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can’t help but imagine that Jubal is a nickname for Jubilant, because that’s exactly what the darling character of Jubal’s Wish is one joyful little guy. The book revolves around his compassionate nature, which leads him to the door of one of life’s biggest mysteries and challenges.

After a four-year gap in publishing, Don and Audrey Wood are back with a work of love, about love. The opening scene is bedecked with vibrant, undulating rows of flowers complementing not only each other, but also Jubal’s happiness. Once again Don Wood soars with the wonder of a child, as he pulls down yet another superlative visual interpretation for wife Audrey’s charming story.

After the cheerful opening with Jubal planning a picnic and so happy his “feet barely touch the ground,” we find a roaring river threatening to lift the little guy’s feet up and away entirely. Jubal is in quite a different frame of mind at this point: He’s scared. A wizard offers him the opportunity to make a wish, telling him that, “Sometimes they work, and sometimes they don’t. You never know how they’ll turn out in the end.” Until you read the end of the book, that is.

The essence of the story can be summed up with this thought: some of us discover things about our friends along the way, which we can either complain about or take to heart; therein lies the risk of friendship. Jubal’s an optimist whose chief aim in life is to do what most of us find hard: Jump out of our own skin long enough to think of others first, even at the cost of rejection. As a result, Jubal’s little journey turns into a big one that I wouldn’t mind taking myself.

June Odette lives in Oregon with people like Jubal.

can't help but imagine that Jubal is a nickname for Jubilant, because that's exactly what the darling character of Jubal's Wish is one joyful little guy. The book revolves around his compassionate nature, which leads him to the door of one of life's biggest mysteries…
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ur beloved Strega Nona is back, and this time she even dons a bathing suit! Fans of this little old Italian lady will delight in her newest adventure at the seashore.

It all starts when Strega Nona, the magical nurse of Calabria, dreams of her Grandma Concetta’s cottage at the beach, and her grandmother beckons her to come back to look for shells, pick wildflowers for the house, swim in the welcoming sea, gather mussels for dinner. . . . Well, after a dream like that, Strega Nona finds it difficult to return to work. Her mind just isn’t there; she even gives Signor Mayor the wrong remedy for his headache! Everyone in the village agrees: she needs a vacation.

When her grandmother in heaven returns to visit her the next night in a dream, she decides to go. Giving her children Bambolona and Big Anthony un bacio (a kiss), she is on her way. But her children don’t do so well without her; Big Anthony doesn’t touch the pasta pot this time, but let’s just say that he has a little problem with bubbles.

Tomie de Paola’s endearing story is enhanced by its setting the warmth of the Italian seashore invites the reader to plunge into the world of Nona, feel the healing waves, and bask in that special Italian sun. The tale is peppered throughout with musical Italian phrases which will only add to a child’s enjoyment. The illustrations are bright, with warm colors that bring happiness to the reader’s heart (just like a day at the beach). Every aspect of the book works to transport the reader to the world of a slow-paced seaside village in Italy.

This year also marks the 25th anniversary of the original Strega Nona; being that old, she certainly deserves a vacation.

Carolyn Cates lives and writes in Nashville.

ur beloved Strega Nona is back, and this time she even dons a bathing suit! Fans of this little old Italian lady will delight in her newest adventure at the seashore.

It all starts when Strega Nona, the magical nurse of Calabria,…
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You are probably familiar with the Brothers Grimm story of the tailor whose cleverness outwits the obstacles placed before him by the king, who has promised half his kingdom and his daughter’s hand in marriage. In time-honored fashion, the king demands more and more labors killing two giants, capturing a unicorn, taming a wild boar. This new version of The Brave Little Tailor begins with prophetic words: “Once upon a time in a far off land where things were often not what they seemed. . . .” Indeed, nothing in this book is what it seems at first glance. A Russian-born married couple who live in Germany, Olga Dugina and Andrej Dugin have a dark Northern European take on this rather lightweight Grimm story. They have illustrated a straightforward fairy tale with some of the strangest fantasies since Pieter Bruegel the Elder or Hieronymous Bosch. The tailor is mistaken for a great warrior after he kills seven flies with a single strike and begins wearing a belt that proclaims SEVEN AT ONE BLOW.

The cover illustration sets the tone for The Brave Little Tailor with this opening scene. The elaborately dressed tailor stands in a fantastic landscape, with his long pointed hat spearing an apple the size of a Volkswagen Beetle. Around it, like planets around the sun, swarm beautifully detailed flies the size of owls.

