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Author Joel Kurtzman has good connections. The former editor of Harvard Business Review has compiled a storehouse of great management thinking by rounding up contributors like junk bond king Michael Milken, Segway inventor Dean Kamen and Harvard’s strategy star Michael Porter. The result is MBA in a Box: Practical Ideas from the Best Brains in Business. With short, thought-provoking chapters on innovation, human resources, strategy and leadership, the book covers every topic a business person needs. MBA in a Box strives to balance fun and practicality. It succeeds most of the time, but some of the famous contributors will leave readers wanting. For instance, Porter’s look at the power of location and Milken’s take on capital structure feel like school lectures. However, Kamen starts the book off right with a compelling comparison of invention versus innovation. The finance and accounting section (one of Kurtzman’s favorites) includes Les Livingstone’s deft explanation of the pros and cons of the recent Sarbanes-Oxley Act and Robert Metcalf’s powerful defense of stock options. Kurtzman is proud that he “thought inside the box” to create a toolkit for professionals, but his book will still shake up readers’ thinking and stretch minds.

Stephanie Swilley will receive her MBA this month from Vanderbilt’s Owen Graduate School of Management.

Author Joel Kurtzman has good connections. The former editor of Harvard Business Review has compiled a storehouse of great management thinking by rounding up contributors like junk bond king Michael Milken, Segway inventor Dean Kamen and Harvard's strategy star Michael Porter. The result is MBA…
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The day Warren Harlan Pease returns home from the war in Iraq, the first person he meets is Jesus. Dressed in a t-shirt and jeans, Jesus walks from the ocean onto the New Hampshire beach where Warren goes to find solace. What follows is a journey through Warren’s life, as Jesus—who insists Warren call him “Ray”—travels with Warren to meet the family and friends who stayed behind when Warren went to war.

One by one, Warren introduces Ray to his loved ones: first to Bethie, Warren’s high school sweetheart and the mother of his daughter, Dodie; then, in turn, his father, his best friend, Ryan, to whom Bethie is now engaged, and even Warren’s dead mother. As the unlikely pair moves from place to place, Warren’s life unfolds before him again. Soon Warren begins to understand that the journey is one of healing for his soul as much as for his wounds. As the meaning of Warren’s return unfolds, the bitterness of war and loss turns into a discovery of peace and hope.

James Landis’ novel The Last Day is haunting and beautiful, rippling with skillfully intertwined themes of faith, love, religion and war. The voice of the young soldier is powerfully real, carried forth in a simple, direct style that is nevertheless richly poetic and thoroughly compelling. And while Warren does not question his duty in the war, the story does not shirk from the graphic, horrible reality of Iraq itself. Flashback scenes are told in the voice of one who has been there, a soldier in the midst of blood, filth and violence—a vivid contrast to the quiet, intimate moments that surround Warren as Jesus leads him through his home. What makes these disparate visions work so well is that the author completely disappears into Warren’s voice. Reading The Last Day is like sharing Warren’s thoughts, as if the story were a memoir rather than a novel.

But it is a novel, and an exceptional one. Landis writes with mastery and grace, weaving together fiction and philosophy with profound beauty. Through an ordinary hero, Landis has crafted an extraordinary literary work. Like Warren, the reader will discover that The Last Day is worth sharing with loved ones.

Howard Shirley is a writer in Franklin, Tennessee.

The day Warren Harlan Pease returns home from the war in Iraq, the first person he meets is Jesus. Dressed in a t-shirt and jeans, Jesus walks from the ocean onto the New Hampshire beach where Warren goes to find solace. What follows is a…

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Long-time favorite picture book creator and New Yorker artist William Steig once again perfectly captures human nature in Spinky Sulks. Spinky is in a terribly bad mood—as we all are occasionally—and no amount of tender cajoling by his family can change it. Steig’s understated and delightful words combine with glorious and colorful pictures to make a terrific read-aloud book for parents and young children.

