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YE OLDE CURIOSITY SHOPPE Lenin grads Lenin’s Embalmers, by Ilya Zbarsky and Samuel Hutchinson, is the story of the eccentric crew who were handed the scientifically and politically volatile assignment of mummifying Lenin’s body a task somewhere between deifying a pharaoh and preserving the bones of a saint. Naturally the book is illustrated with fascinating photos of characters living and dead.

Ilya Zbarsky, the son of one of Lenin’s embalmers, tells the outrageous story of his father, the era, and the secret goings-on behind the mausoleum walls. Zbarsky’s Kafkaesque portrait of the insanely secretive Soviet regime is both terrifying and bitterly amusing. It fortifies his account of the scientific challenge the embalmers faced, and of his father’s and his own surprising survival through such a dangerous time. For all of his arcane expertise and high social position, however, Zbarsky’s father was Jewish, and in time Stalin’s fanatical anti-Semitism brought him down. Worth the price of admission here is the information about embalming and mummification, the methods invented by Zbarsky’s father and his colleagues. As grisly as the tale of Tutankhamen, it is yet still timely. The methods used to preserve Lenin are now being exported to preserve leaders in places as far away as Vietnam. Back home in Russia the techniques are applied to the embalming of rich gangsters.

Surprisingly, Lenin’s Embalmers is also a fascinating memoir of one man’s relationship with an exploitative father. And there is a nice thread of celebrity literary gossip thrown in, too. The Zbarskys were friends with a young writer named Boris Pasternak. It seems that the talented Boris had an affair with the author’s mother. In fiction they call that a subplot.

YE OLDE CURIOSITY SHOPPE Lenin grads Lenin's Embalmers, by Ilya Zbarsky and Samuel Hutchinson, is the story of the eccentric crew who were handed the scientifically and politically volatile assignment of mummifying Lenin's body a task somewhere between deifying a pharaoh and preserving the bones…

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Fat chance: help for healthy living “Focus on permanent, not temporary changes” is the recommendation of Jeffery and Norean Wilbert. “Remember the rule of thumb: Don’t do anything on a diet you’re not willing to do the rest of your life.” This common sense advice appears in their new book, Fattitudes: Beat Self-Defeat and Win Your War with Weight. The Wilberts believe that all too often, those who want to lose weight are their own worst enemy: “Recognize that the universal obstacle to healthy weight management is self-defeating behavior.” Their remedy is to learn to recognize and change your fattitude, which they define as a “thought or pattern of thinking that leads to self-defeating behavior in weight management efforts.” You may not even be aware that you have a fattitude. According to the Wilberts, an adjustment is probably in order if you’re unable to stay on a healthy eating track, if you sabotage your own weight loss success, or if your exercise habits last only a few weeks. In Fattitudes, the Wilberts tackle the complexities of emotional eating, warn you about how certain relationships can set you up for failure, and show you how to establish emotional freedom from the fattitudes that have been at work in your life for a long time. This book will help you find out a lot about yourself and your love/hate relationship with food.

Pat Regel race-walks in Nashville.

Fat chance: help for healthy living "Focus on permanent, not temporary changes" is the recommendation of Jeffery and Norean Wilbert. "Remember the rule of thumb: Don't do anything on a diet you're not willing to do the rest of your life." This common sense advice…

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During its 50-year history, NASCAR has metamorphosed from dirt track, Saturday night, fairgrounds racing into a national spectator sport. It has become a very big business, but it has not lost its rural, southern roots. A panel of NASCAR stalwarts assembled a list of stock car racing’s 50 best (and often most colorful) drivers, representing each of the five decades of NASCAR’s history. With NASCAR 50 Greatest Drivers, writers Bill Center and Bob Moore provide a thumbnail history of each driver and his era, along with a sidebar of vital statistics and a collage of photographs from sepia-toned black and whites from the early years to bold color shots of today. Yesteryear’s heroes such as Junior Johnson and Fireball Roberts, current superstars like Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt, and the timeless King, Richard Petty they’re all here, and they’re all legends. This is a book that any NASCAR fan would be happy to own.

