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In a one-woman show that she frequently performs, Olympia Dukakis utters the line, “Maybe there’s a joy in not belonging.” This sentiment seems far-removed from Dukakis’s own image. After all, she is probably best-known for portraying Rose Castorini, the strong-willed matriarch in the popular film Moonstruck, who defines herself when she says, “I know who I am.” Because she’s so terrific as Castorini she won an Oscar for the role we believe Dukakis is like that in “real” life. Why else would she go on to play equally forceful women in films like Steel Magnolias and TV productions such as Tales of the City? But, to the contrary, Dukakis is a life-long searcher and former outsider who remains on a quest of self-discovery. This journey is at the heart of her wonderful new memoir, Ask Me Again Tomorrow: A Life in Progress, which she authored with Emily Heckman , and which has its origins in family dynamics. Dukakis grew up “a hyphenated American” in Lowell, Massachusetts, a town so renowned for its community of Greek ŽmigrŽs that it was called “The Acropolis of America.” A first-generation Greek-American, she refused to be “the dutiful Greek daughter,” a decision that would create a lifelong rift with her mother. Yet among her warmest childhood memories are afternoons spent at the movies with her mother, a woman whose sensitivity and artistry, Dukakis believes, were suppressed by cultural traditions.

Determined to make her own way in the world in defiance of those traditions Dukakis initially followed a pragmatic path. Despite an infatuation with the stage, she graduated from college with a degree in physical therapy and spent two years working with victims of the brutal polio epidemic of the early 1950s. It was afterward that she returned to theater, in a master’s program. Her metamorphosis as an actress would not be easy. During her first paying gig, she was so terrified that she was unable to say a single line in the entire first act. As Dukakis candidly recounts, she fought to overcome personal battles, including an addictive personality, bouts of depression and relationship woes. She sought help through various forms of therapy and later, through spiritual studies. Moving to New York City also fostered healing, because ethnicity was no longer an issue. The city was a multi-cultural capital.

For Dukakis, the stage would become a conduit for her passions and for her odyssey of self. Marriage (to the stage actor Louis Zorich) and motherhood did not crimp her work it enhanced it. The family’s move to New Jersey brought Dukakis new challenges via a lengthy tenure with a local theater company. She had worked for 30 years as a performer and director when she achieved “overnight” success in Moonstruck. That was in 1988, the same year she introduced cousin Michael Dukakis at the Democratic National Convention. It was, she joked, the “year of the Dukakii.” That Oscar led to other memorable screen roles. But oddly, Dukakis shares little information about the roster of stars she’s worked with. We learn, via a single line, that Sally Field is disciplined. And that Shirley MacLaine pegged Julia Roberts for major stardom. But what about Cher (who won the Best Actress Oscar for Moonstruck)? And the early Nic Cage (also of Moonstruck)? If there’s a drawback to Dukakis’ story, it’s the sense that the woman known for playing up-front roles is perhaps holding something back. Otherwise, this chatty, conversational autobiography is a fascinating account of the beloved actress’ life. Pat Broeske is the co-author of Howard Hughes: The Untold Story.

In a one-woman show that she frequently performs, Olympia Dukakis utters the line, "Maybe there's a joy in not belonging." This sentiment seems far-removed from Dukakis's own image. After all, she is probably best-known for portraying Rose Castorini, the strong-willed matriarch in the popular film…
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Four adventurous orphans take up residence in a boxcar and begin to solve mysteries — this is the premise of the beloved Boxcar Children series, begun in 1942 by Gertrude Chandler Warner and still going strong. Warner enjoyed pointing out that her first book, The Boxcar Children (Whitman, $3.95, grades 3-8), "raised a storm of protest from librarians who thought the children were having too good a time without any parental control! That is exactly why children like it!"

Today’s young readers continue to seek out Henry, Jessie, Violet, and Benny Alden and their dog, Watch, whose exciting exploits are described in easy-to-read chapters. Their creator was born in 1890 and lived across the street from a train station in Putnam, Connecticut, as Mary Ellen Ellsworth explains in a new biography, Gertrude Chandler Warner and the Boxcar Children. The resulting soot and cinders meant that the family had to dust the windowsills twice each day.

