by Eric Manheimer (Get the Book)
Bellevue's former medical director offers unusual clarity, empathy, and insight in these stories from the bedside at the nation's oldest hospital-and, Manheimer notes, perhaps its most famous public one. Yet Manheimer offers far more than remarkable medical dramas: he blends each patient's personal experiences with their social implications. Juan, an addict with a long criminal record, shows indomitable strength in battling cancer in the hospital's prison unit as the hospital presses for his compassionate release. For Manheimer, his case illustrates a broken prison system. For Tanisha, an emotionally damaged teen, one caring foster family gives her a last shot at happiness and demonstrates the problems of psych treatment for kids. Equally gripping tales include that of addict Arnie, a former Wall Street success story whose demons nearly destroyed his son, and whose slow slog to recovery highlights the nature of forgiveness. But perhaps the most moving tale of all is Manheimer's own-as a cancer patient, he learns far more about despair and hope than most physicians can imagine. Manheimer offers a window onto a unique hospital and the wisdom of a healer who tends with equal skill
to patients and the world. --Publishers Weekly
Book News and New Book Reviews
Just a sampling of our new materials (right side)!
Friday, August 31, 2012
Thursday, August 30, 2012
The spymasters : a Men at War novel
by W.E.B. Griffin (Get the Book)
The Men at War series, chronicling the adventures of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) during World War II, is dangerously close to running out of time. The OSS was dissolved in September 1945 to make way for the new CIA and this novel is set in the summer of '43. Operation Overlord and the Manhattan Project are in full swing, both designed to ensure a speedy end to the war. But both projects are in serious jeopardy, and only Dick Canidy, OSS chief Bill Donovan's right-hand man, can find a way to protect them. Battling moles, Soviet spies, and Nazis, the OSS agents race against time to keep the enemy from pushing ahead in the race to win the war. The book is full of action, with characters who are reasonably well drawn and believable (for a novel that is completely plot-driven). Fans of wartime adventure stories (especially, but not limited to, Griffin's legion of readers) should be very pleased. --Booklist
The Men at War series, chronicling the adventures of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) during World War II, is dangerously close to running out of time. The OSS was dissolved in September 1945 to make way for the new CIA and this novel is set in the summer of '43. Operation Overlord and the Manhattan Project are in full swing, both designed to ensure a speedy end to the war. But both projects are in serious jeopardy, and only Dick Canidy, OSS chief Bill Donovan's right-hand man, can find a way to protect them. Battling moles, Soviet spies, and Nazis, the OSS agents race against time to keep the enemy from pushing ahead in the race to win the war. The book is full of action, with characters who are reasonably well drawn and believable (for a novel that is completely plot-driven). Fans of wartime adventure stories (especially, but not limited to, Griffin's legion of readers) should be very pleased. --Booklist
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Some of my best friends are Black : the strange story of integration in America
by Tanner Colby (Get the Book) |
Who would expect a coauthor of two Saturday Night Live alumni biographies (The Chris Farley Show; Belushi) to pen a thoughtful, judicious, yet provocative social history of American race relations? Colby quips that ignorance is his one qualification as a white writer on race, then gets serious in exploring four key areas: school desegregation (in Vestavia Hills, a suburb of Birmingham, AL), homeownership and neighborhood (in Kansas City's 49/63 area), advertising-as a career and a product (in Madison Avenue's old boys' network), and church membership (in Grand Coteau, LA). Colby considers the close connections among suburban development, advertising, and racial fear. His tour of Kansas City, still divided racially by one thoroughfare, underlines how years of misguided federal housing and loan policies institutionalized residential racial stratification. And he reveals how, after 40 years, 13 pastors, and untold strife, it took a hurricane and an ailing priest to integrate neighboring black and white Catholic parishes in one Louisiana town. VERDICT Evenhanded, felicitously written, and animated by numerous interviews, Colby's book is a pleasure despite its overall bleak message. It updates, with only slightly more hope, Leonard Steinhorn and Barbara Diggs-Brown's By the Color of Our Skin: The Illusion of Integration and the Reality of Race. --Library Journal |
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
The light between oceans : a novel
by M.L. Stedman (Get the Book)
Stedman's haunting tale opens in 1918 with the return of Tom Sherbourne to his home in Australia after serving four years in the Great War. He applies for a job as a lighthouse keeper and is assigned to the light on Janus Rock, a remote island off the southwest coast where he hopes to erase his horrific memories of war. Several years later, Tom brings to the island his bride, Isabel, a free-spirited young woman who is determined to adapt to Tom's solitary life with their only contact with the mainland a quarterly visit from the supply boat. Four years later, after Isabel has suffered two miscarriages and a very recent stillbirth, an event occurs that forever changes them. A dinghy washes up on the beach carrying a dead man and a newborn baby girl, giving Isabel hope that she may become, at last, a mother. The choice they make as a couple comes to haunt them, their unexpected happiness replaced by guilt and mistrust. Stedman draws the reader into her emotionally complex story right from the beginning, with lush descriptions of this savage and beautiful landscape, and vivid characters with whom we can readily empathize. Hers is a stunning and memorable debut. --Booklist
Stedman's haunting tale opens in 1918 with the return of Tom Sherbourne to his home in Australia after serving four years in the Great War. He applies for a job as a lighthouse keeper and is assigned to the light on Janus Rock, a remote island off the southwest coast where he hopes to erase his horrific memories of war. Several years later, Tom brings to the island his bride, Isabel, a free-spirited young woman who is determined to adapt to Tom's solitary life with their only contact with the mainland a quarterly visit from the supply boat. Four years later, after Isabel has suffered two miscarriages and a very recent stillbirth, an event occurs that forever changes them. A dinghy washes up on the beach carrying a dead man and a newborn baby girl, giving Isabel hope that she may become, at last, a mother. The choice they make as a couple comes to haunt them, their unexpected happiness replaced by guilt and mistrust. Stedman draws the reader into her emotionally complex story right from the beginning, with lush descriptions of this savage and beautiful landscape, and vivid characters with whom we can readily empathize. Hers is a stunning and memorable debut. --Booklist
Monday, August 27, 2012
Master of deceit : J. Edgar Hoover and America in the age of lies