During its 50-year history, NASCAR has metamorphosed from dirt track, Saturday night, fairgrounds racing into a national spectator sport. It has become a very big business, but it has not lost its rural, southern roots. A panel of NASCAR stalwarts assembled a list of stock…

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Recent surveys indicate that many urban children have no idea that milk comes from cows or that eggs come from chickens, much less any sense of the greater cycles of nature. In our disconnected era of merely virtual reality, Sharon Lovejoy has created a career out of as noble an activity as you can imagine teaching children to stay connected with the earth. Gardening painlessly teaches patience and foresight, encourages imagination, and demonstrates how the natural world works. Lovejoy is the author of two previous books on gardening with children, Sunflower Houses and Hollyhock Days. A talented watercolorist, she beautifully illustrates her own books. She is also a regular guest on both House and Garden TV and The Discovery Channel. She writes clearly and with the casual authority of long-standing expertise. Roots, Shoots, Buckets and Boots features 12 gardens created around particular themes a Flowery Maze, a Snacking and Sipping Garden, a Zuni Waffle Garden, a Pizza Patch, a Giant’s Garden, and many others. Each chapter offers a new round of discovery walks, activities, diagrams, and drawings. Fascinating tidbits range from the favorite snacks of the Hidatsa tribe to using a stethoscope to hear beetles boring inside bark, from how to grow fancifully shaped carrots to attracting nighttime insects so you can examine them and release them without harm.

Each section’s activities suit the season. Harvest activities include drawing the Cherokee corn maiden and constructing a Zuni scarecrow for the garden, crafting jewelry from the corn itself, and making toy animals from the husks. A chapter entitled Gardening Basics covers all you need to know about earthworms, mulching, watering, deadheading, and how to share each of these activities with children. And Top 20 Plants for Kids introduces you to the whys and wherefores of selecting the right plants for your young gardeners.

Visit your plants every day, Lovejoy advises children at one point. Soon they’ll become as familiar as old friends. Then she goes on to good advice for life in general: Something magical and new is always happening in your garden. Take the time to discover it. Michael Sims is the author of Darwin’s Orchestra (Henry Holt).

Recent surveys indicate that many urban children have no idea that milk comes from cows or that eggs come from chickens, much less any sense of the greater cycles of nature. In our disconnected era of merely virtual reality, Sharon Lovejoy has created a career…

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Julia Glass, winner of the National Book Award for Three Junes, is back with an achingly personal tale of sisters, I See You Everywhere. Readers come to know Louisa, traditional and accomplished, and Clement, wild seductress and animal lover, through vignettes without any clear structure, but which unerringly show us their disparate priorities and personalities. Despite their common upbringing, the two women are more different than alike. When apart, they seem to regard each other as casually as old college roommates, and when together, they only occasionally connect on a personal level. Their individual tragedies are as standard as boyfriend troubles, pregnancy scares and sibling rivalry, and as serious as near-fatal accidents and cancer. Though their surface concern for each other can be puzzling at times, it is when we find the small gems in Glass’ prose that we realize how deeply these sisters are connected, and how authentic their relationship is.

The story’s 25-year span gives us long views of the sisters’ changing circumstances, from aspirations to jobs, from romances to marriage and children, and from dreams and ideologies to the reality of making a living and attempting to make a difference in the world, and we come to know the characters almost without being aware of it.

While Glass’ fluid writing style allows for moments of genuine beauty in language, it is not until the final quarter of the book that readers will realize how emotionally invested in the characters they’ve become, after the plot takes a startling, heartbreaking hairpin turn. Suddenly the apparently unrelated vignettes of Louisa and Clem’s lives make sense, and readers realize where Glass has been taking them, expertly, the whole time. It is that subtle, relentless seduction that makes I See You Everywhere a worthy and inevitable addition to Glass’ body of work.

