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The holidays are finally upon us! But is that always a good thing? As perfect as they are in theory, the holidays can be a recipe for disaster. Hectic travel schedules, forced quality time with the family and long, drawn-out meals can bring more pain than joy before the New Year. But no one really talks about these less-than-perfect holiday experiences or do they? In The Worst Noel: Hellish Holiday Tales, writers from Neal Pollack to Marian Keyes to Ann Patchett tell their tales of holiday woe. Comical, spot-on, and above all, reassuring, these stories are sure to make you thankful to have your own wacky family and strange holiday traditions. Cynthia Kaplan describes the holiday horror of hitting a deer (or a reindeer, as her young son presumes) in Donner is Dead, while Mike Albo shares his tale of a romantic Parisian holiday with his boyfriend . . . and his boyfriend’s boyfriend in Christmas and Paris. Neal Pollack delights in baking his first Smithfield ham (despite being Jewish) with his very Southern (and very Christian) in-laws in The Jew Who Cooked Ham for Christmas and Stanley Bing chronicles the unexpected joy in spending the holidays alone in ‘Twas the Bite Before Christmas. The stories are as different and funny as their authors, and the collection is a real holiday treat.

Abby Plesser lives and works in New York City. She can’t wait to go home for the holidays.

The holidays are finally upon us! But is that always a good thing? As perfect as they are in theory, the holidays can be a recipe for disaster. Hectic travel schedules, forced quality time with the family and long, drawn-out meals can bring more pain…
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Will Baggett, the Weather Wizard, has it all. He loves his job as Channel Seven’s weatherman and after 20 years on the air he is one of the most familiar faces in Raleigh, North Carolina. People on the street ask for his autograph, and he can’t set foot in the local mall without a friendly voice yelling, "Yo, Will, what’s the weather?" Will’s charmed life includes a good-looking wife with a talent for high-commission real estate sales and an equally good-looking son in medical school. Perfect family, perfect life, and it’s all about to come crashing down around Will’s ears. The blow comes abruptly with the sale of Channel Seven to a Chicago conglomerate with big ideas for the Raleigh market. The first corporate casualty is Will Baggett, and soon Will is out on the street, out of a job, with a non-compete clause in his contract that thwarts any hope of revenge. On the heels of this rude awakening comes the realization that the family who played second fiddle to Will’s career has moved on with their lives while he was too self-absorbed to notice. When Will lands in jail under an avalanche of legal complications that begins with a minor traffic violation, his midlife crisis becomes a midlife disaster. As he lies on the bunk in his jail cell, it dawns on him: "On the surface, everything is gone; but if everything is gone, anything is possible." That’s the way he plays it, and that’s where the charm of this novel lies, as Will sets out to reinvent himself and to face his public humiliation and private failures.

Captain Saturday is the fourth novel by Robert Inman, a former Raleigh television anchorman who has won a growing regional audience with books like Dairy Queen Days. While Captain Saturday is a Southern novel in the geographical sense, the warm and reassuring message conveyed by the hearty, resilient and delightfully human cast of characters is universal, as is Inman’s wryly humorous take on the suburbanization of everything, not just Dixie. The Cape Fear River may run through Will Baggett’s part of the world, but in the hands of an observant and inventive author like Inman, it is the characters’ genius for living, not the place where they live, that makes this novel memorable.

Mary Garrett reads and writes in Middle Tennessee.

 

Will Baggett, the Weather Wizard, has it all. He loves his job as Channel Seven's weatherman and after 20 years on the air he is one of the most familiar faces in Raleigh, North Carolina. People on the street ask for his autograph, and…

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Believing in ghosts is a lot like believing in the characters of a well-wrought novel. Human figures floating in the mind, delineated with such clarity and likelihood alas, they do not exist in the objective world. A skeptical investigator into paranormal phenomena has much in common, therefore, with a skeptical book reviewer: both of them are ready to disenchant. In the case of Joseph Gangemi’s debut novel, both of these skeptics one inside looking out, the other outside looking in are delightfully bound to fail.

