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The husband and wife team of Joshua and Anne-Lee Gilder are a couple of latter-day Heinrich Schliemanns, and their Troy is the mysterious death of Tycho Brahe, the 16th-century astronomer. Heavenly Intrigue: Johannes Kepler, Tycho Brahe, and the Murder Behind One of History’s Greatest Scientific Discoveries is the story of that death, the events leading up to it, and the use of 21st-century technology to get at the truth, some 400 years after the fact.

Tycho Brahe was a larger-than-life figure. A Danish nobleman, he rejected his cultural peer pressure and studied astronomy, astrology and alchemy instead of soldiering, the usual occupation of his class. He married a commoner whom he loved and spent a good deal of his life securing noble rights for his wife and children. Yet, though he abhorred politics, Brahe was skilled in the ways of the court, and though he cast his lot with science, he was able with a sword, and once had the bridge of his nose sliced off in a duel. True to his nature, rather than wearing a flesh colored prosthesis (which was available at the time), he chose instead to wear one of solid gold. This against-the-grain attitude carried over into his research, and after realizing the gross inadequacies of the astronomical observations of the ancients, he set about his life-long task: creating an accurate map of the motions of the planets.

Enter Johannes Kepler. William Shakespeare himself could not have created a more slippery, conniving villain than this German astronomer. Born of a poor family, abused and hated by his parents, Kepler emerges in his correspondence as nothing less than a Renaissance sociopath. The Gilders create a portrait of man driven by a desire for greatness in astronomy, whose half-baked theory of cosmic spheres was treated with characteristic gentleness by Tycho Brahe, who offered his own home and more to Kepler, who in turn immediately set about dreaming up ways to wrest Brahe’s observational data from him. That after Brahe’s death Kepler discovered that planets have elliptical orbits, one of the touchstones of science, seems almost accidental.

Historians have long regarded Brahe’s sudden illness and death in 1601 as, at the very least, dubious. The Gilders explore recent research into this event, and, like a historical CSI team, make a very good case for Brahe’s death by poisoning with Kepler as the poisoner. Isaac Newton once humbly said that his accomplishments were due to his “standing on the shoulders of giants.” One giant he was referring to was Tycho Brahe. It could be said that Johannes Kepler was a giant as well, as Newton’s theories were a direct result of Kepler’s discovery, but in Heavenly Intrigue, Kepler comes across more as a a very small man indeed.

The husband and wife team of Joshua and Anne-Lee Gilder are a couple of latter-day Heinrich Schliemanns, and their Troy is the mysterious death of Tycho Brahe, the 16th-century astronomer. Heavenly Intrigue: Johannes Kepler, Tycho Brahe, and the Murder Behind One of History's Greatest Scientific…
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Just when rising seventh-grader Charlene Charley Morgan thinks she’s lost everything her nature photographer mother to a plane crash two years ago, her father to his endless work, pain-free mobility to a recent car accident and a summer with her best friend to a snooty tennis star she discovers a wild dog living among her Eagle Lake community in the woods of Charlotte, North Carolina. After naming the chow and shepherd mix Coyote, Charley decides to spend her summer break taming him. Newbery Honor author Stephanie S. Tolan bases Listen! on her own experiences taming an abandoned, abused dog (also named Coyote).

Using Jane Goodall’s work with chimpanzees as inspiration, Charley realizes that before she can claim Coyote, she must first spend time in his territory. Braving extreme humidity, rain showers and poison ivy, she keenly observes the dog’s habits and creates new routines for them to share. And having plenty of liver chunks on hand, the girl finds, is an ideal way to reward Coyote’s new behaviors! Since her mother’s death, Charley has tried to close her mind to her memories, but as she takes Coyote on long walks through the woods, the same woods her mother reverently captured with her cameras, she also remembers her mother’s encouraging words and different ways of looking at and listening to the world. Following her mother’s advice, Charley communicates spirit to spirit with Coyote and ultimately secures his trust.