Kristy Kiernan, author of
Matters of Faith, writes from southwest Florida.

 

 

 

Julia Glass, winner of the National Book Award for Three Junes, is back with an achingly personal tale of sisters, I See You Everywhere. Readers come to know Louisa, traditional and accomplished, and Clement, wild seductress and animal lover, through vignettes without any clear structure,…

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Geoffrey Moorhouse is the kind of writer who reminds you that "Travel Literature" not just "Travel Guides" used to be a prominent section in good bookstores.

Sydney: The Story of a City is beautifully written, casual, conversational, almost unobtrusively suffused with information, and wittily opinionated all at once. It adds to the picture-postcard view of Sydney an engrossing humanity and a sort of rude health that reminds us how young a city it is, founded notoriously as a penal colony only in 1770.

Moorhouse’s sentences have a rare and seductive rhythm, and his adjectives a particular aptness. Consider the polish, and the visual acuity, of a simple vignette of the harbor traffic: "Ships arrive with superstructures rising abruptly in umpteen storeys like an apartment block; ships with the bulbous bow that became fashionable again after being out of favor for the best part of a century; ships so top-heavy with containers that they resemble a railway marshaling yard, and you wonder why they haven’t turned turtle in the latest storms; ships that are nothing more than boxes on keels, so unspeakably ugly that whoever drew up the blueprints must have thought they were being asked to design a septic tank; ships that have become floating advertisements with their owner’s name flashed ostentatiously along the side an unthinkable vulgarity not so long ago." Not only that, but his masterful prose allows him to ramble from past to present, conveying astonishing amounts of fact and detail without ever seeming pedantic.

"It is still, but only just, possible to appreciate what terra australis looked like round here when the Aborigines had it all to themselves. To do so you need to go up the Parramatta River, where there are still small mangrove swamps in Home Bush Bay and near Rydalmere, where duck and pelican, cormorant and sandpiper flourish, just as they did when they were hunted to keep aboriginal hunger at bay; or you must go some distance north of the city, where the Hawkesbury River winds down to the sea at Broken Bay, through hundreds of square miles of national park and its blessedly unexploited bush. . . . [R]oots and fruits were abundant here, together with witchhetty grubs which could be found in rotting trees trunks and were regarded as a great delicacy when lightly grilled." Moorhouse is no respecter of church or state, unless either earns it; he takes shrewd and unshakable aim at the selfish, the aggrandizing and the prejudiced of town and gown and chalice. But he is also unstinting in his admiration of the generous and far-sighted, and unusually imaginative in his portraits of some of the complex and contradictory figures in Australian history. He peeks in at the Parliament, with its very English habit of exquisitely insulting circumlocutions.

He makes palpable the idiosyncratic pleasures (and shadows) of national holidays, from the we’re-all-green over-indulgences of St. Patrick’s Day to the solemnity of Anzac Day, a veterans’ day salute to the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps forces slaughtered at Gallipoli in 1915.

And he conveys the sense of physical energy that pervades the city. The host city for the Olympic Games in September, Sydney is famously sports mad: cricket, horse racing (there are 11 tracks), greyhound racing, American and Australian rules football, rugby league and rugby union, golf and bowling, basketball, soccer and, swimming, and surfing (despite the many hazards of freak tides, deadly sea snakes, sharks, and Portuguese man Ôo war jellyfish). Moorhouse manages to explain how the adherents of these often internecine sporting traditions squabble, coexist, battle for attention and scramble for media coverage. Altogether, this is a book of chewy pleasures, witty, sympathetic, finely descriptive and thoroughly accessible and it demands a suitable wine. The nearest wine region to Sydney is the Hunter Valley, and from that area Rosemount produces unpushy but broadly aromatic Semillons, with a softness to the texture often likened to lanolin but more like mango juice. Although the ordinary Semillons are good, and bargain-priced, the vintage wines, such as the 1996 Show Reserve (about $17) begin with a clearwater stoniness, turn a neat ankle of white peach and honey cream and ring down the curtain with a lingering, palate-cleansing almond. A showstopper.