The narrator, Martin Finch, finds himself assisting the investigative committee charged by Scientific American magazine with testing all those who respond to its offer of $5,000 for “conclusive psychic manifestations.” A graduate student in psychology at Harvard eager to impress his professor, Finch proves himself to be an insuperable foe to the fakes who hope to hoodwink the committee and grab the prize. Gangemi takes us into the spiritualist fever of the post-World War I years, vividly recreating an atmosphere in which a scientific journal incites its employees to satisfy the public’s hunger for authentic spooks. One of the author’s master strokes is to bring Arthur Conan Doyle briefly into the game. The creator of Sherlock Holmes that supreme enemy of the irrational was also one of the era’s leading inquirers into psychic phenomena. The paradox is not as astonishing as it may at first appear: a preoccupation with reason leaves many gaps in the human mind, and into the largest and most formidable of these, love rushes in.

Conan Doyle writes to the committee to recommend that they test a Mrs. Crawley of Philadelphia, a lady of extraordinary psychic gifts. In the course of the investigation, it is the most natural thing in the world for young Martin Finch to fall head over heels for the beautiful Mina Crawley. Finch is bewitched by his inamorata, but Mina’s charm is much more complicated than anything advertised by Conan Doyle. As strange and alluring as Mrs. Crawley herself is the city where she lives. To Finch, Philadelphia seems an old-fashioned place in 1922. His sense of what’s new seems old-fashioned to us in turn. This whimsical dance of time is the novel’s finest work of enchantment. Michael Alec Rose is a music professor at Vanderbilt University.

Believing in ghosts is a lot like believing in the characters of a well-wrought novel. Human figures floating in the mind, delineated with such clarity and likelihood alas, they do not exist in the objective world. A skeptical investigator into paranormal phenomena has much in…
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The characters populating Timothy Schaffert’s The Singing and Dancing Daughters of God may not be particularly likeable, yet somehow they’re impossible not to love. Their flaws only add dimension as they cope with tribulations that could have been pulled from the lyrics of a country song.

The story of a mixed-up family in small-town Nebraska, Schaffert’s second novel (following The Phantom Limbs of the Rollow Sisters) has Hud Smith, a semi-alcoholic elementary school bus driver and part-time musician, at its center. Tuesday is his confused ex-wife who, despite divorce papers, can’t seem to sever her bond with her former husband. Together, they struggle to raise their eerily precocious eight-year-old daughter Nina and to find their teenage son Gatling, who (last they heard) has run off and joined a religious rock group called The Singing and Dancing Daughters of God. The neighbors most notably Ozzie, a widower drowning in grief after his wife’s death, and Charlotte, the daughter left afloat by her emotionally-absent dad are colorful characters who enrich the story, but Schaffert’s narrative sleight-of-hand is a subplot involving a family virtually unknown to the Smiths. Robbie Schrock murdered his two young sons after a bitter divorce and, as the novel opens, the town is celebrating his execution with Halloween-like festivities. That secondary story arc lurks in the background until Hud comes face-to-face with the anguished mother and grapples with just what to say. A child who loses a parent is called an orphan . . . . A wife who loses a husband is a widow, Hud thinks to himself. But, Where’s our word, Mrs. Schrock? Hud wrestles with this question even outside the search for his own son: who are we when there are no words to define us? Is Hud a selfish alcoholic or a devoted father with the tendency to be impulsive? Is he a failure or a man with the soul of a musician who never got his big break? The frankness with which Schaffert tackles these questions is heart-rending, resulting in an honest story with just a touch of honky-tonk. Iris Blasi is a writer in New York City.

The characters populating Timothy Schaffert's The Singing and Dancing Daughters of God may not be particularly likeable, yet somehow they're impossible not to love. Their flaws only add dimension as they cope with tribulations that could have been pulled from the lyrics of a country…
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Cecelia Ahern, the 22-year-old daughter of Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern, writes with insight beyond her years in her debut novel, P.S. I Love You, a book at once poignant and comical, introspective and farcical.

Holly Kennedy, 29, has just become a widow when the novel opens, her husband Gerry her best friend, lover and soul mate having succumbed to a brain tumor. Holly slogs through aimless days and nights with only memories to keep her afloat until her mother reminds her of an envelope she received in the mail just before Gerry’s death. The notes inside are labeled with the remaining months of the year, March through December, and each one contains a tip, written by Gerry as he was dying, to help Holly get on with her life. The first instructs her to go shopping for a new outfit, which gets her out of her dirty jeans and Gerry’s T-shirts; July’s note sends her on a vacation to Spain for a week with her two best friends, September pushes her to get out and look for her "best job ever," and December, the last note, encourages Holly not to be afraid to love again.

