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It’s steamy and suggestive, an unauthorized tell-all. These are words business reviewers rarely get to use. Banned is another word rarely applied to business books, yet iCon: Steve Jobs, the Greatest Second Act in the History of Business has managed to acquire all of the above descriptors. Written by Jeffrey S. Young, co-founder of MacWorld and Forbes.com, and William L. Simon, a screenwriter, author and movie insider, iCon chronicles the rise, fall and rise again of business phoenix Steve Jobs, CEO of Apple.

Much of the book is an abridged version of Young’s (also unauthorized) 1987 book, Steve Jobs: The Journey is the Reward, but it also traces his brilliant business career after Apple. Jobs famously exited Apple in 1985 and founded NeXT computer, which was later swallowed up by Apple and upon which Mac OS X is based. He is credited with the immense success of Pixar and its animated movies, such as Toy Story and The Incredibles not to mention his most recent best-selling dream-child, iPod. While mainly focused on Job’s leadership and career at Apple, Young and Simon’s story also includes personal facts about him, making the book something of a cross between Business 101 and the Hollywood Insider.

Jobs makes it clear to friends and associates that sharing details of his private life with the business equivalent of paparazzi is tantamount to betrayal. So it wasn’t a complete surprise when iCon entered a new category, that of banned book. This spring The San Jose Mercury News reported that iCon‘s publisher, John Wiley ∧ Sons, said Apple Computer has removed all its titles from the shelves of Apple stores in apparent retaliation for publication of the book. Stories of an illegitimate child, brushes with movie stars and an ego the size of any prima donna’s lend iCon its steamy reputation. And while it may not be as clear and easy to read as an Apple computer manual, it is a real-life story, a fascinating tale of an imaginative genius. Sharon Secor writes from Minneapolis.

It's steamy and suggestive, an unauthorized tell-all. These are words business reviewers rarely get to use. Banned is another word rarely applied to business books, yet iCon: Steve Jobs, the Greatest Second Act in the History of Business has managed to acquire all of the…
Review by

Several years ago at a conference on creativity for nonprofit managers, we were asked to design the "perfect" bathtub. Nonprofit managers tend to think creativity is their middle name, so we attacked our task in determined fashion, ready to bring perfect bathing to the world. Sad to say, we came up with few great ideas: "self-cleaning," "built-in head rest" and "soft-sided" didn’t have anyone rushing to buy bubble bath.

If, as people say, we are all "born creative" then maybe our latent artistic side was resting. But resting for too long as the business world speeds on with new products and new ways to reach customers can spell disaster. A new research report shows that failure to innovate is a common trap that will hamper growth for 70 percent of large firms and even destroy entire companies.

We returned to our bathtub assignment, and this time the underpaid, overworked managers worked with perfect escapism in mind. Ideas like "Built-in television and stereo," "automatic aromatherapy sensors" and "massage action tub lining" began to emerge. We were on a roll; our creative juices were flowing.

It turns out we were on to something. These days, manufacturers report stereo and aromatherapy tubs are flying out of bath showrooms. Luck? No, it was creativity and innovation. This month, we examine seven books that promise to help business managers crawl out of the resting rut and get inspired.

If your company needs revving, go find Get Weird!: 101 Innovative Ways to Make Your Company a Great Place to Work by John Putzier. This is exactly the kind of refreshing challenge any group of managers can sink into after a long day at the office. Heck, buy one for every manager on your floor and get together over lunch to get weird.

With humor and ingenuity, Putzier challenges today’s mega-companies to reassess some of their personnel, education and marketing practices to make every work environment a fun and productive place for employees. Weirdness, his name for constant innovative and creative challenge for employees, can revitalize morale, sales and workplace cohesiveness. He makes a cogent argument that in today’s tight labor market companies must reinvent the way they retain employees and create new products. Admittedly, just reading some of his ideas gave me new vigor. Putzier is right: creativity has a purpose, and that purpose can revitalize every aspect of your workplace.

While Get Weird is a "let’s get the juices flowing" idea book, Whoosh: Business in the Fast Lane by Thomas McGehee Jr. is a primer for the creative innovation company. McGehee compares old-line corporate practices of the past to innovative companies he says have stayed ahead of the economic curve. McGehee deftly convinces corporate executives that innovation is not a "new" practice, but rather the lifeblood of business.