 

P.S. If you are going to the Olympics, you might get a kick out of the DK Eyewitness Travel Guide Deluxe Gift Edition: Sydney (Dorling Kindersley, $40, ISBN 0789456443). In addition to DK’s usual lush, full-color format and intriguing historical tidbits (and hotel and restaurant info, of course), the special version has a plastic case, wallet-sized info cards and a take-along map.


Eve Zibart is a restaurant critic for the Washington Post. This column reflects her dual interests in travel and wine.

Geoffrey Moorhouse is the kind of writer who reminds you that "Travel Literature" not just "Travel Guides" used to be a prominent section in good bookstores.

Sydney: The Story of a City is beautifully written, casual, conversational, almost unobtrusively suffused with…

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Holiday books harvest laughter and warmth for young readers ÔTwas the season of giving, And all through the stores, Await bright racks and shelves, Filled with holiday books galore! Happy Hanukkah There’s a feast of Hanukkah books this year, starting with A Hanukkah Treasury (Henry Holt, $19.95, ages 6-up, 0805052933), a collection of legends, history, recipes, crafts, and modern reminiscences. Don’t miss Jane Yolen’s touching poem, Ever After, about how she felt while her father was away fighting during World War II, and the intriguing short essay, A Menorah in the White House. Treat yourself to a short history lesson with The Menorah Story (Greenwillow, $15, ages 5-up, 0688157580), featuring the impressionistic images of Mark Podwal, a New York Times illustrator whose works are part of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Pearl’s Eight Days of Chanukah (Simon ∧ Schuster, $16, ages 3-8, 0689814887) features a story and activity for each night of the festival. Pearl is a little lamb who has also been featured in Jane Breskin Zalben’s Pearl Plants a Tree and Pearl’s Marigolds for Grandpa. Stories are interspersed with recipes, songs, and explanations of the holidays. Zalben’s illustrations will add to the coziness and comfort of any family celebration.

Both the illustrations and the story in When Mindy Saved Hanukkah are charming and exciting. Eric A. Kimmel has combined his memories of Manhattan’s Eldridge Street Synagogue with a saga of a little family (in the tradition of the Borrowers) named Klein. After Papa returns from an unsuccessful trip to find a candle with which to celebrate Hanukkah, young Mindy decides to set out on her own. Armed with garlic, a lucky stone, and a climbing hook (a paper clip with string), Mindy braves a pouncing cat and sheer terror. Barbara McClintock’s illustrations are superb.

Here’s hoping many super books find their way to your house this holiday season. Enjoy! Alice Cary is a reviewer in Groton, Massachusetts.

Holiday books harvest laughter and warmth for young readers ÔTwas the season of giving, And all through the stores, Await bright racks and shelves, Filled with holiday books galore! Happy Hanukkah There's a feast of Hanukkah books this year, starting with A Hanukkah Treasury (Henry…

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Who doesn’t remember, as a child, sitting still in the gray summer twilight, watching fireflies float aimlessly through the sticky heat, listening to cricket music and simply absorbing the peace around you? This is the soothing, familiar scene set by Lee Posey in Night Rabbits, a tender story of young Elizabeth’s special relationship with graceful nighttime creatures, and with her own father.

Elizabeth finds comfort in the playful dances of the rabbits in the moonshadows. They help her to fall asleep. She says, When it’s so hot that I can’t sleep, I get out of bed and go out on the porch. I swing quietly in the hammock and watch the rabbits. They leap onto the lawn, then back into the trees, a dance of lighter shadows. Their leaps are soft as shyness. But when the rabbits begin to eat her father’s new lawn, Elizabeth becomes discouraged. She loves the rabbits, yet she knows how hard her father has worked to keep the yard pretty. She has an idea she carefully places some lettuce on the lawn after dark, hoping the rabbits prefer that to the green grass but her father says there’s no telling with rabbits . . . they’ll probably still eat the grass. So father and daughter reach a compromise by sharing the lawn with their animal friends and working together to preserve it.