Gradually, Holly emerges from her cocoon. Armed with a new job in charge of advertising for a trendy magazine, she is constantly buoyed by her long-time friends, who serve as the vehicles for Ahern’s comic side. They drag Holly along to "hen parties," shopping trips and balls against her wishes. Side plots focus on Holly’s family, who include her doting parents, a stodgy older brother who emerges as one of her staunchest supporters, and her younger sister, pink-haired and flaky, who can always make Holly laugh.

Ahern weaves just the right amount of humor into her tale of Holly’s struggle with grief and its aftermath, resulting in a highly engaging addition (for which the movie rights have already been sold) to the "plight of the suddenly single" genre.

Deborah Donovan writes from Cincinnati and La Veta, Colorado.

 

Cecelia Ahern, the 22-year-old daughter of Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern, writes with insight beyond her years in her debut novel, P.S. I Love You, a book at once poignant and comical, introspective and farcical.

Holly Kennedy, 29, has just become…

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The Civil War, James McIvor explains in his splendidly concise and deceptively powerful book, God Rest Ye Merry, Soldiers: A True Civil War Christmas Story, transformed Christmas into today’s national holiday. For four bloody years, December 25 provided soldiers in blue and gray with a much needed respite from the horrors of internecine war and the grueling daily routine and emotional stress of the volunteer soldier. Often soldiers celebrated the seasonal holiday encamped within shouting distance of their enemy. Each Christmas became a special time to reflect on their loved ones, their cause and their reasons for leaving home to fight.

McIvor writes with precision and grace and has unearthed a lode of Civil War-era Christmas poems and songs that general readers will enjoy. He also has mined a cache of original letters and diary entries that convey the pathos and tragedy of war without romanticizing the complexities, frustrations and ambivalent feelings that Union and Confederate soldiers and their families espoused.

On Christmas Day, 1862, for example, a war-weary woman in Richmond, Virginia, reflected on the absence and loss that the day signified. The Christmas dinner passed off gloomily, she wrote. The vacant chairs were multiplied in Southern homes, and even the children who had so seriously questioned the cause of the absence of the young soldier brother from the festive board, had heard too much, and had seen too much, and knew too well why sad-colored garments were worn by the mother, and the fold of rusty crape placed around the worn hat of the father, and why the joyous mirth of the sister was restrained, and her beautiful figure draped in mourning. Nineteen months of war already had left tens of thousands of men dead. It was hard to celebrate. The unidentified Southern lady remarked poignantly that tears had taken the place of smiles on countenances where cheerfulness was wont to reign. McIvor’s little book underscores the meaning of Christmas for nations at war, when memories of home and longings for the safe return of loved ones preoccupy families rich and poor. In 1870, the U.S. Congress finally legislated what Americans North and South had already ritualized Christmas became a national holiday. John David Smith is the Charles H. Stone Distinguished Professor of American History at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte and the author and editor of many books.

The Civil War, James McIvor explains in his splendidly concise and deceptively powerful book, God Rest Ye Merry, Soldiers: A True Civil War Christmas Story, transformed Christmas into today's national holiday. For four bloody years, December 25 provided soldiers in blue and gray with a…
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Patrick O’Leary often wanders around his office at a large Michigan advertising firm humming to himself. His co-workers might think he’s a bit weird, but if they read his books they would discover that while humming (somewhat tunefully) he’s probably considering parallel worlds, our place in the universe and the hard choices we sometimes must make in our daily lives.

In his third science fiction novel, The Impossible Bird, O’Leary has crafted a page-turning story about "alien invasion, resurrection and brotherly love." But he also uses the book to delve into serious and timely issues. When we talked to O’Leary recently at the World Fantasy Convention in Montreal, he had this to say about the question at the heart of his new novel: "It comes down to this for me individuals facing facts and making a difference." Unfortunately, it’s almost impossible to talk about The Impossible Bird without giving away the huge secrets at the heart of the novel. There are conspiracies within conspiracies, so that what starts off as a relatively simple chase novel quickly becomes a multi-level tale where reality may not be all it’s cracked up to be. The novel begins in 1962 when two brothers witness a Roswell-type event. We follow the brothers through their divergent lives: one goes on to a successful career making commercials, while the other becomes a college professor. Having lost their parents at an early age, the brothers were very close as children, but now they’ve grown apart. How and why they are brought back together is only the beginning of this exciting and thought-provoking book.