McGehee, the vice president of a major consulting firm with Fortune 500 clients, drew on his military past as the starting point for a belief in employee innovation. "Whenever I told a Marine what to do, he or she did it. Nothing remarkable there. But when I told a Marine what needed to be accomplished, he or she always did more. When people are free to choose how to get things done they almost always do more." He says current practice tells employees there is only one way to get a job done. That kills innovation in the workplace.

What McGehee calls Whoosh is not about employee perks or warm fuzzies. He says it’s about employee performance. I liked his no-nonsense, straightforward approach to convincing organizations that innovation is the best practice. He says, "no matter how the economy goes, one thing will remain competition. The organizations that are the strongest competitors win. Creation companies are the strongest competitors because they have strength in their people, in their structure and in their ability to use technology to enable both." If that argument doesn’t convince CEOs to open doors for a Whoosh of fresh air, nothing will.

Breakthrough Teams for Breakneck Times: Unlocking the Genius of Creative Collaboration adds another twist to the innovation and creativity puzzle. Authors Lisa Gundry, Ph.D., and Laurie LaMantia want everyone to have a good time at work, and this book is dedicated to the principle that enjoyable teamwork can be one of the most innovative and creative processes going. Sometimes one person’s good idea leads to another’s great idea and someone else’s brilliant idea. Once challenged, and once comfortable with being creative in front of each other, a group can feed off each other’s innovations. The duo cites examples from successful businesses and provides a framework for developing team principles to enhance creativity. The concept of "fit," how well a personality meshes with a corporation’s values, is used to help teams find places for every personality in the creative process. Combining organizational theory and creativity practices, Gundry and LaMantia offer invaluable tools for enhancing business and personal potential, developing creativity and making it all worthwhile. Refreshingly honest, Breakthrough Teams tells managers not to get bogged down on building the team, but to spend time developing creativity. This guide is a great place for managers to start the creative process.

A dreary commute can also be a good time to get your creative juices flowing. One innovative new entry is an audiobook, How To Think Like Einstein by Scott Thorpe and read by Kerin McCue which provides stimulating and thought-provoking listening on one of the greatest creative minds of the 20th century. Thorpe outlines the rule-breaking journey Albert Einstein traveled as he sought to uncover physics’ great mysteries. A master of creative thinking, Einstein wrote in 1949, "It is nothing short of a miracle that the modern methods of instruction have not yet entirely strangled the holy curiosity of inquiry; for this delicate little plant, aside from stimulation, stands mainly in need of freedom; without this it goes to wreck and ruin without fail." With common sense techniques, Thorpe makes genius sound like a simple process. Rearranging your way of thinking about concepts or problems defines the Einsteinian approach. Break the Rules, Think like a Spider and other exercises get mental juices ready to attack old dilemmas in new ways. Fresh and invigorating, Thorpe’s audio says we can all be Einstein in our own unique ways.

Briefly noted The Other 90%: How to Unlock Your Vast Untapped Potential for Leadership and Life by Robert K. Cooper, Ph.D., is an exercise in unlocking your innovative potential. Cooper’s message is simple; you have more to offer the world than you know. You’ll be surprised at the extraordinary array of physical exercises (even relaxation techniques) and common sense advice Cooper offers to help you unlock the 90 percent of your brainpower you never knew you had.

Thriving in 24/7: Six Strategies for Taming the New World of Work by Sally Helgesen. A series of interviews led Hegelsen, author of The Female Advantage, to develop six strategies for coping with the ever lengthening, more-demanding-than-ever work world. This book offers a little piece of sanity in a confusing 24/7 world. Hegelsen says learn to love your job, make the work world the best place it can be and turn work relationships into something more than corporate connections.

Sharon Secor is a Minneapolis-based writer now experiencing the joys of corporate relocation.

