bookpagedev

Review by

Michael Dibdin’s latest Aurelio Zen mystery, A Long Finish (the title refers to the lingering aftertaste of a fine wine), combines an education in wine making and truffle hunting with a witty, wacky, suspenseful plot, a satisfying set of gory murders, and a solution that keeps the reader guessing up to the last paragraph. For those who have not yet met Aurelio Zen, he is an arrogant, bumbling Italian police detective, who, despite his seeming incompetence, manages to solve mysteries that baffle lesser minds. His subordinates view him with awe. As the story opens, Aldo Vincenzo, one of the greatest vintners in Italy’s piedmont country, has been brutally killed. His son is being held for the murder. A wine connoisseur, collector, and world-famous film and opera director (and friend of police higher-ups), summons Zen. Now he’s dead and his son is in prison, all on the eve of what promises to be one of the great vintages of the century! he says. I want Manlio Vincenzo [the son] released from prison in time to make the wine this year. He tells Zen, Unless we act now, the grapes will either be sold off to some competitor or crudely vinified into a parody of what a Vincenzo wine could and should be. Zen is given a choice. Either get Manlio released from prison, or plan on becoming part of an elite corps of police officers who are being sent to Sicily to wipe out the mob. This, Aurelio Zen does not want, and we are launched into an absorbing (and funny) tale. Dibdin brings the Italian piedmont setting to life: russet and golden foliage sprouting from ancient stumps ; vines heavy with fat blood-red grapes ; the vast, cold damp cellar, its vaulted roof encrusted with a white mesh of saltpetre. He also brings its characters to life, describing three aging partisans, as interchangeable as pieces on a board in their dark, durable patched clothes, each garment a manuscript in palimpsest of tales that would never be told. A Long Finish is Michael Dibdin’s 12th book, and after reading this skillful writer’s latest tale, you’re sure to want to read the entire series.

Cynthia Riggs is a freelance writer on Martha’s Vineyard where she runs a B&andB for poets and writers.

Michael Dibdin's latest Aurelio Zen mystery, A Long Finish (the title refers to the lingering aftertaste of a fine wine), combines an education in wine making and truffle hunting with a witty, wacky, suspenseful plot, a satisfying set of gory murders, and a solution that…

Review by

Get in the swing of it The Masters golf tournament just isn’t fair . . . to its viewers on television. Picture the typical rabid golfer who lives in the Northeast or Midwest. It’s April. He or she has been sitting around all winter, wearing out the living room carpet with putting practice. Then the Masters, the first major golf tournament of the season, appears on television. And everything is perfect. The azaleas are in full bloom, and the world’s best golfers are hitting magnificent drives and sinking eagle putts. No wonder the ratings are always good. Spring doesn’t seem so distant anymore, and anything is possible. This will be the year when you break 80, or 90, or 100. The Masters only lasts for four days in April, but you can take a longer time to read about that competition and the other major tournaments in a pair of new golf books that are just out.

The top release is John Feinstein’s annual literary effort, this time called The Majors (Time Warner AudioBooks, $17.98, 1570426848). It’s an up-close look at the four major golf championships: the Masters, U.

S. Open, British Open, and PGA Championship. You might remember Feinstein’s book on golf from a couple of years ago, A Good Walk Spoiled. That could have been called A Year in the Life of the PGA Tour. It caught the golf boom at just the right time and was a bestseller. A Good Walk Spoiled was good. The Majors is better. In his books, Feinstein usually introduces his cast of characters and slowly lets them play out the season. No matter how thorough and how good the writing, it’s still tough to get everything in while reviewing an entire year. But four tournaments are a different story. Each event has a small list of contenders, and there’s plenty of time to find out what went right, and wrong. Feinstein does a particularly good job of informing the reader about the pressures involved in trying to win a major. It’s the only time of the year when the golfers are playing for history more than the prizes, and it shows up in a variety of hooks and slices that can make the best professional look like a duffer.

Feinstein had a good run of tournaments in 1998: a Masters triumph on the final hole by Mark O’Meara, who went on to double at the British Open; an exciting comeback by Lee Janzen at the U.

S. Open; and a two-man duel at the PGA that was won by Vijay Singh. There are plenty of fun details along the way. When you finish this book, you’ll take greater enjoyment from watching the major championships in 1999.

For those who want to learn more about the first major championship on the calendar, The Making of the Masters: Clifford Roberts, Augusta National, and Golf’s Most Prestigious Tournament (Simon ∧ Schuster, $25, 0684857294) will do the trick. The Masters is a little different from the other majors. It is played on the same course every year, Augusta National Golf Club in Georgia, and is not a professional or national championship. The Masters started off as a cozy little event hosted by Bobby Jones, a legendary amateur golfer from the 1920s. Jones was helped by Clifford Roberts, who was head of the club for more than 40 years and was a perfectionist when it came to the course and the tournament.

