bookpagedev

Review by

Nancy Cote offers a tale with a more uplifting turn of events in Flip-Flops. It’s Mama’s day off and she and Penny are heading to the beach, but Penny is hesitant to leave her friends behind in the city. Besides, she has only one flip-flop and feels a bit like an unmatched flip-flop herself with no one to play with. At first she is bored, but soon she finds a friend and more uses than she could have ever imagined for her lonely flip-flop. Reviewed by Alice Cary.

Nancy Cote offers a tale with a more uplifting turn of events in Flip-Flops. It's Mama's day off and she and Penny are heading to the beach, but Penny is hesitant to leave her friends behind in the city. Besides, she has only one flip-flop…
Review by

The wild life Wild Discovery Guide to Your Cat: Understanding and Caring for the Tiger Within and Wild Discovery Guide to Your Dog: Understanding and Caring for the Wolf Within ($24.95, 1563318059) are the perfect gifts for pet lovers, but they offer something for everyone. The 300 superb photographs of dogs and cats in domestic life and in the wild provide visual delight for any age reader. For the student, the books offer clear, authoritative information for a school report. Would-be and new pet owners can learn everything they need to know in detailed instructions on how to select, care for, and understand dogs or cats. Author Margaret E. Lewis, Ph.

D., specializes in the behavior and evolution of carnivores and provides scientific information for dog and cat fanciers. In her introduction, Elizabeth Marshall, Thomas, anthropologist and author of popular books on dogs and cats, writes [this] new material with old wisdom . . . is a window on the natural world.

The wild life Wild Discovery Guide to Your Cat: Understanding and Caring for the Tiger Within and Wild Discovery Guide to Your Dog: Understanding and Caring for the Wolf Within ($24.95, 1563318059) are the perfect gifts for pet lovers, but they offer something for everyone.…

Review by

Love is a kind of warfare, Ovid wrote around 3 B.

C., and Good Peoples, the new novel by Marcus Major, is another in a two-millennia-long history of literary evidence. Rollicking, explicit at times, but deeply conservative at its core, the book is set in Lawndale, a tidy, mostly African-American and Hispanic neighborhood outside Philadelphia. Myles, a romantic and good-natured schoolteacher meets Marisa, a whip- smart and ambitious lawyer/media personality of Afro-Cuban descent at a party thrown by their mutual friend Jackie. Myles, celibate for the better part of a year, falls instantly in love, but Marisa is cautious, even a bit jaded, and the book follows the sometimes rackety course of their romance. On the sidelines cheering the couple on are Myles’s smart-cracking brother Amir, Myles’s friend Carlos, husband of the match-making Jackie, and Winston, Myles’s adorably clueless bulldog. Winston is the perfect alter ego for Myles both are a bit fat, a bit rumpled, and so pantingly eager that the reader wants good things to happen for them both. Whether they’ll happen for Myles with Marisa is the book’s big question. Marisa is a more complex and contradictory character than Myles, capable of high hilarity and leaden seriousness, warmth and soul-withering coldness, sweetness and cruelty. ( Some-times, too often, you’re not a man to me, she tells Myles during a particularly nasty argument). Orphaned early in life, she’s both a driven career woman and a scared little girl who wanders into Myles’s apartment in her pajamas looking for comfort. The consensus of her friends is that she’s a lady who needs to be worked on subtly. When she inevitably splits in a huff, Myles is warned not to follow her. Give her a chance to miss you, advises Carlos, even as pregnant Jackie arrives at Marisa’s house to warn her not to pass on the cuddlesome Myles. So persuasive and happily gravid is Jackie that you can almost hear someone whispering in the background, Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated. One of the pleasures of the book is its snappy dialogue; the characters are articulate without seeming unnatural, and the sex scenes are erotic without being over the top. But as mentioned, the real message of Good Peoples is sometimes alarmingly retro. Sure, Marisa can have her career, but doesn’t she really want to be a good little self-effacing wife and mother? Major is rather blunt on this point. Whoever heard of a woman who didn’t want to get married? Myles yells at Marisa at one point. Whoever heard of a woman who didn’t want to have children? Marisa’s comeback is appropriately devastating. Still, the reader does wonder if this fiery and enigmatic Latina can be completely domesticated. We wonder if she’ll weather marriage and motherhood with her identity and ambitions intact or disappear into what Sylvia Plath called the totalitarian state of airless wifedom. For that, the reader probably will have to wait for a sequel. Arlene McKanic is a reviewer in Jamaica, New York.

