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Journeys of discovery aren’t only about men, as fathers of daughters know full well. Carolyn Jourdan’s Heart in the Right Place is just such a journey, one that comes not from leaving home, but from returning to it. A Washington, D.C., attorney and the personal counsel to a powerful U.S. senator, Jourdan enjoyed living in an important city filled with important people. But when her mother suffers a stroke, Jourdan fills in temporarily as the receptionist for her father’s storefront health clinic, where she encounters the People on a daily and even nightly basis, from hypochondriacs to accident-prone farmhands and in so doing, rediscovers where her heart truly lies. Heart in the Right Place is an absolute delight of a book: warm, funny and written with great heart and understanding. It is alive with characters who are as unbelievable as they are real and their reality reveals how community, family and friendships build connections that run much deeper and matter far more than all the high-power deals, plans and programs of politicians and lobbyists. In the end, Jourdan discovers not only herself, but a new respect for her father and the meaning his life has in a place she forgot was home.

Journeys of discovery aren't only about men, as fathers of daughters know full well. Carolyn Jourdan's Heart in the Right Place is just such a journey, one that comes not from leaving home, but from returning to it. A Washington, D.C., attorney and the…
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As for those adventures, which ones are more significant to a boy than those at summer camp? For years, if anyone asked me what my happiest moments were, I’d have recalled summers spent in a stretch of wood, field and rustic buildings nestled in the North Carolina foothills, safe in a haven of boyhood whose call has lingered to this day. That same call spurred 33-year-old Josh Wolk to return one last time to the beloved camp of his youth. Cabin Pressure: One Man’s Desperate Attempt to Recapture His Youth as a Camp Counselor is Wolk’s humorous account of his life in a cabin with 10 hormonal 14-year-olds, a science teacher turned mountain-climbing god, a 67-year-old Peter Pan and an aging extreme kayaker who thinks anyone who won’t jump off a 25-foot-high bridge into a Maine river can’t possibly be a real man. Wolk’s writing is fluid, funny and compelling, and his observations of human foibles whether in the campers, the counselors or himself are spot-on. More often than not, I saw my own camp experiences mirrored in Wolk’s account, and once again found myself traveling back to my old summer home a trip every man secretly longs to take.

As for those adventures, which ones are more significant to a boy than those at summer camp? For years, if anyone asked me what my happiest moments were, I'd have recalled summers spent in a stretch of wood, field and rustic buildings nestled in the…
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Reading The Dangerous Book for Boys by brothers Conn and Hal Iggulden is like coming across an old trunk in an attic. The book is full of forgotten treasures, tantalizing challenges and bits of history, science and adventure sure to stir the hearts of boys. It’s not a book you read in order, but a wonderfully jumbled collection of surprises. There are instructions for folding The Greatest Paper Airplane in the World ; building tree houses, go-carts and electromagnets; making and shooting a bow and arrow; speaking Navajo; finding north with a watch; and on and on. Mixed in are tales of great battles; the adventures of explorers, fighter pilots and mountain climbers; primers on grammar, Latin, astronomy, insects and trees; along with advice on everything from first aid to talking with girls the sort of things, say the Igguldens, that every boy should know. The style is delightfully man to man, as though the authors are imparting secrets of the brotherhood of man to those who wish to join the ranks. Fathers will enjoy this as a memory of their own childhood or even as a chance to try some things they didn’t learn themselves. And as for boys, I can’t think of anything better to hide casually on a shelf for a boy to discover on a boring, rainy day it’s sure to spur once again the adventure that is growing up.

Reading The Dangerous Book for Boys by brothers Conn and Hal Iggulden is like coming across an old trunk in an attic. The book is full of forgotten treasures, tantalizing challenges and bits of history, science and adventure sure to stir the hearts of boys.…
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After hiding in the bathroom to escape reading aloud in elementary school, dropping out of sixth grade for a while because of severe dyslexia and ADHD, and harboring a plan for suicide by the age of 12, Jonathan Mooney overcame his disabilities to graduate from Brown University with an honors degree in English. He imagined his resilient life as an after-school television special, but he bought a short bus instead, and traveled across the United States interviewing others with various disabilities, collecting their stories in the sometimes painful, sometimes irreverent and ever hopeful The Short Bus.

