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arren Adler takes an entrepreneurial approach to high-tech publishing Warren Adler is one adaptable author. A successful writer for three decades, he is embracing the new technology of publishing with entrepreneurial enthusiasm, while younger writers remain cautious toward the development of e-books and print-on-demand services.

Perhaps Adler’s flexibility stems from his string of successful careers. A reporter for several New York City-area newspapers, he served as a Pentagon correspondent for the Armed Forces Press Service during the Korean War. For many years, he ran a successful public relations and advertising firm in Washington, D.C. He has owned radio stations and was publisher of Washington Dossier magazine. He’s a warm, conversive, positive-thinking gentleman.

He’s also the author of 24 novels, two of which have been made into high-profile movies: Random Hearts, which starred Harrison Ford and Kristin Scott Thomas, and, more famously, The War of the Roses, the Michael Douglas-Kathleen Turner vehicle that turned divorce into an ugly physical battleground of black humor. “War of the Roses is part of my success,” says Adler, speaking from New York City, where he prefers to be when he’s not at his other home in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. “It plays at least once a week somewhere in the world. Random Hearts, on the other hand, disappointed me,” Adler adds wistfully, “But that’s Hollywood.” Adler’s first novel was published in 1974, which means he’s written almost a book a year since. His latest is Mourning Glory, a tale set in what Adler likes to call the “ghetto” of Palm Beach, Florida, where people of money and extravagance coexist uneasily with the downtrodden and the have-nots.

Grace Sorentino is Adler’s unlikely heroine. A single mother pushing 40, she works the cosmetics counter at Saks, waiting on wealthy WASPish ladies. The rest of her time is spent keeping an eye on her misguided, trouble-prone 16-year-old daughter, Jackie. Life takes a turn when Grace is fired for being less-than-accommodating to a haughty customer. Her boss’ parting advice? Go find a rich widower, work your way into his heart and ride the gravy train into a comfortable, carefree life. This Grace does, though not without plenty of complications.

It’s not unusual for Adler to write about people of power or money. Yet he always manages to find a different slant in approaching his characters.

“I can’t write the same book twice,” he says. “I’m not a formula writer. That wouldn’t be enjoyable for me after 24 novels. I never repeat myself. I do, however, like to write about love. It’s the one great mystery. No one knows why we are attracted to another. Love remains a mysterious emotion.” Love is one thing, but setting out to “catch a man” is quite another. One wonders what kind of reaction Adler’s book will induce in more politically correct readers. “When I wrote this book, I was aware that the feminist reaction might be strong, that I was implying that a woman must find a man to solve her problems. But editors and women love it. The old feminist caveat is out the window. Some people believe it’s a solution for women. [Novelist] Barbara Taylor Bradford thinks I really understand women,” Adler laughs. “I’m not so sure I do.” True to his entrepreneurial spirit, Adler is now involved in a project that consumes as much time as crafting popular fiction. Faced with the reality that 20 of his books were out of print, Adler created an e-book and print-on-demand (POD) library of his previously published novels, with availability on platforms such as Microsoft Reader and Adobe Acrobat. “I own the rights to most of my backlist,” he says. “Now these books will be reissued electronically, with sales availability through Ingram or online booksellers such as Barnes ∧ Noble. You’ll be able to read my books on handheld devices like Palm Pilots.” In some ways, what Adler is doing mirrors higher-tech approaches in the music business, where artists issue their own CDs, then use electronic means to market them independently. Adler explains, “With POD, a machine spits out a book, in trade cover or hardback, in a minute or two. It’s in the customer’s hands 48 hours after they order it.” Adler has even taken his case to more formal arenas, recently addressing the Public Library Association on the future of electronic publishing. “It’s very interesting to me that libraries know about POD and e-books more than anyone. They’ve been very helpful to me. They have a complete understanding of it.” Adler’s enthusiasm for this new means of promotion seems unquenchable. One wonders about the potential downside.