 

Several years ago at a conference on creativity for nonprofit managers, we were asked to design the "perfect" bathtub. Nonprofit managers tend to think creativity is their middle name, so we attacked our task in determined fashion, ready to bring perfect bathing to the…

Review by

One year after the publication of his best-selling and critically acclaimed novel Lullaby, Chuck Palahniuk is back with another unnerving installment in his growing canon of revisionist horror tales. If Lullaby was about words and their power to kill, then Diary is the other side of the coin: it is about art and its ability to shape our destinies. In his inimitable style, Palahniuk has forged another chilling tale out of our deepest fears and given readers a Rosemary’s Baby for the new millennium. Art school dropout Misty Wilmot is living a life on the appropriately named Waytansea Island that she never quite imagined. Once an aspiring artist, Misty is now relegated to waiting on the odd assortment of Mayflower-descended residents at the Waytansea Hotel’s restaurant while her husband, Peter Wilmot, lies in a coma at a hospital, the victim of a failed suicide. But now, at the dubious urging of her mother-in-law, Grace Wilmot, Misty is once again painting. And painting as if her life and the life of Waytansea Island literally depended on it. In a style that is book-by-book becoming his alone, Palahniuk writes painstakingly detailed and claustrophobic scenarios that draw the reader into Misty’s life. Imbued with a growing sense of paranoia that builds with every turn of the page, Diary is Palahniuk at his harrowing best. Through a series of entries written in a “coma diary” she is keeping for her husband, we become privy to Misty’s life on the island; the device of the diary is an effective tool allowing us to see into both the world and mind of Misty Wilmot. As the entries in her diary grow, Misty becomes more and more consumed by her painting, eventually becoming a slave to art, the diary and the residents of Waytansea Island. Is all art good for us? Do we spend our lives looking to become what we’ve always been? Are we all in our own personal coma? Diary may not offer the answers to these questions, but in making us ask them of ourselves, it suggests much more. T.

A. Grasso lives in Hoboken, New Jersey.

One year after the publication of his best-selling and critically acclaimed novel Lullaby, Chuck Palahniuk is back with another unnerving installment in his growing canon of revisionist horror tales. If Lullaby was about words and their power to kill, then Diary is the other side…
Review by

Some years ago, John Crowley published Missolonghi 1824, a short story about the poet Lord Byron’s last days in Greece, when he lay dying of fever, attended only by a servant boy. The story draws a thin line between Byron’s vivid dream-state and his pitiful reality, ending on a question in the poet’s own mind (perhaps his very last thought?) about what had really happened and what he had only dreamed.

This brief tale not only anticipates Crowley’s preoccupation with Byron in his daring new novel; it also distills an abiding theme of this celebrated author the greatest fantasist of our time into its essence: there are multiple realities, and the sum of them is only just out of reach, like a dream that can be recaptured. Lord Byron wrote no novel; this we know as fact. It would have been enough for any ordinary writer of fantasy to present an ingeniously fabricated piece of Byronic fiction, along with a credible foundation for its existence. But for Crowley, the presence of Lord Byron’s novel within his own Lord Byron’s Novel acts as but the fulcrum for all the various, radiating wonders of the book.

Enfolded within the discovery of the novel is the history of Byron’s daughter Ada who, as a matter of fact, invented the first computer program in 1842. It is Crowley’s piece of impertinence (as he impishly calls it in his postscript) to imagine that Ada preserved her father’s unknown prose fiction in numerical code, in order to conceal it from her vengeful mother. Enfolded further into Ada’s story is that of Alexandra Novak, the feminist scholar who stumbles upon Byron’s encoded novel in her research on his brilliant scientist daughter. Alex was forcibly estranged from her rake of a father, just as Ada was from hers. It is Alex’s father who strikes just the right note for us to rediscover Byron’s greatness in our own time (and this is surely Crowley’s primary objective): nil alienum humani. Nothing that is human should be alien to us. It is a tall order. Like so much else we can only imagine, John Crowley places it within our reach.

Some years ago, John Crowley published Missolonghi 1824, a short story about the poet Lord Byron's last days in Greece, when he lay dying of fever, attended only by a servant boy. The story draws a thin line between Byron's vivid dream-state and his pitiful…
Review by

Several years ago at a conference on creativity for nonprofit managers, we were asked to design the "perfect" bathtub. Nonprofit managers tend to think creativity is their middle name, so we attacked our task in determined fashion, ready to bring perfect bathing to the world. Sad to say, we came up with few great ideas: "self-cleaning," "built-in head rest" and "soft-sided" didn’t have anyone rushing to buy bubble bath.

If, as people say, we are all "born creative" then maybe our latent artistic side was resting. But resting for too long as the business world speeds on with new products and new ways to reach customers can spell disaster. A new research report shows that failure to innovate is a common trap that will hamper growth for 70 percent of large firms and even destroy entire companies.

