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reporter Jennifer 8. Lee’s (the 8 connotes prosperity in Chinese) new book, The Fortune Cookie Chronicles: Adventures in the World of Chinese Food, begins with a story about Powerball. In March 2005, the $84 million megalottery jackpot had generated a modest $11 million in ticket sales across 29 states, and officials anticipated three or four second-place winners and maybe one jackpot winner. Instead, there were 104 second-place winners who had selected theidentical six numbers. Where had all these winners gotten their numbers? From a fortune cookie. What started as Lee’s initial search for the fortune cookie manufacturer became a search for the fortune cookie’s history, which in turn raised questions about the origin and evolution of Chinese food in America.

With more Chinese restaurants in the U.S. than McDonald’s, Burger King and KFC restaurants combined, it’s obvious that Americans have a consuming passion for Chinese food, or more accurately phrased, Americanized Chinese food. There is no General Tso’s chicken in China. Chop suey (as we know it, anyway) was invented here. Even the beloved, fabled and ever-entertaining fortune cookie is not Chinese in origin; it’s not American either. How did these and other dishes, “ethnic” yet not too exotic, flavorful yet comforting, come to be? Lee traveled the world and conducted extensive research to find the answers and even goes so far as to identify the world’s greatest Chineserestaurant outside of China (sorry, it is not in the U.S.).

The Fortune Cookie Chronicles is enjoyable and revealing, and provides insight and an education into the American and Chinese cultures; it’s also a tasty blend of thehistory and culture surrounding the rise in popularity of American Chinese food.

Ellen R. Marsden writes from Mason, Ohio.

 

reporter Jennifer 8. Lee's (the 8 connotes prosperity in Chinese) new book, The Fortune Cookie Chronicles: Adventures in the World of Chinese Food, begins with a story about Powerball. In March 2005, the $84 million megalottery jackpot had generated a modest $11 million in ticket…

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I still love to read picture books to my third-grade twin daughters, and Zen Ties is one of the best we’ve encountered lately, a real gem. It’s simple enough for younger children, but offers depth to readers of all ages—a feat accomplished by few books. This is a story with a variety of subtle lessons, worthy of rereading and discussing.

Zen Ties is a follow-up to Jon J. Muth’s Caldecott Honor book, Zen Shorts. Both feature a giant panda named Stillwater who befriends three siblings: Addy, Michael and Karl. In their latest adventure, Stillwater’s nephew Koo comes to visit, and he always addresses his uncle in haiku verse. ("Hi, Koo!" Stillwater says when he meets his nephew at the train station, and Muth begins a later author’s note by explaining his love of wordplay.)

Young Michael is nervous about an upcoming spelling bee. Meanwhile, Stillwater takes the crew to visit an elderly woman named Miss Whitaker, who is depressed and doesn’t feel well. The children aren’t happy about the visit, because Miss Whitaker always shouts at them from her window and scares them. "Miss Whitaker is a good friend. You will see," Stillwater reassures them.

The children visit not once, but several times, and come to like her during a series of exchanges. Finally, Koo’s visit comes to an end, framing the book in a simple, yet deft way.

Not only is the story superb, the artwork is equally exquisite. I was hooked from the introductory spread featuring Stillwater and Koo in a series of yoga-like poses. On each page Stillwater is a lovable, huggable teacher, while Miss Whitaker’s expressions range from deep sadness to kindness in soft-hued watercolor-and-ink illustrations.

Muth sums up his own book well in that author’s note. His story and pictures are a "gentle reminder that we are all connected and interdependent whether we recognize our neighbor’s face or not."

My girls and I will no doubt enjoy this book many times, and read Muth’s other books as well. Aren’t we all in need of Zen Ties?

I still love to read picture books to my third-grade twin daughters, and Zen Ties is one of the best we've encountered lately, a real gem. It's simple enough for younger children, but offers depth to readers of all ages—a feat accomplished by few books.…

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My Weather Channel love affair has long been a secret passion. When I travel, I flip on the hotel TV to find the Weather Channel. I catch the local weather on the 8s and tune in for weather in Europe, Florida, the Galapagos and even Antarctica. If the skies look menacing, I tune in for weather updates.

