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Ah, October. Leaves turning, football crowds cheering, developing economies tanking, stock markets crashing. The memories return every autumn, with Proustian clarity. At any time of the year, it would take a certain chutzpah to claim that the wild bull market of the 1990s is going to keep charging higher and higher. But to do so in October is to exhibit either reckless disregard for history or brilliantly prescient foresight. Or both.

Yet here they are, just in time to make perfect anniversary gifts for those commemorating the stock market disasters of October 1929, October 1987, or October 1998: Four brave books that claim the best is yet to come for investors and the general economy.

Believe it or not, the least audacious of these titles may be Dow 36,000: The New Strategy for Profiting from the Coming Rise in the Stock Market (Times Books, $25, 0812931459; Soundelux audio, abridged, $17.95, 1559353260), by James K. Glassman and Kevin A. Hassett. I confess I’m always skeptical about books of prognostication, whether they are optimistic or full of gloom and doom. (Remember Ravi Batra’s The Great Depression of 1990? It’s out of print now, but Batra soldiers on: his latest work is Crash of the Millennium: Surviving the Coming Inflationary Depression from Harmony Books.) And yet Dow 36,000, with its intricate but lucidly argued analyses, has just about won me over.

Every prospectus churned out by a publicly traded company or mutual fund includes a mantra that’s about as meaningful as cigarette-pack labels or instructions on how to use one’s seat cushion as a floatation device: Previous performance is no guarantee of future results. Washington Post columnist Glassman and think-tank scholar Hassett take these words at face value. Evaluating stocks by historical measures, they claim, ignores their true, latent strength.

The authors offer a new yardstick for measuring the markets: Perfectly Reasonable Price. The PRP is the price a long-term investor would be willing to pay for an investment. Traditionalists in the investment world use price-to-earnings ratios (how much the buyer must pay per dollar of the company’s profits) as a standard for judging the valuation of stocks. By that historical standard, the market is wildly overvalued and due for a painful correction. Problem is, the traditionalists have been saying so for years now, and they are starting to sound like Chicken Little. Glassman and Hassett posit that the market indices have only begun to climb, and that it’s perfectly reasonable to buy stocks at today’s nosebleed-altitude earnings multiples.

In well-crafted layman’s prose, they calculate the PRP of a few individual stocks, analyzing recent trends in earnings growth, dividend growth, and other factors that point to long-term success for the companies. By this reckoning, home mortgage giant Fannie Mae (to take one example) is worth nothing like its May 1999 price of $67 a share: its PRP could be as high as $872. The authors don’t claim that the markets as a whole will do this well, but it’s easy enough for the Dow to reach the 36,000 target if, as they assert, many stocks are currently trading well below their PRPs.

Dow 36,000 makes a cogent and convincing argument that the good times are going to roll on and on. If that’s true, readers who follow this book’s suggestions in navigating the markets will triple their money and then some. Whether it’s true or not, this intriguing book is going to be a very interesting read in five, 15, or 20 years, with its authors enshrined as either the butt of jokes or visionary geniuses.

While Glassman and Hassett don’t predict at what magic moment the Dow Jones Industrial Average will crack 36,000, Charles W. Kadlec goes further out on a limb. In Dow 100,000: Fact or Fiction (Prentice Hall, $25, 0735201374), Kadlec offers a date certain for the completion of a tenfold rise in the Dow: the year 2020.

An investment strategist for a mutual fund firm, Kadlec cites some of the same optimistic reasoning as the other authors for the huge boost in stocks such as gains in productivity, improvements in management and more free global trade but his dramatic scenario of future prosperity relies more on a long view of historical economic developments than on technical analysis of equity markets. He puts the internet into context, for instance, by discussing the impact of the railroads and the telegraph in the last half of the 19th century.

Taking the long view, Kadlec is not shy about drawing a parallel between the 1990s and the 1920s the decade that ended in a cataclysmic market crash. He notes that if the Dow grows in years to come at the same rate it did in the ’20s, it will reach 100,000 by 2016. He sees no reason to consider a crash inevitable after such an explosion. Kadlec’s command of historical detail, and his talent for drawing incisive parallels between past, present, and predicted future, make this book particularly thought-provoking.

Kadlec warns that continued progress is not a sure thing. Taking a broad view of economic and social policy issues that will influence financial markets, Kadlec draws surprising conclusions about the threats that the American economy faces for instance, that Medicare is in much worse shape than Social Security and is headed for a stark choice between full coverage of those in need and fiscal solvency, and that global terrorism lurks as a risk not adequately appreciated by investors. Readers intoxicated by the vision of a six-digit Dow will find these warnings sobering.

Still, Kadlec presents an exhilarating vision of what really might be. Dow 100,000 is no fantasy: Kadlec argues persuasively that the number is attainable.

Knight Kiplinger, representing the third generation of a family that has made its living by economic forecasting in personal finance publications, weighs in with further cheerful tidings in World Boom Ahead: Why Business and Consumers Will Prosper (Kiplinger Books, $14.95, 0938721704). The first edition of this book came out just as the Asian financial crisis was spooking markets last year, but this updated paperback version is even more optimistic. Kiplinger’s focus is on the long term, and he has an authoritative command of the trends reshaping our lives.

Kiplinger is somewhat at odds with the Dow boosters, predicting a less boomy stock market in the decade to come. In fact, he wouldn’t be surprised if stocks head south for a year or two in the near future, but he finds the long-term trends bright. Though he sees the U.S. economy continuing to perform very well, he says the greatest growth in the new millennium will come in the rest of the world. The author foresees a planet teeming with 1.5 billion new humans by 2020, most born in less-developed countries but that prospect doesn’t trouble him. Living standards will rise for these less-fortunate earthlings, he predicts. The real problems will come to countries with too few residents of working age. A relatively open immigration policy has already given the U.S. a competitive advantage in that department.

World Boom Ahead includes an engrossing survey of future developments in industry and society, picking the relative winners and losers of the new economy. A few samples: Traditional retailers will see the downside of chasing super-shoppers, as boomers burn out on the mall . . . In a low-inflation climate, home prices will grow less steeply than in the past . . . Four-hour supersonic trips across the Pacific, day-trading 80-year-olds and microchip-imbedded cattle all await us in Kiplinger’s 21st century.

Buck Rogers lives. If Kiplinger’s work is not enough to convince you, maybe another new release will: The Long Boom: A History of the World’s Future, 1980-2020, by Peter Schwartz, Peter Leyden, and Joel Hyatt a consultant, technology journalist, and Stanford business professor, respectively.

