bookpagedev

Review by

<B>What they’re doing now</B> Curious about what life is like for the "fraternity" of former U.S. presidents, ex-<I>Chicago Tribune</i> columnist Bob Greene set out to spend a few hours talking privately with Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush. In each case, save one, he is successful; just as he was about to interview Reagan, the announcement came that the ex-president was suffering from Alzheimer’s disease and would be unavailable to talk. Greene is deferential toward his subjects in <B>Fraternity: A Journey in Search of Five Presidents</B>; he never asks the tough questions about the life-and-death actions these men took. Still, it is revealing to hear Nixon talk approvingly of how even his closest friends address him as "Mr. President"; to witness Carter sitting in the "green room" at a small Atlanta radio station, patiently waiting his turn to go on; to accompany the elder Bush and his son, Jeb, to a question-and-answer session for an audience of CEOs in Chicago; and to listen to Ford explain why he gave up drinking in support of his addicted wife. This is a warm, quotation-rich book, but it is not an education in the dynamics of politics. <I>Edward Morris reviews from Nashville.</I>

<B>What they're doing now</B> Curious about what life is like for the "fraternity" of former U.S. presidents, ex-<I>Chicago Tribune</i> columnist Bob Greene set out to spend a few hours talking privately with Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush.…

Review by

Sonny Brewer returns to Fairhope, Alabama, the setting for his praiseworthy debut The Poet of Tolstoy Park, with a lyrical new novel. In A Sound Like Thunder, protagonist Rove MacNee navigates through memoir and memory, recalling his youth on the eve of World War II. Passionate about cast-net-fishing, sailing and books by Emerson, Twain and Whitman 16-year-old Rove finds himself overwhelmed by problems in late 1941. First, he is worried about his parents who were playing out their unhappiness in different ways. He can barely tolerate his father, Capt. Dominus MacNee, a whiskey besotted merchant sailor. And Rove’s mother has also changed: Now intolerant of her husband and struggling to communicate with her family, Lillian MacNee seems lately to prefer the companionship of a German immigrant, Joseph Unruh. As the adult triangle approaches a tragic crisis, Rove becomes involved with Anna Pearl Anderson, the prettiest girl on the Eastern shore, who could quicken his pulse with the least of her antics and attention. Rove soon believes that he must distance himself from the emotional maelstrom of life in not-so-bucolic Fairhope, and he turns to the Sea Bird, his 25-foot sloop, which offers him the enthralling possibility of a life of Emersonian self-reliance. But, as Rove will learn, especially through his new friendship with the sagacious artist Walter Anderson, a teenager cannot simply sail away from his problems until he has faced certain startling truths. Self-reliance, in fact, may be more complicated and may require more introspection and maturity than Rove had anticipated.

Like Faulkner’s agonistic families, O’Connor’s anxious adolescents and Welty’s guileless innocents, Brewer’s characters in the compelling A Sound Like Thunder invite readers to meditate upon the challenges of learning to live and love those universal terrors of the heart. Tim Davis teaches English at the University of West Florida.

Sonny Brewer returns to Fairhope, Alabama, the setting for his praiseworthy debut The Poet of Tolstoy Park, with a lyrical new novel. In A Sound Like Thunder, protagonist Rove MacNee navigates through memoir and memory, recalling his youth on the eve of World War II.…
Review by

<B>Other people’s money</B> Peter G. Peterson, who served as secretary of commerce under President Nixon and is the former chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank in New York, states his position clearly in the subtitle to his new book <B>Running On Empty: How the Democratic and Republican Parties are Bankrupting Our Future and What Americans Can Do About It</B>. Peterson’s message is simple: the federal government is spending and promising to spend trillions of dollars more than it is taking in, a practice that is saddling coming generations with debts they cannot possibly pay. Politicians spend so extravagantly because it wins them votes without forcing them to deal with long-term consequences. "During the Vietnam War," Petersen observes, "conservatives relentlessly pilloried Lyndon Johnson for his fiscal irresponsibility. He only wanted guns and butter. Today, so-called conservatives are outpandering LBJ. They must have it all: guns, butter, <I>and</I> tax cuts. . . . [T]he tax cuts pushed by both Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush did not, as promised, pay for themselves, but led to an explosion of government debt." We can do a U-turn on this road to ruin, Peterson says, by such common-sense and relatively painless approaches as indexing Social Security payments to rises in prices rather than wages, mandating personal savings accounts for retirement and bringing more candor and clarity to the way the government budgets its money.