Until now, I thought only a few others shared my obsession, but The Weather Channel: The Improbable Rise of a Media Phenomenon assures me that other weather maniacs exist. Millions of people (actually 103 million people just like me) have helped The Weather Channel become one of the hottest media properties on the planet. In this fascinating book, Weather Channel founder Frank Batten describes the network’s improbable rise as a media darling. He recounts the derision, the laughter, the high-stakes money problems and the ultimate success of the channel. Batten’s blue-sky tale is also one of marketing genius, team leadership and belief in the power of a vision. We forecast good reading ahead.

My Weather Channel love affair has long been a secret passion. When I travel, I flip on the hotel TV to find the Weather Channel. I catch the local weather on the 8s and tune in for weather in Europe, Florida, the Galapagos and…
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For readers eager to escape their humdrum existence via fiction immersed in magic, mysticism and myth, The Palace of Illusions is sure to please. Inspired by ancient Indian legends hailing from the Third Age of Man, storyteller Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni has cast her heroine Panchaali in flesh, blood and fire, a woman poised at the epicenter of history, never to be upstaged by her male counterparts, be they fathers or brothers, lovers, husbands or friends.

While the epic poem “Mahabharat” was an inspiration for The Palace of Illusions, Divakaruni was determined that the women inhabiting her novel would not be content to linger in the periphery of a man’s world, as they did in the original work. Thus, Panchaali was born, and in Divakaruni’s deft hands, illuminates a tale of what could perhaps best be described as the Armageddon of in-law problems: being married to five men, the powerful Pandav princes.

Although the novel is set sometime between 6000 BCE and 5000 BCE, the myriad quagmires sinking today’s marriages are not unknown to Panchaali, a passionate princess who, like many contemporary women, is torn between time-honored traditions and an independent spirit. As Panchaali ponders divine wisdom, she struggles to reconcile what she has been told by her elders with what her heart knows to be true. Despite being burdened by the matrimonial albatross of five husbands, Panchaali is no man-hater, and on the contrary, finds the women in her life to be equally, if not more difficult, to appease, and above all, to trust.

Divakaruni has woven a lyrical tale imbued with the scent of ancient incense, yet simultaneously rooted in modern-day relevancy. Brimming with betrayals, religious fervor and war-torn streets, The Palace of Illusions is a journey experienced from the vantage point of Panchaali, a powerful woman driven by love, honor and, in the end, a fate that unfolds despite her resolve.

Karen Ann Cullotta is a journalism instructor at Roosevelt University in Chicago.

For readers eager to escape their humdrum existence via fiction immersed in magic, mysticism and myth, The Palace of Illusions is sure to please. Inspired by ancient Indian legends hailing from the Third Age of Man, storyteller Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni has cast her heroine Panchaali…
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There’s no place quite like Hollywood, a town without rules where surviving is easier said than done. That’s the bottom line of Shoot Out: Surviving the Fame and (Mis)Fortune of Hollywood, an inside look at the movie-making industry co-authored by Peter Bart and Peter Guber. The pair write from experience: Bart is editor of the show biz bible Variety and a former studio executive who had a hand in films such as Rosemary’s Baby and The Godfather. Guber, former president of Sony Entertainment, is a longtime producer of movies, including Rain Man and Batman. At UCLA, Bart and Guber team-teach a class in which industry personalities guest lecture. This book is based on some of those accounts, as well as the authors’ colorful experiences. The emphasis here is on the moviemaking journey from the initial pitch to the final cut and all the people in-between, including writers, producers and agents (who, according to the authors, dwell in their own sociopathic cocoon ). Guber and Bart offer tantalizing behind-the-scenes tidbits about stars like John Travolta and Eddie Murphy, who on a fluke was cast in the blockbuster 48 HRS. (His role was offered to Gregory Hines and Bill Cosby, until someone finally asked, How about that funny black kid on Saturday Night Live? ) As Guber and Bart reveal, only 20 percent of film projects in development actually get made, and it’s no easy going for the chosen few. Brisk, lively and detailed, Shoot Out proves once again that there really is no business like show business.