by Marc Aronson (Get the Book)
This biography is an unflinching portrait of an insecure, scheming zealot who conflated communism, civil rights, and the antiwar movement into a singular, immeasurable menace and dedicated himself to eradicating it. The author looks at and behind the historical record, examining Hoover's public conduct and peering into the murky corners of his personal life, finding motivation for his fierce exertion of control in the suspicions about his sexuality and his race. Large black-and-white reproductions of photos, internal memos, and cultural artifacts document a troubled man on a mission. For all of his respect for his subject's complexity, Aronson's contempt is unmistakable. He draws overt parallels between Hoover's particular brand of fearmongering and the intractable contemporary polarity of American government. A full 30 pages of back matter include an epilogue, copious source notes, and an index (not seen). Most compelling is the afterword, wherein the author expresses the challenges and fears he faced exposing the underbelly of the FBI under Hoover, making this both a gripping historical investigation and an instructive example of the researched communication of ideas. --Booklist
This biography is an unflinching portrait of an insecure, scheming zealot who conflated communism, civil rights, and the antiwar movement into a singular, immeasurable menace and dedicated himself to eradicating it. The author looks at and behind the historical record, examining Hoover's public conduct and peering into the murky corners of his personal life, finding motivation for his fierce exertion of control in the suspicions about his sexuality and his race. Large black-and-white reproductions of photos, internal memos, and cultural artifacts document a troubled man on a mission. For all of his respect for his subject's complexity, Aronson's contempt is unmistakable. He draws overt parallels between Hoover's particular brand of fearmongering and the intractable contemporary polarity of American government. A full 30 pages of back matter include an epilogue, copious source notes, and an index (not seen). Most compelling is the afterword, wherein the author expresses the challenges and fears he faced exposing the underbelly of the FBI under Hoover, making this both a gripping historical investigation and an instructive example of the researched communication of ideas. --Booklist
Saturday, August 25, 2012
The kingmaker's daughter
by Philippa Gregory (Get the Book)
It's every man and woman for themselves in Gregory's latest, which offers reliable royal entertainment about Anne, queen consort to Richard III. Born the younger daughter of Warwick the Kingmaker, Anne sees her position constantly shifting, depending on whether her father is supporting his protege, King Edward IV, or fighting him. Forcibly wed at 14 to the son of the former Lancastrian queen, Margaret of Anjou, Anne is brought low after his death and obliged to serve her proud sister, Isabel, whose life is equally volatile. Their mutual enemy is beautiful commoner queen Elizabeth Woodville, whose large group of upstart siblings and rumored witchery threaten England's stability. Gregory deftly shows how living amid war's brutality can harden one's character, even that of a gentle innocent like Anne who has a mostly happy second marriage to her childhood friend Richard, the king's loyal brother. At the same time, Gregory presents a stark account of woman-as-commodity in late medieval times, with Anne's forceful mother kept in comfortable, strict confinement, her wealth stolen by her daughters and sons-in-law. --Booklist
It's every man and woman for themselves in Gregory's latest, which offers reliable royal entertainment about Anne, queen consort to Richard III. Born the younger daughter of Warwick the Kingmaker, Anne sees her position constantly shifting, depending on whether her father is supporting his protege, King Edward IV, or fighting him. Forcibly wed at 14 to the son of the former Lancastrian queen, Margaret of Anjou, Anne is brought low after his death and obliged to serve her proud sister, Isabel, whose life is equally volatile. Their mutual enemy is beautiful commoner queen Elizabeth Woodville, whose large group of upstart siblings and rumored witchery threaten England's stability. Gregory deftly shows how living amid war's brutality can harden one's character, even that of a gentle innocent like Anne who has a mostly happy second marriage to her childhood friend Richard, the king's loyal brother. At the same time, Gregory presents a stark account of woman-as-commodity in late medieval times, with Anne's forceful mother kept in comfortable, strict confinement, her wealth stolen by her daughters and sons-in-law. --Booklist
Friday, August 24, 2012
Bullied : what every parent, teacher, and kid needs to know about ending the cycle of fear
by Carrie Goldman (Get the Book)
When the author, a blogger for the online community of the Chicago Tribune, posted about her six-year-old daughter being bullied at school because she was sporting a Star Wars backpack and water bottle, cyberspace rose to her defense with a flurry of posts, e-mails, and letters. Goldman decided to delve more deeply into the subject, discovering that 160,000 children stay home every day from school because of bullying, 42% of kids have been bullied online, and one in five teens has been bullied at school in the previous year ("bullycides" are also an alarming trend). Although progress has been made, Goldman and the experts and parents she interviews reveal that there's more work to do. Goldman identifies kids who are at high risk for bullying (i.e., "geeks"; children with disabilities; gay, lesbian, transgender, and bisexual students; and kids who do not choose gender-specific toys). In fact, any nonconformist is a likely target, and society ups the ante with gender-specific marketing and expectations. In this informative book, Goldman also addresses prevention, intervention and reconciliation, helping parents recognize the warning signs of emotional distress and offering techniques for dealing with bullies (who also need help). The author calls upon parents, schools, and marketers to collaborate in order to change damaging cultural attitudes and create a culture of acceptance and safety for all kinds of kids. --Publishers Weekly
When the author, a blogger for the online community of the Chicago Tribune, posted about her six-year-old daughter being bullied at school because she was sporting a Star Wars backpack and water bottle, cyberspace rose to her defense with a flurry of posts, e-mails, and letters. Goldman decided to delve more deeply into the subject, discovering that 160,000 children stay home every day from school because of bullying, 42% of kids have been bullied online, and one in five teens has been bullied at school in the previous year ("bullycides" are also an alarming trend). Although progress has been made, Goldman and the experts and parents she interviews reveal that there's more work to do. Goldman identifies kids who are at high risk for bullying (i.e., "geeks"; children with disabilities; gay, lesbian, transgender, and bisexual students; and kids who do not choose gender-specific toys). In fact, any nonconformist is a likely target, and society ups the ante with gender-specific marketing and expectations. In this informative book, Goldman also addresses prevention, intervention and reconciliation, helping parents recognize the warning signs of emotional distress and offering techniques for dealing with bullies (who also need help). The author calls upon parents, schools, and marketers to collaborate in order to change damaging cultural attitudes and create a culture of acceptance and safety for all kinds of kids. --Publishers Weekly