Readers will wish the illustrations were even larger, because every corner is filled with outrageous details. In the tailor’s shop, a gigantic fish sits in a bird cage and a man’s face peers from within a hanging lamp. A dog-sized elephant walks upside down on the ceiling. (Elsewhere, several tiny elephants drink from a bowl in the floor like kittens.) The king’s minions ride creatures that are half horse and half hornet. An extravagantly berobed and bonneted woman turns out to have the beak of a demonic bird. Beside the text, plants blossom into musical instruments and winged saltshakers carry threaded needles. Flower seeds have faces. What does all of this surreal imagery have to do with the story of the clever tailor? Not much. That’s part of the fun the realization that Dugina and Dugin just as easily could have illustrated “Rumplestiltskin” or “Briar Rose.” Their pictures emerge less from the story itself than from what it inspires in their rich imaginations. This is part of the triumphantly original feel of this new Brave Little Tailor.

You are probably familiar with the Brothers Grimm story of the tailor whose cleverness outwits the obstacles placed before him by the king, who has promised half his kingdom and his daughter's hand in marriage. In time-honored fashion, the king demands more and more labors…

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ou’ve probably done it every day of your life since you were a child. From the minute you get up in the morning, until you retire for the night, walking has been a necessary part of your life. Now, let it be your pathway to good health. Easing yourself into an exercise that you like and can do is the best way to make exercise a part of your everyday life. Walking is an excellent choice if you need something that’s effective, low-impact, and uncomplicated. You can do it year-round, and you don’t need special equipment, clothing, or previous sports skills. The best thing about it is that you already know most of the basics, but Maggie Spilner can teach you the rest. Spilner’s new book is properly titled it is a complete book of walking. It’s divided into eight parts, covering every phase of walking, from putting on properly fitting shoes to competing in race-walking marathons. The author begins by explaining the abundance of medical benefits derived from walking and its effect on arthritis, cancer, diabetes, heart disease, stress, and depression. This alone may be enough to get you started along the walking path to better health. Choosing properly fitting shoes and clothing is important to your walking comfort. Spilner gives pointers on these as well as handling the heat, cold, and bothersome allergies. And, since race-walking is an excellent way to reduce body fat while getting into better aerobic shape, the author shows you how to eat properly for weight loss, create your own fitness program, and increase your walking speed for a “slow burn.” As your fitness improves, you’ll want more ways to use your walking skills in competitions. Spilner offers an eight-week training plan to prepare for a 5K, gives informative tips on joining a race-walking marathon team, and prepares you for competing in longer distance relays.

Finally, she includes Suki Munsell’s six-week Dynamic Walking techniques, which will restore your body’s posture and help you walk stronger, faster, and farther. Walking for exercise involves a bit more than simply putting one foot in front of the other, but Maggie Spilner makes the learning process interesting and informative. You’ll discover that you’re never too old to enjoy it or reap its benefits.

Pat Regel runs and race-walks in Nashville.

ou've probably done it every day of your life since you were a child. From the minute you get up in the morning, until you retire for the night, walking has been a necessary part of your life. Now, let it be your pathway to…
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My little runaway Jim Harrison turns his considerable writing talents to children’s literature in an autobiographical tale due out later this month. The Boy Who Ran to the Woods tells in Harrison’s typically haunting, lyrical style the story of a “wild boy” who finds solace by escaping to the Michigan woods near his home. Like Harrison himself, the little Jimmy of the book is deeply affected when he loses the sight in one eye after a troubling childhood incident. He recoils from the rigidity and cruelty of the classroom and spends his days roaming the woods and getting into trouble. Older children (and their parents) will appreciate Harrison’s deft handling of the boy’s recovery and the gentle wisdom his parents bring to taming their child’s wild ways. For the fans of Harrison’s novels, poetry, and screenplays, The Boy Who Ran to the Woods provides a fascinating glimpse into how he developed the affinity for animals and the natural world that distinguishes much of his fiction.

My little runaway Jim Harrison turns his considerable writing talents to children's literature in an autobiographical tale due out later this month. The Boy Who Ran to the Woods tells in Harrison's typically haunting, lyrical style the story of a "wild boy" who finds solace…

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The greatest pleasures of Reason for Hope are found in the passages about the chimpanzees of Gombe, Africa, to which Goodall is passionately devoted, and in her insights into spirituality and human moral evolution. Her stories are so brimming with emotion and her philosophical views so unpretentious and calming that one has the impression of sitting cozily with a friend.