Their relationship, however, is never one-sided. As Charley introduces Coyote to veterinary care and restores the dog’s health and faith in humans, she recovers better use of her injured leg and reconnects with her best friend. With Coyote’s help, she also draws her workaholic father back home and finally deals with her grief.

No ordinary dog story, this touching tale combines one girl’s passion and determination with one dog’s receptive and loving character. The process of Coyote’s taming will enthrall readers, while the author’s moving descriptions of the woods and lake will have them seeing and listening to nature with newfound appreciation. Angela Leeper is an educational consultant and writer in Wake Forest, North Carolina.

Just when rising seventh-grader Charlene Charley Morgan thinks she's lost everything her nature photographer mother to a plane crash two years ago, her father to his endless work, pain-free mobility to a recent car accident and a summer with her best friend to a snooty…
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The New England flowering of philosophers, novelists and poets in the early 19th century produced a literary crop that is still influencing our writing and thinking today. Philosophers and essayists continue to quote Emerson. Nonfiction writers revere Thoreau. And novelists and short story writers, especially John Updike, bow toward Hawthorne.

Many readers, however, know Hawthorne’s reputation but not the man. Philip McFarland aims at both audiences in his vivid and dramatic book, Hawthorne in Concord, released to coincide with the 200th anniversary of Hawthorne’s birth. Although his detail and extensive notes will satisfy academics, he writes without assuming that a reader has prior familiarity with the subject. He is also admirably concise in this age of bloated biographies.

McFarland’s focus on Concord provides a good perspective on Hawthorne’s life. The novelist lived there three times, at three crucial periods in his own life and in that of his young nation. The book begins with the 1842 marriage of handsome, promising Nathaniel Hawthorne and bright but seriously ill Sophia Peabody. Provided with enough texture and emotional drama for a period novel, we find ourselves caught up in the prospects of this fascinating man whose writing was marked by so much imagination and compassion.

In the early days in Concord, Hawthorne struggles and almost fails at his chosen career. He and Sophia finally move in with his mother because he can’t make ends meet as a writer. Then, in the wake of The Scarlet Letter, Hawthorne triumphantly reclaims Concord only to be chosen as a consul to England.

Hawthorne’s third period in Concord rounds out this parable of the stages of a man’s life. Ill with what now seems to have been intestinal cancer, Hawthorne, with the devoted Sophia by his side, struggles with his writing and his mortality. It is a tribute to McFarland’s skills that we are so moved by the inevitable end of a biography.

The New England flowering of philosophers, novelists and poets in the early 19th century produced a literary crop that is still influencing our writing and thinking today. Philosophers and essayists continue to quote Emerson. Nonfiction writers revere Thoreau. And novelists and short story writers, especially…
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Behold this haunted house. The Pentagon bears a special fascination and dread for James Carroll, a social critic and the author of such noted books as Constantine’s Sword and the National Book Award-winning memoir An American Requiem. He played in the Pentagon’s hallways as a child, marched on it with masses of other Vietnam War protesters, was stunned when terrorists crashed an airplane into it and, throughout his life, watched it evolve into the menacing driving force behind America’s foreign and domestic policies. House of War, then, is at once a political history and a very personal journal.

Carroll’s father, Joseph F. Carroll, was a one-time FBI agent who was drafted into military intelligence and then appointed the first director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, a position he achieved under President Kennedy via the recommendation of Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara.

Starting with the construction of the Pentagon and the development of the atomic bomb during the height of World War II, Carroll argues that these two events combined to sweep America into perilous waters again and again, regardless of who was president and nominal commander of the military. His rogue’s gallery of overreachers, careerists, paranoids and villains is by now familiar (and persuasively documented). It extends from President Roosevelt, whose doctrine of unconditional surrender may have needlessly cost hundreds of thousands of lives, to Leslie Groves, the man who oversaw the creation of both the Pentagon and the A-bomb, to Curtis LeMay, the bombing scourge of civilians from Germany to Japan, on through alarmist George Kennan, the tormented McNamara and such hardliners as Edward Teller, Herman Kahn, Paul Nitze, Paul Wolfowitz, Richard Perle, Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney.