“There is none,” he says confidently. “It’s a promotional device. Never again will my books go out of print. They’ll be available through a worldwide distribution mechanism. And what about publishers in the midst of all this new technology? Adler says they’re going to have to adjust. He believes that the traditional publishing paradigm may soon become a thing of the past, especially as writers embrace the “no inventory” new technology and learn to harness it.

“I love my work,” say Adler. “I write 300 days a year. But you’ve got to have people reading your product. The ecstasy’s in the work, but it’s still a one-on-one communication system. This whole project is designed to harvest my readership. I have a Web site www.warrenadler.com and I’ll soon have a newsletter available. I want to communicate with my readers.” In case any of those devoted fans ever wondered what happened after Oliver and Barbara Rose crashed to the floor in that chandelier, Adler’s next book project is a sequel to his most famous novel. Like Mourning Glory, it’ll first hit the stands in a traditional print format. “Publishing in all technologies is good,” states Adler, “through the actual publisher, or e-book or POD. It’s a synergistic approach. My strength is that I understand marketing and promotion. But right now, I’m the only author doing it. A lot of other writers are watching to see how it goes for me. But they should be in this game. It’s the future.” Martin Brady is an editor, writer and critic. He lives in Nashville.

arren Adler takes an entrepreneurial approach to high-tech publishing Warren Adler is one adaptable author. A successful writer for three decades, he is embracing the new technology of publishing with entrepreneurial enthusiasm, while younger writers remain cautious toward the development of e-books and print-on-demand services.
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Hubert Horatio Bartle Bobton-Trent is one of the funniest children’s books I’ve read in a while, with a host of quirky illustrations adding to the shenanigans. Author/illustrator Lauren Child has a great sense of fun that infuses both the text and pictures of her “riches-to-rags story.” Young Hubert is born to “frightfully, frightfully rich parents,” who eventually get a bit bored with their lavish lifestyle and decide to have a child. From the start, Hubert keeps his parents in check. For instance: “One day, when Hubert felt he was old enough to tell his parents that he did not like to be called H, he telephoned down to the drawing room, where his parents were doing some light entertaining with the Elfington-Learies.” This “light entertaining” consists of a wild game of Twister with two wealthy couples locked in some comical contortions you’ll giggle at the sight as a very small Hubert telephones them from his bed. All goes well as the years pass, but it’s lonely for Hubert, who has to climb up and down many flights of stairs to share a nightly cup of cocoa with his parents. By the time he arrives at their door, Hubert’s cocoa is always cold. Hubert, it turns out, is an absolute genius, skilled in everything he tries except cake baking and flower arranging, two skills at which “he really had to work.” But his odd though pleasant lifestyle comes to an abrupt end when he discovers that his parents are out of money. He tries various schemes to fill the family coffers entering his parents in board game championships and offering tours of their mansion but his parents immediately squander any money earned.

Hubert saves the day, selling off the family manse and finding an apartment where his father can work as the doorman. His parents proclaim, “We have never been so happy!” The final bonus is that now every night when Hubert makes his way to his parents’ much-closer bedroom, his cocoa is still warm.

Child’s fabric collages and drawings provide funky backgrounds for all of her illustrations. The Bartle Bobton-Trents are a family guaranteed to keep you entertained, whether in their mansion or in their high-rise apartment. Every family could use a little Hubert Horatio!

Hubert Horatio Bartle Bobton-Trent is one of the funniest children's books I've read in a while, with a host of quirky illustrations adding to the shenanigans. Author/illustrator Lauren Child has a great sense of fun that infuses both the text and pictures of her…
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Rare is the novel that contains both a sense of place so evocative the reader feels he has been there himself, and characters so vividly drawn that they tenaciously lure the reader into their inner lives. Such is the case with Kent Nelson’s magnetic new novel, Land That Moves, Land That Stands Still, set in the southern plains of South Dakota.

There, on an alfalfa farm situated between the Lakota reservation to the east and the Black Hills to the west, three determined women and a Native American teenager come together as a unique family, determined to keep their farm alive. Mattie is the recently widowed owner; she struggles not only with the accidental death of her husband, Haney, but also with her discovery that he had a secret gay life. Their daughter Shelley leaves college to help with the chores piling up after Haney’s death and decides to stay. Mattie needs help keeping the various tractors, balers and sprinklers in working order, so she advertises for a “hired man.” The call is answered by Dawn, a young woman running from an abusive husband, who is handy with machinery; Mattie hires her on a temporary basis. They are joined by Elton, a runaway from his own abusive home situation.

