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In his engrossing new book, award-winning historian Alan Taylor masterfully explores the transition of the borderland of Iroquoia, an alliance of Native American groups called the Six Nations, into two bordered lands which became the state of New York in the American republic and the province of Upper Canada in the British Empire. The Divided Ground: Indians, Settlers, and the Northern Borderland of the American Revolution offers a panoramic view of events from multiple perspectives over a period of 50 years. Throughout the painful, and, for many, tragic process including war, diplomacy, broken treaties and promises, land speculation, greed and opportunism the Indians become divided among themselves and devalued as human beings by others. Taylor, recipient of both the Bancroft and Pulitzer prizes for Mr. Cooper’s Town, explains in extensive detail what lay behind Westward expansion and the settlement of the frontier.

At the heart of this narrative are Joseph Brant, a Mohawk Indian, and Samuel Kirkland, a clergyman’s son, whose 50-year link began in 1761 at a colonial boarding school. It was intended that the boys would become teachers and missionaries to the Indians. However, these one-time friends became bitingly hostile opponents: Brant siding with the British, Kirkland with the revolutionary colonists. Brant sought to help the Indians as he, at least for a while, moved nimbly and with great influence and power between the two cultures. Kirkland also tried to help the Indians, then left to join the rebelling colonists, returning to the Indians late in life. Both men profited handsomely from being able to bridge the cultures.

Taylor also gives us carefully drawn portraits of many other prominent personalities, including the Seneca chief Red Jacket, who was an extraordinary negotiator, and George Clinton, who dominated New York’s politics from 1777 to 1795 and was primarily responsible for the massive transfer of Iroquois lands into state possession for sale and settlement.

Taylor shows that the Indian leaders, with foresight, chose to manage settlement by leasing land rather than selling it. However, a so-called preemption right, by which state and colonial leaders declared imminent and inevitable their acquisition of Indian land, diminishing aboriginal title to a temporary possession, accomplished the objectives of dispossessing the Indians and creating the private property that led to the development of New York in the United States and British interests in Canada. Taylor is concerned about scholars who treat preemption as anything more than a partisan fiction asserted to dispossess native people. Of particular interest to him is the Washington administration’s serious concern about the strength of Indian forces which led to a decision to revise the nation’s frontier policy. The foundation of the new federal policy, passed by Congress and signed by President Washington in July 1790, invalidated any purchase of Indian land, whether by a state or an individual, unless conducted at a treaty council held under federal auspices. The power of The Divided Ground comes from both the accumulation of so much detail from all sides regarding specific events and by the roles played by individual leaders. This is a crucial part of American history that all of us should understand, and Taylor is an excellent teacher.

Roger Bishop is a Nashville bookseller and a frequent contributor to BookPage.

In his engrossing new book, award-winning historian Alan Taylor masterfully explores the transition of the borderland of Iroquoia, an alliance of Native American groups called the Six Nations, into two bordered lands which became the state of New York in the American republic and the…
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Coins have been coveted throughout history as both useful art objects and symbols of power. But as international currencies become smaller, lighter and more homogenized, coin collectors thrill at uncovering rarer forms of money, a hobby and history lesson in one that can provide an annual return of 12 percent and sometimes turn a modest investment into millions. Q. David Bowers, award-winning author and principal in the rare-coin firm American Numismatic Rarities, who was named a Numismatist of the Century in a poll in COINage magazine, shares smart moves and insider tips developed over a 50-year numismatics career in The Expert’s Guide to Collecting and Investing in Rare Coins. Using interesting, real-life case studies illustrated with black-and-white photographs, Bowers shows novices how to collect every kind of rare U.S. coin from early American and colonial to modern examples, in categories including copper, nickel, silver and gold, pattern coins, proofs, commemoratives, tokens and medals, as well as the current hot market for obsolete bank notes and Confederate paper money. The book helps beginners identify market fads, trends and cycles; judge prices; and determine quality and value by focusing on grading and rarity. Bowers also covers how to spot fakes, how to buy and bid at live and online auctions, how to display and protect your coin investment, and how to sell smart when the time is right.