Love is a kind of warfare, Ovid wrote around 3 B.

C., and Good Peoples, the new novel by Marcus Major, is another in a two-millennia-long history of literary evidence. Rollicking, explicit at times, but deeply conservative at its core, the book…

Review by

The wild life Wild Discovery Guide to Your Cat: Understanding and Caring for the Tiger Within and Wild Discovery Guide to Your Dog: Understanding and Caring for the Wolf Within ($24.95, 1563318059) are the perfect gifts for pet lovers, but they offer something for everyone. The 300 superb photographs of dogs and cats in domestic life and in the wild provide visual delight for any age reader. For the student, the books offer clear, authoritative information for a school report. Would-be and new pet owners can learn everything they need to know in detailed instructions on how to select, care for, and understand dogs or cats. Author Margaret E. Lewis, Ph.

D., specializes in the behavior and evolution of carnivores and provides scientific information for dog and cat fanciers. In her introduction, Elizabeth Marshall, Thomas, anthropologist and author of popular books on dogs and cats, writes [this] new material with old wisdom . . . is a window on the natural world.

The wild life Wild Discovery Guide to Your Cat: Understanding and Caring for the Tiger Within and Wild Discovery Guide to Your Dog: Understanding and Caring for the Wolf Within ($24.95, 1563318059) are the perfect gifts for pet lovers, but they offer something for everyone.…

Review by

The modern-day nation of Israel is 52 years old this year. That may not mean much to those in the pre-50 age set, but it’s astounding when we consider the lapse of time since the previous Jewish state and the constant boil of ethnic and religious fervor in the region.

Jerusalem Vigil by Brock and Bodie Thoene (prononced Tay’nee) opens on May 14, 1948, the day Israel’s statehood was declared. The novel covers a period of only five days, exploring those first difficult days from the angle of each different ethnic group involved. Jerusalem Vigil initiates the Zion Legacy series, projected to be six titles, each of which will delineate another few days or weeks in this dramatic birth-of-a-nation story. This follows two earlier series, Zion Chronicles and Zion Covenant, begun in 1986 and now numbering 32 titles and 6.5 million books in print. The Thoenes’ fiction has garnered seven Gold Medallion Awards from the Christian Booksellers Association over the years.

How did the Thoenes get started on this epic writing venture? The two grew up together in Bakersfield, California, married when they were sophomores in college, and after graduation, went to work in Hollywood as researchers and screenwriters for John Wayne’s Batjac Productions. Their first book together, Gates of Zion, originated as a screenplay to be produced with the makers of the movie Chariots of Fire while they were working at Batjac. In fact, it was John Wayne who encouraged them to create the Zion Chronicles series and who called the birth of the state of Israel the Jewish Alamo. When I talked with the husband-and-wife writing team, I asked why they had chosen the word Zion to title all their series. Also, I wondered, how can they create another good story about the same tensions in the same setting? Brock explained that Zion best expresses both the biblical and prophetic aspects of the city of Jerusalem. In Old Testament times, Zion was the name of the fortress conquered by King David prior to the first establishment of Jerusalem. The name connotes an incredible continuity. No other state has gone out of existence and come back centuries later. The Pope has called the establishment of Israel the most significant event of the 20th century, Brock reminded me.

In Jerusalem Vigil the Thoenes present the concentrated chaos of the first five days following the British evacuation mandated by the United Nations to establish a Jewish homeland. Even as the British were on the road to Tel Aviv, Jews and Arabs were positioning and arming themselves for the great land grab in the Old City. The book definitely has a cinematic flavor as scenes shift among the various characters, including Moshe Sachar, commander of forces defending the Jewish sector, and his wife, Rachel, survivor of German prison camps; Ahkmed al-Malik, Arab demolitions expert; and the Mother Superior of the Notre Dame Hospice just outside the city walls.