As this hastily assembled mŽlange of farm hands comes together, they learn not only how to keep their farm in working order, but how to help each other come to terms with what is missing from their lives, empowered by loyalty to the new family they have created. Numerous side plots involving romance and troublesome neighbors keep the story moving in unexpected ways, culminating in a violent encounter with Dawn’s husband that affects them all.

The land becomes part of every character and plot turn, as the author’s lyrical descriptions of approaching weather and sunsets inhabit every scene. Nelson obviously feels as close to nature as do the resilient characters he has so carefully crafted, connected as they are to the survival of this patch of land they have made home. Deborah Donovan is a writer in Cincinnati, Ohio.

Rare is the novel that contains both a sense of place so evocative the reader feels he has been there himself, and characters so vividly drawn that they tenaciously lure the reader into their inner lives. Such is the case with Kent Nelson's magnetic new…
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Just about all kids love to paint. (Adults, too. As everyone knows, one of the best parts of hanging out with children is the chance to do those fun things like play with clay, paint and coloring books all over again.) And as soon as readers get a look at the bright, spattered endpapers in this colorful celebration of art, they’re sure to be reaching for brushes and paint boxes.

Written to the tune of “It Ain’t Gonna Rain No More,” Karen Beaumont’s lively, rhyming text is perfectly accompanied by David Catrow’s hilarious illustrations. One day Mama catches the young narrator totally covered in paint, head to toe. Not only that, but the floors and walls of his room are splattered, too. So off to the bath he goes, and the painting supplies (now the only color on the page) are put away, in the top of the closet. “But there ain’t no way . . . that I ain’t gonna paint no more,” chants the young artist, climbing on chair, trunk and basket to reach the top of the closet. Young readers will have a lot of fun predicting how the drips of red that spill out from the paint can he grabs might spread on the next page and they’ll be right. First, the boy takes some red. And just where do you think that paint might land? You got it! Right on his head. Before you know it, he’s covered head to toe once again, and slowly we end up just where we started with a riot of color splashed across the page, and everything else. Beaumont and Catrow, who teamed up previously for I Like Myself, have created an exuberant tale of a child who floods his world with color. Just be sure to have lots of paper on hand after reading this book or you just might end up with paint on your walls! Deborah Hopkinson’s new picture book is Saving Strawberry Farm. She lives and picks strawberries in Oregon.

Just about all kids love to paint. (Adults, too. As everyone knows, one of the best parts of hanging out with children is the chance to do those fun things like play with clay, paint and coloring books all over again.) And as soon as…
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In his stunning debut novel Well, 26-year-old author Matthew McIntosh writes with a calm, almost anthropological solemnity about a loose collection of lost souls living in a suburb of Seattle called Federal Way. Everyone he writes about is damaged or broken or empty in some crucial way, but McIntosh never goes near bathos or melodrama. It’s as if he’s observing their behavior through a microscope and describing every detail in the dispassionate tones of a scientist. But this reportorial detachment in no way makes the book seem cold. McIntosh’s characters feel real enough to sock you in the eye. The novel has been compared to Raymond Carver’s Short Cuts; it’s a series of monologues and vignettes, some interconnected, all focusing on the constant human struggle to go on when you can’t go on and to understand why you should bother. The Carver comparison fits, but McIntosh’s material has more to do with the likes of Hubert Selby Jr. There are druggies and drug pushers, welfare queens, wife beaters, ex-fighters, barflies, bartenders, adulterous spouses in grim apartments. There’s an outcast high-school kid who stalks a girl until her father is driven to violence. There are clerks, waitresses and students, all with dark secrets. Many of these people have debilitating physical or mental ailments, but what they’re all really missing is that fix, that thing they can cling to, and so they lash out at each other or bash their heads against the wall or simply sink even deeper into the well. “What’s the use of crying and holding on to each other and talking in soft, soothing voices (or even asking each other what we’re thinking about) when what we need is really something different and that is just to be saved,” one character muses, and it’s the question that runs throughout the book. McIntosh doesn’t give us the answers, but he’s a master at dissecting the people who are grappling with the question. Becky Ohlsen writes from Portland, Oregon.

