99 other useful things.

Now, this isn’t simply a dry how-to book. It’s an eclectic collection of advice and insight from 100 experts in their fields. Has the spouse been bugging you to paint the bedroom? Bob Vila offers tips for great walls. Considering the stylistic possibilities of a bow tie? CNN’s Tucker Carlson tells you how to loop and tug. Each of the 100 things is presented in a two-to-three page tidbit, mixed with humor and philosophy, making the book both a helpful resource and a delightful little read. You can take it in snips, pondering thoughts as you like or applying the advice right away. So the next time you need to negotiate (Donald Trump), tell a joke (Howie Mandel), or bake chocolate-chip cookies (Debbi Fields), you’ll have expert advice at hand, and at least 100 things in life will be much easier.

There's a button in my desk drawer. It's in the drawer because please don't tell anyone I have no idea how to sew it back on. That is, I had no idea. After reading The Experts' Guide to 100 Things Everyone Should Know How To…
Review by

<B>Let’s get together</B> And for anyone or any group contemplating starting a wine tasting club, <B>Wine Spectator’s Ultimate Wine Tasting Kit</B> would be ideal. It’s a boxed set about the size of an Umberto Eco novel (or a Robert Parker tome) that includes a 240-page “Essentials of Wine” guide, a condensed “Pocket Guide” for carrying about, a beginner’s guide to hosting wine tastings, and fun paraphernalia such as stemware, bottle tags and reusable bottle bags for the hidden-label games. There’s also a coupon for two free issues of Wine Spectator, which, all things considered, is only reasonable advertising. <I>Eve Zibart is a restaurant reviewer for the</I> Washington Post <I>and author of</I> The Ethnic Food Lover’s Companion.

<B>Let's get together</B> And for anyone or any group contemplating starting a wine tasting club, <B>Wine Spectator's Ultimate Wine Tasting Kit</B> would be ideal. It's a boxed set about the size of an Umberto Eco novel (or a Robert Parker tome) that includes a 240-page…
Review by

<B>Let’s get together</B> Dorothy J. Gaiter and John Brecher are the authors of the unpretentious and popular Friday "Tastings" column in <I>The Wall Street Journal</I>. They’re not wine critics, in the traditional sense, but populists, and unofficial cheerleaders for the wine culture. Their new book, <B>Wine for Every Day and Every Occasion: Red, White, and Bubbly to Celebrate the Joy of Living</B>, is full of reader recommendations, anecdotes about first holidays together, restaurants they have dined at and ways to have fun with wine parties including a list of questions to "start the fun," such as "What did Hannibal Lector consider the perfect wine with liver?" Clearly, Gaiter and Brecher are a matter of personal taste (sorry). The book’s chatty tone sometimes verges on the self-congratulatory (gee, we’re famous!), but there is some good information to be gleaned. In fact, the discussion of wine wedding showers and how much wine is needed at a reception might make this a useful gift for the newly engaged.

<I>Eve Zibart is a restaurant reviewer for the</I> Washington Post <I>and author of</I> The Ethnic Food Lover’s Companion.

<B>Let's get together</B> Dorothy J. Gaiter and John Brecher are the authors of the unpretentious and popular Friday "Tastings" column in <I>The Wall Street Journal</I>. They're not wine critics, in the traditional sense, but populists, and unofficial cheerleaders for the wine culture. Their new book,…

Review by

A woman who played a commanding role in one of history’s darkest chapters, Leni Riefenstahl Hitler’s favorite filmmaker went on to deftly rewrite her own history. But lies have a way of catching up with liars. In a pair of new biographies, Riefenstahl, perhaps the single most controversial filmmaker who ever lived, has been found out. Moreover, JŸrgen Trimborn’s newly translated Leni Riefenstahl: A Life, first published in 2002 in Germany, and Steven Bach’s Leni: The Life and Work of Leni Riefenstahl share a common theme: To know Riefenstahl is not necessarily to love her or even like her.