The author, David Owen, has written the story of how the Masters grew to obtain the status it has today. The research is rather remarkable. Owen had access to Augusta National’s archives, and the detail is reflected throughout the book. If a tree was moved on one of Augusta’s holes, Owen comments on it. If a player from the 1930s complains years later that a late pairing was unfair, Owen pulls out the starting times and shows the player’s complaint is invalid. As a result, The Making of the Masters clears up some misconceptions about the tournament and its founders and offers a favorable but relatively balanced portrait of all concerned.

Budd Bailey is a frequent reviewer of sports books in Buffalo, New York.

Get in the swing of it The Masters golf tournament just isn't fair . . . to its viewers on television. Picture the typical rabid golfer who lives in the Northeast or Midwest. It's April. He or she has been sitting around all winter, wearing…

Review by

To the afterlife created in Alice Walker’s latest novel, say amen and believe. This place is a spiritual last stop for 200 miles before the Highway to Heaven, complete with redemption’s tools: clear hindsight, unadulterated instinct, forgiveness, and the chance to make amends for eternal peace. And it is from this afterlife that much of By the Light of My Father’s Smile is narrated, with the living and the dead haunting each other in vignettes of lust, transcendent love, self-determination, pain, and elemental human nature. Susannah and June are the daughters of African-American anthropologists who want to observe the secluded and nearly extinct Mundo Indian tribe of Mexico. An agnostic, their father agrees to be a minister and convert the unbelievers in exchange for church funding, moving his family to the tribe’s remote community in the Sierra Madres. By day he preaches Christian stories that he doubts in order to get closer to tribal secrets, while at night he defrocks and indulges his voracious libido with his haughty wife. Nature and the seductiveness of the tribe’s beliefs soon affect 14 year-old June (also named Mad Dog because of her precocious rebelliousness), who falls for the handsome Manuelito. One day, she comes home beaming from her newfound sexual experiences, only to get beaten by her father, who has discovered that she is sleeping with the younger boy. Susannah, the docile and loving daughter, witnesses the beating and is pressurized to choose between her sister’s and her father’s love, while June, reeling from his violence, eventually rejects both him and men in general. June becomes an obese, lesbian academic who searches continually for trust and an authentic sexual identity. Susannah marries a Greek, and later divorces, becoming promiscuous in search of her authentic sexual self. Their dead father haunts both of their explorations, narrating moments from their adult lives with regret and insight into his wrongdoings. But it is not until June and her father meet in this halfway house afterlife that he has the real chance and character to make amends, once he discovers that it is to our knees that we must sometimes be driven, before we can recognize, witness, or welcome our own light. Walker’s vision of death is a forgiving, restorative state, one that has the power to make both the living and the dead and entire tribes and communities whole again. Entwined with the novel’s episodes from life and death are weighty ideas about nature, women’s sensuality, and patriarchal controls over both, presented in a rich, unadorned language as powerful as muscles rippling under brown skin.

Deanna Larson is a writer in Nashville, Tennessee.

To the afterlife created in Alice Walker's latest novel, say amen and believe. This place is a spiritual last stop for 200 miles before the Highway to Heaven, complete with redemption's tools: clear hindsight, unadulterated instinct, forgiveness, and the chance to make amends for eternal…

Review by

A tribute to Eudora Welty on her 90th birthday From her home in inconspicuous Jackson, Mississippi, Eudora Welty has written some of the funniest and most moving stuff of this century, with solid and elegant prose rather than the pyrotechnics of a noisily experimental style. One thing that has always been remarkable about her work is the affection she has for her characters, her deep-grained habit of love for the eccentric outsiders she depicts. Readers have picked up the habit of love for Ms. Welty herself as well, as is thoroughly demonstrated by Hill Street Press’s new volume of tributes, a 90th birthday present to her.

Eudora Welty: Writers’ Reflections upon First Reading Welty brings together a roster of 22 writers, editors, scholars, and friends to describe their first encounters with Ms. Welty’s work. Tributeers range from Richard Bausch to Richard Wilbur, from Alice Munro to Reynolds Price. Several credit their encounters with Welty for the realization that the Southern vernacular could be legitimately literary. Tony Earley writes, incredibly, the voice had the same accent I did. It was the first time I had realized that literature could speak in a language I recognized as my own. Others recall the shock of finding out that a nice lady in a print dress was making work more daring and more honest than their own. Some, like William Maxwell, recall shared experiences, and others describe the pleasure of first hearing Welty read. All are unflagging in their appreciation, overflowing with praise for the first lady of Southern letters.

After these accolades, it’s a sharp pleasure to turn back to Ms. Welty’s works, in crisp new Modern Library editions. Here are the achingly accurate descriptions of grief in The Optimist’s Daughter, the charm and delicacy of Delta Wedding, the hilarity of a story like Why I Live at the P.O., and the perceptiveness and kindness that runs through every sentence she has ever written. Welty has never been fond of the idea of biography, asking that her books be allowed to stand on their own. I thought of this while re-reading the fabulous One Writer’s Beginnings, in which Ms. Welty describes her childhood understanding of books: It had been startling and disappointing to me to find out that story books had been written by people, that books were not natural wonders, coming up of themselves like grass. A fresh reading of her books, wonders all, is a fitting way to celebrate her 90th, and to get to know, once again, the writer who draws such ardent reponse from so many talented admirers.