O’Leary began the novel in 1995 with one line that "moved and haunted" him. It was to be the last line of the book: "I’m watching my brother’s heart. I’m watching my brother’s beating heart." Although this image sustained him through the "first 50 drafts," in the end he did not include it in the book. "In hindsight," said O’Leary, "I see it was a controlling metaphor," and that the brothers’ relationship was "the focus of the story." After studying journalism in college, O’Leary began to publish poetry in literary magazines. He later published a couple of short stories and then made the decision to write a novel. At the time he didn’t realize what a major commitment this was: his first novel, The Gift, took 22 years to write, his next, Door Number Three, took seven, and The Impossible Bird took six. His first two novels were well received and, after years of slogging away on his own, O’Leary suddenly found himself receiving validation and acclaim from science fiction readers and writers. For The Impossible Bird, O’Leary says he used his experience in advertising to consider how a small group of people might go about trying to secretly control the public’s perception of events. Before I can ask how much behind-the-scenes work at controlling society goes on at advertising agencies, O’Leary says his job led him to conclude that "it’s nearly impossible to get 12 competent and intelligent people to agree on and implement anything much less keep it a secret. But it is such a comfort to believe someone is in charge, someone has the answers." O’Leary’s novels, despite their twists into alternate realities, conspiracies and alien invasions, come down to one thing, "a personal struggle in each of our lives for consciousness, for truth." Therefore in The Impossible Bird, reality and the fate of the players are "essentially in the hands of two ordinary guys stuck in an extraordinary plot. Their choices are messy and hurtful and well-meant." It is O’Leary’s belief in ordinary people making the right choices in difficult situations that continue to make his books so appealing.

Gavin Grant lives in Brooklyn, where he writes and publishes speculative fiction.

Patrick O'Leary often wanders around his office at a large Michigan advertising firm humming to himself. His co-workers might think he's a bit weird, but if they read his books they would discover that while humming (somewhat tunefully) he's probably considering parallel worlds, our…

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From the best-selling author of Chocolat and Five Quarters of the Orange comes this rapturous and page-turning story of devotion, deceit and religious persecution set in 17th-century France. In Holy Fools, Joanne Harris departs from the culinary themes she is known for, but the result is no less delicious. Her trademark sensory descriptions infuse the novel with rich historical and atmospheric detail, and she vividly captures the religious upheaval of the era.

Fluidly interwoven story lines unfold the present and past life of Juliette, a traveling circus performer who becomes enamored with the Machiavellian leader of the troupe, LeMerle, who shamelessly abandons her to a group of murderous religious zealots. Juliette, who is secretly carrying LeMerle’s child, manages to escape and seeks refuge in a remote abbey, reinventing herself as a widow and religious devotee. But her serene existence is shattered five years later with the appointment of a new Abbess who arrives with LeMerle in tow, audaciously masquerading as a priest. What ensues is a spellbinding battle of wits between Juliette and LeMerle, who is bent on orchestrating a dangerous game of revenge against a long-time enemy by using Juliette, her daughter and the nuns as expendable pawns. Without exposing her own checkered past or succumbing to LeMerle’s seductive charms, Juliette must save the abbey from his villainous machinations. The tension builds to a breathtaking crescendo, with a theatrical showdown that brings twists, turns and surprising revelations. This is a dark, seductive exploration of passion and repression that plumbs the depths of the human psyche with its superb and penetrating characterizations; the contrast between Juliette’s wise and generous spirit and LeMerle’s base immorality makes for a bewitching interplay of good and evil, sinner and saint. The cleverly ambiguous conclusion leaves us with many provocative questions to ponder, such as the possibility of LeMerle’s redemption and the mystery of Juliette’s destructive devotion to her betrayer. With its inspired themes and sharp observations, Holy Fools is Joanne Harris’ most ambitious and unforgettable novel to date. Joni Rendon writes from Hoboken, New Jersey.

From the best-selling author of Chocolat and Five Quarters of the Orange comes this rapturous and page-turning story of devotion, deceit and religious persecution set in 17th-century France. In Holy Fools, Joanne Harris departs from the culinary themes she is known for, but the result…
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<b>FDR’s Christmas visitor</b> Given their educations, Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill would doubtless have been intimately familiar with the proverbial loss of a kingdom for want of a horseshoe nail. In other words, small mistakes can determine big outcomes even those as big as World War II. So when Japan forced the United States into the war by bombing Pearl Harbor, small mistakes could have badly damaged the new Anglo-American fighting alliance. Roosevelt and Churchill helped avoid strategic errors right from the start by convening in Washington, D.C., for what we would now call a summit.