Mooney chooses the special education transport because of its oppressive symbolism to those who ride it to school, as he did as a child. Along his 35,000-mile route, he meets such disabled and different individuals as Ashley, a deaf and blind eight-year-old who curses her teachers in sign language; Katie, a young woman with Down syndrome who dreams of marrying and working in a DNA lab; and Jeff, a 40-something with Asperger’s syndrome who obsessively measures his life with his calculator. Together they lead the author to question the concepts of normalcy, intelligence, community and a meaningful life. Interspersed among these poignant stories are brief discussions about the history and culture of learning disabilities.

Throughout the journey, the author reflects upon his struggles to be normal, his own prejudices about the disabled and his eventual self-acceptance. Mooney helps us see that humanity is as much about our differences as it is our common traits.

Angela Leeper is an educational consultant and writer in Wake Forest, North Carolina.

After hiding in the bathroom to escape reading aloud in elementary school, dropping out of sixth grade for a while because of severe dyslexia and ADHD, and harboring a plan for suicide by the age of 12, Jonathan Mooney overcame his disabilities to graduate from…
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If you’ve ever laughed at those of us compulsive enough to shred our grocery lists, you’ll think again after reading Bill Keaggy’s Milk Eggs Vodka: Grocery Lists Lost and Found. Keaggy, who must be a bit of an obsessive-compulsive himself, found, saved and sorted this detritus of everyday life, presented here in scanned images so clear that every lipstick smudge, crossed-out item and doodle is visible. The lists are grouped thematically and paired with his snarky comments about bad eating habits, bizarre combinations of items and it must be said atrocious spelling for our laugh-out-loud pleasure. Aside from pointing out shoppers’ foibles, Milk Eggs Vodka shows our similarities and resourcefulness (see the Creative Recycling chapter), and offers food trivia in the bargain.

If you've ever laughed at those of us compulsive enough to shred our grocery lists, you'll think again after reading Bill Keaggy's Milk Eggs Vodka: Grocery Lists Lost and Found. Keaggy, who must be a bit of an obsessive-compulsive himself, found, saved and sorted…
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<b>A journalist’s tribute to a mentor from the ancient world</b> In the 1950s, when Polish journalist Ryszard Kapuscinski was just beginning his career, an editor asked him about his plans for the future. He answered that he would like to travel abroad someday, perhaps to Czechoslovakia. A year later the same editor told him he was being sent to India and handed him a book, a present for the road, she said. It was a copy of <i>The Histories</i>, by Herodotus (c. 485 BCE-c. 425 BCE), a book that would have a profound influence on Kapuscinski, serving as both an inspiration and a guide for how he should approach his work during his distinguished career. In his beautifully crafted final work, <b>Travels with Herodotus</b>, Kapuscinski, who died in January, shares his early experiences in such places as Africa, India, China and Iran, as well as his intense engagement with the writings of Herodotus.

The reader is helped tremendously in understanding Herodotus through extensive quotations from his writing and Kapuscinski’s detailed comments. In addition, there is considerable fascinating speculation about Herodotus’ life, about which very little is known. A father of history, Herodotus traveled widely in the world he was the first globalist but the world he knew was considerably smaller than what we know today. The center of it was the mountainous and forested area around the Aegean Sea. Nevertheless, Kapuscinski says, Herodotus is the first to discover the world’s multicultural nature . . . the first to argue that each culture requires acceptance and understanding, and that to understand it, one must first come to know it. Both Herodotus and Kapuscinski are concerned with evil. He does not blame the human being, but blames the system, Kapuscinski writes. It is not the individual who is by nature evil, depraved, villainous it is the social arrangement in which he happens to live that is evil. For Kapuscinski, Herodotus was a valuable teacher of reportage. Accuracy and credibility were important to him; he tries to check everything, to get to the sources, to establish the facts. But Herodotus is also keenly aware that memory is fragile; the subjective factor is always present. Kapuscinski says that observation may be Herodotus’ greatest discovery.

