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Dilbert creator Scott Adams receives hundreds of e-mails every day from disgruntled workers want-ing to share their office horror stories. These tales of corporate cluelessness are sprinkled throughout Adams’ hilarious new book, Dilbert and The Way of the Weasel, which exposes the selfish, greedy, “weasel” ways of office workers and managers in all their undisguised glory. But don’t worry, Adams assured us in a recent interview, “Everyone is a weasel except you and me.” Whew.

Adams had plenty of opportunities to observe weasel tendencies during his own stint in corporate America. After earning an M.B.

A. from the University of California at Berkley in 1986, he worked at a San Francisco bank and later “in a number of jobs that defy description” at Pacific Bell. Using his doodles of co-workers as a starting point, he launched the Dilbert comic strip in 1989 and finally quit his day job in 1995 to be a full-time cartoonist. We asked Adams to tell BookPage readers about the ways of the weasel and the special joys of the holidays in Dilbert’s world: Explain the Weasel Zone. Where did the idea come from? It was this growing realization that everybody in authority seemed to be a weasel. So everybody who had an opportunity to steal money was in fact stealing it or rigging something or cheating in some way. Every few years my personal respect for humanity goes to a new low, and I know it’s time to write another Dilbert book.

Do you consider yourself to be a weasel? No one considers themselves to be a weasel. I don’t think there would be as much weaselness if people didn’t think that they had some God-given right to get a little extra.

Does Dilbert decorate his cube for Christmas? Decorate might be overstating it. He might put on a holiday screen saver, but even that would be banned by the company, so it wouldn’t last long.

What’s the best thing to wear to the office Christmas party? I can’t imagine Dilbert’s office having a Christmas party. The concept of a Christmas party is, first of all, you can’t have any alcohol in the office. And second, you’re forced to be with the people you would least like to be with, eating food that is not your first choice of food. I would think that the only way you could make that better would be wearing uncomfortable underwear. Just to bring up the average.

What’s the ideal present for your boss? The ideal present for the boss would be something you pilfered from the office itself. Maybe matching salt and pepper shakers from the company cafeteria or a stapler from Wally’s desk. That sort of thing.

What should you tell your boss if he wants you to work late on Christmas Eve? Tell him that you’ll be at the office for many hours after he leaves, as far as he knows.

Does Dilbert take time off during the holidays? Dilbert tries to. He lives in dread that the last five minutes of work before his vacation starts, his boss will come into his office with a new impossible assignment. He tries to take vacations, but he’s a little like me in the sense that he goes to the Grand Canyon and he looks at it and says, “That’s a big hole. That looks nice. Now what do we do?” So he’s not easily impressed.

In your days as a corporate drone, what kind of boss were you? I probably was a bad boss, even though I thought I was a good boss. My theory is that everyone thinks they’re a good boss, but most people aren’t, so there must be some sort of weird blindness built into the job that you think you’re doing a better job than you are. My guess is that I was a bad boss.

Why? I am insufficiently evil. All leadership is a form of evil because the point of leading is to get people to do things they don’t want to do. You want people to work a little extra for the same amount of pay, that sort of thing. I couldn’t get past the fact that if I didn’t understand why they would want to do it, I couldn’t figure out how I could make them do it. I ended up being a fairly lenient boss just so they would like me at least I would get something out of the deal.

Dilbert creator Scott Adams receives hundreds of e-mails every day from disgruntled workers want-ing to share their office horror stories. These tales of corporate cluelessness are sprinkled throughout Adams' hilarious new book, Dilbert and The Way of the Weasel, which exposes the selfish, greedy,…
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Sean Wilsey grew up rich, pampered, privileged. Home was 800 feet above San Francisco, in a luxury apartment with the kind of view you see on postcards. Early mornings, young Sean and his parents took walks in matching blue jumpsuits with white piping. Their lives, like the scenic splendor out their high-rise windows, seemed perfect. It was an illusion. Wilsey’s engrossing memoir, Oh the Glory of It All, is about surviving a childhood that was all but destroyed by childish adults.

Years later, the adult Wilsey today an editor at McSweeney’s Quarterly realized there had been warning signs. But as children are wont to do, he allowed them to be obscured by his desperate love for his (selfish) parents and their larger than life personas. He was especially devoted to his society columnist mother, who looked like Marilyn Monroe and hosted to-die-for salons attended by the likes of Joan Baez, Gloria Steinem, Black Panthers, Daniel Ellsberg and others who toured the cultural zeitgeist. As for dad, he was a self-made millionaire (the butter and egg business) who would leave his more famous wife for her (younger) best friend. Up until his parents’ split, young Wilsey never even heard them fight.