Although Warner was spirited and full of fun, poor health prevented her from finishing high school. During World War I, a shortage of teachers prompted the local school board to hire her to teach first grade, a position she held for over 30 years. She wrote the first Boxcar book while home recuperating from an illness, thinking back to her childhood glimpses inside a caboose, where the sight of a small stove, table, and dishes led her to imagine what it would be like to live on a train.

By the end of the first book, the four children are reunited with their wealthy grandfather, who moves their boxcar from the woods to his yard. From this beginning, the independent Alden children became so popular that Warner wrote 19 adventures about them with titles such as Surprise Island, Mystery Ranch, and Snowbound Mystery. Warner died at age 89 in 1979, but the Boxcar Children live on with new titles such as The Pizza Mystery, The Canoe Trip Mystery, and The Dinosaur Mystery, written by new writers faithful to Warner’s vision. There are now 59 books in the series and eight special mysteries with additional activities in the back.

The clan even has their own cookbook, The Boxcar Children Cookbook, by Diane Blain, featuring such treats as secret code buns, hobo stew, and tree house chocolate pudding, all inspired by passages from the books. Certainly the volume is in keeping with the spirit of the series—Warner’s very first description of the children has them standing in front of a bakery, hungrily looking inside.

When young Gertrude Chandler Warner gazed into a caboose and started dreaming, little did she realize what it would lead to. Kids, trains, and mysteries make for an all-aboard formula that remains hard to beat!

Alice Cary reviews books in the railroad town of Groton, Mass.

Four adventurous orphans take up residence in a boxcar and begin to solve mysteries -- this is the premise of the beloved Boxcar Children series, begun in 1942 by Gertrude Chandler Warner and still going strong. Warner enjoyed pointing out that her first book, The…

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A Christmas story by Lemony Snicket? For those who know Snicket’s best-selling series of books, this sounds like an oxymoron. He’s well-known for his funny but often bleak, Edward Gorey-like view of the world. Never fear, The Lump of Coal is a small holiday gem, a follow-up of sorts to last year’s Hanukkah tale, The Latke Who Couldn’t Stop Screaming. Yes, it does have its share of grim moments—after all, it’s about a lump of coal! But it’s also full of humor, and it serves as a nice diversion from all the holiday schmaltz.

The opening passage offers a good sample of Snicket’s masterful yet comic writing: "The holiday season is a time for storytelling, and whether you are hearing the story of a candelabra staying lit for more than a week, or a baby born in a barn without proper medical supervision, these stories often feature miracles. Miracles are like pimples, because once you start looking for them you find more than you ever dreamed you’d see, and this holiday story features any number of miracles, depending on your point of view."

Leave it to Snicket (a pseudonym for Daniel Handler) to compare miracles to pimples—and have the comparison make sense. The central character, a lump of coal, dreams of becoming an artist, of drawing "rough, black lines on a canvas." Dressed in a little black tuxedo, he looks quite dashing, in a grumpy yet cute way, as envisioned by Brett Helquist’s equally humorous art. The lump’s quest is realized, although his journey takes many entertaining twists and turns.

Bring out this short tale during a frazzled holiday time. Children and adults alike will be rewarded and also gently reminded of the many unlikely miracles in their lives.

A Christmas story by Lemony Snicket? For those who know Snicket's best-selling series of books, this sounds like an oxymoron. He's well-known for his funny but often bleak, Edward Gorey-like view of the world. Never fear, The Lump of Coal is a small holiday gem,…

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I’m planning a trip to Miami, and one of the most important packing decisions involves which books to bring. A gripping story with interesting, unique characters is a must, but I’m not filling my suitcase with fictional thrillers. Instead, I’ve found three new business books that deliver suspense and adventure with real-life stories about a cocky inventor, a fearless road-tripper and a witty mathematician. So put down the Danielle Steel this summer and get the goods without the guilt.

Reinventing the wheel Code Name Ginger (Harvard Business School Press, $27.95, 336 pages, ISBN 1578516730) delivers the exciting behind-the-scenes story of bringing a dream to the marketplace. At the heart of the book is Dean Kamen, a cocky young inventor and entrepreneur with an ego big enough to match his lofty ideas. Often compared to a modern-day Thomas Edison, Kamen had a passion for the Ginger project, which he believed would revolutionize transportation by developing a self-balancing, electronic "people mover." He bet his fortune on the top-secret project that took more than nine years to develop and cost more than $100 million in R&andD.