Many years ago, Kapuscinski told an interviewer for <i>Granta</i> that newspapers present the story of events, while his books tried to convey what’s around the story. The climate, the atmosphere of the street, the feeling of the people, the gossip of the town, the smell; the thousands and thousands of elements that are part of the events you read about in 600 words of your morning paper. <b>Travels with Herodotus</b> contains many of Kapuscinski’s memorable experiences: traveling in the midst of war in the Congo en route to a hospital run by an Austrian doctor; witnessing the last days of the shah’s rule in Iran; reporting from China, where his permanent translator always kept an eye on what he was doing.

Kapuscinski says he sometimes calls the writing that appears in his books literature by foot. That was certainly true of Herodotus as well, and this book brings the ancient and the modern worlds together for a memorable literary journey. <i>Roger Bishop is a retired Nashville bookseller.</i>

<b>A journalist's tribute to a mentor from the ancient world</b> In the 1950s, when Polish journalist Ryszard Kapuscinski was just beginning his career, an editor asked him about his plans for the future. He answered that he would like to travel abroad someday, perhaps to…

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15 Stars is more than just a clever book title. It represents the collective careers of three five-star generals: Douglas MacArthur, George Marshall and Dwight D. Eisenhower. These three military giants led the United States to victory in World War II and helped shape the world following the war. Not since the immense fame of Grant, Sherman and Lee at the close of the Civil War have three generals become such household names, writes Stanley Weintraub, an accomplished author of more than 50 histories and biographies, many with military themes.

But while these generals were contemporaries, they were a study in contrasts. MacArthur was urbane and egotistical. Marshall exuded quiet confidence. Eisenhower was modest and unassuming. And their relationships to each other were complex. Colleagues, and on occasion competitors, they leapfrogged each other, sometimes stonewalled each other, even supported and protected each other, throughout their celebrated careers, Weintraub writes.

And each accomplished great things: MacArthur conquered the Pacific Theater; Marshall brought order to postwar Europe; Eisenhower was the architect of D-Day. But only one, Eisenhower, would achieve the greatest prize: the presidency. In the public mind they appeared, in turn, as glamour, integrity, and competence, Weintraub writes. But for the twists of circumstance, all three rather than one might have occupied the White House. 15 Stars chronicles those circumstances, from the start of World War II to the height of the Cold War. It is a well-researched book that thoroughly examines the lives of three American military icons. The material is complicated, but Weintraub’s easy writing makes it understandable and engaging. The book reads like a literary narrative, beginning with the bombing of Pearl Harbor and ending in the twilight of each man’s life. It is a worthy choice for the bookshelf of any reader who loves military history or historical nonfiction. John T. Slania is a journalism professor at Loyola University in Chicago.

15 Stars is more than just a clever book title. It represents the collective careers of three five-star generals: Douglas MacArthur, George Marshall and Dwight D. Eisenhower. These three military giants led the United States to victory in World War II and helped shape the…
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It is only in hindsight that the course of a particular war seems inevitable. One reads the histories, sees the dominoes tumbling against each other in a clearly defined line and concludes it could not have been otherwise. The fact is, of course, that wars, particularly in their early stages, can shift in many different directions according to the actions that any one of the principals decides to take. It is only after armed forces are arrayed and hostilities commenced that alternate courses begin to close up.