Coins have been coveted throughout history as both useful art objects and symbols of power. But as international currencies become smaller, lighter and more homogenized, coin collectors thrill at uncovering rarer forms of money, a hobby and history lesson in one that can provide an…
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The disappearance of a 4-year-old boy unearths two generations’ worth of skeletons hidden deep in the small Australian community of Angel Rock. The seemingly unrelated suicide of a teenage girl brings a big-city detective into the community, and with him comes his own demons. And at the center of it all is a young man named Tom Ferry, brother to the missing boy, trying desperately to make sense of the world around him. Angel Rock is the American debut of Australian writer Darren Williams, and his new book is less a mystery than an intense study of the town itself. Angel Rock is populated by working-class families living hard lives and killing themselves daily in logging camps and fly-bitten stores. Surrounded by wilderness, Angel Rock is as much the bush as it is the people living there. The mystery of Tom Ferry’s missing little brother, Flynn, takes a back seat to the effects of the disappearance on the people of the town. Similarly, the suicide of Darcy, the young girl who ran from Angel Rock to Sydney, haunts Detective Gibson and drives him to venture far from his usual Sydney beat. Gibson lost a sister years ago to suicide and he reasons that somehow, by discovering what drove Darcy to suicide, he’ll better understand what went through the mind of his lost sister. Obsessions, not goals, are the forces that make people put one foot in front of the other. Williams finds richness in his characters, particularly Tom Ferry, Pop, the town sheriff, and Grace, Pop’s daughter who develops a budding romance with Tom. The mystery of the story is what keeps the pages turning, but the strength of the characters is what holds the reader’s attention. And ultimately, Angel Rock itself is the intriguing main character. Mike Watt is a freelance writer and independent filmmaker.

The disappearance of a 4-year-old boy unearths two generations' worth of skeletons hidden deep in the small Australian community of Angel Rock. The seemingly unrelated suicide of a teenage girl brings a big-city detective into the community, and with him comes his own demons. And…
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There can hardly be a more frustrating or thankless task than trying to impose a moral code on war, an institution which, by its very nature, feeds on its own excesses. Yet that is the job that A.C. Grayling, a professor of philosophy at the University of London’s Birkbeck College, undertakes here. Although he cites examples from armed conflicts throughout history, Grayling draws his chief conclusions from the bombings of cities in Europe and Japan during World War II. Grayling first makes it clear that he is not an apologist for Germany or Japan and that they were clearly aggressors who merited being defeated. His moral question is: what did the Allies owe to the innocent civilians of those two nations when it came to planning and carrying out their bombing raids? He is specifically concerned with area bombing, which he defines as the strategy of treating whole cities and the civilian populations as targets for attack by high explosive and incendiary bombs, and in the end by atom bombs. The two great Allied proponents of area bombing were Great Britain’s Sir Arthur Harris and America’s Gen. Curtis E. LeMay. Each, according to Grayling, had an inflated notion of the effectiveness of the technique in winning the war. Their unfortunate laboratories for testing their theories included not only the industrial centers of Berlin and Tokyo but also such targets of questionable military value as Augsburg, Frankfurt, Cologne, Dresden and Nagasaki. At the beginning of the war, both Germany and Britain went to some lengths to avoid the gratuitous bombing of civilians. But as the conflict heated up and one outrage incited another, the niceties fell away and the rationalizations for indiscriminate slaughter blossomed. (LeMay conceded that had the U.S. lost the war, he might have been indicted as a war criminal.) Beyond the great loss of innocent lives, Grayling points out that the bombings also amounted to culturecide the needless destruction of libraries, schools, churches, monuments and other irreplaceable objects of artistic and historic importance. (To America’s credit, he notes, Secretary of War Henry Stimson removed Kyoto, Japan’s cultural center, from the list of cities to be bombed.) In addition to contending that it was morally wrong, Grayling further argues that area bombing was not nearly as militarily effective as its champions insisted it was. He says it didn’t sap the Germans’ will to fight nor break the back of their industrial productivity. Just as it had in Britain, the attacks seemed only to stiffen national resolve and bring out the people’s resilience and ingenuity. According to official estimates, Allied bombing principally by the British killed 305,000 German civilians and injured another 780,000.