Night Rabbits is a touching story that celebrates our connection with nature and the peace that such a connection brings. Michael Montgomery’s luminous pictures gently capture the mystery and magic of night a land of stars, dancing rabbits, and faerie secrets hidden deep within the faded forest beside the summer house.

Carolyn Porter lives and writes in Nashville.

Who doesn't remember, as a child, sitting still in the gray summer twilight, watching fireflies float aimlessly through the sticky heat, listening to cricket music and simply absorbing the peace around you? This is the soothing, familiar scene set by Lee Posey in Night Rabbits,…

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When he was 10 or 11 years old, Harold Bloom read the poetry of William Blake and Hart Crane and was profoundly moved. This led to a lifelong passion for literature and a career as one of our most distinguished and prolific literary critics. Much of that time, his influential and often controversial criticism was addressed primarily to an academic readership. More recently, his best-selling titles are mindful of what Dr. Samuel Johnson and later Virginia Woolf called “the common reader.” Bloom notes, “If there is a function for criticism at the present time, it must be to address itself to the solitary reader, who reads for himself, and not for the interests that supposedly transcend the self.” We common readers continue to be in Bloom’s debt. His new book, How to Read and Why, offers not only helpful suggestions indicated by the title but also sophisticated and stimulating analyses of noteworthy short stories, poetry, novels, and plays. Drawing on the writing of Samuel Johnson, Virginia Woolf, Francis Bacon, and Ralph Waldo Emerson, Bloom formulates his principles of reading. In summary, they are: “Read deeply, not to believe, not to accept, not to contradict, but to learn to share in that one nature that writes and reads.” Bloom is careful to state that the selections he has chosen to write about and quote from are “a sampling of works that best illustrate why to read.” In the short story section, for example, the samplings include works by Turgenev and Chekhov as well as Flannery O’Connor and Italo Calvino. A surprise is the story “Gogol’s Wife” by the modern Italian writer Tommaso Landolfi.

There are two chapters on novels, the first one with discussions of Cervantes’ Don Quixote, “the first and best of all novels, which nevertheless is more than a novel,” and Jane Austen’s Emma, and Thomas Mann’s The Magic Mountain, among others. The second chapter on novels includes William Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying and Miss Lonelyhearts by Nathanael West. All of the books in this chapter Bloom includes in the “school of Melville” and his consideration of them follows an introductory section on Moby Dick. He writes there of Ahab being “American through and through, fierce in his desire to avenge himself, but always strangely free, probably because no American truly feels free unless he or she is inwardly alone.” The longest discussion of an individual work is of Shakespeare’s play Hamlet. It is a highlight of the book. Bloom says that “after four centuries, Hamlet remains the most experimental drama ever staged, even in the Age of Beckett, Pirandello, and all the Absurdists.” He also comments, “Hamlet, like Shakespeare’s disciples Milton and the Romantics, wishes to assert the power of mind over a universe of death or sea of trouble, but cannot do so, because he thinks too lucidly.” The other two, quite different plays, discussed are Henrik Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler and Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest.

Bloom’s passion for great literature is evident on every page. This book should be of special interest both to solitary readers and reading groups.

Roger Bishop is a regular contributor to BookPage.