In his latest book, Fateful Choices, British scholar and teacher Ian Kershaw, who won a Wolfson Literary Award for History for the second volume of his study of Adolf Hitler, examines 10 crucial decisions made by national leaders at the outset of World War II, choices that, he maintains, caused that global conflagration to evolve as it did. Those fateful choices all made between the spring of 1940 and the autumn of 1941 were England’s decision to fight Germany rather than make concessions; Hitler’s decision to fight the Soviet Union; Japan’s decision to invade British, French and Dutch colonial possessions in Southeast Asia and to ally itself with Germany and Italy; Mussolini’s decision that Italy must invade Greece; Roosevelt’s decision that the U.S. would provide material support to England’s war efforts without actually joining the war; Stalin’s decision to ignore the evidence that Germany was going to attack Russia; Roosevelt’s subsequent decision to wage an undeclared war against Germany; Japan’s decision to declare war on the U.S.; Hitler’s decision to follow Japan’s lead against the U.S.; and Hitler’s decision to exterminate the Jews. (This final chapter is heartbreaking to read because there is so little real-world context to make the slaughter seem even remotely rational.) As weighty as Kershaw’s agenda is, he lightens it considerably by compacting each decision into a relatively fast-paced and stand-alone chapter. The number of principal players in the six nations involved is quite daunting, but the author provides a vital dramatis personae (complete job titles, responsibilities and dates) to simplify the matter.

Explaining the urgency under which these crucial decisions were made, Kershaw observes, The colossal risks which both Germany and Japan were prepared to undertake were ultimately rooted in the understanding among the power-elites in both countries of the imperatives of expansion to acquire empire and overcome their status as perceived have not’ nations. The imperialist dominance of Great Britain and the international power (even without formal empire) of the United States posed the great challenge. Whether history teaches anything useful and, if so, what it teaches, is not resolved here. But the study is, apart from its other virtues, a fascinating examination of the differences between how sweeping decisions are made within democracies and within dictatorships. Edward Morris reviews from Nashville.

It is only in hindsight that the course of a particular war seems inevitable. One reads the histories, sees the dominoes tumbling against each other in a clearly defined line and concludes it could not have been otherwise. The fact is, of course, that wars,…
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Let us celebrate, just for a moment, those evil geniuses among us whose perpetually foiled schemes have added such a piquant spice to life on this third stone from a nondescript yellow sun. Their names ring out like an infernal Who’s Who: Ming the Merciless. Lex Luthor. Red Skull. Gorzo the Mighty. Brainiac. Green Goblin. The Riddler. Sinestro. Rush Limbaugh.

Distilling the motley spectrum of doomed super-villains from half a century of comics into one impressive anti-hero, Austin Grossman’s raucously madcap debut novel, Soon I Will Be Invincible, races along like a roller coaster with its lug nuts loosened. Events conspire to free Doctor Impossible, a 12-time loser with a 300-plus IQ, from his escape-proof prison. It would seem, finally, like he has a shot at taking over the world again due to the conspicuous absence of his one-time nemesis, CoreFire. The puny forces of Earth rally a group of superheroes known as The Champions to thwart Dr. Impossible, but the eight of them are no match for his staggeringly superior intellect. Bwahh-ha-ha-ha! To his credit, Dr. Impossible has tried to learn from his mistakes, not with the intent of recanting, but to sidestep the bone-headed miscues that have landed him in the pokey on a dozen previous occasions. The loose strand that threatens to unravel his latest master plan is a female cyborg named Fatale, a provisional member of The Champions whose background is a mystery . . . even to her. As she and Dr. Impossible alternate chapter-length narratives, we begin to discover (ˆ la James Bond and Goldfinger, Austin Powers and Dr. Evil, among many others) that only a slender thread separates the guardians of justice from the villainous architects of doom.

Light and adhesive as Spider-Man’s web, Soon I Will Be Invincible is tailored for summer reading like a superhero’s (or super-villain’s) form-fitting costume. Thane Tierney, aka The Intermittently Querulous Professor Atomic Brain, wreaks his havoc on the greater Los Angeles area.