<I>Edward Morris reviews from Nashville.</I>

<B>Other people's money</B> Peter G. Peterson, who served as secretary of commerce under President Nixon and is the former chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank in New York, states his position clearly in the subtitle to his new book <B>Running On Empty: How the Democratic…

Review by

Elinor Mackey’s perfect marriage begins its slow disintegration when she picks up the phone and overhears her husband planning a non exercise-related rendezvous with his personal trainer, Gina. I want to cook for you, Gina says suggestively, and Elinor knows things have spun out of control.

Actually, in her more honest moments, Elinor will admit that the marriage has been in trouble for some time. Endless rounds of failed fertility treatment have left her and Ted numb, retreating to their separate corners. Elinor spends hours in the laundry room, while Ted ostensibly passes his time getting in shape at the gym.

Elinor follows her husband to Gina’s townhouse and watches helplessly as they abandon cooking for more unusual kitchen activities. He doesn’t love you, Gina! Elinor thinks, but it turns out that it’s not that simple: Ted finds himself in love with two very different women. To complicate matters even more, Gina’s troubled young son has come to live with her. In desperate need of a father figure, he clings to Ted as his new role model.

Things are a mess, to be sure. All involved are paralyzed, waiting for one of the others to make the decisions that will untangle this modern-day love triangle. Elinor, who’s long been at the mercy of science and fate in her efforts to have a baby, is unsure whether she has it in her to take charge of her life again.

Author Lolly Winston has an uncommonly deft touch while dealing with some of life’s heaviest topics. In her debut bestseller, Good Grief, Winston won acclaim for her moving portrayal of a young woman finding a new life after her husband’s death. Happiness Sold Separately is one of those wonderfully relatable gems that friends will pass around with a You have to read this recommendation. Sometimes bawdy, sometimes moving, always hilarious, this is a charming, generous book. Amy Scribner writes from Olympia, Washington.

Elinor Mackey's perfect marriage begins its slow disintegration when she picks up the phone and overhears her husband planning a non exercise-related rendezvous with his personal trainer, Gina. I want to cook for you, Gina says suggestively, and Elinor knows things have spun out of…
Review by

Lying has become such a staple of foreign and domestic policy that politicians and the press have come to accept it without serious reservation. So contends The Nation columnist Eric Alterman in When Presidents Lie: A History of Official Deception and Its Consequences. The consequences, he says, have been catastrophic, both in terms of lives lost and cynicism engendered. He begins his recitation of official duplicity with Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Yalta Conference of early 1945. Still needing Russia’s help, Roosevelt made concessions to Soviet premier Joseph Stalin that he would soon deny while unjustly depicting the Russians as treaty-breakers. This, Alterman argues, set the stage for the Cold War and sowed the seeds of the anticommunist hysteria. Harry Truman, Roosevelt’s successor, continued to make Yalta a synonym for Russian betrayal, thus hardening the division and making cooperation between the two superpowers politically unthinkable.

As Alterman presents it, President John F. Kennedy lied about the accommodations he made with Russia to get their missiles out of Cuba and in so doing made confrontation seem the only viable and honorable tool for dealing with adversaries. Lyndon Johnson lied to Congress and the electorate about the Gulf of Tonkin “provocations” that gave him an excuse to widen the war in Vietnam, a decision that would ultimately cost more than 58,000 American lives. Ronald Reagan lied about America’s illegal support of the murderous right-wing forces in El Salvador and Nicaragua, and George W. Bush lied about the necessity of invading Iraq. In supporting these accusations, Alterman relies heavily on original source material such as notes taken at strategy meetings and transcripts from the White House taping system. Finally, he maintains that the press has grown so uncritical of official lies that it acknowledges them if at all only after they have done their damage.