In his stunning debut novel Well, 26-year-old author Matthew McIntosh writes with a calm, almost anthropological solemnity about a loose collection of lost souls living in a suburb of Seattle called Federal Way. Everyone he writes about is damaged or broken or empty in some…
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It’s summer vacation time again, when both parent and child try to wile away the hours while they’re getting where they’re going. We’ve said it before, but it’s worth repeating: travel in cars, planes and trains can be turned into real fun in the sun if you and your about-to-be-bored offspring listen to any of the wonderfully entertaining tapes that are yours for the picking.

Are we there yet? Fortunately, Lemony Snickett’s Series of Unfortunate Events, now up to Book the Seventh, is beginning to come out in audio versions. These darkly quirky, humorous tales that follow the misfortunes of the three orphaned Baudelaire siblings, who are constantly moving from one disaster to another, are a fine way to take up the slack as we totter between Potters. The disarmingly honest Mr. Snickett warns the listener from the get- go that “the audiobook you are holding in your hands is extremely unpleasant.” But kids (ages 8-12) are not put off by these dire warnings, and neither should their elders be. The curious appeal is infectious and audiences are growing rapidly. The first two in the series The Bad Beginning and The Reptile Room are read by Tim Curry. The next two, The Wide Window and The Miserable Mill, are read by the inimitable Mr. Snickett (aka Daniel Handler) himself.

The Amber Spyglass, the final book in Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials trilogy, will keep you all enthralled for more than 14 hours. Performed by the author and a full cast, the extraordinary adventures of Lyra and Will continue as they travel to a strange, dim world where no living soul has ever gone. The first two parts of this highly acclaimed series, The Golden Compass and The Subtle Knife, are also available on cassette (ages 11 and up).

For sheer charm, and a little nostalgia for the grown-ups, listen to Ludwig Bemelmans’ timeless tales of the mischievous Madeline in the Madeline Audio Collection, read by the timeless, mischievous Carol Channing. And for the younger crew there’s The Babar Audio Collection, read by the divine Louis Jourdan. You might also want to check out the contemporary, hip Chet Gecko Private Eye (ages 5 and up) as he stars in Bruce Hale’s The Chameleon Wore Chartreuse and The Mystery of Mr. Nice.

For older ears New as an audio presentation, but not as a book, The Monkey’s Raincoat introduces Robert Crais’ smart-mouthed, tai chi-trained, Vietnam-scarred, tough-but-tender Elvis Cole and his consummately cool, armed-to-the-hilt, Rambo-esque partner Joe Pike. Elvis, a private investigator who can quip with the best of them, even when someone is holding a gun to his temple or knife to his neck, keeps the flip talk flowing while he and Joe confront a very nasty, heavily guarded, drug-dealing ex-Matador, who has probably done in the husband and kidnapped the son of a sweet, seemingly inept Encino housewife. Amid much violence and over-the-top dialogue (well delivered here by David Stuart), Elvis and Joe, with a little help from the LAPD, attempt to find Hubbie, free the boy and see that justice is done, one way or another. Fast-paced, fun and convincingly plotted, the Elvis Cole thrillers make great travel listening. The bad, the beautiful, the betrayed Elegant historical whodunits (a growing genre) are a multiple treat you have the fun of figuring out who the culprit is while soaking up the atmosphere and ambiance of another time. Elizabeth Redfern’s debut novel, The Music of the Spheres, read with great style by Tim Curry, takes us to the teeming turmoil of London in 1795. At war with Republican France, England is filled with master spies of every stripe, royalist refugees fleeing the bloody aftermath of the French Revolution and a serial killer with a predilection for young, redheaded women. Jonathan Absey, officially a clerk in Whitehall and unofficially a Home Office agent, is in the thick of it, quietly gathering intelligence on French spies. But his true obsession is finding the man who murdered his own Titian-haired daughter. In the moist, heavy heat of July, his obsession and job meet, as spy mutates to murderer, Royalist to Republican and Jonathan from frustrated functionary to avenging father.