Dr. Goodall portrays the events of her life as building upon each other and pointing her directly toward Africa, chimpanzees, and her work in environmental preservation. Early on she felt a deep empathy for animals and a desire to study them unobtrusively in their natural habitats. She relates a delightful memory of hiding out in the straw of a henhouse at the age of four to experience first-hand how a chicken lays an egg.

When Dr. Louis Leakey offered her a job studying the chimpanzees of Gombe, she began her life’s work. Her chimpanzee observations are captivating, as are the comparisons between them and humans. The chimpanzees have tender, caring relationships, but can also be ruthless toward members of the outgroup. She sees human precursors to both altruism and savage brutality in the chimpanzees.

Religion and spirituality factor greatly in Goodall’s life. She feels God (the same God all religions share) all around her, but especially in the jungles of Africa. What makes her book such a delight is her unbridled, intelligent optimism.

Although deeply affected by the genocide, terrorism, animal cruelty, deforestation, and other horrors of our age, she has faith in the potential goodness of the human race, and in the benevolence of God. Her strong views are delivered so rationally, and in such a serene way, that not a trace of condescension or bitterness shows through. She is a beautiful role model for these sometimes ugly days. ¦ Julie Anderson writes and stays home with her two sons.

The greatest pleasures of Reason for Hope are found in the passages about the chimpanzees of Gombe, Africa, to which Goodall is passionately devoted, and in her insights into spirituality and human moral evolution. Her stories are so brimming with emotion and her philosophical views…

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She was known for Technicolor aquatic musicals, in which she emerged from lavishly adorned swimming pools on underwater hydraulic lifts nary a drop of running mascara, her hairdo marvelously intact. Over the years Esther Williams’s watery movies have become kitsch classics. But as her entertaining autobiography reveals, there was more to the career and the personal life than water. At a time when women were not known for athletic ability, Williams was the U.S. 100-meter freestyle champ hoping for a chance at the Olympics when she was recruited by showman Billy Rose to appear in his Aquacade at the San Francisco Pan-Pacific Exposition of 1939. Later, when wartime ended her Olympic hopes, she worked as a stock girl and sometime model. But she was also wooed by MGM, which wanted to launch a series of swimming pictures that would rival 20th Century-Fox’s ice-skating odes to Sonja Henie.

In titles like Neptune’s Daughter and Dangerous When Wet, Williams displayed athleticism, beauty, and accessibility. Along with behind-the-scenes tales (Gene Kelly was a creep to work with; Van Johnson a sweetheart), she dishes about the studio’s unforgettable stars Lana Turner, Marlene Dietrich, and Bette Davis. She also recounts her own dalliances, which included romances with actors Victor Mature and Jeff Chandler. She recounts that Chandler, known for his rugged Westerns, surprised her with the revelation that he was a secret cross-dresser. Along with flouncy chiffon dresses, he owned lots of polka-dotted attire. Therefore Williams left him with a fashion tip: Jeff, you’re too big for polka dots. Pat H. Broeske is a biographer of Howard Hughes and Elvis Presley.

She was known for Technicolor aquatic musicals, in which she emerged from lavishly adorned swimming pools on underwater hydraulic lifts nary a drop of running mascara, her hairdo marvelously intact. Over the years Esther Williams's watery movies have become kitsch classics. But as her entertaining…

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It’s easy to tell that the Presidential campaign for the 2000 election is starting to heat up just visit the local bookstore. It has become something of a prerequisite that a candidate come up with a volume to sell in the months of the campaign.

Some of the books are straightforward autobiographies. Others are statements on policy. And almost all will wind up in the remainder section shortly after the Presidential election next year if not sooner.

Therefore it’s good to see a candidate book that is worth reading: Faith of My Fathers, by Senator John McCain of Arizona, with Mark Salter. This is a memoir of the McCain family’s association with the United States Armed Forces, which goes back for many years. The connection actually can be traced back for a majority of the country’s history, although McCain is content to start with his grandfather and work his way to his own story.

The eldest McCain was one of the top military leaders in the Pacific theater in World War II, and he was on the USS Missouri the day the Japanese surrendered. His son was a submarine commander during that war, and eventually worked his way up the ranks until he also became an admiral and leader of the U.S. forces throughout the Pacific.