The lingering question is: who can punish the victor in war, no matter how flagrant his crime? Edward Morris reviews from Nashville.

There can hardly be a more frustrating or thankless task than trying to impose a moral code on war, an institution which, by its very nature, feeds on its own excesses. Yet that is the job that A.C. Grayling, a professor of philosophy at the…
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If someone close to you were replaced by a doppelganger, one who looked and spoke exactly like your loved one, would you know, in your heart, that the person was an imposter? This question pervades Atmospheric Disturbances, Rivka Galchen’s inventive debut novel.

The story begins at the apartment of middle-aged New York psychiatrist Leo Liebenstein, the novel’s narrator. His young wife, Rema, a charming, beautiful Argentine with oft-mentioned “cornsilk hair,” has just walked through the door. Leo notes that she looks like Rema, she walks like Rema, she talks like Rema and her mannerisms are identical to Rema’s. But instantly, he knows—this woman is not his wife.  From that moment on, he refers to this ersatz Rema as the simulacrum.

Thus begins a journey both physical and psychological, as Leo embarks on a desperate search for his “missing” wife, scouring every location from the New York pastry shop where they first met to Argentina to Patagonia.

This journey is not a simple one; Galchen treats it as a puzzle, weaving in intriguing clues along the way. Also tied into the voyage is Leo’s patient Harvey, who believes he is a weather-controlling member of the Royal Academy of Meteorology (amusingly, he claims to receive messages on Page Six of the New York Post). As his search continues, Leo, who once tried to cure Harvey, incorporates his patient’s delusions (or are they?) into his own theories of Rema’s disappearance.

So, has the doctor become the insane one, or are his seemingly paranoid fantasies the true reality? And what, exactly, is the nature of reality? Galchen has crafted a smart, involving tale that keeps the reader guessing on these matters throughout. The novel seems an ideal book club pick, as its complex story allows for many interpretations and could likely spark heated debate.

But Atmospheric Disturbances is more than a brain-teasing mystery complete with cryptic dialogue, erudite sentence construction, charts, bizarre photos and visual-perception exercises. There is ultimately a very human side to the story, one which explores the nature of love and its permutations over time. Perhaps we can never really know our loved ones as well as we think we do, and maybe full trust in another (including in their very identity) is an impossibility.

If someone close to you were replaced by a doppelganger, one who looked and spoke exactly like your loved one, would you know, in your heart, that the person was an imposter? This question pervades Atmospheric Disturbances, Rivka Galchen’s inventive debut novel.

The story begins…

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At age four Joelle Fraser was smoking pot and drinking beer through a straw. A tow-headed free spirit, she roamed unchaperoned through the hippie-strewn streets of Sausalito, California, in the early ’70s, selling her watercolor paintings to strangers. As a teenager, she partied with her father’s 21-year-old girlfriend. Fraser’s experiences, recounted in her debut book, The Territory of Men, are the stuff of which unforgettable memoirs are made. Full of lively, honest prose that flows like poetry, the narrative of her life reads like an intimate conversation and is reminiscent of the work of Mary Karr and Lisa Michaels other gifted authors whose lives were shaped by hard-drinking, troubled parents with unconventional child-rearing styles. Fraser opens the book with the image of her pregnant, sweaty mother driving herself to the hospital windows down, hair flying while her father and his buddies smoke cigarettes, swig gin and sing California Dreamin’ in the back seat. Rowdy and a bit sad, the snapshot captures the essence of much of Fraser’s childhood. Set in northern California, the small towns of Oregon and the islands of Hawaii, Fraser’s story traces the events that shaped her restless spirit. Her mother leaves her father a likeable writer who works odd jobs and drinks away his dreams when Fraser is just a toddler. A steady stream of boyfriends and husbands follows, paving the way to Fraser’s understanding of relationships. Early on, she writes, I decided that it is always better to have a man around. With sharp candor, she tells about her own forays into love, from the awkward sweetness of a first kiss to the dull ache of a failed marriage. She finds herself drawn to violence, to prisons, to men who use her. And from her mother she learns how to leave. Still, Fraser writes about her parents and their choices with compassion and insight. The scenes involving her father are some of the most touching and graceful in the book. Without claiming to know all the answers, Fraser evocatively describes her mistakes, triumphs, disappointments and dreams. Her thoughts and feelings are beautifully rendered even when the portraits aren’t flattering. Ultimately, her vignettes fall into a larger pattern that resonates beyond her personal experiences. Full of truth, forgiveness and gentle introspection, The Territory of Men is an impressive first book from a promising young writer. Rebecca Denton is a copy editor and freelance writer in Nashville.