Edward Morris reviews from Nashville.

Lying has become such a staple of foreign and domestic policy that politicians and the press have come to accept it without serious reservation. So contends The Nation columnist Eric Alterman in When Presidents Lie: A History of Official Deception and Its Consequences. The consequences,…
Review by

Nancy Farmer never intended to be a writer. Rather, the award-winning childen’s author says, “I wanted to be an explorer . . . to go out and have adventures and have fun.” Although she’s no Christopher Columbus, Farmer has certainly had her share of adventures, from spending three years in the Peace Corps in southern India to living in a California temple with a group of Hare Krishnas. Eventually, she says, “I wanted to do something interesting, so I bought a ticket on a freighter to Africa.” She ended up spending nearly 20 years in Africa, where she met and married her husband, Harold.

It was only after the couple returned to the U.S. that Farmer’s writing career flourished. From Do You Know Me?, set in Zimbabwe, to The House of the Scorpion, a futuristic look at human cloning that won the 2002 National Book Award for Young People’s Literature, Farmer has used her love of adventure to create wonderfully engaging books for young readers.

In her latest novel, The Sea of Trolls, Farmer ushers readers into an exciting, unpredictable world to sail the high seas and explore mysterious landscapes in the company of great Norsemen, trolls, an eerily knowledgeable crow and an enormous wild boar with magical powers, among other fantastical beings.

The story begins in 793 A.D., when a small Saxon village is raided and destroyed by beserkers Vikings, or Northmen, who thrive on battle and blood and fame. Jack (a budding bard with magical powers he has not yet mastered) and his younger sister Lucy are kidnapped by the mighty Olaf One-Brow. The two struggle to remain hopeful despite the threats of Thorgil, an angry shield maiden, and any number of bizarre and unimaginable dangers not to mention the seemingly impossible quest they must embark on if they ever hope to return home.

In an interview from her home in California, Farmer says her interest in Norse mythology was sparked by a book her husband gave her. “I wanted a vacation after finishing The House of Scorpions,” she explains. “It was a depressing book to write. I wanted something I’d never seen or done before.” She studied numerous books on history and mythology (those who are similarly entranced can find further reading in the Sources section of The Sea of Trolls), learning about Norse kings, trolls and Viking society. “Some things I made up, and some I got from mythology,” she says.

The combination of mythology and Farmer’s imagination is a powerful one; whether detailing Jack’s attempt to please the angry Olaf or describing the physiognomy of the eight-foot-tall trolls strong women with sharp wits and mind-reading abilities the story is exciting and filled with more than enough surprises to ensure enthusiastic page-turning. Farmer’s intricate descriptions of plants, insects and the countryside paint pulsating, bright mental images of a lush fantasyland.

The story will call to mind The Lord of the Rings the quest, the unexpected bonding among those who might otherwise never have met, the fantastical people and creatures encountered along the way. Says Farmer, “I’ve obviously read and reread Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, George Orwell. I practically have them memorized.” Farmer says September 11 also influenced her as she wrote The Sea of Trolls. “I started writing after 9/11, and I did look for a point in history that was similar [to the historical events in the book].” This way, she says, “Kids could approach the idea of 9/11 indirectly, and come to terms with things on a symbolic level. Lots of children’s writers write about an actual event, but I thought [9/11] might be a little too intense for children.” And, she points out, “I like writing for kids because they’re so wide open to ideas. Adults will pick up books like McDonald’s hamburgers and eat them and drop them, but you can try all sorts of things writing for kids.” Her young fans have responded enthusiastically. “I do hear from children a lot,” she says. “It’s quite startling I worry because I don’t have that much to teach people. I’m here for the cheap thrills. Don’t base your life on me!” Linda M. Castellitto has never encountered a wild boar, thank goodness.