Theirs was a loud, ugly, headline-making divorce. It was Dallas and Dynasty and Danielle Steel come to life, recalled Wilsey, who became one of those ping-pong children, shuttling back and forth between houses and lives and festering anger. (His drama queen mother once urged him to join her in committing suicide.) Recounted in vivid detail and dialogue, with observations both painful and humorous, especially involving Wilsey’s callous stepmother, this memoir is about great wealth, great loss and personal and creative redemption. It’s also about coming to terms with reality and responsibility. After shrinks, private schools, drug abuse and other desperate cries for parental approval, Wilsey reaches a crossroads while in a cell at juvenile hall. To turn his life around he examines where he’s been and why. The resulting emotional catharsis triggered this book, with its cast of colorful characters, its divine locales and a theme that resonates. Pat H. Broeske is a Southern California-based journalist and biographer.

Sean Wilsey grew up rich, pampered, privileged. Home was 800 feet above San Francisco, in a luxury apartment with the kind of view you see on postcards. Early mornings, young Sean and his parents took walks in matching blue jumpsuits with white piping. Their lives,…
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After years of living a life of plenty in Lexington, Kentucky, Lisa Samson and her 18-year-old daughter, Ty, decided to take a mission trip to Swaziland, in Africa. They believed the trip would be one of faith and outreach, but little did they know the ways in which they would be tested and stretched. In a land where poverty and death are abundant, Lisa and Ty face the AIDS crisis headon, finding strength and hope in God’s unending love and compassion. Love Mercy reads as both a memoir and a spiritual diary, chronicling Lisa and Ty’s journey into both the heart of Africa and also into Christ’s teachings and principles. It is a story of sorrow, but also one of enlightenment. The truths exposed in this book can be distressing at times, but by battling hardships they might not have been exposed to on North American soil, Lisa and Ty are able to see the world through new eyes—and redefine what it means to “love thy neighbor” on a global scale. This is a must-read for anyone who considers him- or herself a follower of Christ, or who has ever pondered spreading the gospel abroad. This motherdaughter duo reinforces the hope that even in the darkest corners of the Earth, God’s light and love burn bright.

After years of living a life of plenty in Lexington, Kentucky, Lisa Samson and her 18-year-old daughter, Ty, decided to take a mission trip to Swaziland, in Africa. They believed the trip would be one of faith and outreach, but little did they know the…

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Are you suffering from CHAOS (Can’t Have Anyone Over Syndrome)? Has your kitchen table disappeared under a mountain of clutter? Did you spend most of the morning searching for an overdue phone bill that simply must be paid today? If so, you’re certainly not alone. As Marla Cilley has discovered, there are tens of thousands possibly millions of us who simply can’t keep our houses neat and tidy. Cilley decided to come to the rescue by stepping into a phone booth and emerging as The FlyLady, a superwoman of household organization who rescues the messiest from their dusty, dirty, clutter-laden homes.

Cilley is the chief housekeeper-in-residence at a popular Web site, www.flylady.net, and earlier this year she self-published a book for the overwhelmed, overextended and overdrawn: Sink Reflections: FlyLady’s BabyStep Guide to Overcoming CHAOS. The first printing of the book sold out so quickly that it was snapped up by Bantam Books, which is publishing a trade paperback edition this month ($14.95, 223 pages, ISBN 0553382179).

Cilley’s approach is light-hearted, supportive and sometimes even fun, as the 130,000 subscribers to her Web site have learned. Her commandments range from the 27-Fling Boogie (in which you run through your house at a dizzying pace and grab 27 items to throw away) to the Hot Spot Fire Drill (a twice-a-day cleanup of an area that attracts clutter). After reforming her own disorganized ways a few years ago ( my home was full of clutter, my sink was overrun with dirty dishes and I looked like a truck had just run over me ) Cilley set up a small e-mail group to counsel others. The group evolved into her popular Web site, which she runs with a crew of five from her home in the North Carolina mountains. BookPage recently asked the FlyLady for some help in crawling out from under our own mountain of stuff.