We returned to our bathtub assignment, and this time the underpaid, overworked managers worked with perfect escapism in mind. Ideas like "Built-in television and stereo," "automatic aromatherapy sensors" and "massage action tub lining" began to emerge. We were on a roll; our creative juices were flowing.

It turns out we were on to something. These days, manufacturers report stereo and aromatherapy tubs are flying out of bath showrooms. Luck? No, it was creativity and innovation. This month, we examine seven books that promise to help business managers crawl out of the resting rut and get inspired.

If your company needs revving, go find Get Weird!: 101 Innovative Ways to Make Your Company a Great Place to Work by John Putzier. This is exactly the kind of refreshing challenge any group of managers can sink into after a long day at the office. Heck, buy one for every manager on your floor and get together over lunch to get weird.

With humor and ingenuity, Putzier challenges today’s mega-companies to reassess some of their personnel, education and marketing practices to make every work environment a fun and productive place for employees. Weirdness, his name for constant innovative and creative challenge for employees, can revitalize morale, sales and workplace cohesiveness. He makes a cogent argument that in today’s tight labor market companies must reinvent the way they retain employees and create new products. Admittedly, just reading some of his ideas gave me new vigor. Putzier is right: creativity has a purpose, and that purpose can revitalize every aspect of your workplace.

While Get Weird is a "let’s get the juices flowing" idea book, Whoosh: Business in the Fast Lane by Thomas McGehee Jr. is a primer for the creative innovation company. McGehee compares old-line corporate practices of the past to innovative companies he says have stayed ahead of the economic curve. McGehee deftly convinces corporate executives that innovation is not a "new" practice, but rather the lifeblood of business.

McGehee, the vice president of a major consulting firm with Fortune 500 clients, drew on his military past as the starting point for a belief in employee innovation. "Whenever I told a Marine what to do, he or she did it. Nothing remarkable there. But when I told a Marine what needed to be accomplished, he or she always did more. When people are free to choose how to get things done they almost always do more." He says current practice tells employees there is only one way to get a job done. That kills innovation in the workplace.

What McGehee calls Whoosh is not about employee perks or warm fuzzies. He says it’s about employee performance. I liked his no-nonsense, straightforward approach to convincing organizations that innovation is the best practice. He says, "no matter how the economy goes, one thing will remain competition. The organizations that are the strongest competitors win. Creation companies are the strongest competitors because they have strength in their people, in their structure and in their ability to use technology to enable both." If that argument doesn’t convince CEOs to open doors for a Whoosh of fresh air, nothing will.

Breakthrough Teams for Breakneck Times: Unlocking the Genius of Creative Collaboration adds another twist to the innovation and creativity puzzle. Authors Lisa Gundry, Ph.D., and Laurie LaMantia want everyone to have a good time at work, and this book is dedicated to the principle that enjoyable teamwork can be one of the most innovative and creative processes going. Sometimes one person’s good idea leads to another’s great idea and someone else’s brilliant idea. Once challenged, and once comfortable with being creative in front of each other, a group can feed off each other’s innovations. The duo cites examples from successful businesses and provides a framework for developing team principles to enhance creativity. The concept of "fit," how well a personality meshes with a corporation’s values, is used to help teams find places for every personality in the creative process. Combining organizational theory and creativity practices, Gundry and LaMantia offer invaluable tools for enhancing business and personal potential, developing creativity and making it all worthwhile. Refreshingly honest, Breakthrough Teams tells managers not to get bogged down on building the team, but to spend time developing creativity. This guide is a great place for managers to start the creative process.

A dreary commute can also be a good time to get your creative juices flowing. One innovative new entry is an audiobook, How To Think Like Einstein by Scott Thorpe and read by Kerin McCue which provides stimulating and thought-provoking listening on one of the greatest creative minds of the 20th century. Thorpe outlines the rule-breaking journey Albert Einstein traveled as he sought to uncover physics’ great mysteries. A master of creative thinking, Einstein wrote in 1949, "It is nothing short of a miracle that the modern methods of instruction have not yet entirely strangled the holy curiosity of inquiry; for this delicate little plant, aside from stimulation, stands mainly in need of freedom; without this it goes to wreck and ruin without fail." With common sense techniques, Thorpe makes genius sound like a simple process. Rearranging your way of thinking about concepts or problems defines the Einsteinian approach. Break the Rules, Think like a Spider and other exercises get mental juices ready to attack old dilemmas in new ways. Fresh and invigorating, Thorpe’s audio says we can all be Einstein in our own unique ways.