Nancy Farmer never intended to be a writer. Rather, the award-winning childen's author says, "I wanted to be an explorer . . . to go out and have adventures and have fun." Although she's no Christopher Columbus, Farmer has certainly had her share of adventures,…
Review by

Howard Bahr, author of the critically acclaimed novels The Black Flower and The Year of Jubilo, offers another remarkable Civil War tale. Three veterans, former soldiers of the doomed 21st Mississippi, are the focus of The Judas Field, and the highly sympathetic Cass Wakefield serves as their reluctant leader. Twenty years after the battle of Franklin, Tennessee, Cass is persuaded to retrace his regiment’s journey to that battlefield by a dying childhood friend, Alison, who wants to bring the remains of her father and brother home. As they travel, Cass recalls his fighting years and what they cost him and the men he served alongside. Bahr’s superb handling of battle scenes won’t surprise readers of his first two novels, and in The Judas Field he brings an extraordinary emotional depth to the brutality. Cass as a soldier seems nearly apathetic to the cause, but despite the terror and exhaustion, when the band plays, the flag is raised and the bayonets are strapped on, he is a fierce warrior. He is joined in battle by his cousin’s fiancŽ, Roger, a sensitive pianist, who protects his fingers even as he kills, and 14-year-old Lucien, an orphan with a warped sense of God and little reason to believe in his own worth or inherent goodness.

Cass’ sense of responsibility to his two brothers-in-arms carried him through the war, and he expressly forbids them to accompany him and Alison back north, but Lucien and Roger follow them to Franklin. Once there, the foursome discovers that the war is as fresh and devastating a wound to the people and landscape of Franklin as it is for them, and they are drawn into a tragic, inevitable confrontation. Bahr is at his poetic best here, every word chosen and placed precisely and beautifully. The Judas Field presents us with a heartbreakingly realistic picture of the madness born of violence and war, and the redemption to be found when the past is finally put to rest. Kristy Kiernan, a native of Tennessee, writes from Naples, Florida. Her debut novel will be published next year by Berkley.

Howard Bahr, author of the critically acclaimed novels The Black Flower and The Year of Jubilo, offers another remarkable Civil War tale. Three veterans, former soldiers of the doomed 21st Mississippi, are the focus of The Judas Field, and the highly sympathetic Cass Wakefield serves…
Review by

Jamie Lee Curtis is right it is hard to be a five-year-old. I’ve got two such creatures in my house, and this book hits the age-five bull’s-eye. Poised between babyhood and big kid-dom, five-year-olds want to be cuddled right before they rise out of your lap and announce plans for ruling, or at least bossing, the world. Curtis has written five previous books (including I’m Gonna Like Me and When I Was Little) and is shining brighter with each new entry, proving she has lots more to offer than simply a celebrity name. She has talent, insight, humor and voice.

The little-boy star of It’s Hard to Be Five: Learning How to Work My Control Panel is a zany fireball who proclaims the difficulties of his age: It’s hard to be five/All I want is to play/I’m starting at school/and I don’t get a say. He sums up the terrifying transition by saying, My whole world’s going to change. Laura Cornell’s illustrations bring smiles on every page. For instance, on the opening spread, our hero is plunked down on his belly reading self-help books, including Why Me? A five-year-old asks the question. And oh, that pesky, frequently malfunctioning control panel of the subtitle, the one every parent knows, which Cornell illustrates by showing that right at the center, near the heart, is a big red button marked PANIC, directly over a meter measuring Meltdown, among other amusing items.

Lest you think this book is too negative, fear not. It also celebrates being five in a big way, shouting in a two-page spread: It’s fun to be five! Big changes are here! We see how much this young man can accomplish, such as building things at school, using actual manners, obeying rules and what’s more, in a beautifully written verse: At five I can lie down alone in my bed/and dream of my past and my future ahead./And when I mess up or do right, it’s a start./’cause I have my own mind/and I have my own heart. Curtis and Cornell have hit another home run, showing cute things without being cutesy, celebrating joys without being preachy or precious. They walk a delicate tightrope, never once slipping. Just like all those five-year-olds.