Anne Stringfield is on the staff of the New Yorker.

A tribute to Eudora Welty on her 90th birthday From her home in inconspicuous Jackson, Mississippi, Eudora Welty has written some of the funniest and most moving stuff of this century, with solid and elegant prose rather than the pyrotechnics of a noisily experimental style.…

Review by

You cannot help but wonder if C. S. Lewis might not have been more at home in an earlier age. In his opposition to the relativistic and materialistic philosophy of our modern times, a philosophy that he believed was sapping the magic and the mystery out of literature and life, Lewis knew that he was out of step with modernity. In fact, he once referred to himself as a cultural dinosaur. But 35 years after his death, the influence of this unassuming British scholar shows no sign of abating. His numerous books continue to sell briskly, and he has been the subject of a Broadway play and two feature films, as well as the focus of countless biographies, literary studies, and religious reflections. One could make the argument that he is also the most oft-quoted religious writer of the 20th century, his work appealing across denominational and confessional lines. Lewis is best known as a writer of stylish and memorable books exploring Christian faith and practice (Mere Christianity, The Screwtape Letters) and the creator of the Chronicles of Narnia (which has achieved classic status in children’s literature). Less well-known are his fiction for adults (the Space Trilogy and the remarkable Till We Have Faces) and his highly readable volumes of literary history and criticism. This year marks the hundredth anniversary of Lewis’s birth and has brought forth the expected explosion of secondary works analyzing and celebrating the mind and imagination of this highly creative thinker. None of these compares in usefulness to the newly published The C. S. Lewis Reader’s Encyclopedia. The editors of this hefty volume have sought to summarize the scope of Lewis’s achievement by gathering essays from a wide range of Lewis experts. These short essays, set up in an encyclopedic format, provide an overview of the life, work, and ideas of Lewis, focusing on his literary output: all the books, poems, essays, book reviews, prefaces to the works of others, and even never-before-discussed letters to the editor. In addition, the volume offers a concise, yet penetrating biography of Lewis’s life and entries on his family and friends, as well as his literary and theological forebears. The writing is crisp and interesting, offering insights of value to the serious student of Lewis’s writing, while at the same time being easily accessible to the reader just discovering his work. Although a few essays veer perilously close to hagiography, most show an admirable critical balance, and the comprehensive nature of the whole project is very satisfying. Reading these valuable summaries of Lewis’s work, one is reminded again of his strengths: a vivid imagination, a sparkling wit, clear common-sense thinking, a gift for memorable analogies, and an unshakable faith in the reasonableness of the Christian view of existence. That he could synthesize these in ways that appealed to children as well as academics is probably what has kept this dinosaur from becoming extinct. The manner in which he combines intelligence with a soaring imagination still serves as a challenge to contemporary writers to break free from the usual modes of religious writing and forge creative new ways of communicating timeless ideas.

Terry Glaspey is the author of five books, including Not a Tame Lion: The Spiritual Legacy of C. S. Lewis. He lives in Eugene, Oregon.

You cannot help but wonder if C. S. Lewis might not have been more at home in an earlier age. In his opposition to the relativistic and materialistic philosophy of our modern times, a philosophy that he believed was sapping the magic and the mystery…

Review by

Books for grown-up baby boomers If you’ve been watching closely, you’ve noticed that members of the generation born between 1946 and 1964 are often now simply called boomers rather than the more formal baby boomers, as they used to be known. Sure, the simple boomers is snappier and hipper-sounding. It’s also a lot more accurate. That’s because the generation whose size, influence, and self-referential world view has altered every aspect of American life is certainly not babyish anymore. (A note of disclosure: I’m a card-carrying member of the boomer group.) The boomers are now finding (often to their utter surprise) that they are all grown up and not fully prepared to finance and emotionally weather such important life milestones as their children’s higher education and their own approaching retirement. Some new books are here to help.

The generation that keeps on ticking Don’t Stop the Career Clock: Rejecting the Myths of Aging for a New Way to Work in the 21st Century by Helen Harkness (Davies-Black Publishing, $17.95, 0891061274) is a blast of optimism for 40-something boomers and those even later in life who think they are on the downhill slope. Harkness, a career counselor, successfully bursts many of the stereotypes of aging that equate the addition of years with mental and physical deterioration and a loss of value in the work world. She tells people to focus on their functional ages, not their chronological ones. At one point she writes: The greatest of all remedies for the fear of age and death is a burning desire for achievement, backed by useful service to others. Busy people seldom have time to worry about dying. Harkness spends time in this book examining medical studies that refute myths about age and links to mental and physical decline. She also offers practical advice, with checklists and exercises, for people interested in a mid-life career switch or a chance to go into business for themselves. In an interesting note on the age 65, still considered by many a magical number at which time people should close up the working portion of their lives, Harkness writes: In the 1930s, when the U.