Biographer Pat H. Broeske has covered the film industry for the Los Angeles Times.

 

There's no place quite like Hollywood, a town without rules where surviving is easier said than done. That's the bottom line of Shoot Out: Surviving the Fame and (Mis)Fortune of Hollywood, an inside look at the movie-making industry co-authored by Peter Bart and Peter…

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The trouble in dealing with spies and former spies is that one can never be sure when they’re telling the truth and when they’re spinning self-serving fables. After all, their lives and careers have depended on artful and persistent deception. A high-ranking agent for the KGB and later for its post-Cold War successor, the SVR, Sergey Tretyakov defected to the U.S. in October 2000, bringing with him his wife and daughter. Little was revealed about the defection until Tretyakov, now living under cover, asked the FBI and CIA to connect him with Pete Earley, whose book on American spy Aldrich Ames (Confessions of a Spy) he particularly admired.

As it turns out, Tretyakov had been spying for the U.S. well before he walked out on Russia. His reason for changing sides, he tells Earley in Comrade J, was neither job discontent nor hope of financial gain, but rather his disenchantment with what Russia had become under the leadership of Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin. (He is equally unimpressed with current Russian Federation president Vladimir Putin, whom he remembers as having had “a nothing career” within the KGB.) Former Washington Post reporter Earley says he conducted 126 hours of face-to-face interviews with Tretyakov, a probing that enables him to describe the Russian’s early life and KGB training, his stint in Canada as a spy and spy recruiter, and his final information-gathering assignments in New York. Tretyakov gives a voluminous accounting of the KGB/SVR personalities he worked with and the brutality of the system he long defended.

Perhaps the most newsworthy element here is Tretyakov’s list of people he says were finessed, tricked, bribed or blackmailed into providing useful—although not always classified – information. One of these sources, he reports, was Strobe Talbott, President Clinton’s deputy secretary of state. Earley dutifully presented Tretyakov’s accusations to Talbott and the other supposed sources – and they, as might be expected, dismissed or denied them without exception. Whatever the truth of his specific assertions, Tretyakov draws a remarkably detailed and engaging diagram of the mechanics of spying.

The trouble in dealing with spies and former spies is that one can never be sure when they're telling the truth and when they're spinning self-serving fables. After all, their lives and careers have depended on artful and persistent deception. A high-ranking agent for the…
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While no less a celebrated figure than W.C. Fields often touted the versatility and talent of Bert Williams, the first black performer to appear on Broadway, Camille F. Forbes’ thorough and captivating biography Introducing Bert Williams: Burnt-Cork, Broadway, and the Story of America’s First Black Star represents the most exhaustive work done on this groundbreaking figure. Williams was a superb entertainer, marvelous storyteller, impressive vocalist and often imaginative performer, yet he worked in an era when blacks were openly lampooned and ridiculed in hideous minstrel shows and blackface routines that depicted them as unthinking, childlike buffoons and caricatures. Despite this, Williams managed to inject a degree of humanity and dignity in even the worst creative situations.

Forbes carefully follows Williams’ rise to stardom and traces his involvement and participation in almost every phase of American entertainment. With access to everything from joke books to interviews, letters, films, songs and reviews (both positive and unflattering), Forbes not only tracks the evolution of Williams’ career, she shows the toll it took on him, especially the rejection he received from fellow African Americans angered by his frequent use of blackface. Williams was a complex, driven and conflicted soul, skilled enough to have successfully operated in every arena from medicine shows and vaudeville to films, musical theater and early recordings, yet today he’s more an object of pity or scorn than triumph. Introducing Bert Williams provides some much needed perspective and documentation regarding his life and times.