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Brewing British-style beers : more than 100 thirst quenching pub recipes to brew at home
by Dave Line (Get the Book)
Brewing British-Style Beers reveals the secrets of brewing beers at home that taste just like those found at expensive pubs. It shows readers how to make their own great beer that is virtually identical to popular European brands, and provides all of the information needed to successfully emulate the world's best commercial brews for a fraction of the cost. This book is a must-have for both beginners and experienced brewers looking for great new recipes. It begins with an overview of the brewing process, covering the ingredients needed for brewing, essential equipment, basic concepts, techniques and brewing aids. With complete instructions for first-time brewers, readers will get to know their Fuggles from their Bullions and be "sparging the wort" in no time at all. (Summary)
Brewing British-Style Beers reveals the secrets of brewing beers at home that taste just like those found at expensive pubs. It shows readers how to make their own great beer that is virtually identical to popular European brands, and provides all of the information needed to successfully emulate the world's best commercial brews for a fraction of the cost. This book is a must-have for both beginners and experienced brewers looking for great new recipes. It begins with an overview of the brewing process, covering the ingredients needed for brewing, essential equipment, basic concepts, techniques and brewing aids. With complete instructions for first-time brewers, readers will get to know their Fuggles from their Bullions and be "sparging the wort" in no time at all. (Summary)
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
Line of fire
by Stephen White (Get the Book)
After two decades and 18 novels, White has decided to bring the Alan Gregory series to a close. This is the second-to-last novel about the Colorado clinical psychologist; the final one, the twentieth, will take Gregory to the end of his long and winding road. Here we see the beginning of the end. Forest fires are reducing chunks of the Boulder Valley to tinder and ash; Alan's colleague and close friend, still recovering from a terrible trauma, appears to be approaching a psychological breakdown; and new evidence in an old case causes Alan to reexamine decisions he made in the past, putting his entire career at risk. White is a fine storyteller, and Gregory is a complex, compelling character whom fans have grown to love and respect. It will be hard for them to say good-bye, but at least his creator appears to be planning to give him a first-class send-off. --Booklist
After two decades and 18 novels, White has decided to bring the Alan Gregory series to a close. This is the second-to-last novel about the Colorado clinical psychologist; the final one, the twentieth, will take Gregory to the end of his long and winding road. Here we see the beginning of the end. Forest fires are reducing chunks of the Boulder Valley to tinder and ash; Alan's colleague and close friend, still recovering from a terrible trauma, appears to be approaching a psychological breakdown; and new evidence in an old case causes Alan to reexamine decisions he made in the past, putting his entire career at risk. White is a fine storyteller, and Gregory is a complex, compelling character whom fans have grown to love and respect. It will be hard for them to say good-bye, but at least his creator appears to be planning to give him a first-class send-off. --Booklist
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Where'd you go, Bernadette : a novel
by Maria Semple (Get the Book)
Bernadette Fox, practically a shut-in, who's hired a virtual assistant in India to remotely arrange every task, from hiring a gardener to planning the trip to Antarctica she's promised her star-student daughter, Bee seems pretty crazy. But don't be fooled. Suspicions that madcap Bernadette is as clever as her last name implies will be confirmed heartily. When she's party to some unfortunate events, her erratic behavior leads her husband, Microsoft guru Elgin Branch, to commit her to a local mental-health facility. But Bernadette intercepts his plan at the pass, escapes the staged intervention, and disappears without a trace. Though much of the story is told through documents e-mails, letters, magazine articles precocious young teen Bee as narrator is great company, entertaining and convincing in her comportment. TV writer Semple (Arrested Development) pokes fun at the Pacific Northwest as only a Seattlelite can and concocts a caper that, if seen from outer space, might be a mess but in the minutiae of its tangles is clear and rewarding. Under the guise of a hilarious romp, Semple explores the universal questions of why we do what we do and love what we love to some sweet and unexpected ends. --Booklist
Bernadette Fox, practically a shut-in, who's hired a virtual assistant in India to remotely arrange every task, from hiring a gardener to planning the trip to Antarctica she's promised her star-student daughter, Bee seems pretty crazy. But don't be fooled. Suspicions that madcap Bernadette is as clever as her last name implies will be confirmed heartily. When she's party to some unfortunate events, her erratic behavior leads her husband, Microsoft guru Elgin Branch, to commit her to a local mental-health facility. But Bernadette intercepts his plan at the pass, escapes the staged intervention, and disappears without a trace. Though much of the story is told through documents e-mails, letters, magazine articles precocious young teen Bee as narrator is great company, entertaining and convincing in her comportment. TV writer Semple (Arrested Development) pokes fun at the Pacific Northwest as only a Seattlelite can and concocts a caper that, if seen from outer space, might be a mess but in the minutiae of its tangles is clear and rewarding. Under the guise of a hilarious romp, Semple explores the universal questions of why we do what we do and love what we love to some sweet and unexpected ends. --Booklist
Monday, August 20, 2012
The prophet
by Michael Koryta (Get the Book)
The citizens of Chambers, Ohio, are passionate about high-school football, so it's little wonder that successful head coach Kent Austin is one of the most popular guys in town. Not so his brother, Adam, a bail bondsman who's barely making ends meet. The brothers' relationship has been fractured since the abduction and murder of their teenaged sister, Marie, more than two decades ago. Now, the slaying of another young woman, the steady girlfriend of one of Kent's players, brings the two together again. Adam, who's never fully recovered from his sister's tragedy, is consumed by vengeful thoughts. Kent keeps a cooler head, simultaneously working with the police and prepping his team for the playoffs. Edgar-nominated mystery wunderkind Koryta (he turns 30 this year) has earned kudos from veteran thriller writers Stephen King and Dean Koontz. He proves plenty worthy of praise in this vivid portrayal of a small midwestern town and the evils that befall it. Koryta's recent novels (e.g., The Ridge, 2011) have combined suspense with horror and the supernatural, but this time he returns to his mainstream thriller roots. With its crisp writing and steady suspense, this is a must-read for his fans both old and new. --Booklist