When he was 10 or 11 years old, Harold Bloom read the poetry of William Blake and Hart Crane and was profoundly moved. This led to a lifelong passion for literature and a career as one of our most distinguished and prolific literary critics. Much…

Review by

Holiday books harvest laughter and warmth for young readers ÔTwas the season of giving, And all through the stores, Await bright racks and shelves, Filled with holiday books galore! Happy Hanukkah There’s a feast of Hanukkah books this year, starting with A Hanukkah Treasury (Henry Holt, $19.95, ages 6-up, 0805052933), a collection of legends, history, recipes, crafts, and modern reminiscences. Don’t miss Jane Yolen’s touching poem, Ever After, about how she felt while her father was away fighting during World War II, and the intriguing short essay, A Menorah in the White House. Treat yourself to a short history lesson with The Menorah Story (Greenwillow, $15, ages 5-up, 0688157580), featuring the impressionistic images of Mark Podwal, a New York Times illustrator whose works are part of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Pearl’s Eight Days of Chanukah (ages 3-8) features a story and activity for each night of the festival. Pearl is a little lamb who has also been featured in Jane Breskin Zalben’s Pearl Plants a Tree and Pearl’s Marigolds for Grandpa. Stories are interspersed with recipes, songs, and explanations of the holidays. Zalben’s illustrations will add to the coziness and comfort of any family celebration.

Both the illustrations and the story in When Mindy Saved Hanukkah (Scholastic, $15.95, ages 4-8, 0590371363) are charming and exciting. Eric A. Kimmel has combined his memories of Manhattan’s Eldridge Street Synagogue with a saga of a little family (in the tradition of the Borrowers) named Klein. After Papa returns from an unsuccessful trip to find a candle with which to celebrate Hanukkah, young Mindy decides to set out on her own. Armed with garlic, a lucky stone, and a climbing hook (a paper clip with string), Mindy braves a pouncing cat and sheer terror. Barbara McClintock’s illustrations are superb.

Here’s hoping many super books find their way to your house this holiday season. Enjoy! Alice Cary is a reviewer in Groton, Massachusetts.

Holiday books harvest laughter and warmth for young readers ÔTwas the season of giving, And all through the stores, Await bright racks and shelves, Filled with holiday books galore! Happy Hanukkah There's a feast of Hanukkah books this year, starting with A Hanukkah Treasury (Henry…

Review by

All ages The reason why kids are crazy is because nobody can face the responsibility of bringing them up. – John Lennon Real Love: the Drawings for Sean is a touching collection of drawings done by John Lennon for his son Sean. With simple line sketches of elephants, monkeys, turtles, and dogs singing and dancing together, accompanied by humorous captions which give the book a very candid feel, the playful sketches represent the deep relationship Lennon and his young son shared. A foreword written by Yoko Ono describes how Lennon, not the celebrity personality but the father, would proudly show her the drawings he and his son would create together in their Dakota apartment in New York City. The captions are derived from Sean’s reactions to Lennon’s sketches, and are intended to add laughter to the colorful pages that show us a man and a son teaching each other the value of communication through sharing creative times together. John Lennon led a life of incredible accomplishments and one can only wonder why a man who gave so much to the world was taken out of it so prematurely at age 40. Not only did he found the world’s greatest rock and roll band, the former art student also wrote, painted, and sketched, using his mind and voice in conjunction with his fame to promote peace and benevolence during a time of war and social and cultural upheaval. He was also a father to two boys Julian by his first marriage to Cynthia Powell in 1962, and Sean through his second marriage to Yoko Ono in 1975.

After Sean was born, Lennon, nearing 40 and wanting to be a good father, put his musical career on hold for five years to raise the boy, spending practically every hour with him. As Ono describes in the foreword, after Sean was born, Lennon told her, I’m going to raise this baby, Yoko. You do the business, and he did. This book captures a father and son sharing fun times and no doubt it will evoke a special reading experience for children and adults.

Jamie McAlister is the assistant editor of Port News and lives in Charleston, South Carolina.

All ages The reason why kids are crazy is because nobody can face the responsibility of bringing them up. - John Lennon Real Love: the Drawings for Sean is a touching collection of drawings done by John Lennon for his son Sean. With simple line…

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White Star Lines built the Titanic to make money, but it’s doubtful they ever imagined that the ship would continue to generate profits almost a century after it sank. Millions of words have been written about the ship, its passengers, their fate and the sinking’s place in our history and psyche. Brad Matsen’s new book, Titanic’s Last Secrets: The Further Adventures of Shadow Divers John Chatterton and Richie Kohler, gives us another look at the famous ship, and a fresh perspective on an old story.

