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What would it take to change your life and begin again with a fresh start? Courage? Tenacity? Money? That’s the dilemma facing Free Meeker in April Henry’s Learning to Fly. Free, a 19-year-old high school dropout, is an unlikely heroine with her shaved head, nose ring and tattoo. The daughter of aging hippies, she fantasizes about having an idealized normal family. As a child she yearned for the kind of conventional home life you see on television or in Good Housekeeping, with a traditional mother and father who would never name their two daughters Free and Moon.

Free’s dreary existence in Medford, Oregon, is changed forever when she’s involved in a deadly 52-car collision. The accident literally and figuratively knocks her out of her Birkenstocks. Although slightly injured, she inadvertently leaves the scene of the accident with a bag containing a great deal of money in untraceable bills, money that could finance a fresh start. Presumed dead in the collision, Free changes her appearance, assumes a new identity and moves to a different city. Unconvinced that the money was destroyed in the fiery accident, the owner wants it back and is willing to kill to get it. Free’s dream of a new life comes crashing down as she is hunted by two very dangerous individuals for two very different reasons. Events conspire to bring the three of them together in an explosive climax.

Henry’s characters are complex and intriguing, including a shrewd and, at times, sympathetic career criminal and a sadistic, dimwitted brute who works in a diaper factory. The author is especially adept at depicting Free’s pot-smoking parents and their hippie lifestyle. With bare feet planted firmly in their bohemian past, they are alternately humorous and pathetic with their tie-dyed attitudes, erratic parenting skills and conspiracy theories. Henry, a native Oregonian, selects verdant Portland as her locale and creates fast-paced and harrowing action. In Learning to Fly, a departure from the author’s popular Claire Montrose mystery series, she has produced an entertaining thriller that explores the poignant theme of what it takes to create a better life and the price you may have to pay to live your dreams. C. L. Ross reads, writes and reviews in Pismo Beach, California.

What would it take to change your life and begin again with a fresh start? Courage? Tenacity? Money? That's the dilemma facing Free Meeker in April Henry's Learning to Fly. Free, a 19-year-old high school dropout, is an unlikely heroine with her shaved head, nose…
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Bigelow has two obsessions: the weather and a woman. Sent by the Weather Bureau to establish an observatory in early-boomtown, pre-WWI Anchorage, he is determined to prove his original meteorological theory: that a giant current of air sweeps in a circular fashion from the poles to the equator and back again. Pushing this goal to a secondary position in his consciousness is Bigelow’s infatuation with an Aleut woman who lives a solitary and silent life. He follows her home from the general store one fall day, and a relationship begins.

Because the woman never speaks, Bigelow does not know her name or her history. Her body language is also mysterious, composed of straightforward stares that reveal no emotion, coupled with equally straightforward sex. Intercourse becomes central to their relationship, which quickly cements into an unvarying pattern. Bigelow arrives with an animal for dinner. The Aleut woman prepares the food. They eat. They have sex. She takes a bath while Bigelow watches, after which he goes home to sleep.

This pattern continues through the winter and into the spring, until one day the woman vanishes without a trace. In the months that follow, Bigelow struggles to remain afloat, weighted down by her absence, a loss exacerbated by the harshness of his surroundings: rough men, extreme weather, an unbeautiful city. Harrison cunningly weaves his despair into the bleak landscape so that each echoes the other. As she did in two previous works of fiction (The Binding Chair, Poison), Kathryn Harrison thoroughly immerses the reader in a world forever out of reach. She has a firm grasp of the intricacies of early 20th century weather prediction as well as the story of Anchorage’s past. The result is both an historical education and a literary entanglement, fulfilling readers on numerous levels by the time they reach the last page. Susanna Baird is a writer living in Brookline, Massachusetts.