The citizens of Chambers, Ohio, are passionate about high-school football, so it's little wonder that successful head coach Kent Austin is one of the most popular guys in town. Not so his brother, Adam, a bail bondsman who's barely making ends meet. The brothers' relationship has been fractured since the abduction and murder of their teenaged sister, Marie, more than two decades ago. Now, the slaying of another young woman, the steady girlfriend of one of Kent's players, brings the two together again. Adam, who's never fully recovered from his sister's tragedy, is consumed by vengeful thoughts. Kent keeps a cooler head, simultaneously working with the police and prepping his team for the playoffs. Edgar-nominated mystery wunderkind Koryta (he turns 30 this year) has earned kudos from veteran thriller writers Stephen King and Dean Koontz. He proves plenty worthy of praise in this vivid portrayal of a small midwestern town and the evils that befall it. Koryta's recent novels (e.g., The Ridge, 2011) have combined suspense with horror and the supernatural, but this time he returns to his mainstream thriller roots. With its crisp writing and steady suspense, this is a must-read for his fans both old and new. --Booklist
Saturday, August 18, 2012
College : what it was, is, and should be
by Andrew Delbanco (Get the Book)
Undergraduate education, the Washington Post recently opined, is on the verge of a radical reordering. As a seasoned professor, Delbanco scrutinizes the college world, which poised for such dramatic realignment. It is a world that has long since lost the spiritual purpose of the religionists who founded the nation's flagship universities as institutions for preparing devout students as clergymen. To renew higher education in an age of secular pluralism, Delbanco summons his colleagues to a defense of the university's role in fostering humane and democratic impulses. This defense will require administrators and faculty to resist the hyper-specialization of modern research and the mercenary mentality of careerism. It will also require them to meet new competition from Internet schools and to cope with new pressures from cash-strapped lawmakers. Nor does the challenge end once students show up on campus, for this generation of enrollees often lack basic academic skills yet still expect high grades. Delbanco's agenda for reform curricular, pedagogical, financial, and technological will stimulate a much-needed national dialogue. --Library Journal
Undergraduate education, the Washington Post recently opined, is on the verge of a radical reordering. As a seasoned professor, Delbanco scrutinizes the college world, which poised for such dramatic realignment. It is a world that has long since lost the spiritual purpose of the religionists who founded the nation's flagship universities as institutions for preparing devout students as clergymen. To renew higher education in an age of secular pluralism, Delbanco summons his colleagues to a defense of the university's role in fostering humane and democratic impulses. This defense will require administrators and faculty to resist the hyper-specialization of modern research and the mercenary mentality of careerism. It will also require them to meet new competition from Internet schools and to cope with new pressures from cash-strapped lawmakers. Nor does the challenge end once students show up on campus, for this generation of enrollees often lack basic academic skills yet still expect high grades. Delbanco's agenda for reform curricular, pedagogical, financial, and technological will stimulate a much-needed national dialogue. --Library Journal
Friday, August 17, 2012
Say nice things about Detroit
by Scott Lasser (Get the Book)
Summoned home to Detroit to help his father cope with his mother's dementia, Denver lawyer David Halpert arrives shortly after his former girlfriend Natalie and her black half brother, Dirk, are murdered. While paying respects to the family, David reconnects with Natalie's younger sister, Carolyn, who has traveled from Los Angeles, happy to leave her faltering marriage behind in spite of the tragedy that has unraveled her family. Family tragedy is nothing new to David, who is still mourning the death of his teenage son, which may explain his willingness to take over Dirk's role as mentor to an at-risk inner-city teen. Buoyed by a blossoming love affair with Carolyn and a tenative rapport with Marlon, David decides to make his temporary stay in Detroit a permanent return to his childhood home. Forget the grime and crime, political corruption and economic decay. Lasser's Detroit may be a troubled city, but it is one whose vibrant soul is writ large in the small actions of its loyal citizens. With a serene and steady hand, Lasser's spare but intense tale is a smart, intimate homage to the power of second chances. Put this book in the hands of fans of Richard Ford and Richard Russo. --Booklist
Summoned home to Detroit to help his father cope with his mother's dementia, Denver lawyer David Halpert arrives shortly after his former girlfriend Natalie and her black half brother, Dirk, are murdered. While paying respects to the family, David reconnects with Natalie's younger sister, Carolyn, who has traveled from Los Angeles, happy to leave her faltering marriage behind in spite of the tragedy that has unraveled her family. Family tragedy is nothing new to David, who is still mourning the death of his teenage son, which may explain his willingness to take over Dirk's role as mentor to an at-risk inner-city teen. Buoyed by a blossoming love affair with Carolyn and a tenative rapport with Marlon, David decides to make his temporary stay in Detroit a permanent return to his childhood home. Forget the grime and crime, political corruption and economic decay. Lasser's Detroit may be a troubled city, but it is one whose vibrant soul is writ large in the small actions of its loyal citizens. With a serene and steady hand, Lasser's spare but intense tale is a smart, intimate homage to the power of second chances. Put this book in the hands of fans of Richard Ford and Richard Russo. --Booklist
Thursday, August 16, 2012
Overdressed : the shockingly high cost of cheap fashion
by Elizabeth L. Cline (Get the Book)
The era of socially responsible clothing is upon us. Certainly, thanks to media sensationalism, most American consumers are aware by now of exposes of underpaid factory workers here and overseas and the sincere attempt by U.S. corporations to ban such treatment. Yet just as many readers would be fascinated (in the worst way) by the industry itself and the waste that our clothing habits engender. Journalist Cline chronicles the excesses from every angle, beginning with the YouTube shopping hauls, in which young consumers provide reviews of garments from the likes of H&M, Zara, and Target. She probes previously underreported segments of fashion, such as what it costs to manufacture different items and how retailers shave costs; the composition of man-made fabrics, such as polyester (oil dependent and not biodegradable); and the behind-the scenes disposition of donated articles by the Salvation Army and Goodwill. Most important is her discovery and adoption of ethical fashion, in which quality pieces triumph through the patronage of local designers, by a return to sewing and hand-embellished garments, and by the decidedly unfashionable notion of wearing clothes unique enough to not care about trendiness. --Booklist