At age four Joelle Fraser was smoking pot and drinking beer through a straw. A tow-headed free spirit, she roamed unchaperoned through the hippie-strewn streets of Sausalito, California, in the early '70s, selling her watercolor paintings to strangers. As a teenager, she partied with her…
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In the shadow of Clinch Mountain in Scott County, Virginia, lies what is called Poor Valley. Out of this hardscrabble environment emerged the legendary musical pioneers the Carter family. A.P. (Alvin Pleasant) Carter, his wife Sara and her cousin Maybelle sang and played their way to fame and fortune, creating in many ways the basis for the entire American traditional, folk and country music industries.

In Will You Miss Me When I’m Gone?: The Carter Family and Their Legacy in American Music, documentary filmmaker Mark Zwonitzer teams up with veteran journalist Charles Hirshberg to capture the historic lives of the Carters, from the moment they were discovered by music producer and publisher Ralph Peer in the 1920s, through their groundbreaking careers as recording artists, to their deaths in the late 1970s. In between is an incredible tale of poverty, sudden celebrity and wealth, seminal recording dates, national radio exposure to a country mired in the Great Depression, unceasing concert performances in towns both small and large, appearances on the Grand Ole Opry and associations with musical greats like Jimmie Rodgers, Hank Williams, Chet Atkins, Roy Acuff and Elvis Presley.

There’s also an interesting profile of the young Johnny Cash, who eventually after a great deal of wailing and gnashing of teeth became daughter June’s third husband in the 1960s and has kept the family tradition going ever since. This volume is thoroughly researched, and the authors don’t stint on coverage of the Carter forebears, the details of their simple country life and the idiosyncrasies and squabbles that characterized, in particular, the lives of A.P. and Sara, who divorced fairly early on, yet continued working together for the sake of the music (and the money). The text paints intriguing portraits of all the major players but throws rays of especially revelatory light on A.P.’s brother Eck, who was not simply Mother Maybelle’s devoted husband but also a reliable and organized manager for his wife and a loving father to their singing daughters (June, Helen and Anita).

Music fans will be particularly fascinated with accounts of how A.P. in need of recording material scoured the countryside collecting folk and gospel songs from local citizens, tinkered with the words and melodies as necessary and then, innovator that he was (or scoundrel, depending on your point of view), parlayed his finds into copyrightable gems that netted him (and Peer) a king’s ransom in royalties. In the right place at the right time, the Carters brought to the world the spirit of Wildwood Flower, Keep on the Sunny Side and Will the Circle Be Unbroken, among many other classic tunes. This book is an essential work of musical Americana.

Aspiring musician Martin Brady writes on the arts.

In the shadow of Clinch Mountain in Scott County, Virginia, lies what is called Poor Valley. Out of this hardscrabble environment emerged the legendary musical pioneers the Carter family. A.P. (Alvin Pleasant) Carter, his wife Sara and her cousin Maybelle sang and played their…

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Mars has haunted the human imagination for millennia. From war god in the sky to home base of invading aliens, from canal-scarred elder world to desiccated rock, our sister planet has played many roles in the minds of artists and astronomers. Not surprisingly, when scientists discovered that an odd, fist-size meteorite found in Antarctica had been ejected from Mars during a long-ago comet strike and had crashed into Earth during the last Ice Age, they were as excited as children.