S. government was establishing the age for receiving Social Security benefits, 65 was adopted as the age for retirement. This was a time when life expectancy was around 45 and the unemployment rate was 25 percent. How mindless can this be for today’s work force, with life expectancy at 78 and rising rapidly, and unemployment at its lowest level in 25 years? Finding financial security Okay, so your retirement won’t be as traditional as that of your parents. Still, you’ll need some extra financial security as you grow older to give you greater flexibility and allow you to slow down your work schedule if that’s what you want. Don’t know where to start on that complicated trail? A good place is If You’re Clueless About Financial Planning and Want to Know More by Seth Godin and John Parmelee (Dearborn, $15.95, 0793129885). The book lives up to the promise inherent in its title in that it doesn’t assume much prior knowledge and does provide good basic instruction. The range of subjects is quite wide, from different types of stock and bond investments to life insurance to college financial aid and more. Given the subject range, none of the topics gets in-depth treatment, but there are many referrals about where to find more information in other books and via the Internet.

Retiring comfortably It’s become an accepted axiom that people retiring in the next quarter-century will need a lot more than Social Security payments to comfortably support themselves. The demographic swell of boomers hitting retirement age around the year 2015 will put unprecedented pressure on the Social Security system. Debate is already under way in Washington, D.

C., about ways to save or reform the system. Meanwhile, surveys of younger people reveal deep skepticism about what will be left for them when they reach retirement age, despite lifetimes of contributions. While urging people to assume that Social Security will not form the lion’s share of their retirement income, John F. Wasik, author of The Late-Start Investor: The Better-Late-Than-Never Guide to Realizing Your Retirement Dreams (Henry Holt, $14.95, 0805055029), makes interesting points that should serve to dispel the worst doom and gloom about the future of Social Security.

Wasik writes: Why does anyone in Washington think the 77-million-strong baby boom generation will want less from these programs after they worked so hard to make retirement a pleasant, more financially secure experience? If anything, given the selfishness traditionally ascribed to the me generation, they will want more out of retirement programs, not less. And as this generation gains power in politics, you will see a huge decrease in the political ill will toward big government programs. Wasik, special projects editor for Consumers Digest magazine, provides a balanced, common-sensical approach toward finding a New Prosperity as one approaches retirement. He urges reduced spending to increase the amount of money available for investing; an inventory to make sure you know exactly what you have and what your sources of income are; and growth-oriented investments that take advantage of any tax deferments available. Wasik goes beyond the purely financial and offers advice on how to make later life more balanced and rewarding.

As for investments, Wasik is not afraid to get specific. In a section on mutual funds, he offers recommendations for portfolios for people at different stages of life, including those with as little as five years remaining to retirement. Wasik takes the widely held view that the closer one is to retirement, the less risk he or she should carry in their investments. For those interested in their own investment decisions, Wasik offers specific individual stock recommendations.

Homeward bound Perhaps your later-in-life plans don’t include a total cessation of work, but you would like to shift gears, or, at a minimum, reduce your daily commute. The trip to work doesn’t get any shorter than when you work at home. It’s a growing trend likely to gain even more momentum in the 21st century as technological advances allow people in more occupations to work from home. Work at Home Wisdom: A Collection of Quips, Tips, and Inspirations to Balance Work, Family, and Home by David H. Bangs, Jr., and Andi Axman takes a look at the human side of at-home work. Light on the practical aspects of working at home such as tax implications and equipment needed (that’s left to countless other books), the authors instead focus on how to stay sane and prosperous while going it alone. Among the salient pieces of advice offered in the book: Keep your work confined to your home office and don’t let it spread around the house. That will give you a better chance at maintaining the separation between the personal and professional when both cohabit the same domicile. The authors also urge stay-at-homes to set clear guidelines with those they live with about when they are allowed to be disturbed during working hours. (They offer: a fire, a flood, blood, and so on. ) The book is also good on ways to fight the loneliness that can plague the at-home worker. (The authors know the territory from personal experience; both are writers who run their own at-home shows.) They suggest ways to increase human contact that can also be productive for business and personal growth. Staying at home is increasingly a route to business success. Consider this fact offered by the authors: An astonishing 45 percent of the companies in the Inc. [magazine] 500 list were started in their founder’s residence . . . Neal Lipschutz is managing editor of Dow Jones News Service.

Books for grown-up baby boomers If you've been watching closely, you've noticed that members of the generation born between 1946 and 1964 are often now simply called boomers rather than the more formal baby boomers, as they used to be known. Sure, the simple boomers…

Review by

Over the past several years, journalist/essayist/satirist P.

J. O’Rourke has tickled our collective funny bone with his views on liberals, Republicans, war, politics (and politicians), automobiles, government, and manners. He has written for a wide array of magazines, ranging from Rolling Stone to the New Republic, from Car and Driver to Vanity Fair. In his latest work, Eat the Rich, O’Rourke takes on the subject of economics, I wanted to know why some parts of the earth prosper and others suck, he says. So, armed with nothing but wads of cash and the goodwill of his publishers, O’Rourke spent a couple of years investigating the vagaries of economies around the world. From Sweden to Albania, Cuba to Tanzania, he crisscrossed the globe, finding fact and humor in more or less equal measure.