It was not a coup by a man on horseback that Eisenhower was warning of [in citing the military-industrial complex], Carroll maintains, . . . but the impersonal workings of a frenzied cycle in which money feeds on fear which feeds on power which feeds on violence which feeds on a skewed idea of honor which feeds on demonization of an enemy which feeds on more fear which feeds on ever more money. Wiser and stronger presidents might have slowed or stopped this cycle, Carroll suggests. They might have even shifted the emphasis in international relations from force to diplomacy. But none did.

In growing up when and where he did, Carroll was more sensitive than most to the very real prospect of nuclear annihilation. Still, he manages to bring a scholar’s thoroughness to his critique. While clearly no fan of communism, he expresses great admiration for Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and his willingness to negotiate nuclear disarmament. He also praises America’s nuclear freeze movement of the 1980s, which was gaining enormous momentum when President Reagan’s Star Wars proposal effectively neutralized it.

Despite the grim drag of history, Carroll says there are ways for America to rise above its worst instincts. But the road he envisions is a rocky one: no weapons in space; no wars of prevention; no going it alone; no torture ever, under any circumstances; treaties are sacrosanct; the spread of international legal forums is in America’s interest; the sources of violence deserve as much attention as the threat of it; diplomacy, not war, is America’s primary way of being in the world.

Edward Morris reviews from Nashville.

 

Behold this haunted house. The Pentagon bears a special fascination and dread for James Carroll, a social critic and the author of such noted books as Constantine's Sword and the National Book Award-winning memoir An American Requiem. He played in the Pentagon's hallways as…

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Simon Loxley’s witty Type: The Secret History of Letters was released in Britain last winter, so it is possible that some clever television exec is already working on an adaptation. No kidding if you caught Michael Wood’s BBC series In Search of Shakespeare on public television, you’ll have an idea what to expect.

Loxley’s itinerary includes Gutenberg’s haunts in Mainz, Germany, a metal type repository at the Type Museum and a modern micro-foundry where everything is computerized. He darts around London streets once named for early type designers William Caslon and his son. Both the Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights were set in a Caslon face, he points out, and Ben Franklin who knew a thing or two about printing was a fan. Loxley also traverses London looking for various incarnations of the London Underground’s famous typeface. Created by Edward Johnston in 1916, touched up in the late 1970s and now licensed for commercial use, the face is one of the earliest examples of corporate identity.

A designer, teacher and typographer, Loxley discusses the nuances of typefaces with aplomb. Indeed, nothing escapes his developed aesthetic: “It costs no more, and takes no more effort, to choose a seat fabric that isn’t visually oppressive,” he writes of a garish bus seat. In the book’s last two chapters one of which is hilariously and ominously titled “Typocalypse” he laments the sometimes detrimental influence of the proliferation of desktop publishing on graphic design.

As with any specialized field, typography is filled with connections between its major players fostered through apprenticeships, bloodthirsty competition, etc. Loxley incorporates mini-bios of these characters (no pun intended) into Type. The result is a funny, informative romp through typography.

Simon Loxley's witty Type: The Secret History of Letters was released in Britain last winter, so it is possible that some clever television exec is already working on an adaptation. No kidding if you caught Michael Wood's BBC series In Search of Shakespeare on public…
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Homeschoolers are a growing bunch there are an estimated 1.5 million in the U.S. today, and the number is expected to double by 2010. Parents take on this enormous task for many reasons, from religion to dissatisfaction with local schools. Whether you’re trying to decide if you’re up to the job, or you’re already making homeschooling a daily reality, the following books will give you tips and ideas for making the task easier. No matter what your educational philosophy, you’re bound to find plenty of golden nuggets in these new titles.