Immediately after the Japanese sneak attack on December 7, 1941, Churchill rushed across the Atlantic, accompanied by his senior military advisors. Over the next month, they met with Roosevelt and his top aides to forge a new coalition. <b>One Christmas in Washington: The Secret Meeting Between Roosevelt and Churchill That Changed the World</b>, by historians David Bercuson and Holger Herwig, chronicles the crucial weeks that ultimately led to the defeat of Germany and Japan. Bercuson and Hedwig ably blend the substance of the debates over command structure, production goals and war strategy with biographical background about the main players and colorful descriptions of their social interaction. As we all know, the outcome was successful but the authors show the road got quite rocky. The American generals thought the British were arrogant and greedy for U.S. arms; the British thought the Americans were clueless amateurs. Within each country’s negotiating team, the Army, Navy and Air Force representatives fought out their usual rivalries.

Ultimately, responsibility for success or failure lay with the two national leaders. Churchill, always stubborn, was a diehard imperialist; Roosevelt, who called himself a juggler, had an essentially anti-colonial view of the world. But they came to terms, the torch passed from Britain to the U.S., and the American century followed. <i>Anne Bartlett is a journalist in Washington, D.C.</i>

<b>FDR's Christmas visitor</b> Given their educations, Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill would doubtless have been intimately familiar with the proverbial loss of a kingdom for want of a horseshoe nail. In other words, small mistakes can determine big outcomes even those as big as World…

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Some authors seem to click with moviemakers, and writer Nicholas Sparks is one of the lucky few making his way to the top of Holly- wood’s A-list. First came Message in a Bottle, Sparks’ novel about a tragic love letter which was turned into a hit movie starring Kevin Costner, Robin Wright and Paul Newman. Next comes the film version of A Walk to Remember, which opens in theaters January 25.

In fact, all five of Sparks’ best-selling romantic novels appear headed for the screen. His first book, the multi-million-seller The Notebook, is now in the screenwriting stage, and negotiations are under way to sell film and television rights to his other two novels, A Bend in the Road and The Rescue.

The boyish author and father of five, who just a few years ago was making a living as a pharmaceutical salesman, says his success in the jaded world of Tinseltown hasn’t really changed the way he writes or the way he lives.

"You just set out to write the best book you possibly can, and if you’re lucky Hollywood will make a film of it. The odds are very small. They just don’t make that many films based on books," Sparks said from his home in North Carolina, where he was recuperating from the rigors of a European book tour.

"Movies are a nice way to introduce people to your work, especially if the film is done well, and I’ve been fortunate in that both these films have been done very well." A Walk to Remember, which should have special appeal to the teen audience, stars pop singer and MTV regular Mandy Moore as a small-town preacher’s daughter who wins the heart of a skeptical rich kid. Much of the filming took place in Wilmington, North Carolina, not far from Sparks’ home in New Bern.

"My oldest son and I went to the set twice, and I went down with my editor a third time," Sparks said, noting that he enjoyed his trips to the set but didn’t write the screenplay or take an active role in making the film.

It might be understandable if Sparks took a special interest in the casting of Mandy Moore as Jamie, since the character was inspired in part by his own sister, Danielle, who died in May after battling cancer.

"Mandy Moore was great on both a personal and professional level. She’s a very charming and intelligent young lady, and she did a fabulous job in front of the camera. She really gave a superb performance, especially considering this was her first major film role," Sparks said. Also appearing in the film are Shane West as the male lead (Landon Carter), and Peter Coyote and Daryl Hannah as parents of the teens. Sparks’ publisher, Warner Books, is releasing a special movie tie-in version of A Walk to Remember to coincide with the film’s release.

A disciplined writer who isn’t content to rest on his laurels, Sparks has already completed his sixth novel, The Guardian, a tale of "love and danger" to be published next fall. He is also finishing a screenplay of The Guardian, outlining his seventh and eighth books and helping to design a new Web site.

Sparks does all his work in a home office "right off the living room with five kids running around." His children range in age from 10-year-old Miles to five-month-old twin daughters, and this busy father admits to shutting his office door "at times when it gets tough."