Briefly noted The Other 90%: How to Unlock Your Vast Untapped Potential for Leadership and Life by Robert K. Cooper, Ph.D., is an exercise in unlocking your innovative potential. Cooper’s message is simple; you have more to offer the world than you know. You’ll be surprised at the extraordinary array of physical exercises (even relaxation techniques) and common sense advice Cooper offers to help you unlock the 90 percent of your brainpower you never knew you had.

Thriving in 24/7: Six Strategies for Taming the New World of Work by Sally Helgesen. A series of interviews led Hegelsen, author of The Female Advantage, to develop six strategies for coping with the ever lengthening, more-demanding-than-ever work world. This book offers a little piece of sanity in a confusing 24/7 world. Hegelsen says learn to love your job, make the work world the best place it can be and turn work relationships into something more than corporate connections.

Sharon Secor is a Minneapolis-based writer now experiencing the joys of corporate relocation.

 

Several years ago at a conference on creativity for nonprofit managers, we were asked to design the "perfect" bathtub. Nonprofit managers tend to think creativity is their middle name, so we attacked our task in determined fashion, ready to bring perfect bathing to the…

Review by

Every professor learns the hard way that scholarship does not prepare the scholar for classroom teaching. David Nolta’s first novel hinges on an equally reliable proposition: scholarship, no matter how brilliant, does not make the scholar well-equipped for love or marriage. The murder of beautiful Virginia Vanderlyn, wife of one of Clare College’s most distinguished professors, is a brutal instance of the sorry state of affairs in the academy. Despite the high concentration of brain matter on one small campus, no one (or so it would seem) least of all Virginia’s archaeologist husband knows that she is dead and buried under the floorboards of the Vanderlyn mansion until 10 years after the deed is done. These various proofs of idiocy do not, however, add up to a typical satire on academic life. The subtitle of Grave Circle, “An Ivory Tower Mystery,” invites the reader to think of the book as a murder mystery; but at the same time “Ivory Tower” promises a comedy of manners, a promise fulfilled by the author’s affectionately tongue-in-cheek portrait of New England college life.

There is nothing satirical about the novel’s heroine, either, apart from her outlandish name. Nolta presents a vivid portrait of the inscrutable Antigone Musing, professor of chemistry, as she sits musing (no other word for it) on the arrival of her brother Hiawatha. Nolta almost immediately undercuts the pomposity of these names with the more manageable nicknames Hi and Tig. Such good-natured abbreviations fairly sum up the delightful psychology of the novel: everything falsely inflated gets the stuffing knocked out of it, including both the inevitable love story and the unexpected family romance that unfold. Making their amateur investigations of Virginia Vanderlyn’s murder, Hi and Tig form a fascinating, if ineffectual, duo of novice detectives. And as the mystery nears its suspenseful climax, Grave Circle summons the strange and satisfying feeling that something much more is afoot here than the “game.” To try to name that feeling would be academic. Michael Alec Rose is an associate professor at Vanderbilt’s Blair School of Music.

Every professor learns the hard way that scholarship does not prepare the scholar for classroom teaching. David Nolta's first novel hinges on an equally reliable proposition: scholarship, no matter how brilliant, does not make the scholar well-equipped for love or marriage. The murder of beautiful…
Review by

Have you ever wanted your own copy of the Weasley twins’ Marauder’s Map? You just might find something close in David Colbert’s The Hidden Myths in Harry Potter: Spellbinding Map and Book of Secrets. Colbert has already written one popular Potter reference book (The Magical World of Harry Potter) and his latest work is sure to be a welcome addition to any young wizard’s library (or young marauder’s bag of tricks!).

Have you ever wanted your own copy of the Weasley twins' Marauder's Map? You just might find something close in David Colbert's The Hidden Myths in Harry Potter: Spellbinding Map and Book of Secrets. Colbert has already written one popular Potter reference book (The Magical…
Review by

Several years ago at a conference on creativity for nonprofit managers, we were asked to design the “perfect” bathtub. Nonprofit managers tend to think creativity is their middle name, so we attacked our task in determined fashion, ready to bring perfect bathing to the world. Sad to say, we came up with few great ideas: “self-cleaning,” “built-in head rest” and “soft-sided” didn’t have anyone rushing to buy bubble bath.