A GREAT PLACE TO BEGIN exploring the topic is A Parent’s Guide to Homeschooling: Expert Answers to Tough Questions About Home Schooling (Parent’s Guide Press, $22.95, 306 pages, ISBN 1931199094). Written by veteran homeschooler Tamra Orr in a question and answer format that makes the text highly readable, the book is filled with interesting tidbits and plenty of great, basic information. (Did you know that Ansel Adams, Mark Twain and LeAnn Rimes are among the many famous people who have been homeschooled?) Chapters include “How do I get started?” “Where can I find help?” and “What about the teen years?” Other nuts and bolts issues, such as the legalities of homeschooling, are also covered in this comprehensive volume. CHRISTINE FIELD LEFT A CAREER as a criminal prosecutor to homeschool her four children, and she readily admits, “My days are so much more complex than I ever dreamed they could be as a stay-at-home mom.” In Help for the Harried Homeschooler: A Practical Guide to Balancing Your Child’s Education with the Rest of Your Life (Shaw Books, $13.99, 278 pages, ISBN 0877887942), Field concedes that her educational choice has resulted in personal sacrifice. But the rewards, she says, far outweigh the price. Using humor and biblical teachings along with examples from her own experience, Field presents solutions that will help overwhelmed parents maintain their sanity. She also guides readers through some of the toughest conflicts presented by teaching at home. Topics include how homeschooling can affect marriages, homeschooling through personal crises and dealing with student-siblings of various ages.

WHAT MAKES THESE FAMILIES TICK? “Are home-schooling parents superhuman, always patient June and Ward Cleaver types?” Rhonda Barfield asks in Real-Life Homeschooling: The Stories of 21 Families Who Teach Their Children at Home (Pocket, $14, 299 pages, ISBN 0743442296). Barfield, mother of four home-schooled children, was astonished by the diverse lifestyles and educational philosophies she found when she interviewed 21 families in 18 states. Here’s a book of interest to anyone, whether you simply want a peek into the lives of different families or you’re looking for tips for schooling at home. Each profile includes a photo, advice from the families and a list of helpful resources. Fascinating as well as informative, the volume offers an in-depth look at the homeschooling experiment. Without promoting any particular curriculum or religious views, as many homeschooling books do, Creative Home Schooling for Gifted Children: A Resource Guide by Lisa Rivero offers numerous resources as well as short quotes and insights from homeschooled children and parents. It’s a big book that addresses a multitude of issues, such as socialization and intellectual needs, varied learning styles, practical matters for parents and grade levels and standards. Full of well-organized information for any parent of a gifted child, the book includes reading lists and a fascinating unit that shows how entire areas of study can be organized around themes (like baseball) that will appeal to kids. From parents to teachers to camp counselors, this is a great guide for any educator.

Homeschoolers are a growing bunch there are an estimated 1.5 million in the U.S. today, and the number is expected to double by 2010. Parents take on this enormous task for many reasons, from religion to dissatisfaction with local schools. Whether you're trying to…
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John Irving’s seventh novel is dominated by an extraordinary and preposterous hero. A tiny boy from the massive granite quarries of Gravesend, N.H. A prophet with a wrecked voice. A hero who speaks in a perpetual scream of UNIFORM UPPER-CASE LETTERS. Owen Meany.

Owen may be small, but his faith is huge. And from the fateful day in his eleventh spring when he hits the foul ball that kills his best friend’s mother, Owen Meany knows. He is here for a purpose. “GOD HAS TAKEN YOUR MOTHER,” he tells his bereaved friend, Johnny Wheelwright. “MY HANDS WERE THE INSTRUMENT. GOD HAS TAKEN MY HANDS. I AM GOD’S INSTRUMENT.”