It takes talent to make this story both lucid and exciting. Kathy Sawyer, who began writing about space science for the Washington Post in 1986 (covering the Challenger shuttle disaster and its aftermath), skillfully juggles big-picture context and nitty-gritty details. Sawyer’s The Rock from Mars: A True Detective Story on Two Planets also details an aspect of the sciences that usually is hidden: the hard work, imagination, rivalry, adventure and even occasional danger.

The existence of carbon compounds in the meteorite led to a feverish search for clues to the early days of the red planet, which of course were the early days of the entire solar system. Did Mars once have thriving life forms? Could it possibly still have life? As clues, we now have 34 known Martian meteorites.

Sawyer captures the reader’s attention from the very first page, with the Saganesque majesty of her opening imagery the rock’s ejection from Mars and its eventual surrender to Earth’s gravity, the recent social evolution of Homo sapiens while the rock slowly inched back toward the surface, its final emergence into the province of human curiosity. The star of this book is the innocently wondering human brain. Despite rivalries, despite politics, most of the scientists in the story are driven by a passionate, almost devout curiosity that is eager to understand the connections that govern our cosmos, to find out our place in it which is another way of saying to find out who we are. Michael Sims, author of the critically acclaimed Adam’s Navel, has recently stolen time from science writing to edit Penguin’s The Annotated Archy and Mehitabel.

Mars has haunted the human imagination for millennia. From war god in the sky to home base of invading aliens, from canal-scarred elder world to desiccated rock, our sister planet has played many roles in the minds of artists and astronomers. Not surprisingly, when scientists…
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The people of two continents were ecstatic in 1858 when Queen Victoria sent President Buchanan the first official message via a cable under the Atlantic Ocean. The accomplishment was widely hailed as the greatest achievement in human history. What the public wasn’t told was that the queen’s three-sentence note of congratulations took more than 16 hours to arrive. And when the cable went dead a month later, its promoters were vilified. It wasn’t until eight frustrating years later that another cable was laid that worked, assuring the world that people thousands of miles apart really were only minutes away from each other.

In A Thread Across the Ocean: The Heroic Story of the Trans Atlantic Cable, top-ranking business historian John Steele Gordon superbly chronicles the heartaches and the successes of the feat and scrutinizes those responsible. Foremost among them was Cyrus Field, a paper merchant enthralled by the prospect of transoceanic linkage. Field didn’t waste time passing around a tin cup; instead, he cornered the wealthiest and persuaded them to back the idea. He told one affluent beagle breeder to imagine a huge dog stretching from England to the United States, adding that the venture is essentially just such a dog. If you pinch his tail in Liverpool, he’ll bark in New York. Field became the hands-on mastermind of the project, making more than 50 cross-Atlantic trips. He was seasick on every one of them, except on the final attempt, aboard a vessel five times as large as any other ship afloat. This was the Great Eastern, refitted to carry 2,600 miles of cable. The project was buffeted by technical, legal, financial and political setbacks. Gordon details how Field and his associates converted each reversal into a triumph during the torturous 12-year enterprise. A Thread Across the Ocean celebrates the vision and perseverance of the men who a century before the Internet was conceived created the first information highway underwater. Alan Prince teaches communications history at the University of Miami.

The people of two continents were ecstatic in 1858 when Queen Victoria sent President Buchanan the first official message via a cable under the Atlantic Ocean. The accomplishment was widely hailed as the greatest achievement in human history. What the public wasn't told was that…
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<b>A journey into India’s future</b> Ian McDonald’s faithful readership will be well rewarded with the publication of his new novel, <b>River of Gods</b>, which represents imaginative, extrapolative science fiction at its best. Already nominated for a Hugo Award, McDonald uses his latest work to transform the energy of today’s Indian economy and explore such familiar themes as man’s inhumanity to man and the limits of our imaginations.