Is she or isn’t she?Ê Harlan Coben’s Tell No One, faultlessly read by Stephen Weber, is a race-paced, pulse-pounder if ever there was one. When Dr. David Beck’s young wife, Elizabeth, was brutally killed eight years ago, something died in him too. Then his world turns upside down and inside out. In three short days, Beck goes from being a dedicated doctor, sleepwalking through his own life, to a man who has seen a ghost, received e-mails from the dead, become a suspect in two murders, assaulted a police officer, is on the run from the law and has enlisted the aid of a known drug dealer. And if that’s not enough, he’s being hounded by a cool FBI agent on one side and a strange Asian-American with cement-hard hands that torture for the fun of it on the other. What’s driving Beck, and all the others, is the shaky possibility that Elizabeth is still alive and if that’s true, what’s false? Summer sizzle Eric Jerome Dickey’s latest, Between Lovers, read by Richard Allen, is hot stuff and X-rated! The mystery here is how three hip, smart 30-somethings will sort out their complicated, interconnected love lives, not to mention their sensibilities and sexuality. There’s a lot of searching, soul and otherwise, as the best-selling Dickey tells a good story and adds his special brand of wisdom. Definitely not for the kids.

Sukey Howard reports on spoken word audio each month.

It's summer vacation time again, when both parent and child try to wile away the hours while they're getting where they're going. We've said it before, but it's worth repeating: travel in cars, planes and trains can be turned into real fun in the sun…
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<b>A girl’s surprising quest</b> A young boy’s great-grandmother visits from the Old Country bearing a special gift, an old violin. “You will make this old fiddle sing,” she tells him. When the boys asks her to tell him about the Old Country, she says, “I’ve been waiting for you to ask. In the Old Country, every winter was a hundred years and every spring a miracle; in the Old Country, the water was like music and the music was like water. It’s where all the fairy tales come from, where there was magic and there was war.” So begins Mordicai Gerstein’s magical fable, <b>The Old Country</b>, as Great-Grandmother Gisella relates the strange story of her childhood. As a young girl, she had ventured into the forest with a crossbow to kill a fox stealing chickens from the family farm.

When Gisella finds the fox, she discovers that he can talk, and suddenly she is surrounded by other talking animals and tiny magical forest folk. A trial is held to determine whether the fox is guilty of killing the chickens, and Flame, the fox, is found innocent. Gisella then stares into Flame’s eyes and a transformation occurs: Gisella becomes the fox, and Flame becomes Gisella. A long, magical journey ensues for Gisella the fox. War overtakes the land, threatening to destroy everything. Gisella discovers that her family has been taken prisoner at the Crystal Palace. A family hen has laid a golden egg, and the emperor there is determined to learn the hen’s secret. Aided by magical and animal friends, Gisella manages to get inside the Crystal Palace and help save the day. Along the way she learns much about guilt, innocence, evil, instinct and humanity. Mordicai Gerstein won the 2004 Caldecott Medal for his picture book, <i>The Man Who Walked Between the Towers</i>. His new fable is an enchanted fairy tale that holds something for readers young and old. Younger children will enjoy the excitement of Gisella’s surprising quest, while older children and adults can use this tale of war and hatred to draw conclusions about history and current world affairs. Gerstein’s writing is crisp, pure and lyrical, and <b>The Old Country </b>is a special book that should be read, shared and reread.