How did the Thoenes capture the detail that make the scenes so real? The two have gone to Israel time and again to talk with participants in the conflict, many of whom were young teens in 1948. They have researched customs, buildings, and language. Both Hebrew and Arabic are frequently used in dialogue.

We wanted readers to know what happened on an hour-by-hour basis. Although we have created some characters, everything in the book actually happened, Bodie said. In Jerusalem Vigil they provide three maps to help locate the action of the many scenes.

In describing how they write as a team, Brock noted that he is the chief researcher (he has degrees in history and education). You never really get to the end of research. No circumstance is wasted. He develops the outline of events for the novel; then Bodie, the journalist, develops characters and dialogue. When she has finished, Brock reads the scenes back to her since she is dyslexic. At this point she becomes more editor than author.

Now the Thoenes’ three children are involved in all their writing projects. Sons John and Luke have written nine books of their own and collaborate to produce audio versions of their parents’ books (read by the Royal Shakespeare Theatre Company). The Thoenes’ daughter, Rachel, abridges the text for the audios. Four grandchildren, one born the day of our conversation, are a bit young yet, but no doubt there will be stories for them to research and share as well.

Meanwhile, Jerusalem Vigil promises meticulously researched, dramatic reading for today’s historical fiction fans.

Etta Wilson is an agent and reviewer.

The modern-day nation of Israel is 52 years old this year. That may not mean much to those in the pre-50 age set, but it's astounding when we consider the lapse of time since the previous Jewish state and the constant boil of ethnic and…

Review by

Bookstores may find it difficult to shelve The Kabbalah of Food: Conscious Eating for Physical, Emotional, and Spiritual Health. Should it go in Health or Religion? Rabbi Nilton Bonder’s point is that the two subjects should not be separated; and if they are, it is to our cost.

Kabbalah is the name given to the general body of Jewish mystical activity. Concerned less with law than with investigating the essence of the Divine, it is controversial and little known outside the work of scholars, rabbis, and practicing kabbalists (the latter are usually Hasidic Jews). Incidentally (and curiously), Kabbalah is enjoying a moment of glory in the media thanks to Madonna, Sarah Bernhardt, and Roseanne. Bonder argues that our eating habits are symbolic of our attitudes toward “receiving nourishment on many levels, not just the physical.” To be connected to the flow of life, one must “follow an outer code in each and every exchange” to ensure a healthy interaction between the self and what it takes in. The code will discipline us to pay close attention to not only what we eat, but when we eat, where we eat, and why we eat. Given that the majority of people are starved for physical, emotional, and spiritual health, The Kabbalah of Food may result in a large, and quite healthy body of followers. It is a rich source of complex but practical insights into achieving holistic health. L’Chaim.

Reviewed by Joanna Brichetto.

Bookstores may find it difficult to shelve The Kabbalah of Food: Conscious Eating for Physical, Emotional, and Spiritual Health. Should it go in Health or Religion? Rabbi Nilton Bonder's point is that the two subjects should not be separated; and if they are, it is…

Review by

For the record The Guinness Book of Records, the fact-filled annual compilation of the world’s superlatives, has decided to usher in the new millennium in a big way. Guinness World Records 2000, Millennium Edition is a dramatically different book than its predecessors. A large format hardcover, its silver-coated binding and raised lettering make an immediate visual impact. Inside, a lavish, full-color design, heavy on photos and light on text, is a browser’s delight. It contains not just updates of existing world records, but new ones as well, in areas such as extreme sports, technology, and the Internet. Whether it’s used as a reference guide to settle friendly wagers, or left casually lying around for family and friends to thumb through, Guinness World Records 2000 is sure to be a favorite in countless households.