While those sections of the book are reasonably interesting, the interest level picks up several notches when the youngest McCain himself enters the military and is shot down over North Vietnam in 1967. He was a prisoner of war until 1973. McCain spares few details in describing what those five-plus years were like: torture, solitary confinement, poor food, lack of medical treatment.

McCain is a little hard on himself during his description of his time in captivity, perhaps because he was aware of the high standards set by his ancestors. His experiences, as described in the book, don’t necessarily qualify him for the nation’s highest office, but his book certainly gives a needed look at a slightly buried part of our history.

Budd Bailey is a hockey reporter and editor for the Buffalo News, and a contributor to The Sporting News.

It's easy to tell that the Presidential campaign for the 2000 election is starting to heat up just visit the local bookstore. It has become something of a prerequisite that a candidate come up with a volume to sell in the months of the campaign.

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It is astonishing that the inventor who brought us the lightning rod, bifocals, and the odometer; the writer who brought us Poor Richard’s Almanack; and the negotiator behind the 1784 Treaty of Peace with Great Britain, were in fact just one man. The Benjamin Franklin National Memorial in Philadelphia showcases Franklin’s many inventions and ideas from fire insurance to a urinary catheter. These inventions and the stories behind them reveal Franklin’s practical nature. The First American reveals Franklin’s passions, as well.

Imagine Franklin, in waning health, undertaking a month’s journey to France, where he was to win French support of the colonies’ quest for independence. When he sailed to France as the American commissioner in 1776, he asked a monarch for no less than total support for a cause that was to destroy the underlying principles of a monarchy. H.W. Brands tells us that instead of rejecting Franklin, the French very nearly adopted him. Some pointed out that "Franquelin" was a common French name; many affectionately referred to him as "Doctor Franklin." He eloquently courted and politely strong-armed King Louis and his foreign minister, de Vergennes, by memo, and ultimately, he accomplished his mission using persistent, practical prose as his primary tool.

With similar vigor, he pursued several French women again, with his pen. Some of the best passages in this book are Franklin’s appealing appeals to these women, excerpted in the aptly titled chapter "Salvation in Paris." In his romantic pursuits, Franklin skillfully and sometimes lightly employed theology, natural law, and the rules of war in a single love-letter. Franklin’s favored females, and the recipients of these letters, typically were not single. "If you would not be forgotten, as soon as you are dead and rotten, either write things worth reading, or do things worth the writing." Franklin did both during his 84 years; this book provides some worthwhile reading on an American worth remembering.

Diane Stresing is a writer in Kent, Ohio.

 

It is astonishing that the inventor who brought us the lightning rod, bifocals, and the odometer; the writer who brought us Poor Richard's Almanack; and the negotiator behind the 1784 Treaty of Peace with Great Britain, were in fact just one man. The Benjamin Franklin…

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As a person growing old more rapidly than he cares to contemplate, I can tell you that no one in his youth or even early middle age thinks he will ever get old. It is a beneficial trick life plays on us, because if we comprehended then what awaits us, we would abandon everything out of shock. Once we get there, or close to there, however, it doesn’t matter; it is all right; the intervening years have cushioned the shock.

Even the sight of friends and relatives in their old age does not convince us. To help us understand this realm that we think we will never inhabit, Mary Pipher, a clinical psychologist and author of Reviving Ophelia: Saving the Selves of Adolescent Girls, has written Another Country: Navigating the Emotional Terrain of Our Elders (Simon ∧ Schuster Audio, $18, 0671044753).

Another Country is an exceptionally helpful and instructive book, written in a matching workmanlike style. Stories of people confronting old age, either their own or others’, form its heart, though one that at times tends to bleed. The stories come from interviews and therapy sessions that Pipher, who is 50 and lives in Nebraska, held with mostly rural Midwesterners, both black and white, in their seventies, eighties, and nineties, and in all stages and conditions of life poor, healthy, sick, wealthy.

I wanted to learn about our community-based country that has almost vanished, and also to understand the country of old age, Pipher writes. Because, she says a few pages later, as a nation, we are not organized in a way that makes aging easy. Indeed we are not. The twin topics of Pipher’s book are the segregation of the young from the old and the consequent difficulties this segregation makes for the elderly and those who care for them.

The young, of course, have always done things differently from the old, but Pipher suggests, and I think rightly, that perhaps never before have the two generations been so far removed in body, mind, and spirit, as they are in America today, to the immeasurable detriment of both.

The author and the people she talks to have many examples of the generational differences, but to me the most telling remark is made early on in the book.