Bigelow has two obsessions: the weather and a woman. Sent by the Weather Bureau to establish an observatory in early-boomtown, pre-WWI Anchorage, he is determined to prove his original meteorological theory: that a giant current of air sweeps in a circular fashion from the poles…
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For motivational speaker and self-help guru Judith Wright, creating a luxuriant life depends on something far more important than conspicuous material consumption. In The One Decision: Make the Single Choice that Will Lead to a Life of MORE, Wright outlines a plan for realizing your heart’s deepest desires, which she describes as the greater MORE. To find more in life, she says, people must make a single commitment a life stand or One Decision. She leads readers through a 10-faceted prism, looking at the key qualities of adventure, desire, decision, truth, heart, presence, quest, keys to the kingdom, allies and the good fight then follows up with a 30-day plan to guide readers toward making the One Decision to lead a more meaningful life. Wright makes a compelling case that a life of more is about being alive, conscious, engaged. It’s not about being perfect. . . . It is a constant state of becoming more me.

For motivational speaker and self-help guru Judith Wright, creating a luxuriant life depends on something far more important than conspicuous material consumption. In The One Decision: Make the Single Choice that Will Lead to a Life of MORE, Wright outlines a plan for realizing…
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In his moving, funny and compulsively readable second novel, The Book of Joe, Jonathan Tropper proves that while you can go home again, actually doing so can be colossally upsetting to all involved.

Joe Goffman is a rich one-book novelist living in New York. He gained his wealth and the unmitigated hatred of his small Connecticut hometown by skewering it unmercifully in his best-selling coming-of-age novel. That’s fine with Joe, since he hadn’t planned on going back, but when his estranged father lapses into a coma, he finds himself heading home to Bush Falls for the first time in 17 years.

Very quickly, Joe learns that small town hospitality doesn’t extend to muckraking prodigals. In less than 24 hours, an ex-con former high school classmate wants to brain him with a chair, an elderly woman uses him as a soup bowl and the local book club wakes him by hurling copies of his novel at his father’s house. Petty annoyances aside, Joe also must come to terms with a tragic chain of events that took place during his senior year of high school, mentor his pot-smoking nephew, help a friend wasting away from AIDS, and oh yes, win back the love of his life. Along the way, it becomes apparent that some of the villains of Joe’s youth are not quite as bad as they once seemed. Also glaringly obvious is that Joe cannot find the youth he was in the unhappy man he’s become.

Tropper leads Joe through a quest for a better self that is wise, honest and often downright hilarious. He erects a story of emotional truth that leaves you with a lump in your throat and a smile on your face. The newly formed production company of Hollywood Ÿber-couple Jennifer Aniston and Brad Pitt has reportedly optioned the film rights to The Book of Joe, which will likely spike Tropper’s popularity. Such an honor would be well deserved, because when it comes to articulating the truth in fiction and writing about grown-ups belatedly becoming adults, Tropper is ahead of the pack.

Ian Schwartz reviews from his home in New York City.

In his moving, funny and compulsively readable second novel, The Book of Joe, Jonathan Tropper proves that while you can go home again, actually doing so can be colossally upsetting to all involved.

Joe Goffman is a rich one-book novelist living in New…
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We face dizzying displays of abundance in modern American life. Our stores are packed with plenty, and we’re continually bombarded with ads that exploit our every desire. Does this excess ultimately affect our happiness? In new books, two authors explore this question and examine alternatives to the richly lived life.

Give It Up! My Year of Learning to Live Better with Less is Mary Carlomagno’s diary of deprivation, of the intention to eliminate unnecessary facets of life. For one year, she eliminated one thing monthly: in January, alcohol; in February, shopping; in March, elevator rides. Over the year, newspapers, cell phones, restaurants, television, taxis, coffee, cursing, chocolate and multitasking all got tossed. Chronicling her reflections on doing without, Carlomagno discovered the richness of simplicity and an awareness and enjoyment of the things in life that I was blessed to have. Anyone resolving to live a less cluttered life this year will appreciate her wry, honest account of doing without some of the things we have come to regard as indispensable.

We face dizzying displays of abundance in modern American life. Our stores are packed with plenty, and we're continually bombarded with ads that exploit our every desire. Does this excess ultimately affect our happiness? In new books, two authors explore this question and examine…
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It took only 18 minutes for the Cunard liner Lusitania to sink after the German submarine U-20 torpedoed it off the coast of Ireland on May 7, 1915. From this blink of history’s eye, Diana Preston has pieced together an adventure story as intriguing and convoluted as the most cunningly fashioned spy novel. She weaves her dramatic tale from a close reading of hundreds of eyewitness accounts, newspaper reports, court records and related sources.