Subtitled August 15, 2047 Happy Hundredth Birthday, India, <b>River of Gods</b> tells the stories of nine people whose actions will change the lives of the 1.5 billion inhabitants of the subcontinent. The novel begins with Shiv, a small-time gangster, dropping a woman’s body into the River Ganges in Varanasi (the city of Shiva). She is the unnamed victim of an ovular egg-harvesting operation gone wrong (as well as a stand-in for the crowded streets and unending hunger of India’s vast cities), whose death is about to lose any meaning it might have had. By the time we return to Shiv’s story and discover why the woman’s death was meaningless, the reader has been given a quick tour of India 40 years from now, as well as a glimpse of the U.S. and even outer space.

In this near-future world, artificial intelligences (AIs) above a certain complexity have been declared illegal by United Nations decree. AIs are valued for their many uses, but above that level the U.S. government fears AIs will outstrip their makers and perhaps destroy humanity. Mr. Nandha is a Krishnacop whose job is to enforce this law using software of his own to incapacitate or destroy the rogue AIs.

The survival of these high-level AIs who can be seen as symbols for any discriminated group is at the heart of the book. But on a broader level, this is an action-packed meditation on the future from an exciting and fresh angle. Science fiction readers should be happy to follow McDonald down the river of his imagination. <i>Gavin J. Grant runs Small Beer Press in Northampton, Massachusetts.</i>

<b>A journey into India's future</b> Ian McDonald's faithful readership will be well rewarded with the publication of his new novel, <b>River of Gods</b>, which represents imaginative, extrapolative science fiction at its best. Already nominated for a Hugo Award, McDonald uses his latest work to transform…

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<B>A captain’s taste of island life</B> Sebastian Junger first drew attention to Linda Greenlaw, then the captain of a swordfishing boat, in his 1997 bestseller, <I>The Perfect Storm</I>. Subsequently, Greenlaw penned her own popular book, the best-selling <I>The Hungry Ocean</I>. After 17 years of swordfishing, she returned to her home on Isle au Haut, Maine, to harvest lobsters. Her new memoir, <B>The Lobster Chronicles: Life on a Very Small Island</B>, spans one season of work on the tiny island, during which she lives with her parents and enlists her father, a retired steel company executive, as her crew of one. Although Greenlaw goes into near-technical detail about the history, methods, dangers and frustrations of lobstering, her real gift is vividly re-creating the characters and civic hubbub of a community that has (at last count) only 47 year-round residents. There’s Rita, the snoop, thief, seer and nostrum peddler; Victor, the peruser of mail-order bride videos; and the crafty but colossally inept handymen known as the Island Boys. The author doesn’t spare herself ridicule. Now 40 and admittedly still shopping for a mate, she wryly observes that she has returned to a place where there are only three single men two of whom are gay and the third her cousin.

Greenlaw also plumbs her evolving relationship with her parents, finding her father calm and reassuring and her mother bright, engaging and volatile, but something of a pain. The link with her mother strengthens, however, when the older woman falls seriously ill.

Even as she turns her gaze inland, Greenlaw remains alert to the beauty and hazards of the surrounding waters. To date, she observes, I have lost eleven personal friends in what can best be described as six separate showings of the ocean’s conscienceless temper.’ . . . I am often torn between wanting to know more, and wishing I did not know as much as I do. What Greenlaw does know and illuminate here with anecdotal precision is that chance and circumstance continue to shape her views, just as inexorably as the pounding sea shapes the contours of her beloved island.