Jamie Lee Curtis is right it is hard to be a five-year-old. I've got two such creatures in my house, and this book hits the age-five bull's-eye. Poised between babyhood and big kid-dom, five-year-olds want to be cuddled right before they rise out of your…
Review by

As a newly minted med-school grad, Shelley Green finds herself installed at a pediatric practice on Manhattan’s wealthy Upper East Side in the hilarious 24-Karat Kids. She quickly finds her lifelong desire to heal at odds with the lifestyles of the newly rich and not-necessarily famous as weekends in the Hamptons and invitations to cocktail parties make her fiancŽ (and her old life) pale in comparison. Seduced by her new lifestyle (complete with a plush apartment and a hot heir-to-a-fortune boyfriend) and physically transformed by the demands of her job from an overweight girl from Queens to a sleek, sophisticated and sought-after physician, Shelley initially revels in her quick jaunt up the social ladder, but comes to realize that things on Park Avenue are rarely as perfect as they seem.

Real-life top doc Judy Goldstein and fiction writer Sebastian Stuart (The Mentor) make a fair pair. In this Nanny Diaries for the med set, they poke fun at the absurdity of modern hyper-parenting from a mother who needs to be taught to use a vacuum after being told that it would soothe her colicky baby, to an ex-actress seeking a nose job for her infant. For readers looking for a laugh, this is just what the doctor ordered.

As a newly minted med-school grad, Shelley Green finds herself installed at a pediatric practice on Manhattan's wealthy Upper East Side in the hilarious 24-Karat Kids. She quickly finds her lifelong desire to heal at odds with the lifestyles of the newly rich and not-necessarily…
Review by

An orphan boy fulfilling an ancient legend, a dragon seeking the Rim of Heaven in the Himalayas, and a brownie named Sorrel journey together to find a new home when humans encroach upon the valley of the dragons. The trio encounters a pageant of fabulous creatures, including some who help and some who thwart their best efforts. Opposing them is one of the biggest monsters in all of children’s literature Nettlebrand. Created by an alchemist named Petrosius Henbane in 1424, Nettlebrand, a dragon-like creature covered in impenetrable gold plates, is assisted by Twigleg, a homunculus also created by Henbane, and raven spies. Helping the travelers Firedrake, Ben and Sorrel are Gilbert Graytail, the mapmaker; Barnabas Greenbloom, an expert on fabulous creatures; a djinni with one thousand eyes; Zubeida Ghalid, a dragon expert; and Tibetan monks as the voyagers approach the Himalayas and the ancestral home of the dragons. Twigleg stows away in Ben’s backpack and becomes part of the quest, spying and reporting back to Nettlebrand. But he is faced with a moral decision: should he continue to spy for his monstrous master, or should he be faithful to Ben, whom he has come to love? Translated from the German, this is Funke’s third work to appear in the United States. The Thief Lord and Inkheart were huge successes here and in Germany, and Dragon Rider is sure to equal their popularity. This work will appeal to the fans of Harry Potter, The Lord of the Rings and the many other new fantasy and adventure novels spawned by Potter-mania. Funke’s characters are fully developed and brought to life, sure to absorb readers in a thrilling fantasy adventure. The prose is as lively and fabulous as the creatures the author creates, and the novel would be a great choice for parents looking for the next book to read aloud.

A natural for a future movie, this novel transcends the fantasy quest genre with its meditation on the meaning of home. A wholly satisfying book, sure to charm. Dean Schneider teaches middle school English in Nashville.

An orphan boy fulfilling an ancient legend, a dragon seeking the Rim of Heaven in the Himalayas, and a brownie named Sorrel journey together to find a new home when humans encroach upon the valley of the dragons. The trio encounters a pageant of fabulous…
Review by

Ex-model Robin Hazelwood conducts a guided tour down the runways of the late 1980s in her debut novel, Model Student. Before she knows it, Midwesterner Emily Woods finds herself at photo shoots with the same models whose images had previously been plastered on her bedroom walls. When the time comes to choose between college and catwalks, Emily decides she can do both, moving to New York City to attend Columbia University and pursue her dreams. It proves tougher to balance college life with the fashion world than Emily ever imagined. Doggedly pursuing her dual passions makes Emily start to spin out of control, until she finds herself flailing in both arenas and realizes that she may have to make a choice between brains and beauty.