If, as people say, we are all “born creative” then maybe our latent artistic side was resting. But resting for too long as the business world speeds on with new products and new ways to reach customers can spell disaster. A new research report shows that failure to innovate is a common trap that will hamper growth for 70 percent of large firms and even destroy entire companies.

We returned to our bathtub assignment, and this time the underpaid, overworked managers worked with perfect escapism in mind. Ideas like “Built-in television and stereo,” “automatic aromatherapy sensors” and “massage action tub lining” began to emerge. We were on a roll; our creative juices were flowing.

It turns out we were on to something. These days, manufacturers report stereo and aromatherapy tubs are flying out of bath showrooms. Luck? No, it was creativity and innovation. This month, we examine seven books that promise to help business managers crawl out of the resting rut and get inspired.

If your company needs revving, go find Get Weird!: 101 Innovative Ways to Make Your Company a Great Place to Work by John Putzier. This is exactly the kind of refreshing challenge any group of managers can sink into after a long day at the office. Heck, buy one for every manager on your floor and get together over lunch to get weird.

With humor and ingenuity, Putzier challenges today’s mega-companies to reassess some of their personnel, education and marketing practices to make every work environment a fun and productive place for employees. Weirdness, his name for constant innovative and creative challenge for employees, can revitalize morale, sales and workplace cohesiveness. He makes a cogent argument that in today’s tight labor market companies must reinvent the way they retain employees and create new products. Admittedly, just reading some of his ideas gave me new vigor. Putzier is right: creativity has a purpose, and that purpose can revitalize every aspect of your workplace.

While Get Weird is a “let’s get the juices flowing” idea book, Whoosh: Business in the Fast Lane by Thomas McGehee Jr. is a primer for the creative innovation company. McGehee compares old-line corporate practices of the past to innovative companies he says have stayed ahead of the economic curve. McGehee deftly convinces corporate executives that innovation is not a “new” practice, but rather the lifeblood of business.

McGehee, the vice president of a major consulting firm with Fortune 500 clients, drew on his military past as the starting point for a belief in employee innovation. “Whenever I told a Marine what to do, he or she did it. Nothing remarkable there. But when I told a Marine what needed to be accomplished, he or she always did more. When people are free to choose how to get things done they almost always do more.” He says current practice tells employees there is only one way to get a job done. That kills innovation in the workplace.

What McGehee calls Whoosh is not about employee perks or warm fuzzies. He says it’s about employee performance. I liked his no-nonsense, straightforward approach to convincing organizations that innovation is the best practice. He says, “no matter how the economy goes, one thing will remain competition. The organizations that are the strongest competitors win. Creation companies are the strongest competitors because they have strength in their people, in their structure and in their ability to use technology to enable both.” If that argument doesn’t convince CEOs to open doors for a Whoosh of fresh air, nothing will.

Breakthrough Teams for Breakneck Times: Unlocking the Genius of Creative Collaboration adds another twist to the innovation and creativity puzzle. Authors Lisa Gundry, Ph.

D., and Laurie LaMantia want everyone to have a good time at work, and this book is dedicated to the principle that enjoyable teamwork can be one of the most innovative and creative processes going. Sometimes one person’s good idea leads to another’s great idea and someone else’s brilliant idea. Once challenged, and once comfortable with being creative in front of each other, a group can feed off each other’s innovations. The duo cites examples from successful businesses and provides a framework for developing team principles to enhance creativity. The concept of “fit,” how well a personality meshes with a corporation’s values, is used to help teams find places for every personality in the creative process. Combining organizational theory and creativity practices, Gundry and LaMantia offer invaluable tools for enhancing business and personal potential, developing creativity and making it all worthwhile. Refreshingly honest, Breakthrough Teams tells managers not to get bogged down on building the team, but to spend time developing creativity. This guide is a great place for managers to start the creative process.

A dreary commute can also be a good time to get your creative juices flowing. One innovative new entry is an audiobook, How To Think Like Einstein by Scott Thorpe and read by Kerin McCue which provides stimulating and thought-provoking listening on one of the greatest creative minds of the 20th century. Thorpe outlines the rule-breaking journey Albert Einstein traveled as he sought to uncover physics’ great mysteries. A master of creative thinking, Einstein wrote in 1949, “It is nothing short of a miracle that the modern methods of instruction have not yet entirely strangled the holy curiosity of inquiry; for this delicate little plant, aside from stimulation, stands mainly in need of freedom; without this it goes to wreck and ruin without fail.” With common sense techniques, Thorpe makes genius sound like a simple process. Rearranging your way of thinking about concepts or problems defines the Einsteinian approach. Break the Rules, Think like a Spider and other exercises get mental juices ready to attack old dilemmas in new ways. Fresh and invigorating, Thorpe’s audio says we can all be Einstein in our own unique ways.