Author Steve Kemper was granted exclusive access to the Ginger project during the 18 months of testing and design, but when his book proposal found its way to the Internet in January 2001, it exposed the heavily guarded project. The press started a firestorm of speculation about the machine that would eventually be dubbed the Segway Human Transporter.

Unfortunately, Kemper’s access to the project was cut just before the Segway went on sale, but consumer reaction thus far has been underwhelming. Not having Kamen’s reaction to the disappointing launch is a sorely missed element of the book. But the glimpse inside the mind of a brilliant inventor, someone always testing new ideas and willing to risk "spectacular failures" to create something great, makes this bumpy journey one well worth taking.

The ultimate road trip Jim Rogers knows how to take a vacation. The man Time calls "the Indiana Jones of Finance" has a passion for exploration, and he’s once again taking readers along for the ride in Adventure Capitalist (Random House, $27.50, 368 pages, ISBN 0375509127). On January 1, 1999, Rogers and his fiancŽe began a three-year road trip around the world that took the couple through 116 countries. Ready for anything (like the raging blizzard on Day 3), Rogers chronicles their stories with wit and offers insight on the state of the global economy at the turn of the century.

A former offshore hedge fund manager, Rogers is no ordinary tourist. He has a unique understanding of international politics and economics and describes successful investing as "getting in early, when things are cheap, when everything is distressed, when everyone is demoralized." Rogers successfully mixes business with pleasure by measuring the economic climate of each country on the itinerary. For example, Turkey in 1999 looked like a great emerging market based on location and population, but a harrowing airport ordeal convinced Rogers that the country hadn’t conquered its Byzantine ways, so he decided not to invest there. Rogers’ contagious enthusiasm for off-the-beaten-path discoveries turned his previous book, Investment Biker, into a bestseller. It chronicled his record-setting 700,000-mile motorcycle journey across six continents. Both are great reading for business lovers and armchair travelers.

Falling in love with WorldCom It’s nice to know that we’re all human and that sometimes even mathematicians get a little irrational. Best-selling author and math master John Allen Paulos begins his new book, A Mathematician Plays the Stock Market, by recounting how this "hardheaded fellow" began "falling disastrously in love" with one well-known scandal-ridden company. He lost his shirt, but couldn’t quit buying the stock or force himself to sell. Motivated by his own fear and greed, Paulos learned the painful lesson that emotions and psychology play a big part in stock market volatility.

Paulos uses personal stories and funny, bizarre anecdotes rather than formulas and equations to delve into the market’s "problems, paradoxes, and puzzles." It’s a rational approach that’s both simple and entertaining.

 

I'm planning a trip to Miami, and one of the most important packing decisions involves which books to bring. A gripping story with interesting, unique characters is a must, but I'm not filling my suitcase with fictional thrillers. Instead, I've found three new business…

Review by

I’m planning a trip to Miami, and one of the most important packing decisions involves which books to bring. A gripping story with interesting, unique characters is a must, but I’m not filling my suitcase with fictional thrillers. Instead, I’ve found three new business books that deliver suspense and adventure with real-life stories about a cocky inventor, a fearless road-tripper and a witty mathematician. So put down the Danielle Steel this summer and get the goods without the guilt.

Reinventing the wheel

Code Name Ginger (Harvard Business School Press, $27.95, 336 pages, ISBN 1578516730) delivers the exciting behind-the-scenes story of bringing a dream to the marketplace. At the heart of the book is Dean Kamen, a cocky young inventor and entrepreneur with an ego big enough to match his lofty ideas. Often compared to a modern-day Thomas Edison, Kamen had a passion for the Ginger project, which he believed would revolutionize transportation by developing a self-balancing, electronic "people mover." He bet his fortune on the top-secret project that took more than nine years to develop and cost more than $100 million in R & D.

Author Steve Kemper was granted exclusive access to the Ginger project during the 18 months of testing and design, but when his book proposal found its way to the Internet in January 2001, it exposed the heavily guarded project. The press started a firestorm of speculation about the machine that would eventually be dubbed the Segway Human Transporter.

Unfortunately, Kemper’s access to the project was cut just before the Segway went on sale, but consumer reaction thus far has been underwhelming. Not having Kamen’s reaction to the disappointing launch is a sorely missed element of the book. But the glimpse inside the mind of a brilliant inventor, someone always testing new ideas and willing to risk "spectacular failures" to create something great, makes this bumpy journey one well worth taking.