While no less a celebrated figure than W.C. Fields often touted the versatility and talent of Bert Williams, the first black performer to appear on Broadway, Camille F. Forbes' thorough and captivating biography Introducing Bert Williams: Burnt-Cork, Broadway, and the Story of America's First…

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Whether you’re a new graduate ready to start your first job or a seasoned professional, learning how to succeed in business can be costly both personally and professionally. Wherever you are on the ladder of success, here are four new books to help you learn the secrets for climbing to the top.

0446678147Be a Kickass Assistant Heather Beckel writes from her experience as George Stephanopoulos’ assistant during Bill Clinton’s campaign and first term. In this insightful and irreverent book, Beckel says that if you have the desire to work hard and be great at your job, she can teach you the skills necessary to succeed: organization, diplomacy, problem solving, prioritizing, time management and communication. Even if some of these skills don’t come easily to you, once you master them, they’ll be a great asset in any career path. Although this book is targeted to those starting in an assistant position, it’s also valuable for anyone hiring or managing assistants.

Career nugget: Many new graduates will find themselves starting out as assistants, and Beckel offers great clues on how to make the most of this role from giving good phone, to handling a boss who’s a jerk and coping with your own mistakes. 0814471099Organization Smarts David Brown aims his book at portable professionals people always ready to move on to a new opportunity who need to be savvy about the new organization they’re in. Whether you’re a consultant or new employee, organization smarts are what make you versatile, adaptable and effective. Brown, a professor at the Milano Graduate School of Management and Urban Policy at New School University, uses mini-cases and exercises to help professionals play and win the career-defining games of organizational life.

Career nugget: Learn how to understand the real organization, its cultures, customs and power relations. Brown teaches you to recognize what others really want for themselves and from you and explains the keys to establishing a credible reputation, remembering that some of it is shaped by other players, not just by your own actions. 0743213637Promoting Yourself Here are 52 lessons for getting to the top and staying there from Hal Lancaster, who recently retired from his post as The Wall Street Journal’s popular career columnist. In these succinct and easy-to-read lessons, Lancaster addresses many everyday business situations, including managing a hostile crew, surviving a new boss, going over the boss’ head and adapting to continual turmoil. For those in dead-end jobs, the author gives pointers on writing and posting resumes and pursuing alternate career paths.

Career nugget:Lancaster dismisses psychobabble and puts the emphasis on real-world experiences, drawing on the stories of managers and professionals in the trenches. These real-life accounts offer a road map for overcoming difficult on-the-job situations. When You Mean Business About Yourself Both philosophical and practical, author Ray Capp emphasizes what people can learn from successful businesses and outlines how people can capitalize on this learning to advance their goals, objectives, self-understanding, success and happiness. Companies strategize. They have clear goals, and their moves are deliberate and consistent with those goals. They know how to market themselves and what their strengths are. Capp suggests that, like successful organizations, individuals should realistically evaluate what they do best and make utilizing those skills their priority. Career nugget: Don’t believe that if life gives you a lemon, make lemonade. If you’re a lemon at something, find out what you’re good at, and stop making the best of a bad situation on a long-term basis.

Whether you're a new graduate ready to start your first job or a seasoned professional, learning how to succeed in business can be costly both personally and professionally. Wherever you are on the ladder of success, here are four new books to help you learn…
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Whether you’re a new graduate ready to start your first job or a seasoned professional, learning how to succeed in business can be costly both personally and professionally. Wherever you are on the ladder of success, here are four new books to help you learn the secrets for climbing to the top.

Be a Kickass Assistant Heather Beckel writes from her experience as George Stephanopoulos’ assistant during Bill Clinton’s campaign and first term. In this insightful and irreverent book, Beckel says that if you have the desire to work hard and be great at your job, she can teach you the skills necessary to succeed: organization, diplomacy, problem solving, prioritizing, time management and communication. Even if some of these skills don’t come easily to you, once you master them, they’ll be a great asset in any career path. Although this book is targeted to those starting in an assistant position, it’s also valuable for anyone hiring or managing assistants.