For the record The Guinness Book of Records, the fact-filled annual compilation of the world's superlatives, has decided to usher in the new millennium in a big way. Guinness World Records 2000, Millennium Edition is a dramatically different book than its predecessors. A large format…

Review by

The eyes have it Mother’s birthday? Nephew’s graduation? Second cousin twice removed’s wedding? If you need help selecting a gift for any occasion, you’ve come to the right place. What gift is always the right color, the right size, and the right price? Why, books, of course! Do you know someone who is so trendy that when they go shopping, they think their clothes are out of style before they can get them to the cash register? Laugh and learn with Holly Brubach’s A Dedicated Follower of Fashion (Phaidon, $29.95, 071483887X). A collection of 27 essays published during the past two decades, Brubach’s writings offer insight on trends, designers, models, and photographers. There are chapters dedicated to men, shoes, visionaries, and plus-sizes. Luckily, the photographs featured were carefully selected, so some of fashion’s . . . er, more outrageous phases are kept within the text. It is a witty, educated observation that isn’t muddled into tedium or grandiosity. Brubach takes a scenic route from Paris to New York, with plenty of stops along the way.

One hundred and five years ago, a subtitle reading An Illustrated Monthly was added to the masthead of National Geographic. Since then, photographs featured in the magazine have told stories that reflect our world and the times in which we live. Beginning with those early photographs, six authors have compiled an era-by-era account of the 20th century in National Geographic Photographs: The Milestones (National Geographic Society, $50, 0792275209). Often working in rigorous or rudimentary settings, many of the photographers featured are true pioneers of photojournalism. Look on the wedding portrait of a late 19th-century Zulu couple; observe the conditions of an early 20th-century Mexican cigarette factory; visit Lappland, New York, the Arctic, and scores of other places and events that were hallmarks of the past century. Very often, photographers would return to a previous site with mixed results; progress is evident in many of these revisits, while other photographs reflect areas that remain untouched by time.

If breathtaking scenery and colorful history excites someone on your gift list, you can’t do much better than Scotland. Checkmark Books has captured the majesty and mystery of this gorgeous country in Heritage of Scotland: A Cultural History of Scotland and Its People ($29.95, 06003552609). Author Nathaniel Harris’s enormous undertaking covers everything from Scotland’s landscape to its literary offerings. Beautiful artwork and photographs are featured alongside an abundance of information about Scottish people and their traditions. And yes, clans, kilts, and bagpipes are included, but readers will soon discover there is so much more! Visit the Highland Games, look at priceless works of art, learn the complex linguistic history of the Scottish people, observe the country’s most famous structures, many dating back to prehistoric times. Heritage of Scotland is a great item for history buffs and anyone with Scottish roots.

It’s a classic dilemma: You’re standing in the video store, thinking, What’s that movie from the 1940s, the one where John Wayne plays a naval officer and has an affair with a nurse, played by Donna Reed? This dilemma is easily resolved with VideoHound’s War Movies: Classic Conflict on Film. Mike Mayo has compiled and arranged over 200 war movies according to the war depicted. This guide includes many documentaries and overlooked films, like The Fighting Sullivans and Come and See. There are sidebars profiling famous actors, listings of full movie credits, and 200 photographs to peruse. Mayo provides commentary and synopsis for each film, mentioning the controversies and histories surrounding some of Hollywood’s most powerful movies. Amid trivia and quotes, Mayo is kind enough to include a See Also section for each film, for moviewatchers who are interested in other films that are similar in content, direction, or have the same stars . . . just in case your first choice has been rented out!

The eyes have it Mother's birthday? Nephew's graduation? Second cousin twice removed's wedding? If you need help selecting a gift for any occasion, you've come to the right place. What gift is always the right color, the right size, and the right price? Why, books,…