Young Emily becomes an engaging protagonist, as her intelligence and thoughtfulness make the supreme superficiality of the fashion world palatable. Hazelwood’s sharp writing provides a glimpse into a glamorous world, but stays grounded by using college life as a foil to the fashionistas. Her real-life experience as model in the ’80s and ’90s the era that brought us those larger-than-life supermodels Cindy Crawford and Naomi Campbell gives her an insider edge that lends credibility to events that would be otherwise unbelievable.

Ex-model Robin Hazelwood conducts a guided tour down the runways of the late 1980s in her debut novel, Model Student. Before she knows it, Midwesterner Emily Woods finds herself at photo shoots with the same models whose images had previously been plastered on her…
Review by

Johnny Appleseed, watch out. Apples to Oregon is a gung-ho pioneering tall tale ripe with adventure and humor. Although its subtitle is long-winded, it explains the book’s premise precisely: Being the (Slightly) True Narrative of How a Brave Pioneer Father Brought Apples, Peaches, Pears, Plums, Grapes, and Cherries (and Children) Across the Plains. Author Deborah Hopkinson notes that she bases her story on fact: In 1847 a pioneer named Henderson Luelling . . . left Salem, Iowa, with his wife, Elizabeth, and eight children . . . and a wagon carrying seven hundred plants and young fruit trees. The Luellings did indeed make it to Oregon and prosper along with their trees, but Hopkinson spices up their saga with larger-than-life drama narrated in the wonderful voice of one of the pioneer daughters, whom she aptly gives the name of Delicious. Even the sleeves of this lively girl’s pinafore look like juicy red apples, and she describes her family’s quest by proclaiming: Daddy was ready for the most daring adventure in the history of fruit. Throughout, Hopkinson adopts over-the-top language to make readers laugh and to make it clear that she isn’t sticking with a fact-by-fact accounting. For instance, when the family reaches the Platte River, Delicious says: It was wider than Texas, thicker than Momma’s muskrat stew, and muddier than a cowboy’s toenails. Perils pile up every step of the way to Oregon, and the children, rallied by Delicious, repeatedly save the day, despite hail storms, drought, steep red rock canyon and frost. Nancy Carpenter’s foot-stomping illustrations provide the perfect accompaniment to the rollicking text. Daddy is a fiddling string bean of a man topped off by a 10-gallon hat, with his eight children always pitching in to save their wagonload of saplings.

Hopkinson and Carpenter previously teamed up on Fannie in the Kitchen, a fun, informative look at cooking pioneer Fannie Farmer. Now they’ve come up with another winning slice of history. Alice Cary writes from Groton, Massachusetts.

Johnny Appleseed, watch out. Apples to Oregon is a gung-ho pioneering tall tale ripe with adventure and humor. Although its subtitle is long-winded, it explains the book's premise precisely: Being the (Slightly) True Narrative of How a Brave Pioneer Father Brought Apples, Peaches, Pears, Plums,…
Review by

When 29-year-old Delilah Darling reads in The New York Post that the average person has 10.5 sexual partners in a lifetime, Delilah decides to do a little counting of her own. She’s holding steady at 19 that is, until the day she gets fired from her production job on a Martha Stewart-esque television show and wakes up the next day hung over and in bed next to her smarmy ex-boss. Refusing to exceed the sexual status quo, Delilah takes her severance check and spends it on a cross-country drive down memory lane, visiting each of her previous partners in hopes she can make it work with one of them.

In 20 Times a Lady, author Karyn Bosnak guides her readers on this tour of past loves with a heaping dose of humor and heart. Her first book, Save Karyn, was an autobiographical account of her successful appeal to strangers (via the Internet) to help her pay off her credit card debt, and Bosnak here proves her ability to create a fictional character every bit as endearing as she was able to make herself. Though the obvious ending can be seen from a mile away (could the love she had been looking for have been in front of her the whole time?), readers will still root for Delilah in her quest to beat the odds.

When 29-year-old Delilah Darling reads in The New York Post that the average person has 10.5 sexual partners in a lifetime, Delilah decides to do a little counting of her own. She's holding steady at 19 that is, until the day she gets fired from…

Sign Up

Stay on top of new releases: Sign up for our newsletter to receive reading recommendations in your favorite genres.

Trending Features