To put the tragedy in context, Preston first sketches the evolution of the submarine as an instrument of war and notes the resistance it met initially from home military establishments. Nonetheless, when World War I started in 1914, Great Britain had a fleet of 75 subs in service, and Germany had 28. The latter country’s underwater boats, however, were superior and deemed essential to breaking the crippling blockade Britain had imposed. Into this deadly new twist of warfare sailed the luxury liner Lusitania a carrier of civilian passengers, according to England, but a vessel with military significance by German standards. Well before the Lusitania set out from New York on its final voyage, German submarines had been sinking supposedly civilian boats near England. So open were Germany’s intentions on this point that its embassy placed an advertisement in American newspapers warning passengers that they traveled on British ships at their own risk. Most Lusitania passengers, while aware of the warning, accepted the Cunard company’s argument that the ship was too fast and would be too well protected when it reached home waters to be in danger. From such well-known figures as socialite Alfred Vanderbilt to lowly members of the ship’s enormous crew, Preston fleshes out the characters of many of the liner’s passengers. The author also takes us up to the Lusitania’s bridge to become acquainted with the dour, old-school captain, William Turner, and down into the dark and stifling bowels of the U-20, where its relentless commander, Walther Schwieger, waits for his prey.

As vivid as Preston’s descriptions are elsewhere, they rise to the level of poetry when she describes the chaos and elegant acts of heroism that occur as the great ship goes down. The scenes in the water as friends are separated and mothers lose their babies are heartbreaking. Still, Preston is admirably even-handed, refusing to depict the Germans as villains and enabling us to see the reasonableness of their actions from their point of view. The sinking cost 1,198 lives, 128 of them American. While this slaughter provoked an outcry in America, which was still officially neutral, it did not immediately draw the country into war against Germany. That would not occur until nearly two years later. And many more sinkings lay ahead.

It took only 18 minutes for the Cunard liner Lusitania to sink after the German submarine U-20 torpedoed it off the coast of Ireland on May 7, 1915. From this blink of history's eye, Diana Preston has pieced together an adventure story as intriguing and…
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With the release of Masquerade in 1996 Gayle Lynds joined the deified ranks of spy thriller authors like Robert Ludlum and John le CarrŽ. That novel was a paranoid tour de force about a CIA agent, Liz Sansborough, hunting (and being hunted by) a notorious Cold War assassin called the Carnivore, who happens to be her father. The response to the stand-alone novel was so overwhelming (Lynds says readers “asked, begged and demanded” that she bring the main characters back) that Lynds was compelled to write a sequel. The Coil finds Sansborough far removed from her former life as a CIA operative; she is contentedly teaching a course in the psychology of violence at the University of California, Santa Barbara. But her father’s legacy continues to plague her, even from the grave. Someone has unearthed the Carnivore’s secret files (who hired him, how much they paid, who was killed, etc.) and is blackmailing prominent international business and political figures to further a shadowy agenda. Sansborough becomes a target as well; when her cousin is kidnapped in Paris, Sansborough must somehow find the files before more innocents die.

With breakneck pacing, generous helpings of suspense and intrigue, and a plot with more twists than a bag of pretzels, Lynds’ novel has all the ingredients of a terrific thriller. As Sansborough desperately searches for the Carnivore’s files while trying to elude the CIA, French police and an army of assassins, she makes James Bond look like a Boy Scout learning how to tie knots. Brutally violent, delectably complicated and masterfully researched, The Coil is a spy thriller of the highest order whose mind-blowing conclusion will leave readers slack-jawed in amazement and have them salivating for more.

Paul Goat Allen is a freelance editor and writer in Syarcuse, New York.