Roald Dahl’s quirkish humor abounds in Matilda, his newest novel for middle-grade readers—remember James and the Giant Peach and The BFG? As usual, unfavorite adult characters are verbal cartoons that make readers giggle with a mixture of glee and gloom. The brilliant and sweet Matilda, neither loved nor understood by her dastardly parents or maniacal Headmistress, turns her abounding curiosity and energy to the art of telekinesis, enabling her to play confounding tricks on her tormentors and eventually set everything right. dahl does not mince words or spare the allegorical rod, creating an unprudish novel both touching and funny. Matilda won’t disappoint Dahl’s middle-grade fans.

Long-time favorite picture book creator and New Yorker artist William Steig once again perfectly captures human nature in Spinky Sulks. Spinky is in a terribly bad mood—as we all are occasionally—and no amount of tender cajoling by his family can change it. Steig's understated and…

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Excellent, good, fair, poor what’s your level of satisfaction at work? If something, or a lot of things, about your career could use a change, four new books can help you get where you want to be. If you’re just starting out in a career, these books can launch you on the right path and teach you what to watch for along the way.

Monstrously helpful "We dream, worry, fantasize, agonize about out careers, and yetÉit’s amazing how many people let their careers just…sort of…happen to them," says Jeff Taylor, founder of the Monster job-search website. In Monster Careers: How to Land the Job of Your Life (Penguin, $18, 416 pages, ISBN 0142004367), Taylor, with Doug Hardy, general manager of Monster Careers, challenges readers to steer clear of boredom, resignation or despair about a job. This comprehensive book offers wise, upbeat information and exercises to get readers thinking and acting. Topics include current hiring practices, having the right attitude, defining what you want to do, creating rŽsumŽs and cover letters that market your talents effectively, researching and applying for a job, interviewing, negotiating and transitioning into a new job.

The book has an interactive companion at monstercareers.com with resources such as rŽsumŽ templates, self-assessment tools, networking information, relocation resources and alternative work arrangements.

Finding fulfillment Be real. Get real. We hear that a lot these days. When your work life seems removed from who you really are, it’s time for some serious soul-searching. Two thought-provoking books can help guide you through the process. Each useful on its own, together they offer a tremendous array of techniques for finding answers to that nagging question: what job would make me truly fulfilled? The Authentic Career: Following the Path of Self-Discovery to Professional Fulfillment (New World Library, $14.95, 209 pages, ISBN 1577314387) offers an in-depth process to achieve integration of who you are and what you should be doing. Author Maggie Craddock, career coach and former award-winning Wall Street fund manager, has developed a therapeutic, four-stage process that identifies the demands and expectations others have put on you and helps you decide what you really want and need to be fulfilled. Arguing that working from your authentic self allows you to function at your best, Craddock offers insightful questions and exercises and uses real-life examples of how clients came to better understand themselves and realize more job and personal satisfaction.

If you don’t want to be doing the same old thing three months from now, check out the advice offered in Now What? 90 Days to a New Life Direction (Tarcher, $19.95, 240 pages, ISBN 1585423211) by life coach and author Laura Bergman Fortgang (Living Your Best Life and Take Yourself to the Top). To find the truth about who you really are, what you really want and what you’re really capable of, Fortgang has developed a high-energy, 12-week, chapter-per-week program based on the process that has successfully enabled hundreds of her clients to make important life changes. The first 45 days help you find a new direction, the remaining 45 days help you set the course toward reaching it. Fortgang’s empowering exercises, client stories and tools enable you tap into your own "life blueprint" and the work that will make you happiest and most fulfilled.

From no job to the right job If a career crash is imminent or you’ve recently experienced one, you’ll find calming, caring advice in Bradley G. Richardson’s Career Comeback: 8 Steps to Getting Back on Your Feet When You’re Fired, Laid Off or Your Business Venture Has Failed and Finding More Job Satisfaction Than Ever Before. A job expert and national manager of CareerJournal.com, the recruitment website of The Wall Street Journal, Richardson presents a clear strategy for recognizing whether your career is in trouble. Then he presents the basics on how to react: evaluating and negotiating a severance package, reviewing what went wrong so you’ll learn from the past, relating to family and friends, establishing a support system, coping with stress and finding a new job that’s better than the old one. Addressing both the practical and emotional elements of a major career setback, Richardson’s book is a valuable aid for those who need to dust themselves off and jump back into the fray.