BookPage: Help! My house/life is in total CHAOS. How do I take that daunting first step toward fixing it? Marla Cilley: Go shine your kitchen sink! Quit looking at the big picture and just take the first babystep and shine that sink! You write that the FlyLady program really isn’t about cleaning. What is the heart of your message to the messy? If you take care of yourself first and I mean FLY(Finally Loving Yourself), your home and life will fall right into place. BabySteps, BabySteps, BabySteps. Establish the foundations of small routines and before you know it, you will find the peace you are looking for.

Who are the typical subscribers to your Web site? They are from all walks of life: FLY Guys, homeschooling parents, retired people. You name it and we have them in our cyber-family. FLYing works for anyone who has a home and is tired of living in CHAOS! Does your own house ever lapse into CHAOS? NO! Occasionally I have a hot spot get out of control, but it only takes five minutes to put out that fire! My routines allow us the freedom to open our door to guests at a moment’s notice.

What’s the hardest thing you’ve ever parted with in a 27-Fling Boogie? Flinging becomes fun after a little while. I have never parted with anything that made me smile. If it doesn’t, it is out of here. It is so easy if you can ask yourself a simple question. Do I love you? Do I use you? Do I have a place for you? If you can honestly answer these questions, then the item is worth keeping. If not, look out the flinging has begun! What’s the household chore you dread the most, and how do you convince yourself to do it anyway? I don’t dread any of them, because none of them take more than 15 minutes to do and I can do anything for 15 minutes! When my timer goes off, I get to stop! The holidays are approaching, and I can’t find my dining room table under all the clutter. How can I uncover it in time for Thanksgiving? Find your garbage can first and use it! The trashcan is my favorite filing system! Toss it out!

Are you suffering from CHAOS (Can't Have Anyone Over Syndrome)? Has your kitchen table disappeared under a mountain of clutter? Did you spend most of the morning searching for an overdue phone bill that simply must be paid today? If so, you're certainly not alone.…
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When the markets crash, your nest egg goes splash and you wish you had cash, that’s a bear market. Sadly, most investors spent the summer watching portfolios shrink and blue chips sink as money retreated from Wall Street. That, my friends, is the downside of investing.

If you’re in the market for the long term, here’s what to do seek the advice of people, like the authors below, who’ve weathered the storms. Most will recommend that you diversify, diversify, diversify. Then, hold tight, remembering that a diversified portfolio will share in the gains when the bulls return to Wall Street and in the meantime, your money will be far less likely to smash, crash or splash.

Common sense reigns I know these first guys well. From their days as the hip" investment advisors on AOL to their current monopoly on common sense in the financial world, the Gardner brothers preach a sensible, stable approach to personal finance and investing. So I wasn’t surprised to find that The Motley Fool’s What to Do With Your Money Now: Ten Steps to Staying Up in a Down Market by David and Tom Gardner (Simon ∧ Schuster, $23, 212 pages, ISBN 0743233786) mimics the no-nonsense advice they dispense daily on their Web site, on TV and radio and in their news column. What’s new in this book is the Gardners’ self-deprecating ability to use their own flops as examples of what’s wrong with investing" right now. They admit to financial and business-building mistakes, offering personal examples designed to keep you from taking the wrong turns in your own portfolios. This is sage advice from Fools.

Time to learn Safer Investing in Volatile Markets: Twelve Proven Strategies to Increase Your Income and Financial Security by Carolann Doherty-Brown (Dearborn, $18.95, 288 pages, ISBN 0793151481) is a straightforward guide to understanding the strategy and timing issues most financial advisors and stock brokers use to advise their clients. Knowing how long you will hold and then sell a stock is as important as understanding a company’s P/E ratio or its audit practices. Knowing what your broker knows, and how he should react to market trends, is insurance for you and your portfolio. In the long run, the smart investor survives by being educated about all the issues at work in the markets. As Brown says, my 12 strategies will not work all the time for all people, but history has shown they do work most of the time." Follow her lead for long-term growth and an escape from the roller coaster markets.