Review by

The Inn at Lake Devine is a looming anachronism, a New England WASP character all its own. It reveals itself in pristine white clapboards, rolling mint green lawns reflected in a mountain lake, and porches filled with Adirondack chairs, sat in by the right sort. And at this inn, a remnant of the old order, Elinor Lipman sets her latest gentle social satire/romance. The story is a yellowed snapshot of the social upheaval of the Ô60s and early Ô70s , a coming of age portrait in a land of plenty and prejudice. Natalie Marx is a sharp, sensitive teenager growing up in a tight-knit Jewish family. One year her mother receives correspondence from a Vermont inn that she had queried about summer rates. The note concludes: “Our guests who feel most comfortable here, and return year after year, are Gentiles.” Natalie’s parents renounce but ignore this blatant anti-Semitism, but Natalie becomes fixated on the affront. She asks her father, “Do you think they’ve seen the The Diary of Anne Frank?” The family decides instead to rent a cabin across from the Inn on Lake Devine for the next few summers. On one of these vacations, at the instigation of Natalie and her father, the family adopts another name and travels to the other side of the lake to inquire in person about vacancies. The Inn seems an ideal place for a healing experiment; they need to prove to themselves that people are generally decent, if only to one’s face. The following summer, Natalie discovers that her camp mate is going with her family to the Inn, and she manipulates her way into an invitation. Now she will infiltrate the Inn’s halls as herself, and encounter the monster. Lipman uses an oblique, subtle wit that pins emotions down with a glob of Blu-Tak instead of a nail. Natalie’s search for answers to unanswerable questions moves along with an elegant dignity; as she grows up, her fate seems bound to a place and issues that she rearranges with grace and compassion, finally finding peace in their patterns. At the end, the story surprises that it has finished, that there isn’t more to say. Leaving the reader wistful for eternal justice and a conquering love is perhaps the subtlest move of all.

Reviewed by Deanna Larson.

The Inn at Lake Devine is a looming anachronism, a New England WASP character all its own. It reveals itself in pristine white clapboards, rolling mint green lawns reflected in a mountain lake, and porches filled with Adirondack chairs, sat in by the right sort.…

Review by

Bring together a few people in a defined setting and sooner or later you have conflict. It doesn’t matter if it’s an old-age or new-age workplace. Any workplace will have at least a few people, some making judgments about the performance of others, some giving others instruction or direction. There will be conflicts, sometimes of a nature that have to change people’s relationships. Finding as positive as possible solutions to conflict is the subject of Getting to Resolution, by mediator and attorney Stewart Levine. If more people followed Levine’s advice, the world would be a better place. There would be less litigation and, more importantly, less lingering bitterness in the aftermath of conflict.

Levine’s step-by-step approach to resolution often involves a mediator, but at its heart it requires the people involved to face each other and to air their grievances. There has to be an authentic desire to reach a resolution that can be accepted by both sides. This is not easy. Because of that difficulty, people usually hide behind professionals, usually lawyers, to be their advocates, and they turn to others, usually courts, to resolve their disputes. The author takes a basically optimistic view of people, “Taking care of others is natural for human beings.” Such optimism is necessary in order to get people to confront problems with others head-on and come out with two winners, or at least two people who feel they received a fair shake and are ready to move on with their lives.

As a mediator, Levine brings a useful sense of perspective to the disputes he helps resolve. People in the heat of a dispute often think nothing is more important than their problem. He writes, “Often the essential part of resolution is reframing the perceived problem into something else. Asking people to look back from their Ôdeathbed’ is a good way to get into the discussion.” Though at times repetitive, Levine makes a solid case for a preferable path toward resolving problems. The methods can be applied to dissolving a business partnership or a marriage.

Reviewed by Neal Lipschutz.

Bring together a few people in a defined setting and sooner or later you have conflict. It doesn't matter if it's an old-age or new-age workplace. Any workplace will have at least a few people, some making judgments about the performance of others, some giving…

Review by

Women’s Work Maybe someday there won’t be a genre of women in business books. Maybe someday the experiences of women in the business world won’t be all that different from men’s experiences. For now, though, the shelves groan with women’s biz books that tellingly share one characteristic: They all deal with women’s struggles to triumph over obstacles strewn into their financial and career paths by human biology, corporate tradition, and, of course, men. This month, we look at four new releases in this still-rich vein.

Anne E. Francis probes an especially thorny phenomenon in The Daughter Also Rises: How Women Overcome Obstacles and Advance in the Family-Owned Business (Rudi Publishing, $16.95, 0945213387). This is not a book of caricature. It shows, among other truths, that Dad does not have to be Archie Bunker to stand in the way of his little girl’s success at the family company. In fact, sometimes a father’s (or mother’s) best intentions may be just the problem, trapping the adult daughter in a childlike workplace dependency.