With the release of Masquerade in 1996 Gayle Lynds joined the deified ranks of spy thriller authors like Robert Ludlum and John le CarrŽ. That novel was a paranoid tour de force about a CIA agent, Liz Sansborough, hunting (and being hunted by) a notorious…
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<b>Knocking on heaven’s door</b> Roger Housden wants you to consider sin in a whole new light as a means toward enlightenment! In <b>Seven Sins for a Life Worth Living</b> Housden presents erudite, witty essays on seven so-called transgressions sensuality, foolishness, ignorance, imperfection, uselessness, ordinariness and prodigality. Touting a pleasure principle over a punitive path to happiness, Housden argues that joy can lead to the upwelling of the human spirit, which always lives and breathes beyond the confines of right and wrong. There are no case studies, success stories or how-to exercises in <b>Seven Sins</b>. Instead, we get the author’s personal reflections on modern life, sprinkled throughout with apt, wide-ranging references and quotes from philosophers and poets, scientists, political figures, artists and literary greats. This book is a subjective prescription for happiness, an utter delight, filled with Housden’s trademark self-deprecatory humor and slightly offbeat insight. You probably won’t see hell if you read this book, but you just might catch a glimpse of heaven.

<b>Knocking on heaven's door</b> Roger Housden wants you to consider sin in a whole new light as a means toward enlightenment! In <b>Seven Sins for a Life Worth Living</b> Housden presents erudite, witty essays on seven so-called transgressions sensuality, foolishness, ignorance, imperfection, uselessness, ordinariness and…

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Poor Linc Menner. The hero of Househusband not only faces such thorny issues as quality childcare and domestic violence, he does it all while preparing Indian chicken masala for five, potty training his daughter and caring for two abandoned kittens. As every family caregiver knows, the secret to success is multi-tasking. And when Linc leaves California and moves to Rochester, New York where his wife has taken a job as a hospital executive he gets a crash course in the multi-tasking roles of stay-at-home parents. In the elite Rochester suburb where he lives, stay-at-home dads are an unheard of commodity, and Linc is sometimes mistaken for a child-molesting kidnapper.

A former landscape architect for the stars in Los Angeles, Linc purchases a blue passion flower vine, passiflora caerula, soon after moving to the new home that his wife Jo has decorated in a minimalist style. As passiflora vines its way around the dining room and throughout the kitchen, so too do Linc and Jo tentatively explore and grow to understand their new roles. With a humorous and sympathetic tone, debut novelist Ad Hudler explores the insecurity the househusband feels as his self-esteem and personal hygiene decline. Although he’s successful at running the household and raising a polite and bright little girl, Linc’s lack of gainful employment leads to nagging doubts about his identity. He longs for adult conversation as he searches for validation in his new role. While his neighborhood women friends admire his ability to prepare a meal out of whatever can be found in his vegetable bin, he is not truly one of them. He has the most powerful leaf blower on the block, but cannot comfortably join in with Jo’s male colleagues or the men in the neighborhood.

Teaching, training and responding endlessly to his three-year-old, Linc takes his job of parenting as seriously as any CEO. He shares his recipe for Fast and Easy Tortellini with Peas and Prosciutto, vowing that kids love this easy meal. He struggles with whether to allow Barbie or not to allow Barbie, but in the end takes care to provide Career Barbie.

Like a hawk perched high above the landscape, Linc is aware of every movement in his family. In this alternately funny and moving first novel, Hudler ably captures the value of the family caregiver and the depth of love played out in that role. Alice Pelland is a family caregiver writing from Hillsborough, North Carolina.

Poor Linc Menner. The hero of Househusband not only faces such thorny issues as quality childcare and domestic violence, he does it all while preparing Indian chicken masala for five, potty training his daughter and caring for two abandoned kittens. As every family caregiver knows,…
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Best known for his nonfiction bestseller The God Chasers, Tommy Tenney has combined forces with writer Mark Andrew Olson to create his first novel, Hadassah: One Night with the King. Tenney develops the Old Testament tale of Queen Esther into an action-packed historical novel about how this remarkable young Jewish woman became the wife of the king of Persia and foiled a plot to kill her people. This intergenerational novel will transport the reader from the present to the past and back again. Author and editor W. Terry Whalin has always loved a good story.