Is it any wonder, then that it is Owen Meany who controls the pace and plot of this astonishing novel? It is John Wheelwright who, from the perspective of his self-imposed exile as an English teacher in present-day Canada, narrates the story of the boys’ adolescence in a small New England prep school town in the ’50s and ’60s. It’s Wheelwright who brings us through a time overshadowed by the moral exhaustion of America and the descending madness of Vietnam. but only a hero as attractive and powerful as Owen Meany, only someone with the strength of “a descending angel—a tiny but fiery god, sent to adjudicate the errors of our ways” could hold together the vastly divergent elements of this story: the armadillo, virgin birth, oversexed cousins, unnamed fathers, granite quarries, missing digits, Marilyn Monroe, angels, Christmas pageants, Canadian literature, armless Indian totems, a dressmaker’s dummy, Liberace, lust, Catholics, television, Episcopalians, baseball, Congregationalists, a Labrador retriever, Tess of the D’Urbervilles . . . and that’s just a little of it.

By now fans of Irving’s previous best sellers — The World According to Garp, The Hotel New Hampshire, The Cider House Rules—have come to look forward to his charming though quasi-freakish characters, his truly outstanding wit, and his rich plots illuminated with lightning flashes from vengeful gods. they will not be disappointed by A Prayer for Owen Meany.

For those less devoted, it may require some perseverance to follow the book through to its end. Irving’s story line is far from linear, leaping back and forth between the decades at the flick of a page, folding back on itself constantly in layers of foreshadowing and further explanation. Those who falter should remember Wheelwright’s complaint about his lazy teenage pupils: “They want dialogue, they want action, but there’s so much writing in the description.” Like Owen Meany and his voice, almost every word of Irving’s novel is there for a purpose.

Never underestimate John Irving. The man is a major force in modern American letters. And A Prayer for Owen Meany is rewarding reading, a masterfully constructed story of fate and faith.

Taylor McKillop is a reader who lives in Massachusetts.

A Prayer for Owen Meany is rewarding reading, a masterfully constructed story of fate and faith.
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Wendy Kann lives a comfortable suburban life in Connecticut. Her three children don’t worry whether there’s enough fuel in the car to make it to the grocery store, or that their mother might never return from the errand. Her small nephew, who lives on a rural farm in Zambia, does. His mother, Kann’s youngest sister Lauren, died in a car accident there. The phone call announcing this event brings a flood of memories of a tumultuous upbringing that prompted Kann to write Casting with a Fragile Thread: A Story of Sisters and Africa. Kann and her sisters came of age during the 1960s and ’70s, when civil war transformed this volatile region from the British colonial outpost of Rhodesia into Zimbabwe. Colored by the mental instability of their mother and the early death of their father, the sisters’ unsettled family life mirrored the civil instability of their country. Kann recollects friends fighting to keep white rule, and how the nationalist movement’s victory dismayed and disillusioned many, including herself. She tells of whites suddenly sleeping behind locked gates, and eyeing their black servants with suspicion even as they continue to order them around.

The stark relief of the disparity of Kann’s sophisticated life in the United States contrasts with Lauren’s exotic yet bleak existence. Lauren’s nearest neighbor in the dusty outback of Zambia is miles away, flies and dust plague the household, squatters imperil the crops, and when the phone works, it’s only for a few precious minutes. Kann says that any Out of Africa illusions she or Lauren might have had were quickly quashed under the weight of drought, malaria and loneliness.

It is the anchor of her sisters’ African lives Kann’s sister Sharon still lives there and the tugging past of her homeland that moor Kann’s tale.

Wendy Kann lives a comfortable suburban life in Connecticut. Her three children don't worry whether there's enough fuel in the car to make it to the grocery store, or that their mother might never return from the errand. Her small nephew, who lives on a…
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They were giants of women’s tennis at a time when such notoriety didn’t guarantee the kind of riches today’s sports icons take for granted. Each was an outsider: one a Southern-born African American who grew up in Harlem, the other a South African Jew transplanted to London, both anomalies in their lily-white world.