For O’Rourke, as with many of his generation, the topic of economics was first raised by his parents, who had grown up during the depression: . . . Booms and busts can have larger consequences, such as in 1929 when stocks were crashing, banks were collapsing, and President Hoover was hoovering around. Pretty soon you could buy the New York Central Railroad for a wooden nickel, except nobody could afford wood. People had to make their own nickels at home out of old socks which had also been boiled, along with the one remaining family shoe, to make last night’s dinner. So the kids had to walk to school with pots and pans on their feet through miles of deep snow because no one had the money for good weather. My generation has heard about this in great detail from our parents, which is why we put them in nursing homes. On his visit to Cuba, O’Rourke writes, Figuring out what the Cuban peso is worth is a complex economic calculation. To put it in layman’s terms, a pretty close approximation is nothing. In Moscow, O’Rourke was able to find free-range chicken and Italian food authentic enough to satisfy the Corleone family, but there were virtually no Russian products in sight. For, as the Russians have discovered a free-market economy (mas o menos), they have also discovered brand names. Easy to sneer at this, opines O’Rourke, But there’s a reason why, when we go to Florida, we don’t drink Ocala Cola. It is perhaps difficult for Americans to grasp, but Russia never had a Renaissance, never had a Reformation . . . Russia never had a Roaring ’20’s, a Booming ’50’s, a Swinging ’60’s, or a Me Generation. There was just one Them Generation after another. In Albania, O’Rourke explores how the entire (meager) holdings of a small country were gambled away in a sophisticated pyramid scheme. In Hong Kong, he wonders at the short-sightedness that would allow the British to give up one of the wealthiest colonies on the planet, Why didn’t the British give some other islands to China? Britain, for instance. This would get the UK back on a capitalist course Beijing being more interested in money-making than Tony Blair. Anyone familiar with O’Rourke’s recent books will be able to make a pretty accurate guess at his views, but he makes a good case for his conclusions, drawing from both his own experiences and the writings of the world’s premier economists. And, as usual, he takes a dry topic and moistens it with a liberal (oops, conservative) dollop of humor.

Over the past several years, journalist/essayist/satirist P.

J. O'Rourke has tickled our collective funny bone with his views on liberals, Republicans, war, politics (and politicians), automobiles, government, and manners. He has written for a wide array of magazines, ranging from Rolling Stone…

Review by

Books for grown-up baby boomers If you’ve been watching closely, you’ve noticed that members of the generation born between 1946 and 1964 are often now simply called boomers rather than the more formal baby boomers, as they used to be known. Sure, the simple boomers is snappier and hipper-sounding. It’s also a lot more accurate. That’s because the generation whose size, influence, and self-referential world view has altered every aspect of American life is certainly not babyish anymore. (A note of disclosure: I’m a card-carrying member of the boomer group.) The boomers are now finding (often to their utter surprise) that they are all grown up and not fully prepared to finance and emotionally weather such important life milestones as their children’s higher education and their own approaching retirement. Some new books are here to help.

The generation that keeps on ticking Don’t Stop the Career Clock: Rejecting the Myths of Aging for a New Way to Work in the 21st Century by Helen Harkness is a blast of optimism for 40-something boomers and those even later in life who think they are on the downhill slope. Harkness, a career counselor, successfully bursts many of the stereotypes of aging that equate the addition of years with mental and physical deterioration and a loss of value in the work world. She tells people to focus on their functional ages, not their chronological ones. At one point she writes: The greatest of all remedies for the fear of age and death is a burning desire for achievement, backed by useful service to others. Busy people seldom have time to worry about dying. Harkness spends time in this book examining medical studies that refute myths about age and links to mental and physical decline. She also offers practical advice, with checklists and exercises, for people interested in a mid-life career switch or a chance to go into business for themselves. In an interesting note on the age 65, still considered by many a magical number at which time people should close up the working portion of their lives, Harkness writes: In the 1930s, when the U.S. government was establishing the age for receiving Social Security benefits, 65 was adopted as the age for retirement. This was a time when life expectancy was around 45 and the unemployment rate was 25 percent. How mindless can this be for today’s work force, with life expectancy at 78 and rising rapidly, and unemployment at its lowest level in 25 years? Finding financial security Okay, so your retirement won’t be as traditional as that of your parents. Still, you’ll need some extra financial security as you grow older to give you greater flexibility and allow you to slow down your work schedule if that’s what you want. Don’t know where to start on that complicated trail? A good place is If You’re Clueless About Financial Planning and Want to Know More by Seth Godin and John Parmelee (Dearborn, $15.95, 0793129885). The book lives up to the promise inherent in its title in that it doesn’t assume much prior knowledge and does provide good basic instruction. The range of subjects is quite wide, from different types of stock and bond investments to life insurance to college financial aid and more. Given the subject range, none of the topics gets in-depth treatment, but there are many referrals about where to find more information in other books and via the Internet.