The era of socially responsible clothing is upon us. Certainly, thanks to media sensationalism, most American consumers are aware by now of exposes of underpaid factory workers here and overseas and the sincere attempt by U.S. corporations to ban such treatment. Yet just as many readers would be fascinated (in the worst way) by the industry itself and the waste that our clothing habits engender. Journalist Cline chronicles the excesses from every angle, beginning with the YouTube shopping hauls, in which young consumers provide reviews of garments from the likes of H&M, Zara, and Target. She probes previously underreported segments of fashion, such as what it costs to manufacture different items and how retailers shave costs; the composition of man-made fabrics, such as polyester (oil dependent and not biodegradable); and the behind-the scenes disposition of donated articles by the Salvation Army and Goodwill. Most important is her discovery and adoption of ethical fashion, in which quality pieces triumph through the patronage of local designers, by a return to sewing and hand-embellished garments, and by the decidedly unfashionable notion of wearing clothes unique enough to not care about trendiness. --Booklist
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
Alys, always : a novel
by Harriet Lane (Get the Book)
Frances Thorpe's life is mundane and wearying. An underappreciated editor on the book-review pages of a weekly periodical, she seems to be going nowhere until late one night she stumbles on a car accident. Stopping to help, she witnesses the final moments of the passenger, Alys Kyte, wife of famous novelist Laurence Kyte. The next thing she knows, she's meeting the family, attending the memorial service, and making inroads into elite literary society. Association with Laurence brings her more respect in her professional and personal spheres, and now that she's had a taste of that privileged world, she plans to get even more. In this debut novel, Lane draws readers into an emotional suspense story of manipulation, attraction, and ambition. Realistic characters create an intriguing contrast between the working and privileged classes of English society. Frances' cool determination to penetrate the latter is, at times, disconcerting, but even though she is not your typical strong female protagonist, her desire to improve her life will strike a chord with many readers. --Booklist
Frances Thorpe's life is mundane and wearying. An underappreciated editor on the book-review pages of a weekly periodical, she seems to be going nowhere until late one night she stumbles on a car accident. Stopping to help, she witnesses the final moments of the passenger, Alys Kyte, wife of famous novelist Laurence Kyte. The next thing she knows, she's meeting the family, attending the memorial service, and making inroads into elite literary society. Association with Laurence brings her more respect in her professional and personal spheres, and now that she's had a taste of that privileged world, she plans to get even more. In this debut novel, Lane draws readers into an emotional suspense story of manipulation, attraction, and ambition. Realistic characters create an intriguing contrast between the working and privileged classes of English society. Frances' cool determination to penetrate the latter is, at times, disconcerting, but even though she is not your typical strong female protagonist, her desire to improve her life will strike a chord with many readers. --Booklist
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Energy for future presidents : the science behind the headlines
by Richard Muller. (Get the Book)
UC-Berkeley physicist Muller (Physics for Future Presidents), who made headlines for first criticizing and then vindicating global warming research, explores the contentious issues that will increasingly preoccupy politicians and citizens, in this no-nonsense scientific primer on energy policy. Muller brings fresh, often contrarian perspectives to topics that have been saturated in misinformation and hype, arguing, for example, that new techniques to extract the stupendous reserves of petroleum in shale and tar sands will eliminate all talk of peak oil; that wind power and photovoltaics will boom while corn ethanol, geothermal, and tidal power will fizzle; that household energy conservation is a great investment, while public transit is usually a bad one; and that China's soaring carbon dioxide emissions will render America's almost irrelevant-and that the best way to abate China's emissions is by switching from coal to natural gas. Especially revealing is his positive assessment of nuclear energy, which effectively debunks the alarmism surrounding the March 2011 Fukushima accident. The author's explanations of the science underlying energy production are lucid but never simplistic-and often fascinating in their own right. Policy makers and casual readers alike can benefit from Muller's eye-opening briefing, which sheds lots of light with little wasted heat. --Publishers Weekly
UC-Berkeley physicist Muller (Physics for Future Presidents), who made headlines for first criticizing and then vindicating global warming research, explores the contentious issues that will increasingly preoccupy politicians and citizens, in this no-nonsense scientific primer on energy policy. Muller brings fresh, often contrarian perspectives to topics that have been saturated in misinformation and hype, arguing, for example, that new techniques to extract the stupendous reserves of petroleum in shale and tar sands will eliminate all talk of peak oil; that wind power and photovoltaics will boom while corn ethanol, geothermal, and tidal power will fizzle; that household energy conservation is a great investment, while public transit is usually a bad one; and that China's soaring carbon dioxide emissions will render America's almost irrelevant-and that the best way to abate China's emissions is by switching from coal to natural gas. Especially revealing is his positive assessment of nuclear energy, which effectively debunks the alarmism surrounding the March 2011 Fukushima accident. The author's explanations of the science underlying energy production are lucid but never simplistic-and often fascinating in their own right. Policy makers and casual readers alike can benefit from Muller's eye-opening briefing, which sheds lots of light with little wasted heat. --Publishers Weekly
Monday, August 13, 2012
The unlikely pilgrimage of Harold Fry : a novel
by Rachel Joyce (Get the Book)