Excellent, good, fair, poor what's your level of satisfaction at work? If something, or a lot of things, about your career could use a change, four new books can help you get where you want to be. If you're just starting out in a…

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Excellent, good, fair, poor what’s your level of satisfaction at work? If something, or a lot of things, about your career could use a change, four new books can help you get where you want to be. If you’re just starting out in a career, these books can launch you on the right path and teach you what to watch for along the way.

Monstrously helpful "We dream, worry, fantasize, agonize about out careers, and yetÉit’s amazing how many people let their careers just…sort of…happen to them," says Jeff Taylor, founder of the Monster job-search website. In Monster Careers: How to Land the Job of Your Life (Penguin, $18, 416 pages, ISBN 0142004367), Taylor, with Doug Hardy, general manager of Monster Careers, challenges readers to steer clear of boredom, resignation or despair about a job. This comprehensive book offers wise, upbeat information and exercises to get readers thinking and acting. Topics include current hiring practices, having the right attitude, defining what you want to do, creating rŽsumŽs and cover letters that market your talents effectively, researching and applying for a job, interviewing, negotiating and transitioning into a new job.

The book has an interactive companion at monstercareers.com with resources such as rŽsumŽ templates, self-assessment tools, networking information, relocation resources and alternative work arrangements.

Finding fulfillment Be real. Get real. We hear that a lot these days. When your work life seems removed from who you really are, it’s time for some serious soul-searching. Two thought-provoking books can help guide you through the process. Each useful on its own, together they offer a tremendous array of techniques for finding answers to that nagging question: what job would make me truly fulfilled? The Authentic Career: Following the Path of Self-Discovery to Professional Fulfillment (New World Library, $14.95, 209 pages, ISBN 1577314387) offers an in-depth process to achieve integration of who you are and what you should be doing. Author Maggie Craddock, career coach and former award-winning Wall Street fund manager, has developed a therapeutic, four-stage process that identifies the demands and expectations others have put on you and helps you decide what you really want and need to be fulfilled. Arguing that working from your authentic self allows you to function at your best, Craddock offers insightful questions and exercises and uses real-life examples of how clients came to better understand themselves and realize more job and personal satisfaction.

If you don’t want to be doing the same old thing three months from now, check out the advice offered in Now What? 90 Days to a New Life Direction by life coach and author Laura Bergman Fortgang (Living Your Best Life and Take Yourself to the Top). To find the truth about who you really are, what you really want and what you’re really capable of, Fortgang has developed a high-energy, 12-week, chapter-per-week program based on the process that has successfully enabled hundreds of her clients to make important life changes. The first 45 days help you find a new direction, the remaining 45 days help you set the course toward reaching it. Fortgang’s empowering exercises, client stories and tools enable you tap into your own "life blueprint" and the work that will make you happiest and most fulfilled.

From no job to the right job If a career crash is imminent or you’ve recently experienced one, you’ll find calming, caring advice in Bradley G. Richardson’s Career Comeback: 8 Steps to Getting Back on Your Feet When You’re Fired, Laid Off or Your Business Venture Has Failed and Finding More Job Satisfaction Than Ever Before (Broadway, $14.95, 336 pages, ISBN 0767915577). A job expert and national manager of CareerJournal.com, the recruitment website of The Wall Street Journal, Richardson presents a clear strategy for recognizing whether your career is in trouble. Then he presents the basics on how to react: evaluating and negotiating a severance package, reviewing what went wrong so you’ll learn from the past, relating to family and friends, establishing a support system, coping with stress and finding a new job that’s better than the old one. Addressing both the practical and emotional elements of a major career setback, Richardson’s book is a valuable aid for those who need to dust themselves off and jump back into the fray.