Career nugget: Many new graduates will find themselves starting out as assistants, and Beckel offers great clues on how to make the most of this role from giving good phone, to handling a boss who’s a jerk and coping with your own mistakes. Organization Smarts David Brown aims his book at portable professionals people always ready to move on to a new opportunity who need to be savvy about the new organization they’re in. Whether you’re a consultant or new employee, organization smarts are what make you versatile, adaptable and effective. Brown, a professor at the Milano Graduate School of Management and Urban Policy at New School University, uses mini-cases and exercises to help professionals play and win the career-defining games of organizational life.

Career nugget: Learn how to understand the real organization, its cultures, customs and power relations. Brown teaches you to recognize what others really want for themselves and from you and explains the keys to establishing a credible reputation, remembering that some of it is shaped by other players, not just by your own actions. Promoting Yourself Here are 52 lessons for getting to the top and staying there from Hal Lancaster, who recently retired from his post as The Wall Street Journal’s popular career columnist. In these succinct and easy-to-read lessons, Lancaster addresses many everyday business situations, including managing a hostile crew, surviving a new boss, going over the boss’ head and adapting to continual turmoil. For those in dead-end jobs, the author gives pointers on writing and posting resumes and pursuing alternate career paths.

Career nugget:Lancaster dismisses psychobabble and puts the emphasis on real-world experiences, drawing on the stories of managers and professionals in the trenches. These real-life accounts offer a road map for overcoming difficult on-the-job situations. When You Mean Business About Yourself Both philosophical and practical, author Ray Capp emphasizes what people can learn from successful businesses and outlines how people can capitalize on this learning to advance their goals, objectives, self-understanding, success and happiness. Companies strategize. They have clear goals, and their moves are deliberate and consistent with those goals. They know how to market themselves and what their strengths are. Capp suggests that, like successful organizations, individuals should realistically evaluate what they do best and make utilizing those skills their priority. Career nugget: Don’t believe that if life gives you a lemon, make lemonade. If you’re a lemon at something, find out what you’re good at, and stop making the best of a bad situation on a long-term basis.

 

Whether you're a new graduate ready to start your first job or a seasoned professional, learning how to succeed in business can be costly both personally and professionally. Wherever you are on the ladder of success, here are four new books to help you…

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Whether you’re a new graduate ready to start your first job or a seasoned professional, learning how to succeed in business can be costly both personally and professionally. Wherever you are on the ladder of success, here are four new books to help you learn the secrets for climbing to the top.
 

Be a Kickass Assistant Heather Beckel writes from her experience as George Stephanopoulos’ assistant during Bill Clinton’s campaign and first term. In this insightful and irreverent book, Beckel says that if you have the desire to work hard and be great at your job, she can teach you the skills necessary to succeed: organization, diplomacy, problem solving, prioritizing, time management and communication. Even if some of these skills don’t come easily to you, once you master them, they’ll be a great asset in any career path. Although this book is targeted to those starting in an assistant position, it’s also valuable for anyone hiring or managing assistants. Career nugget: Many new graduates will find themselves starting out as assistants, and Beckel offers great clues on how to make the most of this role from giving good phone, to handling a boss who’s a jerk and coping with your own mistakes.

Organization Smarts David Brown aims his book at portable professionals people always ready to move on to a new opportunity who need to be savvy about the new organization they’re in. Whether you’re a consultant or new employee, organization smarts are what make you versatile, adaptable and effective. Brown, a professor at the Milano Graduate School of Management and Urban Policy at New School University, uses mini-cases and exercises to help professionals play and win the career-defining games of organizational life. Career nugget: Learn how to understand the real organization, its cultures, customs and power relations. Brown teaches you to recognize what others really want for themselves and from you and explains the keys to establishing a credible reputation, remembering that some of it is shaped by other players, not just by your own actions.

Promoting Yourself Here are 52 lessons for getting to the top and staying there from Hal Lancaster, who recently retired from his post as The Wall Street Journal’s popular career columnist. In these succinct and easy-to-read lessons, Lancaster addresses many everyday business situations, including managing a hostile crew, surviving a new boss, going over the boss’ head and adapting to continual turmoil. For those in dead-end jobs, the author gives pointers on writing and posting resumes and pursuing alternate career paths. Career nugget:Lancaster dismisses psychobabble and puts the emphasis on real-world experiences, drawing on the stories of managers and professionals in the trenches. These real-life accounts offer a road map for overcoming difficult on-the-job situations.