Spontaneity has never been Harold Fry's strong suit, especially once he retired. Just ask his long-suffering wife, Maureen. So imagine her surprise when Harold abruptly decides to walk 500 miles to the north of England in a naive attempt to save a dying woman, a colleague he once knew briefly but to whom he hadn't spoken in 20 years. It's the proverbial case of a man going out to mail a letter and never coming home. Clad only in his everyday garb, lacking a cell phone, backpack, or reliable sense of direction, Fry puts one poorly shod foot in front of the other and trudges through villages and hamlets, often relying on the kindness of strangers to keep his momentum going. To the object of his inspiration, the fading Queenie Hennessy, he writes pithy postcards, bravely exhorting her not to die. Solitary walks are perfect for imagining how one might set the world to rights, and Harold does just that, although not always with uplifting results, as he ruminates on missed opportunities and failed relationships. Accomplished BBC playwright Joyce's debut novel is a gentle and genteel charmer, brimming with British quirkiness yet quietly haunting in its poignant and wise examination of love and devotion. Sure to become a book-club favorite. --Booklist
Spontaneity has never been Harold Fry's strong suit, especially once he retired. Just ask his long-suffering wife, Maureen. So imagine her surprise when Harold abruptly decides to walk 500 miles to the north of England in a naive attempt to save a dying woman, a colleague he once knew briefly but to whom he hadn't spoken in 20 years. It's the proverbial case of a man going out to mail a letter and never coming home. Clad only in his everyday garb, lacking a cell phone, backpack, or reliable sense of direction, Fry puts one poorly shod foot in front of the other and trudges through villages and hamlets, often relying on the kindness of strangers to keep his momentum going. To the object of his inspiration, the fading Queenie Hennessy, he writes pithy postcards, bravely exhorting her not to die. Solitary walks are perfect for imagining how one might set the world to rights, and Harold does just that, although not always with uplifting results, as he ruminates on missed opportunities and failed relationships. Accomplished BBC playwright Joyce's debut novel is a gentle and genteel charmer, brimming with British quirkiness yet quietly haunting in its poignant and wise examination of love and devotion. Sure to become a book-club favorite. --Booklist
Saturday, August 11, 2012
What the best college students do
by Ken Bain (Get the Book)
Bain (What the Best College Teachers Do), the provost and vice president for academic affairs at the University of the District of Columbia, weaves a narrative from a series of interviews with a group that includes physicians, lawyers, politicians, Nobel laureates, and MacArthur "Genius Grant" winners to create a qualitative study of the habits of people who distinguish themselves in their postcollege careers. These interviews are supplemented with sociological and psychological research on the characteristics of a "good" student. Common threads include passion, creativity, and flexibility. Indeed, the diversity of Bain's subjects, including comedian Stephen Colbert and engineer (and Palm Pilot inventor) Jeff Hawkins, adds veracity to Bain's arguments about embracing curiosity and failure on the path to making an impact. In the last chapter, Bain offers more concrete advice to college students, but again, the author challenges these future leaders by framing his collected wisdom in the form of questions and considerations. Rejecting the notion that a liberal arts education leads to becoming "jack of all trades and master of none," Bain finds that broad brushstrokes allowed the most successful among us to draw connections between the world at large and a chosen specialty. This straightforward book about learning habits should appeal to the teenager heading off to college and mindfully planning his/her approach to education. --Publishers Weekly
Bain (What the Best College Teachers Do), the provost and vice president for academic affairs at the University of the District of Columbia, weaves a narrative from a series of interviews with a group that includes physicians, lawyers, politicians, Nobel laureates, and MacArthur "Genius Grant" winners to create a qualitative study of the habits of people who distinguish themselves in their postcollege careers. These interviews are supplemented with sociological and psychological research on the characteristics of a "good" student. Common threads include passion, creativity, and flexibility. Indeed, the diversity of Bain's subjects, including comedian Stephen Colbert and engineer (and Palm Pilot inventor) Jeff Hawkins, adds veracity to Bain's arguments about embracing curiosity and failure on the path to making an impact. In the last chapter, Bain offers more concrete advice to college students, but again, the author challenges these future leaders by framing his collected wisdom in the form of questions and considerations. Rejecting the notion that a liberal arts education leads to becoming "jack of all trades and master of none," Bain finds that broad brushstrokes allowed the most successful among us to draw connections between the world at large and a chosen specialty. This straightforward book about learning habits should appeal to the teenager heading off to college and mindfully planning his/her approach to education. --Publishers Weekly
Friday, August 10, 2012
You don't want to know
by Lisa Jackson (Get the Book)
Just because you're paranoid, as the saying goes, it doesn't mean they're not out to get you. In Ava Church Garrison's case, they could be everyone she's related to and just about everyone she's ever met, most of whom seem to live with her in the sprawling, Addams Family-style mansion she inherited. In the two years since Ava's son, Noah, disappeared, she's been plagued with hallucinations, seeing him outside and hearing his cries coming from his shuttered nursery. Recently released from a mental hospital and fed a daily dose of psychotropic drugs, Ava still manages to cling to the belief that Noah is alive, but quickly comes to realize that what she sees and hears ain't necessarily so. With a philandering husband eager to send her back to the psych ward and a vindictive, wheelchair-bound cousin who blames her for her injuries, Ava doesn't lack for enemies. Best-selling and prolific Jackson deftly throws in an escaped serial killer and the recent murders of Ava's psychiatrist and hypnotist to ensure that her creepily gothic thriller teems with sinister possibilities. --Booklist
Just because you're paranoid, as the saying goes, it doesn't mean they're not out to get you. In Ava Church Garrison's case, they could be everyone she's related to and just about everyone she's ever met, most of whom seem to live with her in the sprawling, Addams Family-style mansion she inherited. In the two years since Ava's son, Noah, disappeared, she's been plagued with hallucinations, seeing him outside and hearing his cries coming from his shuttered nursery. Recently released from a mental hospital and fed a daily dose of psychotropic drugs, Ava still manages to cling to the belief that Noah is alive, but quickly comes to realize that what she sees and hears ain't necessarily so. With a philandering husband eager to send her back to the psych ward and a vindictive, wheelchair-bound cousin who blames her for her injuries, Ava doesn't lack for enemies. Best-selling and prolific Jackson deftly throws in an escaped serial killer and the recent murders of Ava's psychiatrist and hypnotist to ensure that her creepily gothic thriller teems with sinister possibilities. --Booklist
Thursday, August 9, 2012
The twilight war : the secret history of America's thirty-year conflict with Iran
By David Crist (Get the Book)