Briefly noted The Other 90%: How to Unlock Your Vast Untapped Potential for Leadership and Life by Robert K. Cooper, Ph.

D., is an exercise in unlocking your innovative potential. Cooper’s message is simple; you have more to offer the world than you know. You’ll be surprised at the extraordinary array of physical exercises (even relaxation techniques) and common sense advice Cooper offers to help you unlock the 90 percent of your brainpower you never knew you had.

Thriving in 24/7: Six Strategies for Taming the New World of Work by Sally Helgesen. A series of interviews led Hegelsen, author of The Female Advantage, to develop six strategies for coping with the ever lengthening, more-demanding-than-ever work world. This book offers a little piece of sanity in a confusing 24/7 world. Hegelsen says learn to love your job, make the work world the best place it can be and turn work relationships into something more than corporate connections.

Sharon Secor is a Minneapolis-based writer now experiencing the joys of corporate relocation.

Several years ago at a conference on creativity for nonprofit managers, we were asked to design the "perfect" bathtub. Nonprofit managers tend to think creativity is their middle name, so we attacked our task in determined fashion, ready to bring perfect bathing to the world.…
Review by

If you just can’t wait until July 16 to get a pinch of Potter, there are a few other options. George Beahm’s new Fact, Fiction, and Folklore in Harry Potter’s World: An Unofficial Guide explores the real and mythical origins of the creatures, places and characters in J. K. Rowling’s books. You can look up specific terms (entries are in alphabetical order and separated into categories), or browse as you like. It’s a handy way to learn a little more about the very real folk tales, myths and lore that inspired Rowling’s novels.

If you just can't wait until July 16 to get a pinch of Potter, there are a few other options. George Beahm's new Fact, Fiction, and Folklore in Harry Potter's World: An Unofficial Guide explores the real and mythical origins of the creatures, places…
Review by

Everyone in Jamesland, it seems, is on hold.

Alice Black waits to hear whether her lover, Nick, who is married to one of Hollywood’s brightest stars, will get a divorce. Pete, a once successful but now slightly suicidal chef, marks time back in his mother’s care until he can make it on his own again.

Helen Harland, a Unitarian-Universalist minister who is considered “too religious” by her congregation, delays deciding whether to go or stay in that position. And in the nursing home, Alice’s Aunt Kate, a descendant of the noted 19th century psychologist William James, is still working on her 60-year-old novel about his life and generally mixing up the past with the present and her relatives with his.

Everything comes to life when Alice wakes up one night to find a deer in her house. As she tries to make sense of what appears to have been a kind of spiritual experience, she sets Pete and Helen in motion. As they get on with their lives, they probe some of the open issues of life in the 21st century, including “the variety show of religious experience.” For Pete, whose psychiatrist judges his personality “incompatible with life,” the question is, “How do people live in this world?” For Helen, it’s “If you can’t hack the Hallmark-variety God, what concept of God can you live with?” For Alice, “What else was there?” (Aunt Kate no longer needs to ask questions.) Michelle Huneven’s first book, Round Rock, earned generous praise from critics, and Jamesland should too. Huneven has assembled one-of-a-kind characters attempting to make their way in an uncertain world along paths of their own choosing. And not an insignificant achievement she has produced a perfect closing sentence. We won’t spoil the impact by quoting it here, but the sentence expresses conclusively the wryly amusing, tentatively profound intent of Huneven’s fine novel. Maude McDaniel writes from Cumberland, Maryland.

Everyone in Jamesland, it seems, is on hold.