 

Excellent, good, fair, poor what's your level of satisfaction at work? If something, or a lot of things, about your career could use a change, four new books can help you get where you want to be. If you're just starting out in a…

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In the summer of 1949. David Halberstam was 15, moving uncertainly into adolescence and looking longingly back over his shoulder at boyhood. America was struggling, too—one generation still emotionally chastened by the Depression, the other increasingly emboldened to expansion and entrepreneurship; the entire country’s culture and class structure splintered by immigration and nearly upended by the war. Only decades later did it occur to Halberstam that he and the country had both taken temporary refuge in one of the last pure flights of baseball fantasy: the down-to-the-wire penant race between Joe DiMaggio’s New York Yankee’s and Ted William’s Boston Red Sox.

And when he looked back to that summer, to the delicate intricacies of box scores and percentages and larger-than-life heroes and smaller-than-myth prejudices, he also saw in the Yankees/Red Sox struggle a rite of national passage.

"That was 40 years ago, but it might as well have been 100," Halberstam says now. "It was the last part of the radio era, before television transformed sports into ‘entertainment.’ It was radio instead of TV, trains instead of planes, it was day ball rather than night games, grass stadiums instead of Astroturf, a time when management was all-powerful rather than the athletes.

"It was an entirely white America, one just beginning to percolate. St. Louis was a Western city and Washington was a Southern one." And baseball truly was the Great American Pastime: "You didn’t have the Final Four, you didn’t have [a TV-fed national obsession with] pro football or the Super Bowl. Nobody had yet heard of Pete Rozelle."

Baseball represented not just competition, as did most sports, but life—no mere victory, but struggle. It required strategy; it offered inspiration; it provided escape and an equalizer for the hundreds of thousands of men and boys who poured over the box scores in taverns and by radios.

Even more fittingly, the pennant races of 1949 exemplified the great rivalry of American baseball, the celebrity-studded, image-conscious Yankees from the House That Ruth Built versus the boyish, beloved, heartbreaking Bosox—New England’s national team. It was the cigar-chomping, hard-driving Red Sox manager John McCarthy, remnant of a rougher age, versus glad-handing, deceptively simple Casey Stengel. It was the duel of a generation, and although they couldn’t have known it, it was also the beginning of the decline.

Of the two great journalistic styles of the post-Vietnam era, "new" and "gonzo," Halberstam’s method emphasized the causes while the flak attack of the Tom Wolfes and Hunter Thompsons seizes on effects. A book like Summer of ’49 plays to the strenghts of Halberstam’s "Best and Brightest" style: His character studies, carefully researched and enriched with revealing anecdotes, become three-dimensional baseball cards, as much snapshots of contemporary society as profiles of the ballplayers.

Here, for instance, is a portrait of the great DiMaggio, the most famous athlete in the United States and arguably the most famous man—a player so intense that he suffered from insomnia and ulcers, so excruciatingly awarre of his fans’ needs that he drove himself to play with extraordinary pain; a player who, finally sidelined with crippling bone spurs, suffered in self-impsosed exile in his hotel room and emerged in true heroic style in time to lead the second-half rally.

And here on the flip side is the bigger picture: the offhand ethnic slurs, the Life magazine story noting with surprise that DiMaggio never used bear grease or olive oil on his hair and "never reeks of garlic," the team nickname "the Dago" (wiry Phil Rizzuto was "Little Dago). DiMaggio was just one of the first generation athletes who found the American Dream on the American diamond (baseball commissioner Bart Giamatti, then 11, kept stats on his own all-Italian all-star lineup);; and many of DiMaggio’s fans who couldn’t even speak English smuggled Italian flags and banners into Yankee stadium and screamed for Joltin’ Joe.