<i>Alice Cary writes from Groton, Massachusetts.</i>

<b>A girl's surprising quest</b> A young boy's great-grandmother visits from the Old Country bearing a special gift, an old violin. "You will make this old fiddle sing," she tells him. When the boys asks her to tell him about the Old Country, she says, "I've…
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Scott Elliott’s impressive debut novel, Coiled in the Heart, is a moving tale of guilt, atonement and redemption that deftly melds images of Southern aristocracy with high-tech genius, haunting memories with the terror and ecstasy of new love. The novel’s central figure, Tobia Caldwell, was born into a proud but declining Tennessee family. As a boy, a momentary impulse led him to provoke an older, unfriendly boy into a deadly encounter with a copperhead snake. Ashamed and frightened, he hides the truth from everyone but his father, who shields his son from scrutiny but admonishes him to atone for his act. As a young man, Tobia is introspective and haunted. His father has lost his position in a prestigious law firm and a foolish affair has resulted in his estrangement from his wife, who has suffered a debilitating stroke and can no longer speak. With Tobia’s help, his father devotes himself to reclaiming his family’s land and rekindling his wife’s affections. But an unexpected letter from Merritt, the twin sister of the boy whose death Tobia was responsible for, shatters his ability to concentrate on the reclamation project. Tobia and Merritt had fallen in love back in college, but have since avoided each other. Her imminent return fills Tobia with anticipation and dread.

Elliott has crafted his novel’s structure as carefully as his lyrical prose. Alternating chapters relate the events of the present day and describe the occurrences of the past that have shaped Tobia. As the chapters follow the characters forward in time, they impart a sense of onrushing destiny.

While readers delve deeper into the mysteries of Tobia’s obsessions, they’re sure to be spellbound by Elliott’s assured style. In the tradition of Southern prose, he imbues his locations from aging mansions to teeming swamps to an eccentric’s high-tech home with vivid detail. And he populates his places with characters as memorable as they are mysterious. Gregory Harris is a writer in Indianapolis.

Scott Elliott's impressive debut novel, Coiled in the Heart, is a moving tale of guilt, atonement and redemption that deftly melds images of Southern aristocracy with high-tech genius, haunting memories with the terror and ecstasy of new love. The novel's central figure, Tobia Caldwell, was…
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<b>It’s a Southern thing: even death is a party</b> Southerners are known for many things gentle accents, salty food, devotion to football but it’s hospitality that should be at the top of the list. In the South, it’s all about good eating and good times, and wherever two or more natives are gathered, there’s bound to be a party. We may talk your ear off, tell stories that last a half hour or more, but we’re going to feed you and we’re certainly going to ensure that our (ahem) eccentricities entertain you.

<b>Being Dead Is No Excuse: The Official Southern Ladies Guide to Hosting the Perfect Funeral</b> by Gayden Metcalfe and Charlotte Hays is tongue in cheek maybe even irreverent but it’s certainly helpful. Witty, sharp and downright hilarious, it’s the type of book you can’t hang on to, for every copy you own will either be given away or pilfered by houseguests: your best friend just has to read it, as does your daughter, your neighbor and your husband’s second cousin, once removed.

According to Metcalfe and Hays, people do more than die "tastefully" in the Mississippi Delta; they rise to the occasion, funerals being a time when the best is brought out in everyone. That best, however, might also be the result of one too many restorative cocktails, or return trips to the buffet spread back at the bereaved’s house. Because "food is grief therapy" the authors include a plethora of recipes within each chapter. A mixture of both high and low, there’s The Ladies of St. James’ Cheese Straws on one page and Bing Cherry Salad with Coca-Cola on another. The importance of traditional Tomato Aspic with Homemade Mayonnaise is stressed, while at the same time much discussion is given over to the merits and healing powers of so many casseroles made with Campbell’s Cream of Mushroom soup. There are even six yes six versions of pimiento cheese offered (a dish also commonly referred to as Southern p‰tŽ).

Most impressive about <b>Being Dead Is No Excuse</b> is its ability to go beyond being just another regional book of local color and appeal to those born outside the South. The writing is tight, the humor flawless, so much so that you’ll find yourself quoting this guide’s advice and telling its stories long after the last chapter is through. Without a doubt, these authors have found an audience; let’s just hope they won’t keep us waiting too long for more. <i>Lacey Galbraith received her M.F.