Imagine this world as the authors imagine it, viewed in hindsight from 2050: We humans have fixed the damage we had done to the environment, without denting anyone’s standard of living. Cars now run on hydrogen fuel cells refilled twice a year. Machines the size of molecules and 120-year life spans are realities for today’s George and Jane Jetsons, and nothing is out of the realm of possibility not cold fusion energy, not anti-gravity devices, not cooperation with alien life forms.

This is a mind-boggling book.

These authors see the present moment as a watershed in human history. Emerging technologies and new modes of deploying human capital, they argue, are in the process of bringing about an unprecedented leap in the progress of civilization. If we can all get it right, the result will be good times throughout the planet we currently inhabit and beyond.

There will be bumps in the road the overthrow of Saudi Arabia’s government by Islamic fundamentalists will cause another oil shock in the economy, for instance. But an evolving civilization, in which all peoples are bound together by common interests and increasingly shared prosperity, will be able to work through such rough patches, in the view of Schwartz, Leyden, and Hyatt.

Like all the authors mentioned here, though perhaps to a far greater degree, The Long Boom’s visionaries have taken on the risk of being ridiculed, now or in the future. But their well-reasoned speculations, and the acrobatic dexterity with which they have stretched their minds, will not be ignored.

Briefly noted: Tom Peters, the personal trainer of American business writing, wants to pump you up. Brash visions of the new millennium are obviously in vogue this month, and Peters offers his own in a new series of books. Just out are The Brand You 50 (Alfred A. Knopf, $16.95, 0375407723), The Projects 50 ($16.95, 0375407731), and The Professional Service Firm 50 ($16.95, 0375407715). In his trademark style of breathless exhortation, Peters inspires readers to embrace the new realities of the evolving workplace and to turn themselves into sought-after brand names on the job. ¦ Journalist E. Thomas Wood is an editor with the Champs-Elysees.com family of European language-and-culture magazines.

Ah, October. Leaves turning, football crowds cheering, developing economies tanking, stock markets crashing. The memories return every autumn, with Proustian clarity. At any time of the year, it would take a certain chutzpah to claim that the wild bull market of the 1990s is…

Review by

Topping our list of some of the best children’s poetry is Jeff Moss’s Bone Poems (illustrated by Tom Leigh, all ages), a rhyming-licious collection of poems inspired by the bones of dinosaurs and early mammals at the American Museum of Natural History, near the author’s New York City home. The book is rip-roaring fun, as you can tell from this excerpt from “America, the Beautiful Home of Dinosaurs”: In the time we call Cretaceous, Skies were beautiful and spacious But there were no deer or antelope at play.

Yet Triceratops were roaming Through the hills of old Wyoming There were dinosaurs throughout the U.S.

A.

Moss, one of the original creators of Sesame Street, wrote the song “Rubber Duckie” as well as the music and lyrics for The Muppets Take Manhattan. He does for dinosaur poems what Miss Piggy does for swine.

Reviewed by Alice Cary.

Topping our list of some of the best children's poetry is Jeff Moss's Bone Poems (illustrated by Tom Leigh, all ages), a rhyming-licious collection of poems inspired by the bones of dinosaurs and early mammals at the American Museum of Natural History, near the author's…
Review by

Back to where they once belonged: the Beatles score more hits There are at least a dozen clever and cute ways I thought about starting this piece. When I had four books to cover, a play on

Back to where they once belonged: the Beatles score more hits There are at least a dozen clever and cute ways I thought about starting this piece. When I had four books to cover, a play on

Review by

Dummy, how does your garden grow? The writers of the Dummies series of garden books are modest folks. They label the series for beginners, but these helpful books are also for those who have come back to gardening after a long absence and need a review of the basics. Even the experienced gardener isn’t knowledgeable about every facet of gardening the field is too vast. These books offer all gardeners an introduction to any unfamiliar area of gardening by using an easy-to-read, easy-to-understand format that is both instructive and entertaining. Gardening for Dummies by Michael MacCaskey and the Editors of the National Gardening Association is a gardening encyclopedia in miniature. It’s fully illustrated and covers the most current tips, techniques, and resources in major areas such as annuals, perennials, vines, trees, shrubs, lawns, soil, pruning, propagation, weeding, and pest control. For those who don’t know a Cape Cod Weeder from a dibber, there is even a section on tools. The appendix lists books and magazines that will broaden your gardening knowledge while the section on gardening Web sites will answer questions and provide further information. Vegetable Gardening for Dummies (IDG Books, $19.99, 0764551299) by Charles Nardozzi and the Editors of the National Gardening Association teaches the fundamentals of vegetable gardening. If you think store-bought tomatoes taste the way tomatoes are supposed to taste, you’re in for a surprise. The basics of soil, climate, and water are covered as well as cool season and warm season vegetables, legumes, vine crops, salad crops, herbs, fruits, and many other edibles. Disease identification and prevention for each vegetable is included, and there’s a bonus delicious recipes. Vegetable Gardening for Dummies is an excellent reference for the first-time vegetable gardener.

Landscaping for Dummies (IDG Books, $16.99, 0764551280) by Philip Giroux, Bob Beckstrom, Lance Walheim, and the National Gardening Association takes the mystery out of landscaping and will convince you that there can be more to your backyard than just a fence and a lawn; you can customize your outdoor space to suit your needs. The book covers everything from planning to planting and also includes a chapter on problem situations accompanied by helpful diagrams. Chapters on patios, arbors, trellises, decks, walls, gates, and paths will show you how to create more visual beauty and interest while keeping costs down. If you don’t know where to begin in designing your home landscape, this book will get you started.

No matter what your level of gardening expertise, 1,001 Ingenious Gardening Ideas (Rodale, $27.95, 0875968090) is another reference you should add to your gardening library. Edited by Deborah L. Martin, this book offers environmentally safe, non-toxic suggestions to make gardening easier, plants sturdier, and yields bountiful. There are chapters on creative garden care, season stretchers, seed-starting secrets, and solutions to garden problems. There are gardening ideas, tips, and suggestions about everything from vegetables and herbs to birds and butterflies. In addition, there are also sources for ingenious gardening supplies, a recommended reading list, and the latest USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map. Clear illustrations serve as helpful guides as the author takes you through each season with advice for making your garden less work intensive and more cost affective. There are tips for all gardeners here.

If there were no gardening references on your bookshelves, this selection of four would offer the best, basic advice covering the most general areas of horticulture. The topics they don’t cover can be found in the sources listed at the end of each book. But the best part about these books is that most of the information is usable year-round not only during the growing season.

Pat Regel writes and gardens in Nashville.