When You Mean Business About Yourself Both philosophical and practical, author Ray Capp emphasizes what people can learn from successful businesses and outlines how people can capitalize on this learning to advance their goals, objectives, self-understanding, success and happiness. Companies strategize. They have clear goals, and their moves are deliberate and consistent with those goals. They know how to market themselves and what their strengths are. Capp suggests that, like successful organizations, individuals should realistically evaluate what they do best and make utilizing those skills their priority. Career nugget: Don’t believe that if life gives you a lemon, make lemonade. If you’re a lemon at something, find out what you’re good at, and stop making the best of a bad situation on a long-term basis.

 

Whether you're a new graduate ready to start your first job or a seasoned professional, learning how to succeed in business can be costly both personally and professionally. Wherever you are on the ladder of success, here are four new books to help you…

Review by

Whether you’re a new graduate ready to start your first job or a seasoned professional, learning how to succeed in business can be costly both personally and professionally. Wherever you are on the ladder of success, here are four new books to help you learn the secrets for climbing to the top.

Be a Kickass Assistant Heather Beckel writes from her experience as George Stephanopoulos’ assistant during Bill Clinton’s campaign and first term. In this insightful and irreverent book, Beckel says that if you have the desire to work hard and be great at your job, she can teach you the skills necessary to succeed: organization, diplomacy, problem solving, prioritizing, time management and communication. Even if some of these skills don’t come easily to you, once you master them, they’ll be a great asset in any career path. Although this book is targeted to those starting in an assistant position, it’s also valuable for anyone hiring or managing assistants.

Career nugget: Many new graduates will find themselves starting out as assistants, and Beckel offers great clues on how to make the most of this role from giving good phone, to handling a boss who’s a jerk and coping with your own mistakes. 0814471099Organization Smarts David Brown aims his book at portable professionals people always ready to move on to a new opportunity who need to be savvy about the new organization they’re in. Whether you’re a consultant or new employee, organization smarts are what make you versatile, adaptable and effective. Brown, a professor at the Milano Graduate School of Management and Urban Policy at New School University, uses mini-cases and exercises to help professionals play and win the career-defining games of organizational life.

Career nugget: Learn how to understand the real organization, its cultures, customs and power relations. Brown teaches you to recognize what others really want for themselves and from you and explains the keys to establishing a credible reputation, remembering that some of it is shaped by other players, not just by your own actions. 0743213637Promoting Yourself Here are 52 lessons for getting to the top and staying there from Hal Lancaster, who recently retired from his post as The Wall Street Journal’s popular career columnist. In these succinct and easy-to-read lessons, Lancaster addresses many everyday business situations, including managing a hostile crew, surviving a new boss, going over the boss’ head and adapting to continual turmoil. For those in dead-end jobs, the author gives pointers on writing and posting resumes and pursuing alternate career paths.

Career nugget:Lancaster dismisses psychobabble and puts the emphasis on real-world experiences, drawing on the stories of managers and professionals in the trenches. These real-life accounts offer a road map for overcoming difficult on-the-job situations. 1558539484When You Mean Business About Yourself Both philosophical and practical, author Ray Capp emphasizes what people can learn from successful businesses and outlines how people can capitalize on this learning to advance their goals, objectives, self-understanding, success and happiness. Companies strategize. They have clear goals, and their moves are deliberate and consistent with those goals. They know how to market themselves and what their strengths are. Capp suggests that, like successful organizations, individuals should realistically evaluate what they do best and make utilizing those skills their priority. Career nugget: Don’t believe that if life gives you a lemon, make lemonade. If you’re a lemon at something, find out what you’re good at, and stop making the best of a bad situation on a long-term basis.