Here also is Rizzuto, with his boy-sized glove and his horror of live animals; Yogi berra, the bricklayer’s son who was called too clumsy and too slow; Tommy Heinrich, who never forgot that baseball had liberated him from a $22.50-a-week typing job (and who, when signed to the New Orleans minor league team, intentionally wore his oldest clothes to the ballpark to avoid the temptation to carouse with his colleagues). And here is the obsessive Williams, who hated reporters as much as he loved hitting; Johnny Pesky, whose Croatian immigrant parents feared he’d shorten his name out of shame; the gentle Do, DiMaggio, both proud of his brother and inescapably overshadowed by him.

This is a wonderful look back at the last real "boys" of summer—the players and the boys and men who loved them, in a time when heroes still walked the earth and wore uniforms.

Eve Zibart is a staff writer for The Washington Post, where she doubles as "Dr. Nightlife."

In the summer of 1949. David Halberstam was 15, moving uncertainly into adolescence and looking longingly back over his shoulder at boyhood. America was struggling, too—one generation still emotionally chastened by the Depression, the other increasingly emboldened to expansion and entrepreneurship; the entire country's culture…

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Excellent, good, fair, poor what’s your level of satisfaction at work? If something, or a lot of things, about your career could use a change, four new books can help you get where you want to be. If you’re just starting out in a career, these books can launch you on the right path and teach you what to watch for along the way.

Monstrously helpful "We dream, worry, fantasize, agonize about out careers, and yet…it’s amazing how many people let their careers just

Excellent, good, fair, poor what's your level of satisfaction at work? If something, or a lot of things, about your career could use a change, four new books can help you get where you want to be. If you're just starting out in a…

Review by

Excellent, good, fair, poor what’s your level of satisfaction at work? If something, or a lot of things, about your career could use a change, four new books can help you get where you want to be. If you’re just starting out in a career, these books can launch you on the right path and teach you what to watch for along the way.

Monstrously helpful "We dream, worry, fantasize, agonize about out careers, and yetÉit’s amazing how many people let their careers just…sort ofÉhappen to them," says Jeff Taylor, founder of the Monster job-search website. In Monster Careers: How to Land the Job of Your Life, Taylor, with Doug Hardy, general manager of Monster Careers, challenges readers to steer clear of boredom, resignation or despair about a job. This comprehensive book offers wise, upbeat information and exercises to get readers thinking and acting. Topics include current hiring practices, having the right attitude, defining what you want to do, creating rŽsumŽs and cover letters that market your talents effectively, researching and applying for a job, interviewing, negotiating and transitioning into a new job.

The book has an interactive companion at monstercareers.com with resources such as rŽsumŽ templates, self-assessment tools, networking information, relocation resources and alternative work arrangements.

Finding fulfillment Be real. Get real. We hear that a lot these days. When your work life seems removed from who you really are, it’s time for some serious soul-searching. Two thought-provoking books can help guide you through the process. Each useful on its own, together they offer a tremendous array of techniques for finding answers to that nagging question: what job would make me truly fulfilled? The Authentic Career: Following the Path of Self-Discovery to Professional Fulfillment (New World Library, $14.95, 209 pages, ISBN 1577314387) offers an in-depth process to achieve integration of who you are and what you should be doing. Author Maggie Craddock, career coach and former award-winning Wall Street fund manager, has developed a therapeutic, four-stage process that identifies the demands and expectations others have put on you and helps you decide what you really want and need to be fulfilled. Arguing that working from your authentic self allows you to function at your best, Craddock offers insightful questions and exercises and uses real-life examples of how clients came to better understand themselves and realize more job and personal satisfaction.

If you don’t want to be doing the same old thing three months from now, check out the advice offered in Now What? 90 Days to a New Life Direction (Tarcher, $19.95, 240 pages, ISBN 1585423211) by life coach and author Laura Bergman Fortgang (Living Your Best Life and Take Yourself to the Top). To find the truth about who you really are, what you really want and what you’re really capable of, Fortgang has developed a high-energy, 12-week, chapter-per-week program based on the process that has successfully enabled hundreds of her clients to make important life changes. The first 45 days help you find a new direction, the remaining 45 days help you set the course toward reaching it. Fortgang’s empowering exercises, client stories and tools enable you tap into your own "life blueprint" and the work that will make you happiest and most fulfilled.