A. from the University of Mississippi and lives in Nashville. Her fear of hostessing still sometimes leaves her feeling a little less than Southern.</i>

<b>It's a Southern thing: even death is a party</b> Southerners are known for many things gentle accents, salty food, devotion to football but it's hospitality that should be at the top of the list. In the South, it's all about good eating and good times,…

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Suspense, history, literary fiction, espionage, romance and psychological drama Secret Father, the compelling new novel by acclaimed writer James Carroll, is all of this and more.

Told by father and son, the story is set in Germany during the summer of 1961. The Cold War between East and West is escalating, and construction will soon begin on the Berlin Wall. During this tense time, Ulrich, Michael and Katharine leave their American high school in West Germany and travel, without telling their parents, to the Communist side of Berlin for the May Day celebration. Their escapade springs from youthful rebellion but quickly brings serious consequences. Shadowed by his unknown birth father’s past, Ulrich has taken a flight bag belonging to his stepfather, a U.S. intelligence officer. The bag what it contains, who will view its secrets and what will happen to Ulrich for possessing it is at the crux of the story.

The teenagers are detained by the Stasi, East Germany’s notorious secret police. Paul, Michael’s widower father, and Charlotte, Ulrich’s beautiful German-born mother, must attempt to rescue them before their actions cause an international incident that could destroy them and the world’s tenuous peace.

Secret Father, Carroll’s first novel in nine years, is being published this month on the 42nd anniversary of the building of the Berlin Wall. The author of Constantine’s Sword, which examined the role of the Catholic Church in the Holocaust, and An American Requiem, a National Book Award-winning memoir, Carroll himself spent time in Germany in the 1960s as the son of a U.S. general. In fact, Carroll and two friends took a trip to East Germany, but their experiences were less harrowing than those of the fictional characters in the novel.

Gripping and beautifully written, Secret Father is a remarkable evocation of a tumultuous era and of the power that secrets can hold across generations.

Cindy Kershner is a writer in Nashville.

Suspense, history, literary fiction, espionage, romance and psychological drama Secret Father, the compelling new novel by acclaimed writer James Carroll, is all of this and more.

Told by father and son, the story is set in Germany during the summer of 1961. The…
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<b>It’s a Southern thing: life is a party</b> Southerners are known for many things gentle accents, salty food, devotion to football but it’s hospitality that should be at the top of the list. In the South, it’s all about good eating and good times, and wherever two or more natives are gathered, there’s bound to be a party. We may talk your ear off, tell stories that last a half hour or more, but we’re going to feed you and we’re certainly going to ensure that our (ahem) eccentricities entertain you.

In <b>Puttin’ on the Grits: A Guide to Southern Entertaining</b>, Deborah Ford aims to show that “Life is a joy, no matter what problems we face, and celebrating in the South is about keeping that joy alive.” It doesn’t matter how fancy the food or humble the setting: in the South, home, heritage, family and friends are the true catalysts for entertaining. Ford’s wish is to share this with today’s modern world, a place and time that often moves too fast for tradition.

Author of the previous bestseller <i>The Grits (Girls Raised In The South) Guide to Life</i>, Ford espouses the principle of “elegant simplicity,” the well-mannered woman now called a “Pearl Girl.” With advice that is surprisingly practical and endearingly encouraging, she provides so many anecdotes, recipes, reminders, definitions, tips, to-do lists and lists of to-do lists that even the most fearful of hostesses will walk away feeling confident. Weddings, dinners, evenings both simple and fancy will no longer intimidate. In Ford’s eyes, “Entertaining in the South is about making everyone feel welcome,” and it’s this, perhaps, which proves to be the greatest Southern tradition of all.

<i>Lacey Galbraith received her M.F.