Some authors seem to click with moviemakers, and writer Nicholas Sparks is one of the lucky few making his way to the top of Holly- wood's A-list. First came Message in a Bottle, Sparks' novel about a tragic love letter which was turned into a…

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Lest there remain any doubt that Afghanistan under the Taliban was a place barely fit for human habitation, Yasmina Khadra’s spellbinding new novel, The Swallows of Kabul, removes it once and for all. The story begins with the scene of a prostitute being stoned to death and ends with a madman being beaten to death; Khadra’s Afghanistan has simply gone insane.

The novel centers on two couples: the jailer Atiq and his moribund wife Musarrat, and the well-educated and dignified (but unemployed) pair Mohsen and Zunaira. A mujahedin during the Soviet occupation, Atiq now finds his life grim and savorless, and he cooperates with the Taliban out of fear. Dreading his shabby hovel, he wanders the streets aimlessly streets filled with beggars, tetchy Talibs and disfigured men capable only of recounting exaggerated war stories.

Formerly involved in the promotion of women’s rights, Zunaira now has to don the burqa whenever she goes outside. When Mohsen is unwilling to defend his wife’s honor for fear of worse befalling him, Khadra deftly shows how no one, no matter how honorable, can escape the degradation around them. Yasmina Khadra is the pseudonym of Algerian army officer Mohamed Moulessehoul, who writes in the mournful tone characteristic of veterans. His language is beautiful and economical, and he has a knack for deadly understatement. “Afghanistan’s countryside,” he writes, “is nothing but battlefields, expanses of sand, and cemeteries.” Reading Khadra, you can almost feel the dust in your throat and even begin to understand the impossible: that a clique as odious as the Taliban could initially be seen as redeemers. The novel ends before the events of 9/11 and the subsequent American intervention, which has yet to stabilize the country. And what is more distressing, the once-humiliated Taliban is again on the rise. If you need reminding that their fulminations against the West and their unabashed misogyny have no place in the modern or indeed a sane world, read this unforgettable, deeply tragic book. Kenneth Champeon is a writer based in Thailand.

Lest there remain any doubt that Afghanistan under the Taliban was a place barely fit for human habitation, Yasmina Khadra's spellbinding new novel, The Swallows of Kabul, removes it once and for all. The story begins with the scene of a prostitute being stoned to…
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Ellis is a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian and the author of the best-selling books Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation and American Sphinx: The Character of Thomas Jefferson. His latest volume chronicles the life of America’s first president, shedding new light on the background of the great leader and his contributions to the incipient republic. Writing with his usual aplomb, Ellis traces the remarkable man’s ascension to commander-in-chief: we see Washington fighting in the French and Indian War, running his Virginia plantation with his wife Martha, acting as head of the Continental Army and assuming the presidency after the defeat of the British forces. Washington led the country for eight years, during which he instituted the federal government as we know it and established the nation’s capital city. In addition to an overview of his many accomplishments, Ellis also explores the president’s viewpoints on slavery and the rights of Native Americans. He goes beyond the facts to provide a colorful and well-rounded portrait of a remarkable man a political innovator who was aloof but kind, distant yet compassionate. Washington’s image is one of the most ubiquitous in our culture, and now, thanks to Ellis, we have an even clearer picture of this founding father. A reading group guide is available in print and online at www.readinggroupcenter.com.

Ellis is a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian and the author of the best-selling books Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation and American Sphinx: The Character of Thomas Jefferson. His latest volume chronicles the life of America's first president, shedding new light on the background of the great…
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If you’re interested in living to an advanced age and still having a "a good life" something the Greeks attempted to define 2,400 years ago a new book by a Harvard psychiatrist offers some unexpected and invaluable insights.

Aging Well: Surprising Guideposts to a Happier Life from the Landmark Harvard Study of Adult Development casts a spotlight on the behaviors that make for happy longevity and those that result in illness and early death. The conclusions in the book are based on a study of behavior that began with Harvard sophomores in 1938 and is the oldest, most thorough study of aging ever undertaken.

"Aging well involves both mental and physical health," says author George Vaillant, M.D., who began managing the study in 1970. "So when we talk about well-being, we’re talking about two facets, not just one." For example, he notes, "alcohol abuse is bad for emotional and physical well-being. Smoking is only bad for physical well-being." Just as Benjamin Spock taught millions of mothers to anticipate child development and to understand what could be changed and what had to be accepted, Vaillant’s book does the same for the later stages of life. The Study of Adult Development, using periodic interviews and questionnaires, follows three groups of elderly men and women, all of whom have been studied continuously for six to eight decades. First, there is a sample of 268 socially advantaged Harvard graduates born about 1920. Second, there is a sample of 456 socially disadvantaged inner-city men born about 1930. Third, there is a sample of 90 middle-class, intellectually gifted women born about 1910. All of these prospective studies (a "prospective" study is one that studies events as they occur, not in retrospect) are the oldest studies of their kind in the world. From these 824 individuals, the book attempts to generalize theories about behaviors that promote health and good living and those that don’t.