So why read about her? Because Riefenstahl who died at age 101 in 2003 remains one of the most fascinating and important figures of the 20th century. Uncompromising in her personal and professional lives, Riefenstahl used her forceful persona and the politics of the day to further a career that enshrined the FŸhrer and celebrated the strength of the Nazi party. In doing so, she forever expanded the scope of documentary filmmaking. No filmmaker has been more adept at evoking powerful persuasive images than the Third Reich’s Riefenstahl. Any stunningly produced TV or film project about sports is indebted to her aesthetics, including her superb editing skills. Feature filmmakers as diverse as Orson Welles and George Lucas have been influenced by her. As to which of the two books to read, it depends on your interest. Trimborn is an authority on films of the Third Reich, and his tome is the most assured in examining Riefenstahl’s climb and eventual lofty berth in pre-war and wartime Germany. Trimborn also had the benefit of having interviewed Riefenstahl; at one point he even thought his book would have her cooperation. (He ultimately realized this was not to be, as Riefenstahl’s version of the truth detracted from other versions.) Still, he gives Riefenstahl her artistic due, even tracing the latter years in which she became an acclaimed still photographer. But Trimborn’s translated text isn’t as smooth nor as easily enjoyed as that of Bach. As the biographer of Marlene Dietrich and Moss Hart, and former head of worldwide production for United Artists which led to his first book, Final Cut: Art, Money, and Ego in the Making of Heaven’s Gate, the Film that Sank United Artists Bach’s Leni also has a cinematic edge, complete with revelations about Riefenstahl’s secret dealings with Hollywood.

What is underscored by both books is that Riefenstahl was a fiercely independent woman driven by the need to succeed, whatever the cost. A superb lifelong athlete, she parlayed her physicality into an early career as an expressionist dancer. When an injury cut short the dance, she turned to acting though she would go on to deny a particular bare-breasted bit player role. (Bach offers photographic proof of her undraped participation in Ways to Strength and Beauty.) It was the mountain film, a popular German genre involving nature themes and alpine locales, that enshrined Riefenstahl’s athleticism and beauty, and led to her interest in working behind the camera.

Her life took a fateful turn after she heard Hitler speak at a National Socialist rally in Berlin in 1932. She daringly wrote him a letter to request a meeting. As she later admitted, I had been infected, no doubt about it. As her Jewish filmmaking colleagues fled the country their names erased from film credits she went on to chronicle Hitler’s rise. Then came her much-studied propaganda spectacle, Triumph of the Will, and Olympia, her groundbreaking salute to the 1936 Olympic games in Berlin.

At war’s end, Riefenstahl was more concerned about the ownership of her films than what had transpired under Hitler. She also downplayed her relationship with him and his regime, claiming ignorance of the horrors of the Holocaust. Trimborn and Bach provide documentation to the contrary (including her presence at the Polish front, where she witnessed a Jewish massacre). There is also a thorough examination of her use of Gypsies found at a forced labor camp as film extras. Many went on to die at Auschwitz. Riefenstahl shrewdly used the courts and litigation to protect her name and reputation. She claimed she was the one being persecuted. She also went on to be alternately celebrated and damned by film critics and film societies, even as they introduced her work to new generations. (In film schools, the study of Riefenstahl’s work is de rigueur.) Ever searching artistically, she was doing underwater photography while in her 90s (after having learned to scuba-dive at 71). If her moral conflicts were minimal, her artistry knew no limits.

Author Pat H. Broeske also works in television, as a field and segment producer for the Court TV program, Video Justice.

A woman who played a commanding role in one of history's darkest chapters, Leni Riefenstahl Hitler's favorite filmmaker went on to deftly rewrite her own history. But lies have a way of catching up with liars. In a pair of new biographies, Riefenstahl, perhaps the…
Review by

The Eyewitness Companions series of travel guides is rightfully famous for its full-color photos and high-quality paper and for its intriguing details on famous buildings and personalities, but the format doesn’t work quite as smoothly in Wines of the World, which is a slightly ungainly combination of tour brochure and wine primer. At times it strains for prettiness, and its factoids often read like picture captions, but it eventually gets its rhythm. The discussion of tannins and their role in wines is trenchant, the descriptions of key flavors and the explanations of how to read wine labels of various countries is useful. Still, there’s a sort of conundrum: the maps and wine region trails, followed by capsules of dependable labels, would seem to be more help to someone actually on the ground, but the book is best used as a buying guide. And while it includes commendably strong sections on less well-known wine regions in Hungary or Romania, for instance, giving Nelson Mandela credit for sparking the winemaking revolution in South Africa is a bit of a stretch.

Eve Zibart is a restaurant reviewer for the Washington Post and author of The Ethnic Food Lover’s Companion.