A. from the University of Mississippi and lives in Nashville. Her fear of hostessing still sometimes leaves her feeling a little less than Southern.</i>

<b>It's a Southern thing: life is a party</b> Southerners are known for many things gentle accents, salty food, devotion to football but it's hospitality that should be at the top of the list. In the South, it's all about good eating and good times, and…
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Greg Rucka, author of the popular Atticus Kodiak mystery series as well as dozens of comic books and graphic novels, has released his first stand-alone novel, a suspense thriller entitled A Fistful of Rain that exposes the unsightly underbelly of the rock and roll industry. Miriam “Mim” Bracca is the lead guitarist for Tailhook, one of the hottest bands in the world. When they started their world tour almost a year earlier, the trio was just another rock band from Portland. Now Mim and her bandmates are media superstars. Their single is shooting up the charts like a bullet, and the band is on the cover of Rolling Stone magazine. Mim has it all fame, fortune and the adoration of millions of fans. But in a matter of hours, Mim’s world is turned upside down. She is kicked off the tour, and temporarily out of the band, for her excessive drinking. When she returns to her home in Portland, she is abducted at gunpoint and thrown into the back of a truck only to be returned an hour later untouched. When the police do nothing about the abduction, she calls her brother Mikel for support. He informs her that their abusive alcoholic father, who was imprisoned more than a decade ago for killing their mother, is out of prison and looking to reconcile. When nude photos of her surface on the Internet, she thinks things can’t possibly get any worse but they do.

Besides the compelling cast of deeply flawed characters and the masterfully constructed plot lines which kept me trying to figure out who was trying to blackmail Mim until the last few pages the melancholy, almost poetic narrative gives the story an extra level of illumination. The symbolism behind the phrase “a fistful of rain,” which comes from a Warren Zevon song of the same name, is used brilliantly throughout the novel as a metaphor for Mim’s life. And very much like a Zevon tune, Rucka’s novel is instantly addictive, hypnotically descriptive, witty, irreverent, disturbing and always entertaining. Paul Goat Allen is a freelance editor and writer living in Syracuse, New York.

Greg Rucka, author of the popular Atticus Kodiak mystery series as well as dozens of comic books and graphic novels, has released his first stand-alone novel, a suspense thriller entitled A Fistful of Rain that exposes the unsightly underbelly of the rock and roll industry.…
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As in his earlier works (including the National Book Award nominee The Diagnosis,), MIT professor Alan Lightman explores the intersection of science and poetry, memory and reality in his new novel Reunion. At base, this book is a love story a story about pivotal, remembered love of a passionate and largely unrequited sort.

We all tend to edit our memories to suit our visions of who we are, of what we’ve experienced and endured to become our present-day selves. Protagonist Charles is no different. He is a divorced, 52-year-old college professor at a middling liberal arts college who has lost the spark and vigor that characterized his early career as a poet. He lives in the house left behind by his ex-wife, and he doesn’t get on well with his daughter.

And so, when Charles receives an invitation to attend his 30-year college reunion, he decides to go. His interactions with his former classmates the remnants of former affection, the patience mingled with disinterest ring humorous and true. The vaguely bored Charles strolls around the perimeter of the reunion, and it is then that his senior year unspools before him.

The 52-year-old Charles reunites with his 22-year-old self, and time becomes elastic as he relives his 1960s love affair with mysterious ballerina Juliana. The beautiful, troubled dancer drew Charles in and pushed him away in keeping with her changing moods and unsteady self-image and Charles idealized her to an extent that threatens to induce eye-rolling. As Charles watches his younger, na•ve self, he begins to confront the bits of his cherished memory that are perhaps somewhat tarnished. There was a betrayal and a painful decision that changed the way he felt about their relationship and about love. Charles also allows himself to realize and admit he was irrevocably changed and affected by this period of his life; it affected his poetry, his ability to be intimate with the lovers that came afterward and his relationship with his daughter.

This sense of closure and realization makes Reunion satisfying. Its examination of how we hoard memories and edit time is compelling. The story at the heart of Reunion is not a new one, however, and readers may find themselves wishing Lightman had delved more into the stories of some of the other characters rather than focusing on the familiar story of the callow, obsessive young romantic wounded by the worldly, selfish object of his or her affections. Linda M. Castellitto is not going to attend her college reunion.

As in his earlier works (including the National Book Award nominee The Diagnosis,), MIT professor Alan Lightman explores the intersection of science and poetry, memory and reality in his new novel Reunion. At base, this book is a love story a story about pivotal, remembered…

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