Chatterton and Kohler are the divers who discovered the sunken German U – boat U – 869; their exploration of that vessel off the coast of New Jersey was the subject of their first collaboration, Shadow Divers. This time the two are on the trail of the biggest shipwreck of all time. Specifically, they’re given a clue by an acquaintance of Chatterton’s that indicates there was more than an errant iceberg to blame for the ship’s quick sinking. This bait they find irresistible, and they eventually find themselves aboard a Russian ship, scheduled for a dive to the wreck.

While their quest to the bottom of the ocean – and what they find there – is the reason for this book, the real heart of the story is Matsen’s detailed and fascinating look at the men who dreamed, schemed, designed and built the Titanic. There’s the unscrupulous American billionaire J.P. Morgan, who saw the Titanic as a means to gain control of the transatlantic passenger trade; the brilliant designer Thomas Andrews, destined to go down with his creation; the senior captain of White Star, Edward Smith, whose highly regarded reputation might not have been wholly deserved; and finally the Titanic’s builder, J. Bruce Ismay, a reluctant tycoon who would forever after be the goat of the Titanic’s story. Their actions drive the two divers’ thesis – the loss of so many lives didn’t have to happen. Was there a cover – up? And can they find concrete proof of their theory?Titanic’s Last Secrets is a good title, and a good book. Whether that title proves to be the truth remains to be seen. James Neal Webb admits to being something of a Titanic geek.

White Star Lines built the Titanic to make money, but it's doubtful they ever imagined that the ship would continue to generate profits almost a century after it sank. Millions of words have been written about the ship, its passengers, their fate and the sinking's…

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You just had a sack lunch yesterday. This ain’t Outward Bound, you know. one hungry smokejumper to another. A smokejumper’s job description might read: Squelch forest fires by parachuting into them wearing 40 pounds of gear. Operations require days of primitive camping in hot, smoky areas. Rewards include near-death experiences, extreme sleep deprivation, broken bones and more interesting injuries, and knowing you’re the world’s best defense against forest fires.

In the late 1930s, someone in the Forest Service suggested parachuting firefighters into small blazes to stop them. After U.S. Army officials watched the first fire jumps in 1940, they quickly created the first airborne units for World War II. The Bureau of Land Management launched a jumping program in 1959, the same year Murry Taylor became a firefighter. Taylor became a smokejumper in 1965, and today he is the oldest active jumper, having dropped into more than 200 fires.

Taylor’s clean construction takes us straight to the jumpers’ camp, close enough to scoff at the tourist who suggests the jumpers take a flying vacation over Alaska because “it’s the best way to see the country,” and close enough to grind off tooth enamel waiting out a day on call when, alas, no fires need fighting. In plain and simple terms, Taylor describes the vastness of the fires, the land on which they feed, and the immense challenge faced by those who dare interfere with nature’s burning desires. He also refrains from embellishing the injuries so many jumpers experience; a good thing, since a description of bones popping as they land badly on hot Alaskan rocks needs no amplification. Taylor’s remembered, recalled, or recreated events are so neatly recounted that they sound like a friend’s “day at the office” stories; his dialogue and description of place are as accurate as a jumper’s safe landing. The book moves fast; read the short glossary of jumper terms in the back of the book first so as not to get lost in jumper-lingo. Then dive into the intense pleasure of Jumping Fire.

Diane Stresing is a freelance writer in Kent, Ohio.

You just had a sack lunch yesterday. This ain't Outward Bound, you know. one hungry smokejumper to another. A smokejumper's job description might read: Squelch forest fires by parachuting into them wearing 40 pounds of gear. Operations require days of primitive camping in hot, smoky…

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