The ultimate road trip

Jim Rogers knows how to take a vacation. The man Time calls "the Indiana Jones of Finance" has a passion for exploration, and he’s once again taking readers along for the ride in Adventure Capitalist. On January 1, 1999, Rogers and his fiancŽe began a three-year road trip around the world that took the couple through 116 countries. Ready for anything (like the raging blizzard on Day 3), Rogers chronicles their stories with wit and offers insight on the state of the global economy at the turn of the century.

A former offshore hedge fund manager, Rogers is no ordinary tourist. He has a unique understanding of international politics and economics and describes successful investing as "getting in early, when things are cheap, when everything is distressed, when everyone is demoralized." Rogers successfully mixes business with pleasure by measuring the economic climate of each country on the itinerary. For example, Turkey in 1999 looked like a great emerging market based on location and population, but a harrowing airport ordeal convinced Rogers that the country hadn’t conquered its Byzantine ways, so he decided not to invest there. Rogers’ contagious enthusiasm for off-the-beaten-path discoveries turned his previous book, Investment Biker, into a bestseller. It chronicled his record-setting 700,000-mile motorcycle journey across six continents. Both are great reading for business lovers and armchair travelers.

Falling in love with WorldCom

It’s nice to know that we’re all human and that sometimes even mathematicians get a little irrational. Best-selling author and math master John Allen Paulos begins his new book, A Mathematician Plays the Stock Market (Basic, $25, 224 pages, ISBN 0465054803), by recounting how this "hardheaded fellow" began "falling disastrously in love" with one well-known scandal-ridden company. He lost his shirt, but couldn’t quit buying the stock or force himself to sell. Motivated by his own fear and greed, Paulos learned the painful lesson that emotions and psychology play a big part in stock market volatility.

Paulos uses personal stories and funny, bizarre anecdotes rather than formulas and equations to delve into the market’s "problems, paradoxes, and puzzles." It’s a rational approach that’s both simple and entertaining.

 

I'm planning a trip to Miami, and one of the most important packing decisions involves which books to bring. A gripping story with interesting, unique characters is a must, but I'm not filling my suitcase with fictional thrillers. Instead, I've found three new business…

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In theory, Americans are defined not by their ethnicity but by their adherence to the principles enshrined in the founding documents of the United States. But in practice, a “real” American is often thought to be some wholly mythological, composite descendant of Europeans, while everyone else is relegated to “foreign” status in various insidious ways. Chinese-American scholar Iris Chang exposes and explodes this view in her new, much-anticipated history The Chinese in America: A Narrative History, following upon the surprising success of her 1997 book, The Rape of Nanking. Chang amasses an enormous and eye-opening collection of contributions made by the Chinese to the development of the U.S. Without their industry, the transcontinental railroad could not have been built with such lightning speed. Chinese Americans discovered or invented everything from condensed milk to fortune cookies to obscure subatomic particles. America’s research universities, national laboratories, hospitals and, increasingly, its bookshelves would be greatly diminished without them.

But Chang argues that the status of Chinese Americans has not reflected their impact. In return for being one of America’s most successful minorities, they have endured racial discrimination, slurs and violence. Less subtly, they faced humiliating restrictions on Chinese immigration the so-called exclusion laws and legal barriers to land ownership. Chinese Americans are commonly judged not on their merits but on the basis of current relations between China and America. Chang masterfully combines these two countries’ histories with personal testimony, including her own. A daughter of Chinese immigrants, she brings first-hand knowledge of the Asian-American experience to bear on a history filled with hopes, successes and disappointments. By turns sympathetic and indignant, she nevertheless betrays no bias. As she did with the Nanking atrocity, in her latest book Chang stands to revolutionize the way Chinese Americans are viewed. Kenneth Champeon is a writer based in Thailand.

In theory, Americans are defined not by their ethnicity but by their adherence to the principles enshrined in the founding documents of the United States. But in practice, a "real" American is often thought to be some wholly mythological, composite descendant of Europeans, while everyone…
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Football season’s in full swing, so get your gourmet game on with The NBC Sunday Night Football Cookbook, which stars 150 recipes from NFL players and many of America’s top chefs, including Emeril (bam!) Lagasse and grill – guy Bobby Flay. This eclectic cookbook puts regional down – home favorites (Houston Texan Chester Pitts’ cheesy Potato Casserole, oh yeah!) in the huddle alongside more gussied – up grub (Chef Jonathan Hale’s Deconstructed Sushi, anyone?), offering dishes that go beyond halftime hot links and tailgate chili. Also, this book has heart: proceeds benefit nationwide food banks via the Super Bowl “Taste of the NFL” fund – raising event and Feeding America program.