These were reasons enough for Angela Buxton and Althea Gibson to draw toward each other not just on the court as doubles partners, but also many years later, during the moment of life-threatening crisis that confronts Gibson at the beginning of Bruce Schoenfeld’s The Match: Althea Gibson ∧ Angela Buxton. This is in fact the book’s central premise, yet it’s the differences in the women’s stories that make this narrative compelling.

Buxton, for example, took to the spotlight with some ambivalence, even keeping her “day job” at a tennis store in London after becoming the first British women’s player to reach the Wimbledon finals in 17 years. By championship standards, her successes were modest: when a wrist injury cut short her career, she was left with a record that included no major singles titles. Gibson, in contrast, was the first African American to win a major tennis title, winning the French Open in 1956 and Wimbledon and the U.S. Open in 1957 (she won all three tournaments in 1958). She enjoyed much more longevity than Buxton, in part because she had no choice; unlike Buxton, she never saved much money and thus had to play far past her prime to make ends meet.

Schoenfeld honors Gibson and Buxton in parallel narratives that frequently intersect but ultimately stand on their own. Their childhoods, families and lovers pass by, vivid and real. Though played more than half a century ago, their greatest matches bound through Schoenfeld’s rhythmic writing, as exciting as volleys shown live on ESPN. In the end, Schoenfeld scores a victory of his own in finding the drama that’s often buried in stats, and the shades of love and sorrow that celebrity’s glare obscures.

They were giants of women's tennis at a time when such notoriety didn't guarantee the kind of riches today's sports icons take for granted. Each was an outsider: one a Southern-born African American who grew up in Harlem, the other a South African Jew…
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Homeschoolers are a growing bunch there are an estimated 1.5 million in the U.S. today, and the number is expected to double by 2010. Parents take on this enormous task for many reasons, from religion to dissatisfaction with local schools. Whether you’re trying to decide if you’re up to the job, or you’re already making homeschooling a daily reality, the following books will give you tips and ideas for making the task easier. No matter what your educational philosophy, you’re bound to find plenty of golden nuggets in these new titles. A GREAT PLACE TO BEGIN exploring the topic is A Parent’s Guide to Homeschooling: Expert Answers to Tough Questions About Home Schooling (Parent’s Guide Press, $22.95, 306 pages, ISBN 1931199094). Written by veteran homeschooler Tamra Orr in a question and answer format that makes the text highly readable, the book is filled with interesting tidbits and plenty of great, basic information. (Did you know that Ansel Adams, Mark Twain and LeAnn Rimes are among the many famous people who have been homeschooled?) Chapters include “How do I get started?” “Where can I find help?” and “What about the teen years?” Other nuts and bolts issues, such as the legalities of homeschooling, are also covered in this comprehensive volume.

CHRISTINE FIELD LEFT A CAREER as a criminal prosecutor to homeschool her four children, and she readily admits, “My days are so much more complex than I ever dreamed they could be as a stay-at-home mom.” In Help for the Harried Homeschooler: A Practical Guide to Balancing Your Child’s Education with the Rest of Your Life (Shaw Books, $13.99, 278 pages, ISBN 0877887942), Field concedes that her educational choice has resulted in personal sacrifice. But the rewards, she says, far outweigh the price. Using humor and biblical teachings along with examples from her own experience, Field presents solutions that will help overwhelmed parents maintain their sanity. She also guides readers through some of the toughest conflicts presented by teaching at home. Topics include how homeschooling can affect marriages, homeschooling through personal crises and dealing with student-siblings of various ages. WHAT MAKES THESE FAMILIES TICK? “Are home-schooling parents superhuman, always patient June and Ward Cleaver types?” Rhonda Barfield asks in Real-Life Homeschooling: The Stories of 21 Families Who Teach Their Children at Home. Barfield, mother of four home-schooled children, was astonished by the diverse lifestyles and educational philosophies she found when she interviewed 21 families in 18 states. Here’s a book of interest to anyone, whether you simply want a peek into the lives of different families or you’re looking for tips for schooling at home. Each profile includes a photo, advice from the families and a list of helpful resources. Fascinating as well as informative, the volume offers an in-depth look at the homeschooling experiment. Without promoting any particular curriculum or religious views, as many homeschooling books do, Creative Home Schooling for Gifted Children: A Resource Guide (Great Potential Press, $26, 430 pages, ISBN 0910707480) by Lisa Rivero offers numerous resources as well as short quotes and insights from homeschooled children and parents. It’s a big book that addresses a multitude of issues, such as socialization and intellectual needs, varied learning styles, practical matters for parents and grade levels and standards. Full of well-organized information for any parent of a gifted child, the book includes reading lists and a fascinating unit that shows how entire areas of study can be organized around themes (like baseball) that will appeal to kids. From parents to teachers to camp counselors, this is a great guide for any educator.