Let us celebrate, just for a moment, those evil geniuses among us whose perpetually foiled schemes have added such a piquant spice to life on this third stone from a nondescript yellow sun. Their names ring out like an infernal Who's Who: Ming the Merciless.…
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Put your faith in strangers, says David’s mother, aiming for a bit of English irony, but when David does just that, the reader knows from the start that he will eventually pay for it. Still, because Andrew O’Hagan’s Be Near Me is so beautifully written, you keep cheering for the novel’s hero, hoping that felicity of expression will somehow conquer folly. No such luck.

A priest with a passion for Proust, David Anderton goes back to Scotland after 28 years in England to be with his mother in her last years. He has had only one serious romantic relationship in his life, with a young man he met at Oxford. (Flashbacks to this period are gems of British undergraduate narcissism.) Conor’s death cut short an idyll David has never forgotten.

By now he has mastered his longing for closeness, finding indeed that the church might offer a refuge against temptation, somewhere to exist as a noble animal in the struggle against the nights. He thoroughly enjoys his philosophical exchanges with Mrs. Poole, the rectory housekeeper, whose independent mind and ability to keep up her side in any average intellectual discussion run away with this novel.

Insufficiently given to examining his own motivations, the usually passive Father David one night drinks too much to police his desires as usual, and makes advances to a young hooligan whom he has befriended. This turns out to be the ruination of his career; no surprise, as one has seen him all-too-tepidly protest the young folks’ deliberately destructive behavior.

It’s the writing that stars here an ear for dialogue, and nuance in single sentences lit by unexpected insights. (David’s late father would have thought going into the priesthood was a grand and unnecessary bid for an idealism too proud to accommodate the facts. ) Scottish writer O’Hagan is a widely recognized young author whose previous three novels have reaped acclaim and several honors. His conclusion here, that one cannot choose whom to love, is arguable, but the author’s arrival at it remains a thing of joy and promises much for the future. Maude McDaniel writes from Maryland.

Put your faith in strangers, says David's mother, aiming for a bit of English irony, but when David does just that, the reader knows from the start that he will eventually pay for it. Still, because Andrew O'Hagan's Be Near Me is so beautifully written,…
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<b>The thinking person’s beach read</b> Katherine Taylor’s <b>Rules for Saying Goodbye</b> is a novel filled with sadness, hilarity and the futile feeling that often comes from trying to figure out what to make of one’s life. The story centers on Katherine Taylor, a girl from provincial Fresno, California, sent away to boarding school in Massachusetts at age 11 to come of age among cruel girls for whom suffering was a contest and social structures were strictly defined. Readers follow her through college, graduate school, one bartending job and one completely wrong-for-her boyfriend after another, as she wanders California, New York, England, France and Belgium. The book’s gossipy quality (not to mention its cover) will remind some readers of chick lit, but this book is not like most of the chick lit out there. It is smarter, funnier, darker and more relevant. The angst of growing up and wanting to be someone brilliant but not knowing how to do it is beautifully portrayed. While most people’s lives don’t revolve quite so much around drinking, drugs prescribed by fathers and following boyfriends around the world, the book is still relatable and will speak to those of Taylor’s generation who are stymied by the feeling that they must be instant successes. Given that the author and the protagonist share the same name and much of the same history, it’s easy to get caught up in wondering how much of this book is memoir, which does detract from the story at times. Still, the Katherine Taylor of the story is a fun girl to be around. She’s wildly funny and seeks to be independent while consistently falling in with men who will do her no good. She’s the kind of girl you want to take under your wing, or at least take for a drink so you can hear all her stories. We can only hope she’ll get her life together at some point and learn that happiness is possible, even when you’re alone, and even in California. <i>Sarah E. White writes from Arkansas.</i>