From no job to the right job If a career crash is imminent or you’ve recently experienced one, you’ll find calming, caring advice in Bradley G. Richardson’s Career Comeback: 8 Steps to Getting Back on Your Feet When You’re Fired, Laid Off or Your Business Venture Has Failed and Finding More Job Satisfaction Than Ever Before (Broadway, $14.95, 336 pages, ISBN 0767915577). A job expert and national manager of CareerJournal.com, the recruitment website of The Wall Street Journal, Richardson presents a clear strategy for recognizing whether your career is in trouble. Then he presents the basics on how to react: evaluating and negotiating a severance package, reviewing what went wrong so you’ll learn from the past, relating to family and friends, establishing a support system, coping with stress and finding a new job that’s better than the old one. Addressing both the practical and emotional elements of a major career setback, Richardson’s book is a valuable aid for those who need to dust themselves off and jump back into the fray.

 

Excellent, good, fair, poor what's your level of satisfaction at work? If something, or a lot of things, about your career could use a change, four new books can help you get where you want to be. If you're just starting out in a…

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Hard-hitting advice from The Donald Donald Trump. The name carries its own exclamation point. To the man who wears it, though, it’s more than a name it’s also a “brand” that signifies excellence, decisiveness, risk-taking, flamboyance and an ego the size of Gibraltar (one of the few choice properties, by the way, that The Donald doesn’t yet own). In his new book, Trump: How To Get Rich, the brash bon vivant and wily real estate mogul lays out a roadmap to success via a tour of his own vast holdings, which range from skyscrapers to the Miss Universe and Miss USA pageants.

While the book was reportedly well underway before Trump took the lead role in The Apprentice, it was clearly hurried into print to capitalize on the show’s popularity. The NBC-TV series focused on 16 young, business-savvy contestants in a ruthless competition to win a lucrative post at The Trump Organization and the benign gaze of its chief, as well. A second season of the show, which garnered unexpectedly high ratings, is set to air on NBC in the fall. Trump devotes the final section of the book to explaining how he became involved with the project and describing who the contestants are.

Readers shouldn’t be fooled by the book’s title. It’s really less about “how to get rich” than it is “how I got richer.” In bite-size one- and two-page chapters, the 57-year-old Trump offers such business verities as “Get a great assistant,” “Keep your door open,” “Pay attention to the details,” “Trust your instincts” and no surprise here “Brand yourself and toot your horn.” He offers 53 such “commandments” in all. Trump plucks most of his tips to would-be millionaires from his own experiences, some of which seem narrowly applicable to others, if at all. For instance, he advises against shaking hands, not because it has anything to do with accumulating wealth but because he finds the practice unhygienic. Among his other quirky tenets for getting ahead are “Play golf” (he owns four spiffy courses) and “Get a prenuptial agreement.” Still, Trump spins his exemplary tales with such relish that it really doesn’t matter if a few of them are off-theme; they’re always entertaining. Trump even devotes a segment to discussing his much-maligned hair, which he insists is real but admits is badly colored. When not giving business advice or marveling about his diverse joys and toys, Trump uses the book as a platform to strike back at people who have crossed him. These unfortunates include former New York governor Mario Cuomo and newsman Dan Rather. Noting that he was once a big backer of Cuomo’s political campaigns, Trump adds, “For my generous support, he regularly thanked me and other major contributors with a tax on real estate so onerous it drove many investors away from [New York City].” But the breaking point came, he says, when Cuomo refused to pass on to his son, Andrew, then head of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, Trump’s request for a “perfectly legal and appropriate favor.” He dismisses Cuomo as “a total stiff [and] a lousy governor.” Rather fell from grace after presenting an unflattering profile of the developer on 60 Minutes. “He’s got absolutely no talent or charisma or personality,” Trump huffs. “I could take the average guy on the street and have him read the news…and that guy would draw bigger ratings.” In fairness, though, Trump has more good things to say about the people he encounters than bad. But, as one of his tips says, sometimes you have to hold a grudge.