<B>A captain's taste of island life</B> Sebastian Junger first drew attention to Linda Greenlaw, then the captain of a swordfishing boat, in his 1997 bestseller, <I>The Perfect Storm</I>. Subsequently, Greenlaw penned her own popular book, the best-selling <I>The Hungry Ocean</I>. After 17 years of swordfishing,…

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Abby Randolph’s life is forever altered by a chamber pot in Mameve Medwed’s How Elizabeth Barrett Browning Saved My Life. Reeling from a breakup and her mother’s death in an earthquake in India (where she was vacationing with her late-in-life lesbian lover), antiques-dealer Abby inherits the chamber pot without realizing there is anything unique about it. But a colleague’s inkling of its worth leads Abby to Antiques Roadshow, where an expert identifies it as belonging to the poetess of the book’s title. What Abby initially envisioned as an old pot is actually appraised for $75,000 and potentially could be sold for much more.

Inevitably, such a fortuitous windfall comes with complications. Shortly after being informed of her good fortune, Abby is sued over the ownership of the chamber pot by her mother’s lesbian lover’s children, one of whom just happens to be her ex-best friend and the other the ex-true love who broke her heart. Of course, the battle over the chamber pot becomes a struggle over things much larger as Abby wrestles with her past and fights for what she believes to be hers. Medwed touches on the pressures of being reared in an academic family (Abby’s father was a prestigious Harvard professor, and both academia and the Cambridge social circle surrounding it figure largely into the story), the deep wounds left by young love tainted by betrayal and our often profound relationships with inanimate objects. Nicely threaded through are literary allusions from Browning and others. What’s also particularly delightful about Medwed’s writing is her pace the story connects in a series of nodes before coming together in a satisfying conclusion. Though Abby herself can occasionally be grating (the novel is peppered with a few too many rhetorical questions and self-indulgent whining sessions for the protagonist to be wholly likeable), the story surrounding her is a lovely chronicle of the quest for ownership both of an object and of the self. Iris Blasi is a writer in New York City.

Abby Randolph's life is forever altered by a chamber pot in Mameve Medwed's How Elizabeth Barrett Browning Saved My Life. Reeling from a breakup and her mother's death in an earthquake in India (where she was vacationing with her late-in-life lesbian lover), antiques-dealer Abby inherits…
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In an age of whiny novels about 30-something singletons whose sole goal in life seems to be snagging a decent man, Must Love Dogs is a refreshing antidote. Yes, 40-year-old Sarah Hurlihy is edging back into dating after a particularly nasty divorce, and yes, she wants to meet the right man. But author Claire Cook flips the same tired story upside down, serving up a hilariously original tale about dating and its place in a modern woman’s life.

Sarah’s life centers around two things: her job as a preschool teacher and her family. Her overbearing Boston Irish siblings walk into her house without knocking to grill her on her love life and grumble about their own. But their efforts to set her up yield consistently gloomy results. A blind date to a family lobster bake ends in an exchange of profanity after her dopey date, all dressed up for the occasion in a sailor hat and shiny loafers, gets a little too familiar.

So sister Carol goes proactive, placing a want ad on Sarah’s behalf. Sarah halfheartedly juggles the responses, furtively donning a pink boa to boost her confidence before she calls a potential candidate. In truth, Sarah admits, she’d rather be watching Brady Bunch reruns and eating macaroni and cheese prepared with wine (a surprisingly good dish discovered after she runs out of milk).

Some of the men she meets are losers, a few aren’t bad and one is quite promising, but Sarah still must decide what it is she’s looking for in a relationship. Is it really as simple as placing an ad and insisting that her soul mate must love dogs? Cook’s previous novel, Ready to Fall, was well-received, partly for its innovative construction: the story was told completely through the main character’s e-mails. Must Love Dogs relies on no such device and doesn’t need it. Reading about Sarah Hurlihy’s travails is like talking to a comedic self-deprecating friend. Cook’s humor breezes through the pages as she details the perils and perks of plunging back into the dating scene. Amy Scribner is a writer in Washington, D.C.

In an age of whiny novels about 30-something singletons whose sole goal in life seems to be snagging a decent man, Must Love Dogs is a refreshing antidote. Yes, 40-year-old Sarah Hurlihy is edging back into dating after a particularly nasty divorce, and yes, she…

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