One generalization and perhaps the most important to the average reader is that there are six factors at age 50 that have a great deal to do with whether you will get to age 80. The six are having a warm marriage, possessing adaptive or coping strategies, not smoking heavily, not abusing alcohol, getting ample exercise and not being overweight. Those who observe these factors are better at wending through what Vaillant calls "the minefields of aging." For these people, there is a statistically greater chance to achieve emotional and physical health. He calls them "the happy well." The happy well are those, he says, "who subjectively enjoy their lives and are objectively healthy." By contrast, the "sad sick" occupy another category. "The sad sick are people who feel and are sad and they feel and are sick." Obviously, one can have a majority of the six factors but be felled by a fatal compulsion. So Babe Ruth, a heavy cigar smoker, died of laryngeal cancer at age 53, even though he had a fine second marriage and possessed most of Vaillant’s other factors. A gifted ballplayer, Mickey Mantle often repeated the line attributed to the 100 year-old Hubie Blake: "If I’d known I’d live this long, I’d have taken better care of myself." Mantle’s marriage and then his health were ruined by alcohol. He succumbed to a cancerous liver at 63. Marilyn Monroe’s failing was more subtle. It has to do with what Vaillant calls "taking people inside," the ability to internalize and be enriched by the love and caring of others.

"Look at that famous line when Monroe says to Joe DiMaggio [then her husband], You don’t know what it’s like to have 50,000 people cheering for you,’ and he said, Yes, Marilyn, I do.’ She was a beautiful person physically and quite a nice person and talented, so most people that knew her cared about her, but it did her absolutely no good, because she couldn’t eat any of the fruit she couldn’t take the love inside." Many of the answers that study participants send back offer excellent guides to living the good life. One question was: "What is the most important thing that makes you want to get out of bed in the morning?" An 84-year-old study member answered, "I live to work, to learn something that I didn’t know yesterday to enjoy the precious moments with my wife." Other cases offer surprises. Anthony Pirelli was one of the socially disadvantaged inner-city subjects. His parents were born in Italy and barely spoke English. Pirelli grew up poor. Worse, his father was an abusive, alcoholic lout who beat his wife and children. A psychologist described the 13-year-old Pirelli as "unaggressive, sensitive, and fearful of parental disapproval." But the real lesson of his life was that he was not a prisoner of childhood: by age 30 he was a successful CPA and had a successful marriage. Now 70, Pirelli has survived open-heart surgery. He plays tennis, enjoys his retirement and says, "Life is never boring for me." Pirelli’s case illustrates one of Vaillant’s hopeful creeds: The past often predicts but never determines our old age.

Happily, Aging Well is free of the jargon and academic-speak that scares off would-be readers of scientific studies. The writing is clear, passionate and chock-full of poetic sentiments on aging. In one instance Vaillant reminds us of the words of Scrooge in Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol: "Men’s courses will foreshadow certain ends, to which, if persevered in, they must lead. But if the course be departed from, the ends will change." People can change; there is hope. But change is easier when you come armed with sufficient knowledge about how to change. Vaillant has provided that knowledge in Aging Well.

Golden oldies The study identified several factors that affect the quality of life as we age: It is not the bad things that happen to us that doom us; it is the good people we encounter at any age that facilitate enjoyable aging.

A good marriage at age 50 predicts positive aging at 80. But surprisingly, low cholesterol levels at age 50 do not. Alcohol abuse unrelated to unhappy childhood consistently predicts unsuccessful aging, in part because alcohol damages future social supports. Learning to play and create after retirement and learning to gain younger friends as we lose older ones add more to our enjoyment than retirement income.

Healing relationships a key component of aging well are facilitated by a capacity for gratitude and forgiveness.

 

If you're interested in living to an advanced age and still having a "a good life" something the Greeks attempted to define 2,400 years ago a new book by a Harvard psychiatrist offers some unexpected and invaluable insights.

Aging Well: Surprising Guideposts…

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