Francis, a business consultant with a doctorate in social work, draws on her experience of counseling families on the broad spectrum of issues business and (often deeply) personal that arise when blood and business mix. Through cogent, real-world examples and incisive analysis, she sheds light on topics that might seem unfathomable and might seem unrelated to the running of a business. It turns out, for instance, that a mother’s repressed envy of her daughter’s success, and a father’s unspoken discomfort in the presence of his adolescent daughter long ago, can have plenty to do with business when families work together.

The author’s language is refreshingly free of psychobabble, taking on daunting psychological subject matter with admirable clarity. For ambitious women and the people who love them, The Daughter Also Rises offers a roadmap to uncharted territory.

It has been argued before that women have their own way of doing business, distinct from the structures of traditional, male-dominated corporate life. Bearing out that argument are many of the extraordinary life stories sketched out in Conversations with Uncommon Women: Insights from Women Who’ve Risen Above Life’s Challenges to Achieve Extraordinary Success (Amacom, $22.95, 0814405207), by Ellie Wymard.

Of the 100 women we meet here, some are famous (former Texas Governor Ann Richards, syndicated columnist Ellen Goodman, Ruth Fertel of Ruth’s Chris Steak House), others lesser-known. But they’re all in business, whether the business is working behind the scenes in a political campaign or running an arts organization or starting a small business on the kitchen table.

As Wymard’s women stretch the bounds of what we normally think of as business, they puncture stereotypes along the way. There’s a surprise on nearly every page. When we meet Mary Agee, who gained brief and unwanted fame some years ago as the female executive whose romantic involvement with the CEO led to chaos at Bendix Corp., we don’t read some Oprah story of how she has personally grown from the experience. What Mary Agee does these days is not about Mary Agee; it’s about making a difference in the lives of troubled women. Productively, without fanfare and without taking sides in the abortion debate, the foundation she runs helps women cope with unexpected pregnancies.

Wymard vividly sketches the turning points in many of these women’s lives. In one portrait, for instance, we see successful ad exec Kip Tiernan stopped dead in her tracks in a church aisle, suddenly uttering Holy something (not a word one says in church): It’s not a prayer; it’s an epiphany, after which she is destined to spend the rest of her life as a gadfly activist on behalf of Boston’s homeless.

The author also offers trenchant insights on how women run organizations. One female CEO tells Wymard she wishes she could be tougher on some employees, but senses that she is expected to have a more collaborative style of management because of her gender. People think I’m nice, this executive says, and I’m not sure that’s true. They don’t give me any choice! Kathleen Neville’s Internal Affairs: The Abuse of Power, Sexual Harassment, and Hypocrisy in the Workplace (McGraw-Hill, $24.95, 0071342567) takes us to a darker corner of the working world. It’s a little hard to believe that a book like this needed to be written, almost a decade after the nationwide sexual-harassment-sensitivity stand-down brought on by the Clarence Thomas-Anita Hill hearings. Yet here we are on the cusp of a new millennium, and women can’t be assured they won’t be accosted by a creep while they work. Nor that the creep won’t be the boss.

Neville, an educator, arbitrator, and expert on sexual harassment, has spent a lot of time getting inside the heads of victims, harassers, corporate officials, and others affected by harassment cases. Her horror stories of actual cases drive home a point that won’t be lost on senior managers who think it can’t happen in my shop it can happen, no matter how much camaraderie your employees seem to enjoy, no matter how upstanding a guy your scoutmaster-father-of-three-EVP-for-marketing may seem to be, no matter what boilerplate language you have put in your employee handbook about your supposedly zero-tolerance policy on workplace harassment.