To demonstrate what’s involved in being Donald Trump, the author opens up his calendar to a week in the fall of 2003. During this period, he not only attended to daily business matters but also met with or talked to Oscar de la Renta, New York mayor Michael Bloomberg, Regis Philbin (one of his favorites), Hugh Grant, New York Yankees manager Joe Torre, Rudy Giuliani, Mohamed Al Fayed (whose son was killed with Princess Diana), Arnold Schwarzenegger, Melanie Griffith, Matt Lauer, Katie Couric, Beverly Sills, Robin Leach, Larry King, Barbara Walters, Meredith Viera, Sandra Bullock, Reggie Jackson, Tina Brown, New York attorney general Eliot Spitzer and Bill Clinton. And this was a five-day week, mind you. The joy of reading this book or any other of Trump’s utterances is witnessing his great lust for life. While he may prattle on about his private jet and his helicopter or drop the names of famous friends, it’s evident that his real wealth lies in never having a dull moment. Edward Morris spends his riches in Nashville.

Hard-hitting advice from The Donald Donald Trump. The name carries its own exclamation point. To the man who wears it, though, it's more than a name it's also a "brand" that signifies excellence, decisiveness, risk-taking, flamboyance and an ego the size of Gibraltar (one of…
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“I had everything I needed to run a household: a house, food, and a new family,” explains 11-year-old Aubrey after stocking up on SpaghettiOs and buying Sammy, a pet fish, to keep her company. In Suzanne LaFleur’s tender debut novel, Love, Aubrey, the grieving girl has been holed up in her Virginia home since her mother, Lissie, devastated by the car crash that claimed Aubrey’s father and younger sister, packed up and left her all alone.

Discovered by her concerned Gram, Aubrey accompanies her back to Vermont, where they begin their search for Lissie and their long road to healing. Aubrey not only has to adjust to a new climate and school year, but to each holiday and even day-to-day events without her family.

What eases Aubrey’s grief the most are her emotionally charged letters, first to her sister’s imaginary friend, Sammy, and then to her absent family members. When she’s torn between moving back with her mother and staying with her grandmother, the letters allow her to work through the tense dilemma and to realize that home is not just a physical place but a refuge where comfort and caring reside.

Aubrey draws readers into her stirring plight with realistic concerns and a spot-on tween voice. The author’s precise word choice and even pacing leads middle-grade girls through every step of Aubrey’s heart-wrenching survival. They will indeed love Aubrey.

“I had everything I needed to run a household: a house, food, and a new family,” explains 11-year-old Aubrey after stocking up on SpaghettiOs and buying Sammy, a pet fish, to keep her company. In Suzanne LaFleur’s tender debut novel, Love, Aubrey, the grieving girl…

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At the beginning of Any Which Wall, Laurel Snyder’s second middle-grade novel, four bored children while away the summer, wistful for the kind of magic that only happens in books. They’ve been reading Edward Eager, author of the 1954 uber-classic Half Magic, which also begins with bored children yearning for something, anything exciting to happen.

And those children—the kids in Half Magic—have been reading E. Nesbit, the mother of all adventure writers (The Railway Children, Five Children and It, etc.) and the model for Eager himself. Any Which Wall then, is the second degree of separation from Nesbit to Eager to Snyder, and the new book holds up well in such august company.

Magic is actually quite common, as we are told by the chatty, no-nonsense narrator who has not forgotten what it’s like to be a kid. “Common magic” is what can happen to characters lucky enough to be bored, be together, have excellent taste in literature and have parents too busy to interfere. Such as Emma, six years old; her brother Henry, a rising fifth grader; Henry’s best friend Roy; and Roy’s older sister Susan. Susan is charged with looking after the younger ones, but does not do a great job keeping anyone out of trouble. The trouble starts at the end of a path through an Iowa cornfield, where a bizarre, gigantic stone wall launches adventures accidental and on purpose. As in Half Magic, each kid gets a turn, and each kid discovers the power of words. “Be careful what you wish for” has never been such an apt caution: wordplay and syntactical imprecision make for unexpected (and funny) plot twists. Also look for the funky, retro-feel illustrations by LeUyen Phem: magical in their own right.