Homeschoolers are a growing bunch there are an estimated 1.5 million in the U.S. today, and the number is expected to double by 2010. Parents take on this enormous task for many reasons, from religion to dissatisfaction with local schools. Whether you're trying to…
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The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is at least in part a tragedy of unacknowledged similarities. On one side, you have a proud people forced out of their traditional homeland, ill-treated in their diaspora, desperate to regain and hold what they fervently believe is their land. And on the other, you have exactly the same thing. Yet that likeness has led not to mutual accommodation, but to unending violence. The Lemon Tree, by Sandy Tolan, reduces the tragedy to two families and one house in a moving story of both grief and hope. Ahmad Khairi, a furniture-maker from a prominent clan, built the house in 1936 in a town where his family had lived since the 16th century. He, his wife Zakia and their eight children fled to Ramallah in the West Bank during the 1948 war that followed the creation of Israel. Moshe and Solia Eshkenazi, refugees from Bulgaria who had barely escaped the Holocaust, moved into the empty house and raised their daughter Dalia there. The book focuses on the second generation, the inheritors of the strife: Dalia Eshkenazi and Bashir Khairi, Ahmad’s oldest son. When the outcome of the Six-Day War in 1967 in effect opened the border between Israel and the West Bank, Bashir and two cousins sneaked across to visit their hometown. Some Israelis rebuffed them, but Dalia opened the door and invited them in, starting a tentative friendship. Both Dalia and Bashir turn out to be remarkable people, in very different ways. Dalia, a teacher, seeks reconciliation; Bashir becomes a well-known Palestinian nationalist lawyer perhaps even a terrorist. The two families are divided by politics, but continue to be drawn together by their common humanity. The lemon tree of the book’s title, planted by the Khairis and nurtured by the Eshkenazis, becomes a poignant symbol of the relationship. Tolan, who first told this story in a public radio documentary, is admirably even-handed, alternating between the points of view of the two families and their respective nations. The book has no neat solution. But just as the Khairis and Eshkenazis learn each other’s better qualities, we come to understand more about both sides. Anne Bartlett is a journalist in Washington, D.C.

The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is at least in part a tragedy of unacknowledged similarities. On one side, you have a proud people forced out of their traditional homeland, ill-treated in their diaspora, desperate to regain and hold what they fervently believe is their land. And on…
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In the 1780s, as the Founding Fathers wrestled with a new experiment in government, a handful of other men experimented with a new idea in transportation: that a boat could move with the power of steam.

Steam: The Untold Story of America’s First Great Invention tells the story of these technological pioneers and their battles with engineering, politics, finances and personality. It is a story of personal inspiration and ambition, a struggle against ridicule and public humiliation, and even personal animosity. Andrea Sutcliffe has crafted a history that combines tragedy with triumph as she deftly navigates the way from the first moments of the idea to the final success (though not by its originators).

Steam pulls the reader along with fascinating history and compelling biographies, introducing the characters, both famous and forgotten, who worked to conquer America’s rivers. The book rings with names like Washington, Jefferson, Madison, Franklin (and even a Roosevelt), who all played a part in the creation (and sometimes delay) of the Age of Steam. But the story itself is that of two obscure inventors James Rumsey and John Fitch whose ideas, successes and failures opened the waterways for the eventual triumph of Robert Fulton. Sutcliffe presents well-rounded portraits that neither idolize nor choose among them. Each in his way was a genius; and in the end, Sutcliffe suggests, not one of them actually invented the steamboat they all did.