Equally valuable are the detailed composite scenarios that Neville presents in order to explain the varying moral and social perspectives that come into play in harassment cases. The book is like a series of role-playing exercises, inviting readers to see things, just briefly, from the point of view of the board of directors (who may consider it more cost-effective to pay off claims than to lose a valued top exec); the competing lawyers (who tend to spring unwelcome surprises on both adversaries and clients in the course of the settlement process); the victim (often tormented by self-doubt about the incidents); and the harasser (who may be a calculating predator in the corner office or may be Lennie from the mail room, who figures the girls upstairs appreciate being told they’re kinda hot).

In these scenarios, the author does not address the possibility of false harassment claims by vindictive employees. (It would be interesting to know whether that omission reflects a partisan stance on her part or the fact that, in her experience, such claims simply don’t happen.) Still, Neville sheds light where there has mostly been heat in the past, moving beyond battle-of-the-sexes polemics to convey real understanding about how sexual harassment happens and how companies can prevent it. Internal Affairs is a comprehensive and eye-opening primer on a subject that today’s corporate honchos wish away at their peril.

Enough about women at work what’s a lady to do with her hard-earned dough? For starters, don’t let some piggish man get his mitts on it. Heidi Evans offers that advice in How to Hide Money from Your Husband . . . and Other Time-Honored Ways to Build a Nest Egg: The Best Kept Secret of a Good Marriage (Simon and Schuster, $20, 0684841878). This is an unabashedly one-sided book. Evans says men are past masters at hiding money from women, whether the purpose is to finance secret affairs or to keep a wife from getting part of the marital estate in a divorce. It’s high time, she argues, that women play the same game.

More intriguingly, Evans finds that women have been hiding money from their husbands since time immemorial. A more than adequate amateur anthropologist, she delves into the unrecorded history of women’s home lives, uncovering stories of women who spent lifetimes building secret, five-figure nest eggs. Some wives do it to protect themselves in shaky marriages. Others do it to protect the feckless men they love from their own bad habits.

The book presents plenty of cautionary tales about women who trusted their cheating husbands too much or too long, until divorce brought financial ruin. There are stories of depressingly mercenary men as well as women. But the most interesting relationships chronicled here are the ones in which a little financial secrecy really has been the key to a strong marriage, enabling the woman to feel a measure of control over her life and providing a slush fund from which the whole family benefits. How to Hide Money is an eye-opening look at how money and power are intertwined in a marriage, and how women can hold onto their share of both.

Briefly noted: Even in today’s booming economy, shocking numbers of Americans still carry crippling credit-card balances and other installment debts that can leave them feeling financially trapped. Slash Your Debt: Save Money and Secure Your Future, by debt counselor Gerri Detweiler and writers Marc Eisenson and Nancy Castleman, offers a concise and understandable roadmap for getting out of the money pit.

In Generations at Work: Managing the Clash of Veterans, Boomers, Xers, and Nexters in Your Workplace (Amacom, $25, 0814404804), authors Ron Zemke, Claire Raines, and Bob Filipczak address the conflicting generational values to be found in any large group of employees. And they look to the future, predicting that today’s adolescent Nexters will come full circle, tending to share more values in common with their 60-to-80-year-old Veteran elders than with any social cohorts in-between.

Journalist E. Thomas Wood is an editor with the Champs-Elysees.com family of European language-and-culture magazines.

Women's Work Maybe someday there won't be a genre of women in business books. Maybe someday the experiences of women in the business world won't be all that different from men's experiences. For now, though, the shelves groan with women's biz books that tellingly share…
Review by

The eyes have it Mother’s birthday? Nephew’s graduation? Second cousin twice removed’s wedding? If you need help selecting a gift for any occasion, you’ve come to the right place. What gift is always the right color, the right size, and the right price? Why, books, of course! Do you know someone who is so trendy that when they go shopping, they think their clothes are out of style before they can get them to the cash register? Laugh and learn with Holly Brubach’s A Dedicated Follower of Fashion (Phaidon, $29.95, 071483887X). A collection of 27 essays published during the past two decades, Brubach’s writings offer insight on trends, designers, models, and photographers. There are chapters dedicated to men, shoes, visionaries, and plus-sizes. Luckily, the photographs featured were carefully selected, so some of fashion’s . . . er, more outrageous phases are kept within the text. It is a witty, educated observation that isn’t muddled into tedium or grandiosity. Brubach takes a scenic route from Paris to New York, with plenty of stops along the way.