Dummy, how does your garden grow? The writers of the Dummies series of garden books are modest folks. They label the series for beginners, but these helpful books are also for those who have come back to gardening after a long absence and need a…

Review by

Tracking futures Ah, October. Leaves turning, football crowds cheering, developing economies tanking, stock markets crashing. The memories return every autumn, with Proustian clarity. At any time of the year, it would take a certain chutzpah to claim that the wild bull market of the 1990s is going to keep charging higher and higher. But to do so in October is to exhibit either reckless disregard for history or brilliantly prescient foresight. Or both.

Yet here they are, just in time to make perfect anniversary gifts for those commemorating the stock market disasters of October 1929, October 1987, or October 1998: Four brave books that claim the best is yet to come for investors and the general economy.

Believe it or not, the least audacious of these titles may be Dow 36,000: The New Strategy for Profiting from the Coming Rise in the Stock Market (Times Books, $25, 0812931459; Soundelux audio, abridged, $17.95, 1559353260), by James K. Glassman and Kevin A. Hassett. I confess I’m always skeptical about books of prognostication, whether they are optimistic or full of gloom and doom. (Remember Ravi Batra’s The Great Depression of 1990? It’s out of print now, but Batra soldiers on: his latest work is Crash of the Millennium: Surviving the Coming Inflationary Depression from Harmony Books.) And yet Dow 36,000, with its intricate but lucidly argued analyses, has just about won me over.

Every prospectus churned out by a publicly traded company or mutual fund includes a mantra that’s about as meaningful as cigarette-pack labels or instructions on how to use one’s seat cushion as a floatation device: Previous performance is no guarantee of future results. Washington Post columnist Glassman and think-tank scholar Hassett take these words at face value. Evaluating stocks by historical measures, they claim, ignores their true, latent strength.

The authors offer a new yardstick for measuring the markets: Perfectly Reasonable Price. The PRP is the price a long-term investor would be willing to pay for an investment. Traditionalists in the investment world use price-to-earnings ratios (how much the buyer must pay per dollar of the company’s profits) as a standard for judging the valuation of stocks. By that historical standard, the market is wildly overvalued and due for a painful correction. Problem is, the traditionalists have been saying so for years now, and they are starting to sound like Chicken Little. Glassman and Hassett posit that the market indices have only begun to climb, and that it’s perfectly reasonable to buy stocks at today’s nosebleed-altitude earnings multiples.

In well-crafted layman’s prose, they calculate the PRP of a few individual stocks, analyzing recent trends in earnings growth, dividend growth, and other factors that point to long-term success for the companies. By this reckoning, home mortgage giant Fannie Mae (to take one example) is worth nothing like its May 1999 price of $67 a share: its PRP could be as high as $872. The authors don’t claim that the markets as a whole will do this well, but it’s easy enough for the Dow to reach the 36,000 target if, as they assert, many stocks are currently trading well below their PRPs.

Dow 36,000 makes a cogent and convincing argument that the good times are going to roll on and on. If that’s true, readers who follow this book’s suggestions in navigating the markets will triple their money and then some. Whether it’s true or not, this intriguing book is going to be a very interesting read in five, 15, or 20 years, with its authors enshrined as either the butt of jokes or visionary geniuses.

While Glassman and Hassett don’t predict at what magic moment the Dow Jones Industrial Average will crack 36,000, Charles W. Kadlec goes further out on a limb. In Dow 100,000: Fact or Fiction (Prentice Hall, $25, 0735201374), Kadlec offers a date certain for the completion of a tenfold rise in the Dow: the year 2020.

An investment strategist for a mutual fund firm, Kadlec cites some of the same optimistic reasoning as the other authors for the huge boost in stocks such as gains in productivity, improvements in management and more free global trade but his dramatic scenario of future prosperity relies more on a long view of historical economic developments than on technical analysis of equity markets. He puts the internet into context, for instance, by discussing the impact of the railroads and the telegraph in the last half of the 19th century.

Taking the long view, Kadlec is not shy about drawing a parallel between the 1990s and the 1920s the decade that ended in a cataclysmic market crash. He notes that if the Dow grows in years to come at the same rate it did in the ’20s, it will reach 100,000 by 2016. He sees no reason to consider a crash inevitable after such an explosion. Kadlec’s command of historical detail, and his talent for drawing incisive parallels between past, present, and predicted future, make this book particularly thought-provoking.

Kadlec warns that continued progress is not a sure thing. Taking a broad view of economic and social policy issues that will influence financial markets, Kadlec draws surprising conclusions about the threats that the American economy faces for instance, that Medicare is in much worse shape than Social Security and is headed for a stark choice between full coverage of those in need and fiscal solvency, and that global terrorism lurks as a risk not adequately appreciated by investors. Readers intoxicated by the vision of a six-digit Dow will find these warnings sobering.

Still, Kadlec presents an exhilarating vision of what really might be. Dow 100,000 is no fantasy: Kadlec argues persuasively that the number is attainable.

Knight Kiplinger, representing the third generation of a family that has made its living by economic forecasting in personal finance publications, weighs in with further cheerful tidings in World Boom Ahead: Why Business and Consumers Will Prosper. The first edition of this book came out just as the Asian financial crisis was spooking markets last year, but this updated paperback version is even more optimistic. Kiplinger’s focus is on the long term, and he has an authoritative command of the trends reshaping our lives.

Kiplinger is somewhat at odds with the Dow boosters, predicting a less boomy stock market in the decade to come. In fact, he wouldn’t be surprised if stocks head south for a year or two in the near future, but he finds the long-term trends bright. Though he sees the U.S. economy continuing to perform very well, he says the greatest growth in the new millennium will come in the rest of the world. The author foresees a planet teeming with 1.5 billion new humans by 2020, most born in less-developed countries but that prospect doesn’t trouble him. Living standards will rise for these less-fortunate earthlings, he predicts. The real problems will come to countries with too few residents of working age. A relatively open immigration policy has already given the U.S. a competitive advantage in that department.

World Boom Ahead includes an engrossing survey of future developments in industry and society, picking the relative winners and losers of the new economy. A few samples: Traditional retailers will see the downside of chasing super-shoppers, as boomers burn out on the mall . . . In a low-inflation climate, home prices will grow less steeply than in the past . . . Four-hour supersonic trips across the Pacific, day-trading 80-year-olds and microchip-imbedded cattle all await us in Kiplinger’s 21st century.

Buck Rogers lives. If Kiplinger’s work is not enough to convince you, maybe another new release will: The Long Boom: A History of the World’s Future, 1980-2020 (Perseus Books, $26, 0738200743), by Peter Schwartz, Peter Leyden, and Joel Hyatt a consultant, technology journalist, and Stanford business professor, respectively.

Imagine this world as the authors imagine it, viewed in hindsight from 2050: We humans have fixed the damage we had done to the environment, without denting anyone’s standard of living. Cars now run on hydrogen fuel cells refilled twice a year. Machines the size of molecules and 120-year life spans are realities for today’s George and Jane Jetsons, and nothing is out of the realm of possibility not cold fusion energy, not anti-gravity devices, not cooperation with alien life forms.