Retiring comfortably It’s become an accepted axiom that people retiring in the next quarter-century will need a lot more than Social Security payments to comfortably support themselves. The demographic swell of boomers hitting retirement age around the year 2015 will put unprecedented pressure on the Social Security system. Debate is already under way in Washington, D.C., about ways to save or reform the system. Meanwhile, surveys of younger people reveal deep skepticism about what will be left for them when they reach retirement age, despite lifetimes of contributions. While urging people to assume that Social Security will not form the lion’s share of their retirement income, John F. Wasik, author of The Late-Start Investor: The Better-Late-Than-Never Guide to Realizing Your Retirement Dreams (Henry Holt, $14.95, 0805055029), makes interesting points that should serve to dispel the worst doom and gloom about the future of Social Security.

Wasik writes: Why does anyone in Washington think the 77-million-strong baby boom generation will want less from these programs after they worked so hard to make retirement a pleasant, more financially secure experience? If anything, given the selfishness traditionally ascribed to the me generation, they will want more out of retirement programs, not less. And as this generation gains power in politics, you will see a huge decrease in the political ill will toward big government programs. Wasik, special projects editor for Consumers Digest magazine, provides a balanced, common-sensical approach toward finding a New Prosperity as one approaches retirement. He urges reduced spending to increase the amount of money available for investing; an inventory to make sure you know exactly what you have and what your sources of income are; and growth-oriented investments that take advantage of any tax deferments available. Wasik goes beyond the purely financial and offers advice on how to make later life more balanced and rewarding.

As for investments, Wasik is not afraid to get specific. In a section on mutual funds, he offers recommendations for portfolios for people at different stages of life, including those with as little as five years remaining to retirement. Wasik takes the widely held view that the closer one is to retirement, the less risk he or she should carry in their investments. For those interested in their own investment decisions, Wasik offers specific individual stock recommendations.

Homeward bound Perhaps your later-in-life plans don’t include a total cessation of work, but you would like to shift gears, or, at a minimum, reduce your daily commute. The trip to work doesn’t get any shorter than when you work at home. It’s a growing trend likely to gain even more momentum in the 21st century as technological advances allow people in more occupations to work from home. Work at Home Wisdom: A Collection of Quips, Tips, and Inspirations to Balance Work, Family, and Home by David H. Bangs, Jr., and Andi Axman (Upstart Publishing Co., $9.95, 1574101005) takes a look at the human side of at-home work. Light on the practical aspects of working at home such as tax implications and equipment needed (that’s left to countless other books), the authors instead focus on how to stay sane and prosperous while going it alone. Among the salient pieces of advice offered in the book: Keep your work confined to your home office and don’t let it spread around the house. That will give you a better chance at maintaining the separation between the personal and professional when both cohabit the same domicile. The authors also urge stay-at-homes to set clear guidelines with those they live with about when they are allowed to be disturbed during working hours. (They offer: a fire, a flood, blood, and so on. ) The book is also good on ways to fight the loneliness that can plague the at-home worker. (The authors know the territory from personal experience; both are writers who run their own at-home shows.) They suggest ways to increase human contact that can also be productive for business and personal growth. Staying at home is increasingly a route to business success. Consider this fact offered by the authors: An astonishing 45 percent of the companies in the Inc. [magazine] 500 list were started in their founder’s residence . . . Neal Lipschutz is managing editor of Dow Jones News Service.

Books for grown-up baby boomers If you've been watching closely, you've noticed that members of the generation born between 1946 and 1964 are often now simply called boomers rather than the more formal baby boomers, as they used to be known. Sure, the simple boomers…
Review by

What began with Walter Dean Myers’s curiosity over some letters listed for sale resulted in At Her Majesty’s Request (ages 9 and up), the tale of a young African princess saved from certain death and raised under the direction of Queen Victoria herself. Myers’s account begins in Africa, where the Dohoman tribe has overpowered an Egbado village, saving only those villagers fit to be sold as slaves or used as sacrifices. A five-year-old girl, the daughter of the village chief, is saved for use in a brutal ritual. Two years later, on the day she was to die, Frederick Forbes, the young commander of the British ship Bonetta, convinces the Dohoman king to spare her life. Soon this young child, marked as a princess by tribal facial scars she would carry throughout her life, is on a ship headed toward England to be presented as a gift to an English queen.

Intrigued by the young girl’s ability to learn English while on board the Bonetta and deeply moved by her story, Queen Victoria assumes financial responsibility for her care and agrees to let Sarah Forbes Bonetta (as she became known during the voyage) be raised by Commander Forbes and his family. This arrangement soon changes as the Queen decides Sarah, suffering from a series of ailments, should be sent to a healthier climate Africa. Sarah’s extended stay in Sierra Leone ends when, at the Queen’s request, she is sent back to England. Queen Victoria’s personal involvement in decisions affecting Sarah continues throughout Sarah’s formative years, adulthood, and marriage. Meticulous use of manuscripts, photographs, diaries, and letters, including the letters that initially aroused Myers’s curiosity, not only gives intellectual validation to this sometimes unbelievable story, but also gives nonfiction a personal face the beautiful, regal face of Sarah Forbes Bonetta. At Her Majesty’s Request is a refreshing option for older children to read both inside and outside of the classroom.