One hundred and five years ago, a subtitle reading An Illustrated Monthly was added to the masthead of National Geographic. Since then, photographs featured in the magazine have told stories that reflect our world and the times in which we live. Beginning with those early photographs, six authors have compiled an era-by-era account of the 20th century in National Geographic Photographs: The Milestones (National Geographic Society, $50, 0792275209). Often working in rigorous or rudimentary settings, many of the photographers featured are true pioneers of photojournalism. Look on the wedding portrait of a late 19th-century Zulu couple; observe the conditions of an early 20th-century Mexican cigarette factory; visit Lappland, New York, the Arctic, and scores of other places and events that were hallmarks of the past century. Very often, photographers would return to a previous site with mixed results; progress is evident in many of these revisits, while other photographs reflect areas that remain untouched by time.

If breathtaking scenery and colorful history excites someone on your gift list, you can’t do much better than Scotland. Checkmark Books has captured the majesty and mystery of this gorgeous country in Heritage of Scotland: A Cultural History of Scotland and Its People. Author Nathaniel Harris’s enormous undertaking covers everything from Scotland’s landscape to its literary offerings. Beautiful artwork and photographs are featured alongside an abundance of information about Scottish people and their traditions. And yes, clans, kilts, and bagpipes are included, but readers will soon discover there is so much more! Visit the Highland Games, look at priceless works of art, learn the complex linguistic history of the Scottish people, observe the country’s most famous structures, many dating back to prehistoric times. Heritage of Scotland is a great item for history buffs and anyone with Scottish roots.

It’s a classic dilemma: You’re standing in the video store, thinking, What’s that movie from the 1940s, the one where John Wayne plays a naval officer and has an affair with a nurse, played by Donna Reed? This dilemma is easily resolved with VideoHound’s War Movies: Classic Conflict on Film (Visible Ink, $19.95, 1578590892). Mike Mayo has compiled and arranged over 200 war movies according to the war depicted. This guide includes many documentaries and overlooked films, like The Fighting Sullivans and Come and See. There are sidebars profiling famous actors, listings of full movie credits, and 200 photographs to peruse. Mayo provides commentary and synopsis for each film, mentioning the controversies and histories surrounding some of Hollywood’s most powerful movies. Amid trivia and quotes, Mayo is kind enough to include a See Also section for each film, for moviewatchers who are interested in other films that are similar in content, direction, or have the same stars . . . just in case your first choice has been rented out!

The eyes have it Mother's birthday? Nephew's graduation? Second cousin twice removed's wedding? If you need help selecting a gift for any occasion, you've come to the right place. What gift is always the right color, the right size, and the right price? Why, books,…

Review by

While we nod our heads at positive examples to emulate, we all know the 9-to-5 world doesn’t always allow us to practice enlightened work habits. That’s where When Smart People Work for Dumb Bosses by William Lundin, Ph.

D. and Kathleen Lundin comes in. It features dispatches from the dark side of the office, where dictatorial bosses break people’s spirits and shoddy management practices dominate. The authors write, “. . . dumbness at work deserves as serious a study as smartness.” What’s offered here is a host of testimonials by employees to the wrongheaded policies of their superiors. After each case study, the authors offer a short analysis of the negative dynamics at play. Authors William Lundin and Kathleen Lundin, who are consultants and the founders of Worklife Productions, roam across a host of industries to uncover dysfunctional scenarios. They document the resulting downside when today’s management trends don’t work, from the use of teams to employee empowerment to flatter hierarchies. They also ruminate about why some people stay in bad work situations for long periods of time. Sometimes the only answer is to move on.

Reviewed by Neal Lipschutz.

While we nod our heads at positive examples to emulate, we all know the 9-to-5 world doesn't always allow us to practice enlightened work habits. That's where When Smart People Work for Dumb Bosses by William Lundin, Ph.

D. and Kathleen Lundin…

Sign Up

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

Trending Features