In the 1780s, as the Founding Fathers wrestled with a new experiment in government, a handful of other men experimented with a new idea in transportation: that a boat could move with the power of steam.

Steam: The Untold Story of America's…
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Homeschoolers are a growing bunch there are an estimated 1.5 million in the U.S. today, and the number is expected to double by 2010. Parents take on this enormous task for many reasons, from religion to dissatisfaction with local schools. Whether you’re trying to decide if you’re up to the job, or you’re already making homeschooling a daily reality, the following books will give you tips and ideas for making the task easier. No matter what your educational philosophy, you’re bound to find plenty of golden nuggets in these new titles.

A GREAT PLACE TO BEGIN exploring the topic is A Parent’s Guide to Homeschooling: Expert Answers to Tough Questions About Home Schooling (Parent’s Guide Press, $22.95, 306 pages, ISBN 1931199094). Written by veteran homeschooler Tamra Orr in a question and answer format that makes the text highly readable, the book is filled with interesting tidbits and plenty of great, basic information. (Did you know that Ansel Adams, Mark Twain and LeAnn Rimes are among the many famous people who have been homeschooled?) Chapters include “How do I get started?” “Where can I find help?” and “What about the teen years?” Other nuts and bolts issues, such as the legalities of homeschooling, are also covered in this comprehensive volume. CHRISTINE FIELD LEFT A CAREER as a criminal prosecutor to homeschool her four children, and she readily admits, “My days are so much more complex than I ever dreamed they could be as a stay-at-home mom.” In Help for the Harried Homeschooler: A Practical Guide to Balancing Your Child’s Education with the Rest of Your Life, Field concedes that her educational choice has resulted in personal sacrifice. But the rewards, she says, far outweigh the price. Using humor and biblical teachings along with examples from her own experience, Field presents solutions that will help overwhelmed parents maintain their sanity. She also guides readers through some of the toughest conflicts presented by teaching at home. Topics include how homeschooling can affect marriages, homeschooling through personal crises and dealing with student-siblings of various ages.

WHAT MAKES THESE FAMILIES TICK? “Are home-schooling parents superhuman, always patient June and Ward Cleaver types?” Rhonda Barfield asks in Real-Life Homeschooling: The Stories of 21 Families Who Teach Their Children at Home (Pocket, $14, 299 pages, ISBN 0743442296). Barfield, mother of four home-schooled children, was astonished by the diverse lifestyles and educational philosophies she found when she interviewed 21 families in 18 states. Here’s a book of interest to anyone, whether you simply want a peek into the lives of different families or you’re looking for tips for schooling at home. Each profile includes a photo, advice from the families and a list of helpful resources. Fascinating as well as informative, the volume offers an in-depth look at the homeschooling experiment. Without promoting any particular curriculum or religious views, as many homeschooling books do, Creative Home Schooling for Gifted Children: A Resource Guide (Great Potential Press, $26, 430 pages, ISBN 0910707480) by Lisa Rivero offers numerous resources as well as short quotes and insights from homeschooled children and parents. It’s a big book that addresses a multitude of issues, such as socialization and intellectual needs, varied learning styles, practical matters for parents and grade levels and standards. Full of well-organized information for any parent of a gifted child, the book includes reading lists and a fascinating unit that shows how entire areas of study can be organized around themes (like baseball) that will appeal to kids. From parents to teachers to camp counselors, this is a great guide for any educator.

Homeschoolers are a growing bunch there are an estimated 1.5 million in the U.S. today, and the number is expected to double by 2010. Parents take on this enormous task for many reasons, from religion to dissatisfaction with local schools. Whether you're trying to…

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