This is a mind-boggling book.

These authors see the present moment as a watershed in human history. Emerging technologies and new modes of deploying human capital, they argue, are in the process of bringing about an unprecedented leap in the progress of civilization. If we can all get it right, the result will be good times throughout the planet we currently inhabit and beyond.

There will be bumps in the road the overthrow of Saudi Arabia’s government by Islamic fundamentalists will cause another oil shock in the economy, for instance. But an evolving civilization, in which all peoples are bound together by common interests and increasingly shared prosperity, will be able to work through such rough patches, in the view of Schwartz, Leyden, and Hyatt.

Like all the authors mentioned here, though perhaps to a far greater degree, The Long Boom’s visionaries have taken on the risk of being ridiculed, now or in the future. But their well-reasoned speculations, and the acrobatic dexterity with which they have stretched their minds, will not be ignored.

Briefly noted: Tom Peters, the personal trainer of American business writing, wants to pump you up. Brash visions of the new millennium are obviously in vogue this month, and Peters offers his own in a new series of books. Just out are The Brand You 50 (Alfred A. Knopf, $16.95, 0375407723), The Projects 50 ($16.95, 0375407731), and The Professional Service Firm 50 ($16.95, 0375407715). In his trademark style of breathless exhortation, Peters inspires readers to embrace the new realities of the evolving workplace and to turn themselves into sought-after brand names on the job. ¦ Journalist E. Thomas Wood is an editor with the Champs-Elysees.com family of European language-and-culture magazines.

Tracking futures Ah, October. Leaves turning, football crowds cheering, developing economies tanking, stock markets crashing. The memories return every autumn, with Proustian clarity. At any time of the year, it would take a certain chutzpah to claim that the wild bull market of the 1990s…
Review by

Jill Ker Conway describes autobiography as “our favorite form of fiction.” A distinguished and best-selling autobiographer herself (The Road to Coorain and True North) as well as a scholar of the subject, she knows the genre well. In her stimulating and enlightening new book, When Memory Speaks: Reflections on Autobiography, she gives us historical perspective on the subject, emphasizing how gender, race, and societal attitudes have influenced what autobiographers write about themselves.

“For men,” she notes, “the overarching pattern for life comes from adaptations of the epic hero in classic antiquity. Life is an odyssey, a journey through many trials and tests, which the hero must surmount alone through courage, endurance, cunning and moral strength . . . His achievement comes about through his own agency . . .” With St. Augustine, the odyssey in time moved from the external world to the inner consciousness. Rousseau’s Confessions brought us a “secular hero creating himself,” the story “of the individual against society.” Classic antiquity was not helpful in the same way for women. “It was within the special enclave of religious life that the tradition of Western European women’s autobiography was first established, in narratives about the autobiographer’s relationship with God.” Therefore women did not discuss “the sense of agency and acting on one’s own behalf,” which continued in secular narratives.

Ker Conway considers the works of such well-known writers as Benjamin Franklin, Frederick Douglass, Virginia Woolf, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. But many of her subjects are not as well known: Harriet Martineau, Emmeline Pankhurst, and Mabel Dodge Luhan. And in contrast to the writings of such male explorers as Richard Burton, David Livingstone, and Henry Morton Stanley, Ker Conway points out overlooked female accounts of “travels into territories every bit as dangerous” like those by Mary Kingsley and Gertrude Lowthian Bell.

Of particular interest are Ker Conway’s discussions of contemporary works such as Angela’s Ashes, The Liars’ Club, The Color of Water, All Over but the Shoutin’, The Shadow Man, and The Diving Bell and the Butterfly. The author reminds us that we are all autobiographers, “but few of us give close attention to the forms and tropes of the culture through which we report ourselves to ourselves . . .” She emphasizes the importance of cultivating the power to confidently speak for ourselves out of our understanding of our own experience. She encourages us to find our own voices.

Reviewed by Roger Bishop.

Jill Ker Conway describes autobiography as "our favorite form of fiction." A distinguished and best-selling autobiographer herself (The Road to Coorain and True North) as well as a scholar of the subject, she knows the genre well. In her stimulating and enlightening new book, When…

Review by

Back to where they once belonged: the Beatles score more hits There are at least a dozen clever and cute ways I thought about starting this piece. When I had four books to cover, a play on

Back to where they once belonged: the Beatles score more hits There are at least a dozen clever and cute ways I thought about starting this piece. When I had four books to cover, a play on

Review by

Dummy, how does your garden grow? The writers of the Dummies series of garden books are modest folks. They label the series for beginners, but these helpful books are also for those who have come back to gardening after a long absence and need a review of the basics. Even the experienced gardener isn’t knowledgeable about every facet of gardening the field is too vast. These books offer all gardeners an introduction to any unfamiliar area of gardening by using an easy-to-read, easy-to-understand format that is both instructive and entertaining. Gardening for Dummies (IDG Books, $19.99, 1568846444) by Michael MacCaskey and the Editors of the National Gardening Association is a gardening encyclopedia in miniature. It’s fully illustrated and covers the most current tips, techniques, and resources in major areas such as annuals, perennials, vines, trees, shrubs, lawns, soil, pruning, propagation, weeding, and pest control. For those who don’t know a Cape Cod Weeder from a dibber, there is even a section on tools. The appendix lists books and magazines that will broaden your gardening knowledge while the section on gardening Web sites will answer questions and provide further information. Vegetable Gardening for Dummies by Charles Nardozzi and the Editors of the National Gardening Association teaches the fundamentals of vegetable gardening. If you think store-bought tomatoes taste the way tomatoes are supposed to taste, you’re in for a surprise. The basics of soil, climate, and water are covered as well as cool season and warm season vegetables, legumes, vine crops, salad crops, herbs, fruits, and many other edibles. Disease identification and prevention for each vegetable is included, and there’s a bonus delicious recipes. Vegetable Gardening for Dummies is an excellent reference for the first-time vegetable gardener.

Landscaping for Dummies (IDG Books, $16.99, 0764551280) by Philip Giroux, Bob Beckstrom, Lance Walheim, and the National Gardening Association takes the mystery out of landscaping and will convince you that there can be more to your backyard than just a fence and a lawn; you can customize your outdoor space to suit your needs. The book covers everything from planning to planting and also includes a chapter on problem situations accompanied by helpful diagrams. Chapters on patios, arbors, trellises, decks, walls, gates, and paths will show you how to create more visual beauty and interest while keeping costs down. If you don’t know where to begin in designing your home landscape, this book will get you started.