In this well-researched book, historian and former marine Crist makes the case that the United States is already enmeshed in a hidden war with Iran that has raged unacknowledged for decades. This shadow war is characterized by espionage, assassination plots, and frequent eruptions of open hostilities, and exacerbated by egregious missteps and blunders by both sides. (Crist loses no time in labeling the American invasion of Iraq, for instance, as one of the "worst planned campaigns ever executed by the U.S. military.") Enriched by hundreds of interviews with key players as well as the author's own experiences in the Persian Gulf, this is a comprehensive and readable account of American-Iranian hostilities since the 1979 revolution. Crist reveals many previously unreported details of recent maneuverings, such as the provenance of the Stuxnet virus and the backstory of the bizarre case of Shahram Amiri (the nuclear scientist who defected to the U.S. and then posted videos on YouTube claiming that he was being held captive by the CIA), but the broad outlines of the narrative are not nearly as "secret" as the subtitle implies. If there is a moral to this story, it may be that despite the furious machinations of the world's intelligence agencies, critical change points more often than not hinge on blind luck and happenstance. --Booklist
In this well-researched book, historian and former marine Crist makes the case that the United States is already enmeshed in a hidden war with Iran that has raged unacknowledged for decades. This shadow war is characterized by espionage, assassination plots, and frequent eruptions of open hostilities, and exacerbated by egregious missteps and blunders by both sides. (Crist loses no time in labeling the American invasion of Iraq, for instance, as one of the "worst planned campaigns ever executed by the U.S. military.") Enriched by hundreds of interviews with key players as well as the author's own experiences in the Persian Gulf, this is a comprehensive and readable account of American-Iranian hostilities since the 1979 revolution. Crist reveals many previously unreported details of recent maneuverings, such as the provenance of the Stuxnet virus and the backstory of the bizarre case of Shahram Amiri (the nuclear scientist who defected to the U.S. and then posted videos on YouTube claiming that he was being held captive by the CIA), but the broad outlines of the narrative are not nearly as "secret" as the subtitle implies. If there is a moral to this story, it may be that despite the furious machinations of the world's intelligence agencies, critical change points more often than not hinge on blind luck and happenstance. --Booklist
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
Red ink : inside the high-stakes politics of the federal budget
by David Wessel (Get Book)
Anyone who's curious to know how the U.S. government managed to spend $3.6 trillion dollars in 2011 may be interested to learn about the inner workings of the federal budget and where the money goes. Economics expert Wessel breaks it down in layperson's terms. With the budget deficit being higher in 2011 than it has ever been, he explains the ever-widening gaps between government revenue and spending from the Great Depression until now, highlighting major historical milestones in budgetary strategy and the current situation. Despite four years in which the government actually had budget surpluses enough to pay off the federal debt, economic woes, costly wars, and other problems drove the budget back into the red, where it remains up to the present. The book explains the factors causing health-care spending to rise faster than the other areas of the federal budget, which forecasts an alarming trend for the future. Controversy over whether tax increases or spending cuts should be made to defense, Medicare, or Social Security spending provides fuel for great debate. --Booklist
Anyone who's curious to know how the U.S. government managed to spend $3.6 trillion dollars in 2011 may be interested to learn about the inner workings of the federal budget and where the money goes. Economics expert Wessel breaks it down in layperson's terms. With the budget deficit being higher in 2011 than it has ever been, he explains the ever-widening gaps between government revenue and spending from the Great Depression until now, highlighting major historical milestones in budgetary strategy and the current situation. Despite four years in which the government actually had budget surpluses enough to pay off the federal debt, economic woes, costly wars, and other problems drove the budget back into the red, where it remains up to the present. The book explains the factors causing health-care spending to rise faster than the other areas of the federal budget, which forecasts an alarming trend for the future. Controversy over whether tax increases or spending cuts should be made to defense, Medicare, or Social Security spending provides fuel for great debate. --Booklist
Monday, August 6, 2012
The fear artist
by Timothy Hallinan. (Get the Book)
All I wanted to do was paint my apartment, thinks Poke Rafferty after more than a week of evading capture by Bangkok's secret police. He has become a suspect in the War on Terror, hunted by police, who are concerned that Muslims have killed thousands of Buddhists in southern Thailand, and by an aging American whose appetite for torture and murder wasn't sated by the Vietnam War's Phoenix Program. Set against actual strife in the south and the epochal 2011 monsoon that nearly drowned all of Bangkok, Hallinan's latest surpasses his last Rafferty thriller, the Edgar-nominated The Queen of Patpong (2010). The plot is straightforward until Poke learns that Murphy, the American, is a monster who killed women and children as easily as Vietcong agents. But it becomes more complex when he hires two former Russian spies to help him and reluctantly accepts assistance from his 17-year-old half-sister, Ming Li. The Russians' first loyalty may be to money, and Poke wishes that Ming Li were safely home in Virginia. All of Hallinan's characters are multifaceted and compelling, but his villains are exceptional; and the volcanic American sadist is the author's best yet. Poke's ongoing melancholy over his daughter's adolescent angst remains knowing, and here it serves as a reader's respite from the book's myriad tensions. The Fear Artist is simply the best of a fine series of thrillers set in one of the world's most exotic locales. --Booklist
All I wanted to do was paint my apartment, thinks Poke Rafferty after more than a week of evading capture by Bangkok's secret police. He has become a suspect in the War on Terror, hunted by police, who are concerned that Muslims have killed thousands of Buddhists in southern Thailand, and by an aging American whose appetite for torture and murder wasn't sated by the Vietnam War's Phoenix Program. Set against actual strife in the south and the epochal 2011 monsoon that nearly drowned all of Bangkok, Hallinan's latest surpasses his last Rafferty thriller, the Edgar-nominated The Queen of Patpong (2010). The plot is straightforward until Poke learns that Murphy, the American, is a monster who killed women and children as easily as Vietcong agents. But it becomes more complex when he hires two former Russian spies to help him and reluctantly accepts assistance from his 17-year-old half-sister, Ming Li. The Russians' first loyalty may be to money, and Poke wishes that Ming Li were safely home in Virginia. All of Hallinan's characters are multifaceted and compelling, but his villains are exceptional; and the volcanic American sadist is the author's best yet. Poke's ongoing melancholy over his daughter's adolescent angst remains knowing, and here it serves as a reader's respite from the book's myriad tensions. The Fear Artist is simply the best of a fine series of thrillers set in one of the world's most exotic locales. --Booklist