Our parents’ generation was pre-irony, Pipher writes. Irony implies a distance between one’s words and one’s world, a cool remove that is a late-century phenomenon . . . [Freud] gave my generation the notion that underneath one idea is another, that behind our surface behavior is a different motive . . . But many people older than a certain age grew up believing that the surface is all there is. This may make it sound as if the young are clever and the elderly gullible, but her implication seems to be rather that irony has introduced a slickness inimical to plain and forthright dealing. People born early in the century, she writes, are the last Americans to grow up in a world in which all behavior mattered. Her great concern is that we get together ( communities keep people healthy; without community there is no morality ), and in her suggestions for achieving this, the advantage falls to the practices of our elders (a word she prefers to elderly ). In nothing is this more true than in the matter of physical closeness.

The book discusses many other significant subjects: the importance of the grandparent/grandchild relationship; the profound differences between the young-old (in their sixties and seventies) and the old-old (eighties and nineties); the assertion that rest homes are the concrete embodiment of failed social and cultural policies toward the old. As for the elders themselves, I could have composed a column of their comments alone and produced a review of this book at least as good as the dithyramb above. But for a parting shot I’ll limit myself to this, from Bette Davis, because it captures both the central difficulty of the aged the waning of powers and the qualities, like resiliency and fortitude, they summon to deal with it: Old age, La Belle Davis said, isn’t for sissies. Roger Miller is a freelance writer. He can be reached at roger@bookpage.com.

As a person growing old more rapidly than he cares to contemplate, I can tell you that no one in his youth or even early middle age thinks he will ever get old. It is a beneficial trick life plays on us, because if we…

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Before Eddie Fisher took his place in history as Elizabeth Taylor’s most famous cuckold, he stood shoulder-to-shoulder in the pop music pantheon with Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, and Tony Bennett. Been There, Done That is Fisher’s own account of the meteoric rise and painfully long decline of his career.

Edwin Jack Fisher, the son of Russian Jews, was born in Philadelphia in 1928. Although his family was poor and his parents dysfunctional, Fisher found refuge and comfort in his remarkable singing voice. He began performing on radio when he was still in junior high, and by the time he was 15, he says, he was earning more money than his hard-working father. His radio shows and appearances in the Catskills quickly revealed Fisher as a talent to watch. He signed with RCA Records and, after a few false starts, had his first hit, Thinking Of You, in 1950, when he was 22 years old. He boasts that he had more consecutive hit records than the Beatles or Elvis Presley (which is demonstrably untrue) but he did rack up three No. 1’s and 16 Top 10’s during his 17 years on the charts.

As Fisher tells it, his attention to his career began faltering when he and Debbie Reynolds started dating. Their short and unhappy marriage was doomed, he insists, long before he began his much criticized affair with Elizabeth Taylor. He remains bitter and contemptuous toward Reynolds, but recalls with fondness his passionate marriage to Taylor. That marriage, also brief, ended abruptly when she dropped Fisher for her Cleopatra co-star, Richard Burton. Taylor’s incessant illnesses, as well as her flagrant infidelity, took further toll on Fisher’s work.

In spite of his outsized ego, Fisher is uproariously self-deprecating when he hits his story-telling stride a few chapters into the book. He is candid about his drug addictions, his failures as a father and husband, his indifference to the quality of songs he recorded, his ineptitude as an actor, and his appetite for beautiful women. On this last note, he claims affairs with Ann-Margaret, Marlene Dietrich, Connie Stevens (whom he also married), Kim Novak, Judith Exner, Juliet Prowse, Stefanie Powers, Mia Farrow, Angie Dickinson, and many more. Edward Morris is a book publisher and journalist.

Before Eddie Fisher took his place in history as Elizabeth Taylor's most famous cuckold, he stood shoulder-to-shoulder in the pop music pantheon with Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, and Tony Bennett. Been There, Done That is Fisher's own account of the meteoric rise and painfully long…

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To the legion of readers who have already enjoyed How the Irish Saved Civilization, Thomas Cahill’s distinctive style needs no introduction. This time he lends his reverent erudition and irreverent wit to an exploration of an earlier history: the origins of Western culture. As Cahill says in his Introduction, “the Jews started it all.” In other words, the Irish may have saved civilization, but the Jews invented it.

The Gifts of the Jews is not, as the title may imply, a tiresome catalogue of Jewish achievements (“Casimir Funk discovered vitamins!”). Cahill uses the Hebrew Bible to illustrate general and specific ways Jews altered the course of human thought broke the momentum and forced from its cyclical track the perpetually spinning wheel of primeval history.