Alice Black waits to hear whether her lover, Nick, who is married to one of Hollywood's brightest stars, will get a divorce. Pete, a once successful but now slightly suicidal chef, marks time back in…
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Anyone who believes Washington is awash in power sex will find ample support for their theory in Jessica Cutler’s juicy roman ˆ clef, The Washingtonienne. When a lowly Hill staffer starts sharing her exploits with her friends via her blog, the whole world soon knows every intimate detail of her life. Jackie may be just a staff assistant, but she plays Washington’s you use me, I use you game to the hilt. Breezing through men for sex, lines of cocaine and cold, hard cash, she’s a waif with attitude. Author Cutler, a former Senate mail girl who grew infamous thanks to her own blog, cuts through the spin of inflated Washington egos with an edge as sharp as the heels of Jackie’s Manolos. She delivers the dish and an insider’s view of Washington’s two favorite sports, and we don’t mean baseball and the Redskins. Cutler also drops pseudonyms like crazy, leaving readers guessing who the characters (such as Bloggette ) really are. Savvy and sexy, this sizzler strips away the pompous, stodgy veneer of our capital city to prove that all Washington is political, from the boardroom to the bedroom. We just know this racy tale is going to be clucked over and tucked into every messenger bag and briefcase in the District.

Sandy Huseby wonders why Washington seemed so different way back when she was a Senate intern.

Anyone who believes Washington is awash in power sex will find ample support for their theory in Jessica Cutler's juicy roman ˆ clef, The Washingtonienne. When a lowly Hill staffer starts sharing her exploits with her friends via her blog, the whole world soon knows…
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Echoing the themes of his National Book Award nominee, The Feast of Love, Charles Baxter’s latest novel examines the ways in which humanity is enriched by our capacity to both love and be loved. After graduating from Northwestern, Saul and Patsy Bernstein find themselves in Five Oaks, Michigan, “the rural middle of American nowhere,” where Saul has landed a job as a history and journalism teacher, and Patsy a position at the local bank. They are so devoted to one another that it doesn’t matter where they live, as long as they can make love and play Scrabble in their own little world.

But signs of discontent begin to haunt Saul. Being Jewish makes him feel foreign in Five Oaks, and the birth of his daughter, Emmy, leaves him unsure of his new role. Despite his wonderful marriage, he begins to feel a vague unhappiness, “like Schopenhauer arriving at the door with a big suitcase.” When Saul is assigned to teach a remedial writing class, he encounters a difficult new student, 17-year-old Gordy Himmelman. Fatherless and abused at home, Gordy becomes obsessed with Saul and Patsy. He stands aimlessly in their front yard, staring at their house, “their sentry, their guard dog, their zombie, their boy.” As problems with the boy escalate, Saul feels responsible for the tragic events that unfold. In one unforgettable scene, he finally gives way to his emotions while on a trip alone to New York City, riding back and forth on the subway from Grand Central to Times Square, his anonymous tears freely flowing.

Saul is forced to rethink the boundaries of his love what responsibilities come with it, and whom it should include, or exclude. Baxter uses two wonderfully drawn characters Saul’s brother and mother, neither of whom has ever experienced unconditional love to help Saul redefine love and its place in his life, a life now big enough to include even the Gordy Himmelmans of the world.

Echoing the themes of his National Book Award nominee, The Feast of Love, Charles Baxter's latest novel examines the ways in which humanity is enriched by our capacity to both love and be loved. After graduating from Northwestern, Saul and Patsy Bernstein find themselves in…
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Many golfers have their favorite regular playing fields, but who hasn’t dreamed of taking on the world’s exclusive and historic venues? Stoking this sense of unbridled wish fulfillment is 1001 Golf Holes You Must Play Before You Die, which offers a hearty tour of the game’s most glorious (and notorious) individual holes. Besides overseeing the assemblage of gorgeous color photos, general editor Jeff Barr supervised a team of writers who passionately describe each hole’s beauty, as well as the challenge it poses to the ambitious golfer. Coverage is international U.S., U.K., Australia, Spain, Sweden, New Zealand, Canada, Thailand, etc. with various courses represented a lot more than once. For example, Pebble Beach, Augusta National and Royal Troon (Old Course) each have five memorable holes featured. Arrangement is by hole number (1-18) and, within that, by par (3-4-5); handy indexes spur easy navigation within sections. This is simply a stunner of a book, which will sit nicely on a coffee table that is, when it’s not being thumbed eagerly by a dreamy duffer.

Many golfers have their favorite regular playing fields, but who hasn't dreamed of taking on the world's exclusive and historic venues? Stoking this sense of unbridled wish fulfillment is 1001 Golf Holes You Must Play Before You Die, which offers a hearty tour of…

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