The Eyewitness Companions series of travel guides is rightfully famous for its full-color photos and high-quality paper and for its intriguing details on famous buildings and personalities, but the format doesn't work quite as smoothly in Wines of the World, which is a slightly ungainly…
Review by

A woman who played a commanding role in one of history’s darkest chapters, Leni Riefenstahl Hitler’s favorite filmmaker went on to deftly rewrite her own history. But lies have a way of catching up with liars. In a pair of new biographies, Riefenstahl, perhaps the single most controversial filmmaker who ever lived, has been found out. Moreover, JŸrgen Trimborn’s newly translated Leni Riefenstahl: A Life, first published in 2002 in Germany, and Steven Bach’s Leni: The Life and Work of Leni Riefenstahl share a common theme: To know Riefenstahl is not necessarily to love her or even like her.

So why read about her? Because Riefenstahl who died at age 101 in 2003 remains one of the most fascinating and important figures of the 20th century. Uncompromising in her personal and professional lives, Riefenstahl used her forceful persona and the politics of the day to further a career that enshrined the FŸhrer and celebrated the strength of the Nazi party. In doing so, she forever expanded the scope of documentary filmmaking. No filmmaker has been more adept at evoking powerful persuasive images than the Third Reich’s Riefenstahl. Any stunningly produced TV or film project about sports is indebted to her aesthetics, including her superb editing skills. Feature filmmakers as diverse as Orson Welles and George Lucas have been influenced by her. As to which of the two books to read, it depends on your interest. Trimborn is an authority on films of the Third Reich, and his tome is the most assured in examining Riefenstahl’s climb and eventual lofty berth in pre-war and wartime Germany. Trimborn also had the benefit of having interviewed Riefenstahl; at one point he even thought his book would have her cooperation. (He ultimately realized this was not to be, as Riefenstahl’s version of the truth detracted from other versions.) Still, he gives Riefenstahl her artistic due, even tracing the latter years in which she became an acclaimed still photographer. But Trimborn’s translated text isn’t as smooth nor as easily enjoyed as that of Bach. As the biographer of Marlene Dietrich and Moss Hart, and former head of worldwide production for United Artists which led to his first book, Final Cut: Art, Money, and Ego in the Making of Heaven’s Gate, the Film that Sank United Artists Bach’s Leni also has a cinematic edge, complete with revelations about Riefenstahl’s secret dealings with Hollywood.

What is underscored by both books is that Riefenstahl was a fiercely independent woman driven by the need to succeed, whatever the cost. A superb lifelong athlete, she parlayed her physicality into an early career as an expressionist dancer. When an injury cut short the dance, she turned to acting though she would go on to deny a particular bare-breasted bit player role. (Bach offers photographic proof of her undraped participation in Ways to Strength and Beauty.) It was the mountain film, a popular German genre involving nature themes and alpine locales, that enshrined Riefenstahl’s athleticism and beauty, and led to her interest in working behind the camera.

Her life took a fateful turn after she heard Hitler speak at a National Socialist rally in Berlin in 1932. She daringly wrote him a letter to request a meeting. As she later admitted, I had been infected, no doubt about it. As her Jewish filmmaking colleagues fled the country their names erased from film credits she went on to chronicle Hitler’s rise. Then came her much-studied propaganda spectacle, Triumph of the Will, and Olympia, her groundbreaking salute to the 1936 Olympic games in Berlin.

At war’s end, Riefenstahl was more concerned about the ownership of her films than what had transpired under Hitler. She also downplayed her relationship with him and his regime, claiming ignorance of the horrors of the Holocaust. Trimborn and Bach provide documentation to the contrary (including her presence at the Polish front, where she witnessed a Jewish massacre). There is also a thorough examination of her use of Gypsies found at a forced labor camp as film extras. Many went on to die at Auschwitz. Riefenstahl shrewdly used the courts and litigation to protect her name and reputation. She claimed she was the one being persecuted. She also went on to be alternately celebrated and damned by film critics and film societies, even as they introduced her work to new generations. (In film schools, the study of Riefenstahl’s work is de rigueur.) Ever searching artistically, she was doing underwater photography while in her 90s (after having learned to scuba-dive at 71). If her moral conflicts were minimal, her artistry knew no limits.

Author Pat H. Broeske also works in television, as a field and segment producer for the Court TV program, Video Justice.

 

A woman who played a commanding role in one of history's darkest chapters, Leni Riefenstahl Hitler's favorite filmmaker went on to deftly rewrite her own history. But lies have a way of catching up with liars. In a pair of new biographies, Riefenstahl, perhaps…

Sign Up

Stay on top of new releases: Sign up for our newsletter to receive reading recommendations in your favorite genres.

Trending Features