No matter what your level of gardening expertise, 1,001 Ingenious Gardening Ideas (Rodale, $27.95, 0875968090) is another reference you should add to your gardening library. Edited by Deborah L. Martin, this book offers environmentally safe, non-toxic suggestions to make gardening easier, plants sturdier, and yields bountiful. There are chapters on creative garden care, season stretchers, seed-starting secrets, and solutions to garden problems. There are gardening ideas, tips, and suggestions about everything from vegetables and herbs to birds and butterflies. In addition, there are also sources for ingenious gardening supplies, a recommended reading list, and the latest USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map. Clear illustrations serve as helpful guides as the author takes you through each season with advice for making your garden less work intensive and more cost affective. There are tips for all gardeners here.

If there were no gardening references on your bookshelves, this selection of four would offer the best, basic advice covering the most general areas of horticulture. The topics they don’t cover can be found in the sources listed at the end of each book. But the best part about these books is that most of the information is usable year-round not only during the growing season.

Pat Regel writes and gardens in Nashville.

Dummy, how does your garden grow? The writers of the Dummies series of garden books are modest folks. They label the series for beginners, but these helpful books are also for those who have come back to gardening after a long absence and need a…
Review by

Ah, October. Leaves turning, football crowds cheering, developing economies tanking, stock markets crashing. The memories return every autumn, with Proustian clarity. At any time of the year, it would take a certain chutzpah to claim that the wild bull market of the 1990s is going to keep charging higher and higher. But to do so in October is to exhibit either reckless disregard for history or brilliantly prescient foresight. Or both.

Yet here they are, just in time to make perfect anniversary gifts for those commemorating the stock market disasters of October 1929, October 1987, or October 1998: Four brave books that claim the best is yet to come for investors and the general economy.

Believe it or not, the least audacious of these titles may be Dow 36,000: The New Strategy for Profiting from the Coming Rise in the Stock Market (Times Books, $25, 0812931459; Soundelux audio, abridged, $17.95, 1559353260), by James K. Glassman and Kevin A. Hassett. I confess I’m always skeptical about books of prognostication, whether they are optimistic or full of gloom and doom. (Remember Ravi Batra’s The Great Depression of 1990? It’s out of print now, but Batra soldiers on: his latest work is Crash of the Millennium: Surviving the Coming Inflationary Depression from Harmony Books.) And yet Dow 36,000, with its intricate but lucidly argued analyses, has just about won me over.

Every prospectus churned out by a publicly traded company or mutual fund includes a mantra that’s about as meaningful as cigarette-pack labels or instructions on how to use one’s seat cushion as a floatation device: Previous performance is no guarantee of future results. Washington Post columnist Glassman and think-tank scholar Hassett take these words at face value. Evaluating stocks by historical measures, they claim, ignores their true, latent strength.

The authors offer a new yardstick for measuring the markets: Perfectly Reasonable Price. The PRP is the price a long-term investor would be willing to pay for an investment. Traditionalists in the investment world use price-to-earnings ratios (how much the buyer must pay per dollar of the company’s profits) as a standard for judging the valuation of stocks. By that historical standard, the market is wildly overvalued and due for a painful correction. Problem is, the traditionalists have been saying so for years now, and they are starting to sound like Chicken Little. Glassman and Hassett posit that the market indices have only begun to climb, and that it’s perfectly reasonable to buy stocks at today’s nosebleed-altitude earnings multiples.

In well-crafted layman’s prose, they calculate the PRP of a few individual stocks, analyzing recent trends in earnings growth, dividend growth, and other factors that point to long-term success for the companies. By this reckoning, home mortgage giant Fannie Mae (to take one example) is worth nothing like its May 1999 price of $67 a share: its PRP could be as high as $872. The authors don’t claim that the markets as a whole will do this well, but it’s easy enough for the Dow to reach the 36,000 target if, as they assert, many stocks are currently trading well below their PRPs.

Dow 36,000 makes a cogent and convincing argument that the good times are going to roll on and on. If that’s true, readers who follow this book’s suggestions in navigating the markets will triple their money and then some. Whether it’s true or not, this intriguing book is going to be a very interesting read in five, 15, or 20 years, with its authors enshrined as either the butt of jokes or visionary geniuses.

While Glassman and Hassett don’t predict at what magic moment the Dow Jones Industrial Average will crack 36,000, Charles W. Kadlec goes further out on a limb. In Dow 100,000: Fact or Fiction, Kadlec offers a date certain for the completion of a tenfold rise in the Dow: the year 2020.

An investment strategist for a mutual fund firm, Kadlec cites some of the same optimistic reasoning as the other authors for the huge boost in stocks such as gains in productivity, improvements in management and more free global trade but his dramatic scenario of future prosperity relies more on a long view of historical economic developments than on technical analysis of equity markets. He puts the internet into context, for instance, by discussing the impact of the railroads and the telegraph in the last half of the 19th century.

Taking the long view, Kadlec is not shy about drawing a parallel between the 1990s and the 1920s the decade that ended in a cataclysmic market crash. He notes that if the Dow grows in years to come at the same rate it did in the ’20s, it will reach 100,000 by 2016. He sees no reason to consider a crash inevitable after such an explosion. Kadlec’s command of historical detail, and his talent for drawing incisive parallels between past, present, and predicted future, make this book particularly thought-provoking.

Kadlec warns that continued progress is not a sure thing. Taking a broad view of economic and social policy issues that will influence financial markets, Kadlec draws surprising conclusions about the threats that the American economy faces for instance, that Medicare is in much worse shape than Social Security and is headed for a stark choice between full coverage of those in need and fiscal solvency, and that global terrorism lurks as a risk not adequately appreciated by investors. Readers intoxicated by the vision of a six-digit Dow will find these warnings sobering.

Still, Kadlec presents an exhilarating vision of what really might be. Dow 100,000 is no fantasy: Kadlec argues persuasively that the number is attainable.

Knight Kiplinger, representing the third generation of a family that has made its living by economic forecasting in personal finance publications, weighs in with further cheerful tidings in World Boom Ahead: Why Business and Consumers Will Prosper (Kiplinger Books, $14.95, 0938721704). The first edition of this book came out just as the Asian financial crisis was spooking markets last year, but this updated paperback version is even more optimistic. Kiplinger’s focus is on the long term, and he has an authoritative command of the trends reshaping our lives.

Kiplinger is somewhat at odds with the Dow boosters, predicting a less boomy stock market in the decade to come. In fact, he wouldn’t be surprised if stocks head south for a year or two in the near future, but he finds the long-term trends bright. Though he sees the U.S. economy continuing to perform very well, he says the greatest growth in the new millennium will come in the rest of the world. The author foresees a planet teeming with 1.5 billion new humans by 2020, most born in less-developed countries but that prospect doesn’t trouble him. Living standards will rise for these less-fortunate earthlings, he predicts. The real problems will come to countries with too few residents of working age. A relatively open immigration policy has already given the U.S. a competitive advantage in that department.