Is it a stock or a bond? Most people don’t know the difference between stocks and bonds. Over the years, I’ve encountered many investors who just think bonds pay less" than stocks. So I’m delighted to report there’s finally a book that shows how this integral part of a portfolio works. The Money-Making Guide to Bonds: Straightforward Strategies for Picking the Right Bonds and Bond Funds by Hildy and Stan Richelson delivers a wealth of information on what bonds are, how to pick bonds and how to plan bond investing. Bonds should not be trendy additions to portfolios in bad times, the authors argue, but a well-thought out portion of any serious investment or retirement plan. Get off the bubble Bubbleology: The New Science of Stock Market Winners and Losers by Kevin Hassett (Crown Business, $18.95, 128 pages, ISBN 0609609297) offers an interesting and timely look at why stock market prices rise and fall and how group psychology intersects with finance. Recent market reactions would make any investor wonder are we all a group of untrained lemmings rushing toward the cliff? Hassett, an economist and frequent contributor to The Wall Street Journal, argues that traditional ways of assessing a stock’s inherent risk (equating it with volatility) are flawed. He offers a set of simple principles to explain why investors panic when they see a bubble" or steep rise in the markets and what you can do to profit from the market’s overreactions to bubblespotting." A timely book, yes, but one that teaches long-term approaches to investing and offers interesting insight into the mind of the market.

 

When the markets crash, your nest egg goes splash and you wish you had cash, that's a bear market. Sadly, most investors spent the summer watching portfolios shrink and blue chips sink as money retreated from Wall Street. That, my friends, is the downside…

Review by

When the markets crash, your nest egg goes splash and you wish you had cash, that’s a bear market. Sadly, most investors spent the summer watching portfolios shrink and blue chips sink as money retreated from Wall Street. That, my friends, is the downside of investing.

If you’re in the market for the long term, here’s what to do seek the advice of people, like the authors below, who’ve weathered the storms. Most will recommend that you diversify, diversify, diversify. Then, hold tight, remembering that a diversified portfolio will share in the gains when the bulls return to Wall Street and in the meantime, your money will be far less likely to smash, crash or splash.

Common sense reigns I know these first guys well. From their days as the hip" investment advisors on AOL to their current monopoly on common sense in the financial world, the Gardner brothers preach a sensible, stable approach to personal finance and investing. So I wasn’t surprised to find that The Motley Fool’s What to Do With Your Money Now: Ten Steps to Staying Up in a Down Market by David and Tom Gardner mimics the no-nonsense advice they dispense daily on their Web site, on TV and radio and in their news column. What’s new in this book is the Gardners’ self-deprecating ability to use their own flops as examples of what’s wrong with investing" right now. They admit to financial and business-building mistakes, offering personal examples designed to keep you from taking the wrong turns in your own portfolios. This is sage advice from Fools.

Time to learn Safer Investing in Volatile Markets: Twelve Proven Strategies to Increase Your Income and Financial Security by Carolann Doherty-Brown (Dearborn, $18.95, 288 pages, ISBN 0793151481) is a straightforward guide to understanding the strategy and timing issues most financial advisors and stock brokers use to advise their clients. Knowing how long you will hold and then sell a stock is as important as understanding a company’s P/E ratio or its audit practices. Knowing what your broker knows, and how he should react to market trends, is insurance for you and your portfolio. In the long run, the smart investor survives by being educated about all the issues at work in the markets. As Brown says, my 12 strategies will not work all the time for all people, but history has shown they do work most of the time." Follow her lead for long-term growth and an escape from the roller coaster markets.

Is it a stock or a bond? Most people don’t know the difference between stocks and bonds. Over the years, I’ve encountered many investors who just think bonds pay less" than stocks. So I’m delighted to report there’s finally a book that shows how this integral part of a portfolio works. The Money-Making Guide to Bonds: Straightforward Strategies for Picking the Right Bonds and Bond Funds by Hildy and Stan Richelson (Bloomberg, $26.95, 304 pages, ISBN 1576601226) delivers a wealth of information on what bonds are, how to pick bonds and how to plan bond investing. Bonds should not be trendy additions to portfolios in bad times, the authors argue, but a well-thought out portion of any serious investment or retirement plan. Get off the bubble Bubbleology: The New Science of Stock Market Winners and Losers by Kevin Hassett (Crown Business, $18.95, 128 pages, ISBN 0609609297) offers an interesting and timely look at why stock market prices rise and fall and how group psychology intersects with finance. Recent market reactions would make any investor wonder are we all a group of untrained lemmings rushing toward the cliff? Hassett, an economist and frequent contributor to The Wall Street Journal, argues that traditional ways of assessing a stock’s inherent risk (equating it with volatility) are flawed. He offers a set of simple principles to explain why investors panic when they see a bubble" or steep rise in the markets and what you can do to profit from the market’s overreactions to bubblespotting." A timely book, yes, but one that teaches long-term approaches to investing and offers interesting insight into the mind of the market.