<b>The thinking person's beach read</b> Katherine Taylor's <b>Rules for Saying Goodbye</b> is a novel filled with sadness, hilarity and the futile feeling that often comes from trying to figure out what to make of one's life. The story centers on Katherine Taylor, a girl from…

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In Landsman, his first novel, Peter Charles Melman offers a vivid and original Civil War story. More than simply an absorbing historical novel, in the tradition of works like The Red Badge of Courage or The Killer Angels, it’s a serious work of literary fiction that grapples with moral questions in a page-turning tale. The year is 1861, and Elias Abrams is a 20-year-old New Orleans street thug, the illegitimate son of wealthy planter and an indentured servant, a Jewish woman who emigrated from France. Elias enlists in the Confederate Army to escape prosecution for his role in a grisly murder. He’s dispatched to Missouri and soon is introduced to the horrors of war, described by Melman in stark, unflinching prose. Elias’ life takes a dramatic turn when his commanding officer gives him a letter from Nora Bloom, a young Jewish woman from New Orleans who’s written the letter in the hope it will be shared with some Jewish soldier in the regiment. Seizing on her words of encouragement and support, Elias quickly develops a passionate, if idealized, attachment to Nora. His comrade, John Carlson, a college classics professor from New Orleans, helps him craft a reply, and Elias begins to imagine a future with Nora, farming a plot of land in a time of peace.

But before Elias can realize his dream he must do what he can to survive the war and devise a plan to deal with the events that caused him to flee New Orleans. When he finally makes his way back home, overcoming both injury and captivity, he must reckon with his boyhood friend, Silas Wolfe, the leader of his old gang and a figure of frightening power and surpassing evil. Their final showdown, played out in a game of poker whose stakes are the highest imaginable, unfolds in a scene of breathtaking tension.

Richly imagined and beautifully told, Landsman displays the skills of a literary craftsman. It’s suffused with lavish period detail and yet the tale it offers is as contemporary as any modern love story. Melman has mixed a sumptuous blend of all the elements of classic storytelling to create a profoundly satisfying work.

In Landsman, his first novel, Peter Charles Melman offers a vivid and original Civil War story. More than simply an absorbing historical novel, in the tradition of works like The Red Badge of Courage or The Killer Angels, it's a serious work of literary fiction…
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The game of consequences requires that each player write a few lines following a simple direction, then fold the sheet over before the next person responds to a new direction on that same paper, and so on. The result is a story, usually with surprising consequences. And so begins the story of Lorna and Matt, a pair from very different backgrounds: They met on a bench in St. James’s Park; it was the sixth of June 1935. Lorna was crying because she had had a violent argument with her mother; Matt was feeding the wildfowl in order to draw them. By afternoon’s end, life has changed: Matt knew only that he must see her again, and forever. Their forever is gloriously spent in a rich corner of West Somerset, making a dilapidated farmhouse into home. It’s a fairy tale that includes tough conditions in winter, the house showed its claws and hard work sheltered city girl Lorna learns to do housework and, soon, how to tend a baby, Molly. But the couple’s happiness is interrupted by World War II. When Matt’s letters arrived, they were already several weeks old. Lorna read of yesterday, and wondered about today. And she too wrote into the future; it was as though they existed now in different dimensions of time. A keen perception of the meanings of time and space joins the three generations of women (Molly’s daughter Ruth, who makes wonderful observations about the relation between them, is the third) as much as their shared blood does; it also allows author Penelope Lively to observe the worlds of change that occur during their lifetimes. She remains a heartbreakingly human and elegant writer.

Choices are another theme those we make, those that seem simply to occur. Middle-aged Molly realizes she has never been in love. How did this come about? Oh, you made choices, but in a way that was sometimes almost subliminal. . . . And, sometimes, choice is not an option. But you, reader, have a choice. Joanne Collings writes from Washington, D.C.

The game of consequences requires that each player write a few lines following a simple direction, then fold the sheet over before the next person responds to a new direction on that same paper, and so on. The result is a story, usually with surprising…

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