Best known for his nonfiction bestseller The God Chasers, Tommy Tenney has combined forces with writer Mark Andrew Olson to create his first novel, Hadassah: One Night with the King. Tenney develops the Old Testament tale of Queen Esther into an action-packed historical novel about…
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Wisdom is now so cheap and abundant that it floods over us from calendar pages, tea bags, bottle caps, and mass e-mail messages asserts social psychologist Jonathan Haidt in The Happiness Hypothesis: Finding Modern Truth in Ancient Wisdom. Does access to endless streams of information really help with man’s search for life meaning and purpose? Haidt takes a rational approach to too much wisdom by identifying 10 Great Ideas, insights about man, purpose and happiness celebrated through the ages by ancient civilizations. He weaves a story of opposites, of what causes humans to thrive or to wither by exploring ancient wisdom and contrasting it with modern-day psychological research.

Haidt is a fine guide on this journey between past and present, discussing the current complexities of psychological theory with clarity and humor ( The mind is . . . like the rider on the back of an elephant, he writes). He explains how our minds work and how we socialize, grow and develop, while explicating ancient religious, literary and philosophical texts on human happiness, citing authors from Plato, Jesus Christ and the Buddha, to Benjamin Franklin, Proust and Kant. Haidt’s is an open-minded, robust look at philosophy, psychological fact and spiritual mystery, of scientific rationalism and the unknowable ephemeral an honest inquiry that concludes that the best life is, perhaps, one lived in the balance of opposites.

Wisdom is now so cheap and abundant that it floods over us from calendar pages, tea bags, bottle caps, and mass e-mail messages asserts social psychologist Jonathan Haidt in The Happiness Hypothesis: Finding Modern Truth in Ancient Wisdom. Does access to endless streams of…
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I'm making a pizza the size of the sun,
a pizza that's sure to weigh more than a ton,
a pizza too massive to pick up and toss,
a pizza resplendent with oceans of sauce.

I'm topping my pizza with mountains of cheese,
with acres of peppers, pimentos, and peas,
with mushrooms, tomatoes, and sausage galore,
with every last olive they had at the store.

My pizza is sure to be one of a kind,
my pizza will leave other pizzas behind,
my pizza will be a delectable treat
that all who love pizza are welcome to eat.

The oven is hot, I believe it will take
a year and a half for my pizza to bake.
I hardly can wait till my pizza is done,
my wonderful pizza the size of the sun.

 

Jack Prelutsky is widely acknowledged as the poet laureate of the younger generation. (And many people would happily see him crowned with no age qualification.) The New Kid on the Block and Something Big Has Been Here are household words wherever there are kids.

Here is another wondrously rich, varied, clever — and always funny — collection. Meet Miss Misinformation, Swami Gourami, and Gladiola Gloppe (and her Soup Shoppe), and delight in a backwards poem, a poem that never ends, and scores of others that will be chanted, read, and loved by readers of every age. The Prelutsky-Stevenson duo is irresistable. Whether you begin at the beginning or just open the book at random, you won't stop smiling.

If you are twelve or under, you have probably read — and memorized — at least one poem by Jack Prelutsky. He has written more than thirty books of verse, edited several enormously popular anthologies (and been extensively anthologized himself), translated a number of books, and is always at work on the poems for at least three future books. He has lived in Boston, Albuquerque, and Manhattan, but he says he is now happily settled in the Seattle area. Among his most popular books are The New Kid on the Block, Something Big Has Been Here, The Dragons Are Singing Tonight, and Monday's Troll.

 

I'm making a pizza the size of the sun,
a pizza that's sure to weigh more than a ton,
a pizza too massive to pick up and toss,
a pizza resplendent with oceans of sauce.

I'm topping my pizza…

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Author Rick Moody’s first work of nonfiction lifts the veil on some of his own worst experiences from struggling with substance abuse and depression to surviving a destructive relationship with an ex-girlfriend. A sensitively written narrative in which he bares all about the discouraging times in his life, The Black Veil: A Memoir with Digressions is a departure for the 40-year-old author, who has carved out a successful career as a fiction writer. His first book, Garden State, won the Pushcart Press Editor’s Choice Award, and his novel The Ice Storm was made into an acclaimed film by noted director Ang Lee.

Moody’s stay in a New York psychiatric hospital as a result of his severe depression makes up the prime matter of this memoir with digressions, but it also serves as a jumping-off point for his meditations on topics such as fathers and sons, his New England family lineage and the pain of modern-day adolescence. Moody also touches on the very personal difficulty of dealing with his sister’s sudden death.