Discussion of the Bible starts before the Bible, to establish the critical contrast between old and new. For example, he shows that every ancient society throughout the world shared a “cyclical worldview.” There simply was no beginning, middle, or end to anything. Historical consciousness had not yet appeared. Human life existed to propitiate nature gods in a never-ending cycle of birth, copulation, and death. In developing this background, Cahill invokes the Sumerian Epic of Gilgamesh to show its influence on, and contrast to, the later storytelling content and styles of the Hebrew Bible.

Cahill’s depictions of the Biblical heroes invest near-cinematic life into characters many of us half-remember from long-ago Sunday school lessons. Abraham, Moses, David: the exploits of these few charismatic leaders and visionaries transform the course of human history. Through them, the core ideas of our civilization ethical monotheism, human justice, individual destiny, and history itself come into the world.

Cahill insists that this volume is not intended to be an introduction to Judaism or the Bible, but it could certainly be used to supplement one. It takes the lay reader into religious and philosophical territory that may seem too formidable under other guises. In the author’s hands this is accessible stuff, relayed to us with intelligence and clarity as an entertaining, compelling, and concise historical narrative.

By the way, a reader’s personal religious outlook is not an issue in this book. As the author says, his purpose is “to discover in this unique culture of the Word some essential thread that runs through it, to uncover in outline the sensibility that undergirds the whole structure, and to identify the still-living sources of our Western heritage for contemporary readers, whatever color of the belief-unbelief spectrum they may inhabit.” The Gifts of the Jews follows How the Irish Saved Civilization as the second volume in a proposed series of seven entitled The Hinges of History. Like the first two, subsequent volumes are to “recount a pivotal chapter in the evolution of human sensibility, moments in the Western world when the course of civilization was changed forever.” Such works could only encourage greater understanding, tolerance, and hope concerning ourselves, our neighbors, and our own places in history (Jewish concepts, all). That these books are finding such a wide general readership is, in itself, a reason for hope.

Reviewed by Joanna Brichetto.

To the legion of readers who have already enjoyed How the Irish Saved Civilization, Thomas Cahill's distinctive style needs no introduction. This time he lends his reverent erudition and irreverent wit to an exploration of an earlier history: the origins of Western culture. As Cahill…

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eart of gold. Gold at the end of the rainbow. Goldilocks, gold rush, golden mean. In The Power of Gold, Peter Bernstein investigates the phenomenon responsible for so much love and theft, bloodshed and joy. Gold is as much a symbol to us as an actual precious metal (its symbol in the periodic table is Au, as in aurora, or shining like the dawn).

Its presence in myth bears this out, as Bernstein writes. He notes that we should not be too hard on Midas, the famous king whose wish that everything he touched turned to gold came true. Bernstein writes that Midas’s rash wish was really just one for a shortcut, or “a choice made without regard to the consequences,” something to which readers can relate, even if they have never turned anything to gold.

Bernstein not only tells the story of gold throughout the history of civilization, but discusses the very real ways in which it affected currency and monetary systems worldwide. He notes that to this day no tourists are allowed to enter Fort Knox, and observes that “As the need for money grows, it rapidly inspires innovation to make it function more efficiently and conveniently.” But it is the sheer intrigue of the stories Bernstein tells, and not their efficiency, that makes The Power of Gold so interesting. He writes about the Byzantine emperors, Marco Polo, the London bank Baring Brothers, and the Gilded Age with equal liveliness. Those years of the Gilded Age, in particular, saw a paucity of monetary gold, and the American market rocketed around as a partial effect of this lack. Again, symbol followed history, as Bernstein writes of William Jennings Bryan in 1896, “Great decisions were afoot that would press down the crown of thorns on the brow of labor and crucify mankind on a cross of gold. What powerful language might Bryan have mustered had he lived to witness the outcome?” As for gold in the present day, Bernstein issues caveats after seeing the ravages that gold has created over the years. As he warns, “Gold and its surrogates make sense only as a means to an end: to beautify, to adorn, to exchange for what we need and really want.” Eliza R.

L. McGraw lives and writes in Cabin John, Maryland.

eart of gold. Gold at the end of the rainbow. Goldilocks, gold rush, golden mean. In The Power of Gold, Peter Bernstein investigates the phenomenon responsible for so much love and theft, bloodshed and joy. Gold is as much a symbol to us as an…

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