Intros from singer/football fan Faith Hill and Hall of Famer John Madden kick off the cookbook, which is handily organized by NFL regions from east to north, south to west, making it easy to locate a favorite team. Sections highlight a nation’s bounty of appetizers, main dishes and desserts, a far – ranging variety of foods that reflect the diversity of America’s current cultural palate. Meat – and – potatoes fans will find lots to love, especially luscious wine – braised short – ribs and an exotic recipe for bison burgers, but there’s something here for everyone – even vegans (try KC Chief Tony Gonzalez’s spicy Tom Kha Tofu soup or Chez Henri Chef Paul O’Connell’s Swiss Chard – Eggplant Crepes with Tomato – Basil Coulis). The recipes are clearly written and conveniently timed out, presented in an easy – to – follow format with wine pairings (oddly, there are no suggested brew pairings) and enhanced by color photographs – of both the food and the football greats – along with snippets of player and team trivia. A final bonus section includes three tempting Super Bowl party menus.

Football season's in full swing, so get your gourmet game on with The NBC Sunday Night Football Cookbook, which stars 150 recipes from NFL players and many of America's top chefs, including Emeril (bam!) Lagasse and grill - guy Bobby Flay. This eclectic cookbook puts…

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Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote “Kubla Kahn,” his most rapturous poem, in an opium – induced stupor: “In Xanadu did Kubla Kahn/A stately pleasure dome decree.” Coleridge was responding to the fantastic descriptions of the Kahn's court recorded in the 13th – century Travels of Marco Polo, a narrative which has inspired countless artists over the past 700 years because of its literally incredible accounts of the intrepid Marco's travels from Venice to China and back.

In Denis Belliveau and Francis O'Donnell's new travelogue/photographic essay, In the Footsteps of Marco Polo, we are given stunning proof of Marco Polo's essential veracity, for the geographic realities and enduring ethnographic facts overwhelm any doubt. The illustrated chronicle of the authors' two – year, 25,000 – mile, 20 – country expedition in Marco's footsteps surpasses in sheer strangeness anything that Coleridge could have imagined, whether tripped out or sober. On almost every page, we discover that Marco's anxious assurances (shown here in scriptural red) that what he implausibly reports is real and actual, pale in comparison to the authors' own death – defying exploits, all of them corroborated by beautiful and disturbing photographs.

Belliveau and O'Donnell took the trip 15 years ago (it has taken that long to get a book and PBS film deal), so they have had ample time to digest and interpret their adventures with wisdom and renewed wonder. They reflect poignantly on the timeless nature of the many Asian cultures they encountered, so many of them threatened by endless conflict. In order to follow Polo's route, the authors had to travel through eight war zones and were very nearly killed on several occasions. When what you experience exceeds what you can imagine, the physical and spiritual costs can be very high. Is it worth it? Get this book, go along for the wild ride, and see for yourself.

Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote "Kubla Kahn," his most rapturous poem, in an opium - induced stupor: "In Xanadu did Kubla Kahn/A stately pleasure dome decree." Coleridge was responding to the fantastic descriptions of the Kahn's court recorded in the 13th - century Travels of Marco…
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When it’s time to leave the comfy confines of home and school, a few words of wisdom about the real world can save new graduates a lot of time, money and aggravation. We’ve found four new books all great gift ideas that will help grads ace the transition. (And for those of you who have been out there for a while but could still use a few clues, these books are definitely worth reading.) Stepping out Your old life is behind you and what lies ahead is a great big grown-up world. How do you get a job, an apartment, a car, a life? How do you clean from top to bottom, or cook a chocolate cherry cake? Two new books that are informative on their own and even more comprehensive together will help you through. No one likes to be lectured about this stuff, but the authors present their information as a trusted big sister might with humor, knowledge and care all of which makes for an enlightening and entertaining read. Rebecca Knight, author of A Car, Some Cash, and a Place to Crash: The Only Post-College Survival Guide You’ll Ever Need (Rodale, $17.95, 334 pages, ISBN 1579546269), offers smart insights into navigating and negotiating your way in the real world. Drawing on her own experiences and those of many recent graduates, as well as directing the reader to helpful books and websites, she covers the basics of jobs, apartments and cars as well as insurance and investing, food and friendships. In Real Life, Here I Come: A Survival Guide to the World After Graduation (Adams, $12.95, 304 pages, ISBN 1580628419), author Autumn McAlpin starts with surviving college, then progresses to finding your first home away from home and thriving financially, physically and socially. Witty, three-question quizzes begin each chapter and help you assess your understanding of the topic to follow, but no matter what your score, there is good, sound information to be learned about life. On the right road When it comes to choosing a career, “to thine own self be true” is the focus of Roadtrip Nation: A Guide to Discovering Your Path in Life (Ballantine, $13.95, 248 pages, ISBN 0345460138). Authors Nathan Gebhard and Mike Marriner, with Joanne Gordon, believe that if you have a broad understanding of what’s out there, you can better determine how to realize your dreams and passions. Gebhard and Marriner, not knowing what to do after college, set out in an RV and took a cross-country road trip to meet with successful people and learn how they found their paths in life. More than a hundred people were interviewed during the authors’ travels and a couple dozen of the more captivating interviews are in the book, including Arianne Phillips, stylist for Madonna and Lenny Kravitz; Howard Schultz, chairman of Starbucks and owner of the Seattle Supersonics; scientist and human genome decoder Craig Venter; and Manny, a lobsterman in Maine. The book urges readers to go on their own road trips and gives guidance on whom to meet (answer: anyone you want), how to get the meeting and what to do and say during the conversation. Hit the road you can only regret the roadtrip not taken.

On-the-job nightmares You might just make it in the workplace after all, and with The Worst-Case Scenario Survival Handbook: Work you’ll be that much more savvy and have that much more fun. In the latest book in the The Worst Case Scenario Survival Handbook series by Joshua Piven and David Borgenicht, you’ll learn such skills as covering mistakes and covering tattoos, making yourself seem more important and making yourself invisible. Presented in a deadpan, businesslike style laced with humor, the book’s step-by-step instructions tell you how to get a job you’re not qualified for, stay awake during a meeting or restore a mistakenly shredded document. Ellen Marsden is a writer in Jackson, Tennessee.

When it's time to leave the comfy confines of home and school, a few words of wisdom about the real world can save new graduates a lot of time, money and aggravation. We've found four new books all great gift ideas that will help grads…
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Brooke Astor was only in her mid – 50s when her wealthy husband, Vincent Astor, died, leaving her the sudden heir to a trust fund worth more than $60 million. She started the Astor Foundation and began a four – decade – and – then – some adventure, gracefully balancing the self – indulgences she could well afford with an enormous philanthropic spirit. Following the lead of Gilded Age predecessors like Vanderbilt, Rockefeller and Carnegie, Brooke shrewdly turned the Astor name into an icon of munificence, endowing museums, schools, hospitals, libraries and charities, turning herself into a “sought – after social arbiter” in the process.

As Meryl Gordon writes in Mrs. Astor Regrets, “the ability to dispense millions made her popular and powerful, and Mrs. Astor reveled in her long – running starring role, savoring the accolades.” She loved high fashion, parties and fascinating people – her inner circle included David Rockefeller, Nancy Reagan, Henry Kissinger. Her gravestone heralds this charmed existence, with a simple, self – chosen epitaph: “I had a wonderful life.” And a long one, too: she lived to be 105. But toward the end of it, things went sour.

In 2006, her grandson, Philip Marshall, filed a lawsuit against his own father (and Astor’s only child), Anthony Marshall, for alleged mistreatment, seeking to remove his father from guardianship. The public lawsuit propelled their private squabble into tabloid sensation. Changes to Astor’s will cast suspicion of criminal wrongdoing on her son, eventually leading to a charge of first – degree grand larceny. Through her carefully crafted and well – documented expos

Brooke Astor was only in her mid - 50s when her wealthy husband, Vincent Astor, died, leaving her the sudden heir to a trust fund worth more than $60 million. She started the Astor Foundation and began a four - decade - and - then…

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When it’s time to leave the comfy confines of home and school, a few words of wisdom about the real world can save new graduates a lot of time, money and aggravation. We’ve found four new books all great gift ideas that will help grads ace the transition. (And for those of you who have been out there for a while but could still use a few clues, these books are definitely worth reading.)