Catharsis can have abject terror connected with it, Moody said in a recent interview. In this case, I wanted to write about things I’ll never need to write about again. As any essentially introverted person might, Moody has his phobias. He’s not keen about talking on the telephone, and he expresses anxiety about his upcoming book tour. I love bookstore appearances, but the media aspect can be demanding, admits the author, who lives on Fishers Island (off Long Island) and in Brooklyn.

What he’s not phobic about, however, is engaging as a writer with emotionally demanding material. In The Black Veil, his alcohol abuse, his explosive, codependent relationship with an ex-girlfriend (called Jen in the book) and the psychic dark hole that resulted in his hospitalization in Hollis, Queens, is prefaced by incidents from his superficially comfortable upbringing in Darien, Connecticut. But these topics are informed and balanced by an investigation into whether his depression might be hereditary, which Moody probes through family diaries and field trips to the Maine of his forebears. In chapters that alternate with Moody’s personal story, we are offered a scholarly deconstruction of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s short story The Minister’s Black Veil, from the famed author’s collection Twice-Told Tales. Hawthorne’s lead character, the Reverend Mr. Hooper, is based on the Reverend Joseph ( Handkerchief ) Moody of Maine, who accidentally shot to death a childhood friend and lived out the remainder of his life veiled in a spiritual darkness. Sifting through the evidence of his ancestry proves time-consuming and revelatory for author Moody. He discovers that his clan, while related to Handkerchief Moody, actually descends from the other side of the Moody lineage.

I had thought, Moody writes, since I believed that I was related to Handkerchief Moody, that there was a genetic inclination that had been preserved across the centuries, a vulnerability, an insight, a recoiling, a burden, a Moody style. . . . But it was becoming apparent that the more likely and reliable assumption was that the simulated tendencies of families were bits of mythology by which a family constituted itself. Families were, in this view, nothing in nature, and everything in recitation. What else did learning about the Moody ancestry teach him? That maybe some of my disarming markers are much more prevalent in my family, he says. It made me feel more human and less eccentric. When I get a notion to learn about a thing, I’m lucky to be able to make it into something that is interesting. That’s my job. In this case, my research took me personal places. In light of Handkerchief Moody’s grave childhood sin, Moody was also led to consider the social phenomenon of Columbine and similar horrific incidents. All through that rash of schoolboy killings, he says, I felt like, if I was in high school then, they would have had a 24-hour watch on me. I definitely would have fit into the category of socially awkward.’ Then there are some things that hit home even more directly, as when Moody’s sister died six years ago without warning, the victim of a cardiac seizure. Yeah . . . that’s a lifer, he says somberly. She was fine one day, then gone the next. But beyond the sadness and the depression and the emotional challenges, Moody’s volume functions best when it charts the interesting journey through the mind of a man trying to deal with who he is and achieve wellness at the same time. When I was at my worst emotionally, he says, it was as if I didn’t want to get better. I figured neurosis and eccentricity were part of my creativity. My issues are always gonna be there, but I know how to handle them better. I also feel I’m more compassionate than ever about other people’s pain. Writing such an intensely personal book can often have real-life consequences, especially where real people are concerned. In Moody’s case, the reception was surprisingly positive.

Everyone important in the book had read it in manuscript. They were all fine about it. My father and my ex-girlfriend were extremely supportive. In fact, Jen’ wanted me to use her real name in the book. She wanted it to be the truth. My dad was very positively struck by the book, which was a relief to me. I’ve found that most people are not taking it as a kiss-and-tell memoir. It’s more an anatomy of what makes me tick. As for the ghosts of bad behavior, Moody says: They’re still there. The historical legacy and genetic tendencies are there. But I know how to act today. And I’m not a drinker anymore. I’ve been clean for 15 years. And with that, Rick Moody’s own black veil has for now anyway been lifted. I’ve found that most people are not taking it as a kiss-and-tell memoir. It’s more an anatomy of what makes me tick. Martin Brady writes from Nashville.

Author Rick Moody's first work of nonfiction lifts the veil on some of his own worst experiences from struggling with substance abuse and depression to surviving a destructive relationship with an ex-girlfriend. A sensitively written narrative in which he bares all about the discouraging times…

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