When the markets crash, your nest egg goes splash and you wish you had cash, that's a bear market. Sadly, most investors spent the summer watching portfolios shrink and blue chips sink as money retreated from Wall Street. That, my friends, is the downside…

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Let’s face it: not all college grads are ready to enter the workforce. Sure, getting a job and working 9 to 5 is an almost inevitable part of growing up. But many graduates aren’t ready for the daunting task of finding employment, settling down and working their 20s away. Luckily for those adventure-seekers, recent Yale graduate and world traveler Colleen Kinder has some fabulous, if unconventional, advice in her book, Delaying the Real World: A Twentysomething’s Guide to Seeking Adventure. From leading a teen group through the Rocky Mountains to teaching English in Korea to working on an organic farm, Kinder gives grads the ideas, resources and more than anything, the confidence they need to “think outside the box.” A must-read for students with a non-traditional career path in mind and parents who need some reassurance, Delaying the Real World is practical, refreshing and inspiring. Abby Plesser will graduate from Vanderbilt University this month.

Let's face it: not all college grads are ready to enter the workforce. Sure, getting a job and working 9 to 5 is an almost inevitable part of growing up. But many graduates aren't ready for the daunting task of finding employment, settling down and…
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You’ve probably wondered how some people become so successful. Entrepreneur and author Peter Han wondered that as well, and sought to find out by interviewing 100 well-known high-achievers to learn how they made the choices that got them where they are today. In Nobodies to Somebodies: How 100 Great Careers Got Their Start, he culls wisdom from the experiences of his 100 subjects to help anyone, especially those just starting out, find a satisfying career. Han interviewed business and government leaders, writers, artists and entertainers, Nobel Prize winners and nonprofit/organizational leaders. Some of the leaders’ traits are what you’d expect strong work ethic, positive attitude and outgoing personality but other characteristics common to many of these leaders are more surprising. Of these, Han determined strong self-knowledge understanding and playing to one’s strengths and following gut instincts to be most important, while at the same time being attuned to the real world and being flexible to change are also crucial to success. These career stories can provide the catalyst for your own career development.

You've probably wondered how some people become so successful. Entrepreneur and author Peter Han wondered that as well, and sought to find out by interviewing 100 well-known high-achievers to learn how they made the choices that got them where they are today. In Nobodies…
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Interviewing is like dating: if you don’t make a good first impression, you don’t get another chance. Michael Farr’s latest career book, Next-Day Job Interview: Prepare Tonight and Get the Job Tomorrow is a logical, thorough and easy read that will quickly give you the skills and the confidence to ace any interview. Farr tells you how to identify your skills, find job openings, research companies, give well thought-out answers to interview questions even the difficult, tricky and sensitive ones follow-up after the interview and negotiate your salary. Whether you’re new at interviewing or are an interviewing veteran, following Farr’s advice can increase your chances of getting the right job.

Interviewing is like dating: if you don't make a good first impression, you don't get another chance. Michael Farr's latest career book, Next-Day Job Interview: Prepare Tonight and Get the Job Tomorrow is a logical, thorough and easy read that will quickly give you…
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An approach to having fun on the job is offered by Mike Veeck, son of late Hall of Fame baseball club owner Bill Veeck, and president and part-owner of six successful minor league baseball teams. “I want to love my entire life and I want my employees to feel the same way,” Veeck says. Along with co-author Pete Williams, he presents the whys and hows of having fun at work in Fun Is Good: How to Create Joy ∧ Passion In Your Workplace ∧ Career.

“Fun is good” means more than spending time at work laughing and joking. Veeck shows how to create the fun, irreverence, creativity and passion that help build positive relationships and create community with co-workers and teammates. That “fun” results in better customer service and makes good business sense. The book is peppered with vignettes from accomplished business leaders who have found that Veeck’s philosophy works. Maybe you can make it work for you, too.

An approach to having fun on the job is offered by Mike Veeck, son of late Hall of Fame baseball club owner Bill Veeck, and president and part-owner of six successful minor league baseball teams. "I want to love my entire life and I…
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Dennis W. Bakke, co-founder and CEO emeritus of the AES Corporation, a worldwide energy company with 40,000 employees in 31 countries, leads his company with radical business values and practices that work. Bakke details his unorthodox philosophies and their implementation in Joy at Work: A Revolutionary Approach to Fun on the Job.