World Boom Ahead includes an engrossing survey of future developments in industry and society, picking the relative winners and losers of the new economy. A few samples: Traditional retailers will see the downside of chasing super-shoppers, as boomers burn out on the mall . . . In a low-inflation climate, home prices will grow less steeply than in the past . . . Four-hour supersonic trips across the Pacific, day-trading 80-year-olds and microchip-imbedded cattle all await us in Kiplinger’s 21st century.

Buck Rogers lives. If Kiplinger’s work is not enough to convince you, maybe another new release will: The Long Boom: A History of the World’s Future, 1980-2020 (Perseus Books, $26, 0738200743), by Peter Schwartz, Peter Leyden, and Joel Hyatt a consultant, technology journalist, and Stanford business professor, respectively.

Imagine this world as the authors imagine it, viewed in hindsight from 2050: We humans have fixed the damage we had done to the environment, without denting anyone’s standard of living. Cars now run on hydrogen fuel cells refilled twice a year. Machines the size of molecules and 120-year life spans are realities for today’s George and Jane Jetsons, and nothing is out of the realm of possibility not cold fusion energy, not anti-gravity devices, not cooperation with alien life forms.

This is a mind-boggling book.

These authors see the present moment as a watershed in human history. Emerging technologies and new modes of deploying human capital, they argue, are in the process of bringing about an unprecedented leap in the progress of civilization. If we can all get it right, the result will be good times throughout the planet we currently inhabit and beyond.

There will be bumps in the road the overthrow of Saudi Arabia’s government by Islamic fundamentalists will cause another oil shock in the economy, for instance. But an evolving civilization, in which all peoples are bound together by common interests and increasingly shared prosperity, will be able to work through such rough patches, in the view of Schwartz, Leyden, and Hyatt.

Like all the authors mentioned here, though perhaps to a far greater degree, The Long Boom’s visionaries have taken on the risk of being ridiculed, now or in the future. But their well-reasoned speculations, and the acrobatic dexterity with which they have stretched their minds, will not be ignored.

Briefly noted: Tom Peters, the personal trainer of American business writing, wants to pump you up. Brash visions of the new millennium are obviously in vogue this month, and Peters offers his own in a new series of books. Just out are The Brand You 50 (Alfred A. Knopf, $16.95, 0375407723), The Projects 50 ($16.95, 0375407731), and The Professional Service Firm 50 ($16.95, 0375407715). In his trademark style of breathless exhortation, Peters inspires readers to embrace the new realities of the evolving workplace and to turn themselves into sought-after brand names on the job. ¦ Journalist E. Thomas Wood is an editor with the Champs-Elysees.com family of European language-and-culture magazines.

Ah, October. Leaves turning, football crowds cheering, developing economies tanking, stock markets crashing. The memories return every autumn, with Proustian clarity. At any time of the year, it would take a certain chutzpah to claim that the wild bull market of the 1990s is…

Review by

Anyone familiar with a collection of short stories entitled Fishing the Sloe-Black River knows the strength of Colum McCann’s writing. Like Thomas Wolfe, McCann writes lyrical prose that is both refined and urbane. Given the structure of the short story, McCann’s talents distill themselves into wonderfully descriptive passages that segue gracefully into and out of the action of his well-captured characters. McCann is a master at making his language float about whatever subject or object he has chosen to describe. In his stories his vocabulary slips easily from the archaic to the profane, proving him to be much more than a literary stuffed shirt. McCann’s strong knowledge of words is only out done by his even stronger sense of the way words sound. Whether expressing dialect or trying to evoke the emotion of a certain exchange, one cannot help but admire the way McCann’s dialogues draw out sounds. The stories of Fishing the Sloe-Back River are a wonderful testament to a writer with an incredible ear for language.

This Side of Brightness follows in this tradition of powerful writing. This new novel captures all of the admirable qualities of his short stories and expands them. The long form of the novel suits McCann well in this generational story about one man’s struggle to raise a family in New York City. The novel begins just after the turn of the century when we meet Nathan Walker, a transplanted Georgian working as a digger in the New York City subway system. Walker is embroiled in the burgeoning Irish community of the Lower East Side as he works in the dangerous and somewhat heroic position as a lead digger in the tunnels being excavated underneath the East River. After a disaster in the tunnels, Walker’s ties to an Irish family are deepened by his eventual courtship and marriage to a deceased friend/coworker’s daughter. From this marriage springs the great tale of the Walker clan as it spans three generations living in Harlem under the stigma of a being a family born from a racially mixed couple.

As a novelist McCann could not be better fit for such a remarkable tale about such a memorable family. His strengths at dialogue are well served not only in his rendering of life in the growing Irish community of New York but also through the thoughts and conversations of a mysterious homeless narrator whose place in the novel takes on an almost prodigal nature. McCann addresses the big issues of race, love, and time with a literary majesty that completely befits the nature and scope of this family epic. His tone as novelist is a wonderful reminder of the self-assured poetics of his shorter fiction, yet now even more of a literary treat as he traces out his tale through the vicissitudes of time. This Side of Brightness is an epic not only in its embrace of one family’s generational struggles, but in its accomplishments as powerfully written art.

Anyone familiar with a collection of short stories entitled Fishing the Sloe-Black River knows the strength of Colum McCann's writing. Like Thomas Wolfe, McCann writes lyrical prose that is both refined and urbane. Given the structure of the short story, McCann's talents distill themselves into…

Review by

Dummy, how does your garden grow? The writers of the Dummies series of garden books are modest folks. They label the series for beginners, but these helpful books are also for those who have come back to gardening after a long absence and need a review of the basics. Even the experienced gardener isn’t knowledgeable about every facet of gardening the field is too vast. These books offer all gardeners an introduction to any unfamiliar area of gardening by using an easy-to-read, easy-to-understand format that is both instructive and entertaining. Gardening for Dummies (IDG Books, $19.99, 1568846444) by Michael MacCaskey and the Editors of the National Gardening Association is a gardening encyclopedia in miniature. It’s fully illustrated and covers the most current tips, techniques, and resources in major areas such as annuals, perennials, vines, trees, shrubs, lawns, soil, pruning, propagation, weeding, and pest control. For those who don’t know a Cape Cod Weeder from a dibber, there is even a section on tools. The appendix lists books and magazines that will broaden your gardening knowledge while the section on gardening Web sites will answer questions and provide further information. Vegetable Gardening for Dummies (IDG Books, $19.99, 0764551299) by Charles Nardozzi and the Editors of the National Gardening Association teaches the fundamentals of vegetable gardening. If you think store-bought tomatoes taste the way tomatoes are supposed to taste, you’re in for a surprise. The basics of soil, climate, and water are covered as well as cool season and warm season vegetables, legumes, vine crops, salad crops, herbs, fruits, and many other edibles. Disease identification and prevention for each vegetable is included, and there’s a bonus delicious recipes. Vegetable Gardening for Dummies is an excellent reference for the first-time vegetable gardener.