Jamie Whitfield is an author and middle school teacher. She lives in Hendersonville, Tennessee.

What began with Walter Dean Myers's curiosity over some letters listed for sale resulted in At Her Majesty's Request (ages 9 and up), the tale of a young African princess saved from certain death and raised under the direction of Queen Victoria herself. Myers's account…
Review by

Have you ever received a letter that meant so much to you that you read it over and over, memorized it, and kept it close by to read when you needed laughter or encouragement? My Dear Noel (ages 4-8) is a story about a letter written by Beatrix Potter to a young boy who was very ill; this letter became more than just a cherished memento. Written in story form and accompanied by drawings, this treasured letter ultimately became the beloved story The Tale of Peter Rabbit, the first in a series of stories written by Potter.

Young children can relate to this true story about a real little boy, his family, their friend Beatrix Potter, and her animals. The book is just the right length for young wiggle worms with short attention spans. Johnson’s words are carefully chosen, and her sentences are short enough for young readers to tackle independently. Adults reading to children will find several excellent opportunities to compare life in the 1890s with life in the 1990s (for example, differences in clothing worn then and now), and to discuss the importance of friendship.

The illustrations are rendered in pen and ink and watercolor, reminiscent of Potter’s. A unique feature of the book cover is the facsimile of the original letter sent to Noel Moore on the front endpapers. The back endpapers are the same letter, but have been cleaned for clarity and the pages arranged in correct reading order.

My Dear Noel is a timeless book; children all over the world still read and love the stories of Beatrix Potter. A new story board book, The Tale of Peter Rabbit, would be an ideal companion to My Dear Noel. After all, this famous tale of a naughty rabbit’s adventures might never have been written if not for the strong friendship between Beatrix Potter and a five-year-old boy who desperately needed gifts of laughter and encouragement.

Cynthia B. Drennan, Ed.

D., is a retired college administrator and music teacher.

Have you ever received a letter that meant so much to you that you read it over and over, memorized it, and kept it close by to read when you needed laughter or encouragement? My Dear Noel (ages 4-8) is a story about a letter…
Review by

Wallace Stegner, who died in 1993, is frequently referred to as the dean of the new American West writers. In the world of serious writers, the term dean can often be a form of damning with faint praise, meaning that one was an important early contributor to a movement but perhaps not its best example, not its apogee. Marking the Sparrow’s Fall: Wallace Stegner’s American West demonstrates that the term is both positive and deserved. Edited by Stegner’s son Page, this anthology both defines in nonfiction what the North American West was and is with the mythology stripped away and provides excellent examples of some its best fiction. It also proffers examples of the harsh, unromantic life of the cowboy who, in Stegner’s view, is a poorly paid agricultural worker whose one inviolate dictum is that the well-being of his animals comes first. Stegner fought a lifelong battle with the myth of the American cowboy which, he admitted, he lost. Stegner was not, however, a mere cowboy writer not by any means. Among his 30-some books are important works on conservation and the environment. Stegner’s west is a big dry place; aridity is common to most of what he calls the West as he explains in an essay called Living Dry. Understandably then, the wise and equitable use of water was one of his major concerns. And in a larger sense, Stegner’s famous Wilderness Letter remains one of the environmental movement’s most eloquent statements.

Stegner was also a teacher, an academic at some of the nation’s best universities. As a young man, he attended the University of Iowa, the site of America’s first and finest creative writers’ program. In 1964, he founded the nation’s second great writers’ program at Stanford University where he taught until 1971. Among his students were Ken Kesey (who claimed to dislike him), Wendell Barry, Larry McMurtry, Ernest Gaines, Raymond Carver, Edward Abbey, and Robert Haas to mention a few who credit much of their development to Stegner’s tutelage. Abbey once called him the only living American writer worthy of the Nobel. Stegner’s colossal output (as his son calls it) of 35 books may be daunting to a reader new to his work. Where does the Stegner initiate start? Obviously, with Marking the Sparrow’s Fall which presents a fine cross section of essays, travel pieces, sketches, and fiction. And it concludes with one of the most powerful pieces of western realism to be found anywhere the chilling novella Genesis. As noted earlier, Stegner used aridity as a defining characteristic of the North American West. He wrote, aridity and aridity alone, makes the various Wests one. While it may define the West, dryness is definitely not a feature of Stegner’s writing.

Writer, environmentalist, professor Wallace Stegner was all of these, but he was also a consummate westerner. All of these facets are represented in Marking the Sparrow’s Fall. Once a westerner himself, writer Jim Grinnell lives in DeKalb, Illinois.