Whether you're a new graduate ready to start your first job or a seasoned professional, learning how to succeed in business can be costly both personally and professionally. Wherever you are on the ladder of success, here are four new books to help you learn…
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Reading Susan Gregg Gilmore’s debut novel is almost like being introduced to the author herself. The former journalist writes Looking for Salvation at the Dairy Queen in a conversational Southern dialect that includes frequent use of words like "dad-gum." The reader is instantly immersed in a world of chigger bites, berry picking, comfort food and Sunday school.

The small town of Ringgold, Georgia, is home to nearly 2,000 people in the early 1970s, and one of these citizens is a girl with big aspirations. Catherine Grace Cline, the preacher’s daughter, dreams of moving to the big city—Atlanta—as soon as she turns 18. She and her younger sister, Martha Ann, lick Dilly Bars at the Dairy Queen every Saturday and plan what excitement their lives will hold in Atlanta. The difficult part is that Catherine Grace must leave her father, sister and high school boyfriend behind. She embarks on what she hopes is a great adventure as an independent young woman, but soon returns to Ringgold because of a devastating tragedy. A surprising series of events, including revealed family secrets, causes Catherine Grace to question where she really belongs: working at Davison’s department store in Atlanta or growing her own crop of tomatoes in Ringgold? Maybe what she was seeking could have been found in her hometown all along.

The tight-knit Cline clan lives in a home of Baptist values and Georgia football, but the most significant component of this family is their confidence in one another’s dreams. That kind of love and support is even more appealing than a diet of Dilly Bars, and Gilmore’s novel is a meal well worth the consumption.

Reading Susan Gregg Gilmore's debut novel is almost like being introduced to the author herself. The former journalist writes Looking for Salvation at the Dairy Queen in a conversational Southern dialect that includes frequent use of words like "dad-gum." The reader is instantly immersed in…

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Pulitzer Prize-winning environmental journalist Philip Fradkin (Stagecoach; A River No More) trains his literary eye on the physical, emotional and intellectual landscapes of iconic Western writer Wallace Stegner in a new biography, Wallace Stegner and the American West. A well-executed biography often utilizes a specific angle colloquial to its subject’s life and endeavors: Here Fradkin works a favorite Stegner literary device, synecdoche, as a pivotal conceit. The use of specific example to illustrate generality, synecdoche is employed while the biographer visualizes Stegner’s life as “the vista from which to gaze upon the panorama of the American West in the twentieth century.” This grand gesture has the remarkable effect of putting the panoply of the western frontier in the background; pushed forward is a meditative, focused homage to the vital synergy between man and place.

Wallace Stegner was born in Iowa in 1909, the son of “a wandering boomer” father and a mother who longed for domestic permanence. Of his childhood, the eminent novelist, teacher and conservationist stated: “I was born on wheels. I know the excitement of newness and the relief when responsibility has been left behind. But I also know the dissatisfaction and hunger that result from placelessness.” For Stegner, that hunger was a raw unease that birthed a lifelong, deep connection with place, a fusion that dominated his literary, academic and activist pursuits. Fradkin investigates the writer’s life from Stegner’s youthful days on a bleak Saskatchewan plain and in the more hospitable environs of Utah; as a groundbreaking Stanford professor; a controversial Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist (for Angle of Repose) and a man passionate about wilderness preservation.

Fradkin’s journalistic objectivity largely balances this work, however his emotional involvement with and respect for Stegner (though he met him only once) impart a glancing instability, resulting in an overlong defense against the accusations of plagiarism leveled at Stegner for Angle of Repose, and a slightly cloying epilogue. Overall, this is an engaging, holistic recounting of a rich, rough-and-tumble literary life, anchored in the rugged Western terrain, a fast-vanishing wilderness that Stegner would say we must preserve for our very sanity, a landscape crucial to our human “geography of hope.” Alison Hood writes from the urban wilderness of northern California.

Pulitzer Prize-winning environmental journalist Philip Fradkin (Stagecoach; A River No More) trains his literary eye on the physical, emotional and intellectual landscapes of iconic Western writer Wallace Stegner in a new biography, Wallace Stegner and the American West. A well-executed biography often utilizes a specific…

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