Landscaping for Dummies by Philip Giroux, Bob Beckstrom, Lance Walheim, and the National Gardening Association takes the mystery out of landscaping and will convince you that there can be more to your backyard than just a fence and a lawn; you can customize your outdoor space to suit your needs. The book covers everything from planning to planting and also includes a chapter on problem situations accompanied by helpful diagrams. Chapters on patios, arbors, trellises, decks, walls, gates, and paths will show you how to create more visual beauty and interest while keeping costs down. If you don’t know where to begin in designing your home landscape, this book will get you started.

No matter what your level of gardening expertise, 1,001 Ingenious Gardening Ideas (Rodale, $27.95, 0875968090) is another reference you should add to your gardening library. Edited by Deborah L. Martin, this book offers environmentally safe, non-toxic suggestions to make gardening easier, plants sturdier, and yields bountiful. There are chapters on creative garden care, season stretchers, seed-starting secrets, and solutions to garden problems. There are gardening ideas, tips, and suggestions about everything from vegetables and herbs to birds and butterflies. In addition, there are also sources for ingenious gardening supplies, a recommended reading list, and the latest USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map. Clear illustrations serve as helpful guides as the author takes you through each season with advice for making your garden less work intensive and more cost affective. There are tips for all gardeners here.

If there were no gardening references on your bookshelves, this selection of four would offer the best, basic advice covering the most general areas of horticulture. The topics they don’t cover can be found in the sources listed at the end of each book. But the best part about these books is that most of the information is usable year-round not only during the growing season.

Pat Regel writes and gardens in Nashville.

Dummy, how does your garden grow? The writers of the Dummies series of garden books are modest folks. They label the series for beginners, but these helpful books are also for those who have come back to gardening after a long absence and need a…

Review by

Ah, October. Leaves turning, football crowds cheering, developing economies tanking, stock markets crashing. The memories return every autumn, with Proustian clarity. At any time of the year, it would take a certain chutzpah to claim that the wild bull market of the 1990s is going to keep charging higher and higher. But to do so in October is to exhibit either reckless disregard for history or brilliantly prescient foresight. Or both.

Yet here they are, just in time to make perfect anniversary gifts for those commemorating the stock market disasters of October 1929, October 1987, or October 1998: Four brave books that claim the best is yet to come for investors and the general economy.

Believe it or not, the least audacious of these titles may be Dow 36,000: The New Strategy for Profiting from the Coming Rise in the Stock Market (Soundelux audio, abridged, $17.95, 1559353260), by James K. Glassman and Kevin A. Hassett. I confess I’m always skeptical about books of prognostication, whether they are optimistic or full of gloom and doom. (Remember Ravi Batra’s The Great Depression of 1990? It’s out of print now, but Batra soldiers on: his latest work is Crash of the Millennium: Surviving the Coming Inflationary Depression from Harmony Books.) And yet Dow 36,000, with its intricate but lucidly argued analyses, has just about won me over.

Every prospectus churned out by a publicly traded company or mutual fund includes a mantra that’s about as meaningful as cigarette-pack labels or instructions on how to use one’s seat cushion as a floatation device: Previous performance is no guarantee of future results. Washington Post columnist Glassman and think-tank scholar Hassett take these words at face value. Evaluating stocks by historical measures, they claim, ignores their true, latent strength.

The authors offer a new yardstick for measuring the markets: Perfectly Reasonable Price. The PRP is the price a long-term investor would be willing to pay for an investment. Traditionalists in the investment world use price-to-earnings ratios (how much the buyer must pay per dollar of the company’s profits) as a standard for judging the valuation of stocks. By that historical standard, the market is wildly overvalued and due for a painful correction. Problem is, the traditionalists have been saying so for years now, and they are starting to sound like Chicken Little. Glassman and Hassett posit that the market indices have only begun to climb, and that it’s perfectly reasonable to buy stocks at today’s nosebleed-altitude earnings multiples.

In well-crafted layman’s prose, they calculate the PRP of a few individual stocks, analyzing recent trends in earnings growth, dividend growth, and other factors that point to long-term success for the companies. By this reckoning, home mortgage giant Fannie Mae (to take one example) is worth nothing like its May 1999 price of $67 a share: its PRP could be as high as $872. The authors don’t claim that the markets as a whole will do this well, but it’s easy enough for the Dow to reach the 36,000 target if, as they assert, many stocks are currently trading well below their PRPs.

Dow 36,000 makes a cogent and convincing argument that the good times are going to roll on and on. If that’s true, readers who follow this book’s suggestions in navigating the markets will triple their money and then some. Whether it’s true or not, this intriguing book is going to be a very interesting read in five, 15, or 20 years, with its authors enshrined as either the butt of jokes or visionary geniuses.

While Glassman and Hassett don’t predict at what magic moment the Dow Jones Industrial Average will crack 36,000, Charles W. Kadlec goes further out on a limb. In Dow 100,000: Fact or Fiction (Prentice Hall, $25, 0735201374), Kadlec offers a date certain for the completion of a tenfold rise in the Dow: the year 2020.

An investment strategist for a mutual fund firm, Kadlec cites some of the same optimistic reasoning as the other authors for the huge boost in stocks such as gains in productivity, improvements in management and more free global trade but his dramatic scenario of future prosperity relies more on a long view of historical economic developments than on technical analysis of equity markets. He puts the internet into context, for instance, by discussing the impact of the railroads and the telegraph in the last half of the 19th century.

Taking the long view, Kadlec is not shy about drawing a parallel between the 1990s and the 1920s the decade that ended in a cataclysmic market crash. He notes that if the Dow grows in years to come at the same rate it did in the ’20s, it will reach 100,000 by 2016. He sees no reason to consider a crash inevitable after such an explosion. Kadlec’s command of historical detail, and his talent for drawing incisive parallels between past, present, and predicted future, make this book particularly thought-provoking.

Kadlec warns that continued progress is not a sure thing. Taking a broad view of economic and social policy issues that will influence financial markets, Kadlec draws surprising conclusions about the threats that the American economy faces for instance, that Medicare is in much worse shape than Social Security and is headed for a stark choice between full coverage of those in need and fiscal solvency, and that global terrorism lurks as a risk not adequately appreciated by investors. Readers intoxicated by the vision of a six-digit Dow will find these warnings sobering.