Stepping out Your old life is behind you and what lies ahead is a great big grown-up world. How do you get a job, an apartment, a car, a life? How do you clean from top to bottom, or cook a chocolate cherry cake? Two new books that are informative on their own and even more comprehensive together will help you through. No one likes to be lectured about this stuff, but the authors present their information as a trusted big sister might with humor, knowledge and care all of which makes for an enlightening and entertaining read. Rebecca Knight, author of A Car, Some Cash, and a Place to Crash: The Only Post-College Survival Guide You’ll Ever Need (Rodale, $17.95, 334 pages, ISBN 1579546269), offers smart insights into navigating and negotiating your way in the real world. Drawing on her own experiences and those of many recent graduates, as well as directing the reader to helpful books and websites, she covers the basics of jobs, apartments and cars as well as insurance and investing, food and friendships. In Real Life, Here I Come: A Survival Guide to the World After Graduation, author Autumn McAlpin starts with surviving college, then progresses to finding your first home away from home and thriving financially, physically and socially. Witty, three-question quizzes begin each chapter and help you assess your understanding of the topic to follow, but no matter what your score, there is good, sound information to be learned about life.

On the right road When it comes to choosing a career, "to thine own self be true" is the focus of Roadtrip Nation: A Guide to Discovering Your Path in Life (Ballantine, $13.95, 248 pages, ISBN 0345460138). Authors Nathan Gebhard and Mike Marriner, with Joanne Gordon, believe that if you have a broad understanding of what’s out there, you can better determine how to realize your dreams and passions. Gebhard and Marriner, not knowing what to do after college, set out in an RV and took a cross-country road trip to meet with successful people and learn how they found their paths in life. More than a hundred people were interviewed during the authors’ travels and a couple dozen of the more captivating interviews are in the book, including Arianne Phillips, stylist for Madonna and Lenny Kravitz; Howard Schultz, chairman of Starbucks and owner of the Seattle Supersonics; scientist and human genome decoder Craig Venter; and Manny, a lobsterman in Maine. The book urges readers to go on their own road trips and gives guidance on whom to meet (answer: anyone you want), how to get the meeting and what to do and say during the conversation. Hit the road you can only regret the roadtrip not taken.

On-the-job nightmares You might just make it in the workplace after all, and with The Worst-Case Scenario Survival Handbook: Work (Chronicle, $14.95, 176 pages, ISBN 0811835758) you’ll be that much more savvy and have that much more fun. In the latest book in the The Worst Case Scenario Survival Handbook series by Joshua Piven and David Borgenicht, you’ll learn such skills as covering mistakes and covering tattoos, making yourself seem more important and making yourself invisible. Presented in a deadpan, businesslike style laced with humor, the book’s step-by-step instructions tell you how to get a job you’re not qualified for, stay awake during a meeting or restore a mistakenly shredded document. Ellen Marsden is a writer in Jackson, Tennessee.

 

When it's time to leave the comfy confines of home and school, a few words of wisdom about the real world can save new graduates a lot of time, money and aggravation. We've found four new books all great gift ideas that will help…

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In popular culture, Russian – born, French modernist painter Marc Chagall (1887 – 1985) is like a colorful, phantasmagorical “Fiddler on the Roof” of the art world. Chagall is typically equated with sweet, sad, nostalgic shtetl culture, but with the curious additions of flying people and improbably placed goats. Jackie Wullschlager’s Chagall: A Biography will undoubtedly change this view. With access to new material (some recovered from Soviet archives), artworks, translations and insights into the use of language (especially Yiddish), Wullschlager, chief visual arts critic for the Financial Times, has created a massive, groundbreaking work that heroically strives to paint the whole Chagall picture, at last.

Chagall, like the Wandering Jew of legend, seems to be right there at the crux of things, present at every great historical crisis. But Chagall not only suffers the curse of bearing witness to the momentous, breakneck passage of the 20th century; he also bestows the permanent blessing of translating history into the mythic sphere of his imagination.