Perfectly timed for a summer release, Any Which Wall should handily alleviate boredom for young readers, and keep us all wishing for a sequel. Of course, the ultimate accolade would be a book written by someone in the next generation of children’s authors, and which begins with bored characters wistful for the kind of magic in Any Which Wall.

Joanna Brichetto still owns the copy of Half Magic she first read 34 years ago (price: 75 cents).

At the beginning of Any Which Wall, Laurel Snyder’s second middle-grade novel, four bored children while away the summer, wistful for the kind of magic that only happens in books. They’ve been reading Edward Eager, author of the 1954 uber-classic Half Magic, which also begins…

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In 1959, Ken Kesey, then a creative writing student at Stanford University, volunteered to act as a guinea pig in a series of medical trials, partly sponsored by the CIA, into the effects of psychoactive drugs like LSD and mescaline. The experiences he had during these trials fed into the novel he was writing and the result was One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Set in a mental hospital in Oregon, the book is narrated by "Chief" Bromden, a giant American Indian patient there. It tells the story of what happens too the other inmates of the hospital when the drugged routine of their lives is disrupted by the arrivale of Randle McMurphy, a larger-than-life prankster who challenges all the rules and assumptions of the establishment.

Apart from his fiction—other novels include Sometimes a Great Nation and Sailor Song—Kesey is also known as the leader of the "Merry Pranksters," the group of proto-hippies who, in the summer of 1964, drove across America in a psychedelically painted school bus, startling the natives of the small towns en route with their appearance and antics. Throughout his life—and in all his writings—Kesey’s aim was to startle. Just as Randle McMurphy strove to awaken his fellow inmates to the world outside the hospitcal, his creator wanted to stimulate people into the new wasy of looking at life and its potential.

Review reprinted from 100 Must Read Life-Changing Books, by Nick Rennison (A&C Black Books, ISBN 9780713688726). Available in bookstores everywhere.

In 1959, Ken Kesey, then a creative writing student at Stanford University, volunteered to act as a guinea pig in a series of medical trials, partly sponsored by the CIA, into the effects of psychoactive drugs like LSD and mescaline. The experiences he had during these…

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Mudshark, aka Lyle Williams, is a cool kid, the kind who doesn’t have to say he’s cool for the other kids to know it. It’s not only the way he dresses or the way he moves that makes Mudshark cool, but his uncanny ability to know just about everything that goes on at school.

“The cool thing about Mudshark was that he not only had information, he knew how to use it,” writes author Gary Paulsen, explaining why his classmates frequently turn to Mudshark for help in finding lost objects or explaining school mysteries. Before Paulsen comes to the end of his new classroom comedy, Mudshark, even the principal will seek out this resourceful 12-year-old for help. The principal, Mr. Wagner, wants to know why all the erasers in the school have disappeared. And the students want to know whether the librarian’s pet parrot is psychic. Luckily for them, the Mudshark Detective Agency is on the case.

Paulsen laces his tale with the kind of humor that’s sure to appeal to middle grade readers, including a couple of running gags about a free-range gerbil and problems in the faculty restroom. He also offers enough clues to keep the story’s central mystery moving along with growing suspense.

Mudshark himself is an admirable fellow, who’s not only cool at school, but willing to pitch in at home to care for his triplet sisters. This light, entertaining read should prove especially popular with those on the younger end of the book’s suggested 8-to-12-year-old age range.

 

Mudshark, aka Lyle Williams, is a cool kid, the kind who doesn’t have to say he’s cool for the other kids to know it. It’s not only the way he dresses or the way he moves that makes Mudshark cool, but his uncanny ability to…

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