Bakke believes a values-driven, decentralized workplace where all workers feel important will be a joyful workplace. When employees are encouraged to make meaningful decisions and take responsibility for their actions, they can experience true joy at work. Bakke argues that the best decision-making occurs when leaders see their role as serving other employees and delegate most of their decision-making power to the lowest practicable level. And since each person is unique, fairness means treating everyone differently. Additionally, Bakke believes that the purpose of business is not to maximize the bottom line, but to steward resources in an economically responsible way. He offers candid, profound and thought-provoking ideas on life, management and corporate culture in this important read for anyone who can see potential in moving away from business as usual.

Dennis W. Bakke, co-founder and CEO emeritus of the AES Corporation, a worldwide energy company with 40,000 employees in 31 countries, leads his company with radical business values and practices that work. Bakke details his unorthodox philosophies and their implementation in Joy at Work:…
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Was there ever a time when Betty Crocker wasn’t an American cultural touchstone? In the same class of advertising icons as Aunt Jemima and the Pillsbury Doughboy, Betty Crocker epitomizes the desire of cooks to please their families with fresh-baked goodies. Susan Marks spent six years researching this cultural phenomenon, writing a master’s thesis, a documentary and Finding Betty Crocker: The Secret Life of America’s First Lady of Food.

Betty’s mission was to address the homemaking and baking concerns of legions of Gold Medal Flour customers who wrote in by the thousands. Marks includes some of these letters in the book, as well as recipes and a selection of advertisements featuring Betty Crocker. Over the decades, Betty’s status as the First Lady of American Food grew as she saw America through the Depression, World War II and the 1950s with her penny-pinching recipes and radio programs, adapting to the needs of the dedicated homemaker. By the time the 1960s and ’70s rolled around, Betty was synonymous with cooking.

Just as Betty’s audience changed through the years, so did her appearance, as illustrated by a gallery of her ever-changing visage. From her first portrait in the 1930s (said to have been a composite of the women on the Gold Medal kitchen staff), Betty Crocker’s image has kept up with what her audience deems both authoritative and comforting. That almost no one makes cakes and pancakes from scratch anymore is a testament to the simplicity she preached. But Betty Crocker’s legacy extends beyond “just add water” mixes. We needed Betty to pour into our minds the idea that cooking wasn’t onerous, even for busy parents and working stiffs. Betty and her big red spoon logo meant that the recipes perfected in her test kitchens were guaranteed successes, and by extension, so were the women who made them at home. Kelly Koepke is the restaurant critic for the Albuquerque Journal.

Was there ever a time when Betty Crocker wasn't an American cultural touchstone? In the same class of advertising icons as Aunt Jemima and the Pillsbury Doughboy, Betty Crocker epitomizes the desire of cooks to please their families with fresh-baked goodies. Susan Marks spent six…
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Louis May is in a situation that many young readers will find unfortunately familiar. His parents have divorced, and now he’s living in a new town, with a new school, no friends and a stepmother and stepbrother whom he doesn’t like very much. What makes Louis’ story unique is its time and place; in Wes Tooke’s debut novel for middle-schoolers, Lucky: Maris, Mantle, and My Best Summer Ever, the year is 1961, the place is New York City and the backdrop is the most famous home-run chase in history.

Louis loves baseball—he knows all the teams, their players and their stats, and he especially loves the New York Yankees. He only wishes he could play the game as well as his stepbrother Bryce, who joins in with the other kids in mocking him when he inevitably strikes out or muffs a grounder. Life takes a dramatic turn when Louis’ father takes him along with a business client to a Yankees game and a lucky catch lands him a job as a Yankees bat boy!

In the weeks and months that follow, Louis must somehow improve his unhappy home life, while at the same time work a job that puts him smack in the middle of Roger Maris’ and Mickey Mantle’s race to break Babe Ruth’s record. Along the way, he’ll need to deal with both his avant-garde mother and her more traditional replacement, face down bullies and aggressive reporters, and maybe improve his baseball skills a bit.

Lucky succeeds both as a story about a kid learning to deal with the world on his own (and growing up in the process) and as an insightful look into the players involved in one of the most dramatic sports stories of our time. If you have a child who’s into sports—or into well-written books, for that matter—then put a copy of Lucky into their hands. It just might beat catching a home-run ball.

James Neal Webb is a Boston Red Sox fan who doesn’t usually read books about the Yankees, but in this case he’s happy to make an exception.

Louis May is in a situation that many young readers will find unfortunately familiar. His parents have divorced, and now he’s living in a new town, with a new school, no friends and a stepmother and stepbrother whom he doesn’t like very much. What makes…

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