Saturday, August 4, 2012
Mapping Census 2010 : the Geography of American diversity
Get the Book
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Friday, August 3, 2012
The after wife : a novel
by Gigi Lewangie Grazier (Get the Book)
Grazier, A-list writer for the TV series The Starter Wife, which is based on her best-selling 2005 novel of the same name, delivers another strong story set in upscale Los Angeles with The After Wife. Hannah Bernal is bereft when she learns that her beloved husband has been killed in a hit-and-run accident while on his way to the market. She struggles with overwhelming grief and the impossible task of comforting her three-year-old daughter, Ellie, who was inseparable from her stay-at-home dad. Three colorful friends keep Hannah going during a series of crises involving an arrest, a job termination, and day-care difficulties, but they balk at Hannah's weird and troubling new ability to see and hear the dead. Hannah begins to advise people according to the wishes of their deceased relatives and even talks to her dead husband. Grazer evokes powerful emotions and situations that remain realistic even with the complication of Hannah's paranormal gift, and she ends this affecting tale on a hopeful note. Fans of Lolly Winston, Mary Kay Andrews, and Jennifer Weiner will especially enjoy Grazer's newest. --Booklist
Grazier, A-list writer for the TV series The Starter Wife, which is based on her best-selling 2005 novel of the same name, delivers another strong story set in upscale Los Angeles with The After Wife. Hannah Bernal is bereft when she learns that her beloved husband has been killed in a hit-and-run accident while on his way to the market. She struggles with overwhelming grief and the impossible task of comforting her three-year-old daughter, Ellie, who was inseparable from her stay-at-home dad. Three colorful friends keep Hannah going during a series of crises involving an arrest, a job termination, and day-care difficulties, but they balk at Hannah's weird and troubling new ability to see and hear the dead. Hannah begins to advise people according to the wishes of their deceased relatives and even talks to her dead husband. Grazer evokes powerful emotions and situations that remain realistic even with the complication of Hannah's paranormal gift, and she ends this affecting tale on a hopeful note. Fans of Lolly Winston, Mary Kay Andrews, and Jennifer Weiner will especially enjoy Grazer's newest. --Booklist
Thursday, August 2, 2012
Tales from Titchmarsh : a year in the garden
by Alan Titschmarsch. (Get the Book)
Regardless whether one refers to a plant's colour or color, deadheads it using secateurs or clippers, or mucks about in one's Wellies or boots, gardeners everywhere speak a universal language. They can also relate to common delights and setbacks, from a kinked garden hose that upends a prized geranium to the effervescent blooming of a heretofore recalcitrant wisteria. An esteemed and prolific author and novelist and beloved columnist for the BBC's Gardener's World Magazine, Titchmarsh may write specifically about the gardening goings-on in his little corner of Britain, but the rewards and challenges he extols are ones that gardeners from Arizona to Maine will recognize. Month by month, in succinct, witty, outraged, and outrageous essays, Titchmarsh mirthfully holds forth on the proclivities of plant collectors and garden tourists, problem pets and potting sheds, hated plants and proper hedges. Devoured cover-to-cover or dipped into casually, this rollicking collection of Titchmarsh's most vibrant columns is a true garden of reading delights. --Booklist
Regardless whether one refers to a plant's colour or color, deadheads it using secateurs or clippers, or mucks about in one's Wellies or boots, gardeners everywhere speak a universal language. They can also relate to common delights and setbacks, from a kinked garden hose that upends a prized geranium to the effervescent blooming of a heretofore recalcitrant wisteria. An esteemed and prolific author and novelist and beloved columnist for the BBC's Gardener's World Magazine, Titchmarsh may write specifically about the gardening goings-on in his little corner of Britain, but the rewards and challenges he extols are ones that gardeners from Arizona to Maine will recognize. Month by month, in succinct, witty, outraged, and outrageous essays, Titchmarsh mirthfully holds forth on the proclivities of plant collectors and garden tourists, problem pets and potting sheds, hated plants and proper hedges. Devoured cover-to-cover or dipped into casually, this rollicking collection of Titchmarsh's most vibrant columns is a true garden of reading delights. --Booklist
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
Wildflower Hill
by Kimberley Freeman (Get the Book)
When Beattie Blaxland finds herself pregnant in 1930s Glasgow, she thinks the worst that can happen is that her married lover, Henry, will abandoned her. Instead, he runs away with her to Australia, where he drinks, gambles, and abuses her, all the while doting on their daughter, Lucy. Determined to have a better life, Beattie runs away to Tasmania, where she and Lucy make a rocky start at Wildflower Hill, a large sheep ranch badly managed by a sinister English gentleman. In present-day London, Beattie's granddaughter, Emma, a driven ballet dancer, suffers her own setbacks, which propel her home to her family in Australia. There she learns her grandmother left an unwelcome inheritance that changes her life. Despite its length, this first novel moves swiftly through secrets, forbidden love, and heartbreak, revealing two strong female protagonists and appealing secondary characters, especially the two men who work at Wildflower Hill with Beattie. Fans of multigenerational family sagas (like those of Kate Morton and Colleen McCullough) who are attracted by hardscrabble, romantic settings will eat it up. --Booklist
When Beattie Blaxland finds herself pregnant in 1930s Glasgow, she thinks the worst that can happen is that her married lover, Henry, will abandoned her. Instead, he runs away with her to Australia, where he drinks, gambles, and abuses her, all the while doting on their daughter, Lucy. Determined to have a better life, Beattie runs away to Tasmania, where she and Lucy make a rocky start at Wildflower Hill, a large sheep ranch badly managed by a sinister English gentleman. In present-day London, Beattie's granddaughter, Emma, a driven ballet dancer, suffers her own setbacks, which propel her home to her family in Australia. There she learns her grandmother left an unwelcome inheritance that changes her life. Despite its length, this first novel moves swiftly through secrets, forbidden love, and heartbreak, revealing two strong female protagonists and appealing secondary characters, especially the two men who work at Wildflower Hill with Beattie. Fans of multigenerational family sagas (like those of Kate Morton and Colleen McCullough) who are attracted by hardscrabble, romantic settings will eat it up. --Booklist
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