Wallace Stegner, who died in 1993, is frequently referred to as the dean of the new American West writers. In the world of serious writers, the term dean can often be a form of damning with faint praise, meaning that one was an important early…

Review by

Have you ever received a letter that meant so much to you that you read it over and over, memorized it, and kept it close by to read when you needed laughter or encouragement? My Dear Noel (ages 4-8) is a story about a letter written by Beatrix Potter to a young boy who was very ill; this letter became more than just a cherished memento. Written in story form and accompanied by drawings, this treasured letter ultimately became the beloved story The Tale of Peter Rabbit, the first in a series of stories written by Potter.

Young children can relate to this true story about a real little boy, his family, their friend Beatrix Potter, and her animals. The book is just the right length for young wiggle worms with short attention spans. Johnson’s words are carefully chosen, and her sentences are short enough for young readers to tackle independently. Adults reading to children will find several excellent opportunities to compare life in the 1890s with life in the 1990s (for example, differences in clothing worn then and now), and to discuss the importance of friendship.

The illustrations are rendered in pen and ink and watercolor, reminiscent of Potter’s. A unique feature of the book cover is the facsimile of the original letter sent to Noel Moore on the front endpapers. The back endpapers are the same letter, but have been cleaned for clarity and the pages arranged in correct reading order.

My Dear Noel is a timeless book; children all over the world still read and love the stories of Beatrix Potter. A new story board book, The Tale of Peter Rabbit (F. Warne &and Co., $6.99, 0723244324), would be an ideal companion to My Dear Noel. After all, this famous tale of a naughty rabbit’s adventures might never have been written if not for the strong friendship between Beatrix Potter and a five-year-old boy who desperately needed gifts of laughter and encouragement.

Cynthia B. Drennan, Ed.

D., is a retired college administrator and music teacher.

Have you ever received a letter that meant so much to you that you read it over and over, memorized it, and kept it close by to read when you needed laughter or encouragement? My Dear Noel (ages 4-8) is a story about a letter…
Review by

An adroit blend of melodrama and literary fiction, Louis Begley’s Mistler’s Exit recycles character types, themes, and settings from his previous novel, About Schmidt. Again, our New York narrator is a wealthy, privileged, supposedly talented old man of acid tongue and heart. Again, too, his long marriage has been a facade hiding an unforgiven sexual betrayal. Still again, a quirky younger woman seizes upon him as her sexual ideal and leaps into his bed, eager and inventive.

But widower Schmidt ran south to make a new life at sunset. Mistler, whose wife is still alive, escapes alone to Venice to settle his head in light of the warning that liver cancer may kill him within months.

Not surprisingly, Mistler’s Exit draws upon Thomas Mann’s Death in Venice, but there are strong contrasts. Unlike Mann’s wasting hero, Mistler is self-consciously virile. He schemes to sell his advertising agency for a huge sum of money, only slightly concerned that concealing his illness might be sharp practice. He wreaks revenge upon the former Harvard roommate and business partner who once had an affair with Mrs. Mistler. He indulges in various sexual postures and recalls others.

Through Mistler’s recollections and chance meetings with old acquaintances, Begley sums up the man’s emotional life. It is not an especially pretty sight. He apparently came close to alienating his only child, a son who is an academic in California. He is obsessed by his late father’s affair with a luminous if romanticized woman in Paris. He admits his role in his wife’s discontent but moons after a blowsy old bag who rejected him in college.

Between such reflections and his snits about hotel service, Mistler and his adoring young woman eat in his favorite Venetian restaurants and visit his favorite Renaissance paintings. He ponders God’s cruelties while trying to recreate the most precious moments of his past.

Unfortunately, precious is sometimes accurate in a disabling sense. When a smug Mistler amazes his lover with philosophical speculations that would be at home in any college dorm, the reader wonders whether or not Begley entirely realizes the extent of his protagonist’s self-satisfaction and self-delusion. Similarly, the novel’s Manhattan social stratosphere is preposterous. Begley treats as contemporary the world of midtown eating clubs, but he surely knows that exclusivity has long since bowed to the need to swell the rosters to pay overhead, and that raspberries are not always reliable in winter. More importantly, his portrayal of elitist power is several decades out of date.

Reviewers often praise Begley’s precise, measured, well-tailored writing, and Mistler’s Exit is certainly a work of assurance. Is the coldness of the dying Mistler the consequence of his never having slept with the one woman he loved, the paragon who was his father’s mistress? Perhaps. But that is a kind of sentimentality difficult to square with Mistler’s betrayals of old friends and proprietary impulses toward women. Charles Flowers is the author of A Science Odyssey (William Morrow).

An adroit blend of melodrama and literary fiction, Louis Begley's Mistler's Exit recycles character types, themes, and settings from his previous novel, About Schmidt. Again, our New York narrator is a wealthy, privileged, supposedly talented old man of acid tongue and heart. Again, too, his…

Sign Up

Stay on top of new releases: Sign up for our newsletter to receive reading recommendations in your favorite genres.

Trending Features