Still, Kadlec presents an exhilarating vision of what really might be. Dow 100,000 is no fantasy: Kadlec argues persuasively that the number is attainable.

Knight Kiplinger, representing the third generation of a family that has made its living by economic forecasting in personal finance publications, weighs in with further cheerful tidings in World Boom Ahead: Why Business and Consumers Will Prosper (Kiplinger Books, $14.95, 0938721704). The first edition of this book came out just as the Asian financial crisis was spooking markets last year, but this updated paperback version is even more optimistic. Kiplinger’s focus is on the long term, and he has an authoritative command of the trends reshaping our lives.

Kiplinger is somewhat at odds with the Dow boosters, predicting a less boomy stock market in the decade to come. In fact, he wouldn’t be surprised if stocks head south for a year or two in the near future, but he finds the long-term trends bright. Though he sees the U.S. economy continuing to perform very well, he says the greatest growth in the new millennium will come in the rest of the world. The author foresees a planet teeming with 1.5 billion new humans by 2020, most born in less-developed countries but that prospect doesn’t trouble him. Living standards will rise for these less-fortunate earthlings, he predicts. The real problems will come to countries with too few residents of working age. A relatively open immigration policy has already given the U.S. a competitive advantage in that department.

World Boom Ahead includes an engrossing survey of future developments in industry and society, picking the relative winners and losers of the new economy. A few samples: Traditional retailers will see the downside of chasing super-shoppers, as boomers burn out on the mall . . . In a low-inflation climate, home prices will grow less steeply than in the past . . . Four-hour supersonic trips across the Pacific, day-trading 80-year-olds and microchip-imbedded cattle all await us in Kiplinger’s 21st century.

Buck Rogers lives. If Kiplinger’s work is not enough to convince you, maybe another new release will: The Long Boom: A History of the World’s Future, 1980-2020 (Perseus Books, $26, 0738200743), by Peter Schwartz, Peter Leyden, and Joel Hyatt a consultant, technology journalist, and Stanford business professor, respectively.

Imagine this world as the authors imagine it, viewed in hindsight from 2050: We humans have fixed the damage we had done to the environment, without denting anyone’s standard of living. Cars now run on hydrogen fuel cells refilled twice a year. Machines the size of molecules and 120-year life spans are realities for today’s George and Jane Jetsons, and nothing is out of the realm of possibility not cold fusion energy, not anti-gravity devices, not cooperation with alien life forms.

This is a mind-boggling book.

These authors see the present moment as a watershed in human history. Emerging technologies and new modes of deploying human capital, they argue, are in the process of bringing about an unprecedented leap in the progress of civilization. If we can all get it right, the result will be good times throughout the planet we currently inhabit and beyond.

There will be bumps in the road the overthrow of Saudi Arabia’s government by Islamic fundamentalists will cause another oil shock in the economy, for instance. But an evolving civilization, in which all peoples are bound together by common interests and increasingly shared prosperity, will be able to work through such rough patches, in the view of Schwartz, Leyden, and Hyatt.

Like all the authors mentioned here, though perhaps to a far greater degree, The Long Boom’s visionaries have taken on the risk of being ridiculed, now or in the future. But their well-reasoned speculations, and the acrobatic dexterity with which they have stretched their minds, will not be ignored.

Briefly noted: Tom Peters, the personal trainer of American business writing, wants to pump you up. Brash visions of the new millennium are obviously in vogue this month, and Peters offers his own in a new series of books. Just out are The Brand You 50 (Alfred A. Knopf, $16.95, 0375407723), The Projects 50 ($16.95, 0375407731), and The Professional Service Firm 50 ($16.95, 0375407715). In his trademark style of breathless exhortation, Peters inspires readers to embrace the new realities of the evolving workplace and to turn themselves into sought-after brand names on the job. ¦ Journalist E. Thomas Wood is an editor with the Champs-Elysees.com family of European language-and-culture magazines.

Ah, October. Leaves turning, football crowds cheering, developing economies tanking, stock markets crashing. The memories return every autumn, with Proustian clarity. At any time of the year, it would take a certain chutzpah to claim that the wild bull market of the 1990s is…

Review by

Once Pocket Books stepped up to the table with a whopping two million dollar deal for Margaret Cuthbert’s first two novels, the talk began that her debut, The Silent Cradle was certain to be one of the “hot” books in 1998. Happily for all concerned, The Silent Cradle actually lives up to its advance billing. Dr. Rae Duprey, vice-chairman of the prestigious OB/GYN Department at San Francisco’s Berkeley Hills Hospital, is passionate about her work, her patients, and most of all, about babies. But Berkeley Hills is losing so much business to the new Birth Center across the street that the hospital’s Board is making plans to close down her department.

Run by Rae’s vindictive former lover Dr. Bo Michaels, the Center is an upscale pastel haven for low-risk deliveries. Any sign of a problem and the expectant mothers are delivered to Rae’s doorstep. And lately, there seem to be a few too many “bad babies” coming Rae’s way and she’s getting the blame. Someone is out to destroy both her department and her career, and if a few mothers and babies lose their lives in the process, so be it.

Determined to uncover who’s masterminding the sinister plan, Rae’s soon caught up in a web of murder, medical sabotage, and hidden agendas. The killer, Rae is certain, is someone on staff at Berkeley Hills. But is there a colleague she can trust to help her discover the truth? Dr. Sam Hartman, the new chief of cardiac anesthesia, is a willing volunteer as both a detective and a potential romantic interest. A complication Rae tries her best to avoid.

Unable to convince hospital management that there is a murderer in their midst, Rae finally contacts the police, who dismiss her story they need “proof, not grudges.” Then a vengeful Bo has her railroaded off the staff, crippling her ability to investigate within the hospital. To make matters even worse, she’s beginning to suspect that Sam may be in league with her enemies. Finally, disguised as a hospital cleaning woman, Rae sets a trap for the killer a killer she hopes won’t be Sam. There’s a terrifying showdown in the hospital nursery before the murderer and his motives are exposed.

With a smart feisty heroine and heart-stopping medical emergencies worthy of the best of ER, Cuthbert, an obstetrician turned novelist, has produced a chilling medical thriller that should satisfy even the most discriminating fans of those other doctor/writers, Robin Cook and Michael Crichton.

Reviewed by Lucinda Dyer.

Once Pocket Books stepped up to the table with a whopping two million dollar deal for Margaret Cuthbert's first two novels, the talk began that her debut, The Silent Cradle was certain to be one of the "hot" books in 1998. Happily for all concerned,…

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