Here are just a few of the epochal moments in which Chagall found himself a participant: in Paris at the birth of High Modernism, alongside and in direct collaboration with other painters, poets and composers; in Vitebsk at the transformation of old Russian life into revolutionary Soviet art; in France, on the brink of deportation to Auschwitz; in postwar New York as the touchstone for the new generation of American Modernists; in Israel, at the realization of a Zionist dream with the creation of his famous stained glass windows. Wullschlager leads readers through this fruitful wandering year by year, and creates a narrative examining influences from family, lovers, friends, teachers, students, patrons, life and Chagall’s own restless spirit.

Although Chagall’s prolific works extend over most of the 20th century, Wullschlager admits that his best was already behind him by the year 1920. What makes the first modernist breakthrough so extraordinary that it takes the rest of a man’s life to sort out the consequences? In this new biography, Wullschlager offers the most thorough investigation of that question thus far.

In popular culture, Russian - born, French modernist painter Marc Chagall (1887 - 1985) is like a colorful, phantasmagorical "Fiddler on the Roof" of the art world. Chagall is typically equated with sweet, sad, nostalgic shtetl culture, but with the curious additions of flying people…

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When it’s time to leave the comfy confines of home and school, a few words of wisdom about the real world can save new graduates a lot of time, money and aggravation. We’ve found four new books all great gift ideas that will help grads ace the transition. (And for those of you who have been out there for a while but could still use a few clues, these books are definitely worth reading.) Stepping out Your old life is behind you and what lies ahead is a great big grown-up world. How do you get a job, an apartment, a car, a life? How do you clean from top to bottom, or cook a chocolate cherry cake? Two new books that are informative on their own and even more comprehensive together will help you through. No one likes to be lectured about this stuff, but the authors present their information as a trusted big sister might with humor, knowledge and care all of which makes for an enlightening and entertaining read. Rebecca Knight, author of A Car, Some Cash, and a Place to Crash: The Only Post-College Survival Guide You’ll Ever Need, offers smart insights into navigating and negotiating your way in the real world. Drawing on her own experiences and those of many recent graduates, as well as directing the reader to helpful books and websites, she covers the basics of jobs, apartments and cars as well as insurance and investing, food and friendships. In Real Life, Here I Come: A Survival Guide to the World After Graduation (Adams, $12.95, 304 pages, ISBN 1580628419), author Autumn McAlpin starts with surviving college, then progresses to finding your first home away from home and thriving financially, physically and socially. Witty, three-question quizzes begin each chapter and help you assess your understanding of the topic to follow, but no matter what your score, there is good, sound information to be learned about life. On the right road When it comes to choosing a career, “to thine own self be true” is the focus of Roadtrip Nation: A Guide to Discovering Your Path in Life (Ballantine, $13.95, 248 pages, ISBN 0345460138). Authors Nathan Gebhard and Mike Marriner, with Joanne Gordon, believe that if you have a broad understanding of what’s out there, you can better determine how to realize your dreams and passions. Gebhard and Marriner, not knowing what to do after college, set out in an RV and took a cross-country road trip to meet with successful people and learn how they found their paths in life. More than a hundred people were interviewed during the authors’ travels and a couple dozen of the more captivating interviews are in the book, including Arianne Phillips, stylist for Madonna and Lenny Kravitz; Howard Schultz, chairman of Starbucks and owner of the Seattle Supersonics; scientist and human genome decoder Craig Venter; and Manny, a lobsterman in Maine. The book urges readers to go on their own road trips and gives guidance on whom to meet (answer: anyone you want), how to get the meeting and what to do and say during the conversation. Hit the road you can only regret the roadtrip not taken.

On-the-job nightmares You might just make it in the workplace after all, and with The Worst-Case Scenario Survival Handbook: Work (Chronicle, $14.95, 176 pages, ISBN 0811835758) you’ll be that much more savvy and have that much more fun. In the latest book in the The Worst Case Scenario Survival Handbook series by Joshua Piven and David Borgenicht, you’ll learn such skills as covering mistakes and covering tattoos, making yourself seem more important and making yourself invisible. Presented in a deadpan, businesslike style laced with humor, the book’s step-by-step instructions tell you how to get a job you’re not qualified for, stay awake during a meeting or restore a mistakenly shredded document. Ellen Marsden is a writer in Jackson, Tennessee.

When it's time to leave the comfy confines of home and school, a few words of wisdom about the real world can save new graduates a lot of time, money and aggravation. We've found four new books all great gift ideas that will help grads…

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