Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Lowest Price Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books


Not only am I one of the last people in the world to read this book, I'm one of the few who didn't like it. And I really wanted to like it. I generally enjoy reading and learning about life in the Middle East but this book just did not grab me.

One problem was my fault - I haven't read all of the books she and her girls have and they played an important part of the story. But I also found the sequence of events confusing - it's not entirely chronological. I found Nafisi's writing style to be detached, almost arrogant and therefor I found myself not really caring what happened to her personally. I would have like to have known more about each individual girl in her reading circle.Get more detail about Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books.

Monday, August 30, 2010

Save Shadow Divers: The True Adventure of Two Americans Who RIsked Everything to Solve One of the Last Mysteries of World War II


Just to put this in perspective, I've recently become more serious about diving and have starting gaining certifications on my way to Dive Master (and possibly beyond, we'll see when I get there). I've read a bunch of technical manuals, as well as "The Last Dive" and "Diver Down" and found them to both be page-turners (and informational to boot).

After reading Shadow Divers, I have to admit that the fever to discover the identity of the U-Who was extremely gripping (I was skipping sleep and reading through my lunch break to find out what happened). Even after reading "The Last Dive", I found this to be a much more detailed account. The Rouses get a footnote in this book (it is like maybe a page or two), but they aren't a major part of the story (which I had been worried when I purchased this book that it would rehash major portions of The Last Dive). The lengths those involved go to is nothing short of insanity as they push harder and harder to get their answers.

Great book!Get more detail about Shadow Divers: The True Adventure of Two Americans Who RIsked Everything to Solve One of the Last Mysteries of World War II.

Discount The Wilderness Warrior: Theodore Roosevelt and the Crusade for America


Okay, to preface this review: This is a good book, it suffers from some errors, and it is not for everyone.

Here's an explanation of each point;




- This is a very good text regarding a very specific subject matter, the conservationist leanings and policies of Theodore Roosevelt, as well as the circumstances that crafted those leanings and policies, and the individuals and events behind those circumstances, and....you get my point. This is a topical biography, so it is dense with detail, names and dates. If you are looking for something more generic and less topic specific, Edmund Morris' biographies of Roosevelt are the cream of the crop.
Still, this particular text sets out to do a specific task, and it does it well; the explanation of the conservationist and naturalist feelings of our 26th President. There is no other text on Roosevelt that offers the wealth of information or insight that this book does, save perhaps the books written by the man himself.

-For the last two points, this book does suffer from some minor errors of fact and some bad editing. It is definitely not the worst edited book I've ever seen but a substandard job was obviously done on it. Examples have already been made in several reviews already so I feel no need to rehash them here. Where they do occur are glaring and annoying. In short, the editing is bad, but not so bad as to ruin the book.
Secondly, this book is not for everyone. It is hefty, ringing in at 817 pages plus of text, not including notes, appendices, and bibliography. This is not an issue for me personally, but I can see how it might be so for others. This book could be a difficult result for some but the completion of it is worth the effort. It is detail oriented and the topical nature of the subject matter may discourage some readers, especially those who are looking for something along the lines of pop history. Unfortunately, Harper Collins began marketing this book as pop history, which it is most definitely not. It is niche history, and this book would be best served as a companion text to more comprehensive biographies, such as Roosevelt's own autobiography, or the works of Edmund Morris. It would be my recommendation to read this book after those, and not to use this as a primary biography, which it is not.


On the whole I am awarding this book 4 stars out of 5. I believe despite that some of the issues this book suffers from it is on the whole a worthy effort by Mr. Brinkley, and I believe it would be a welcome addition to the library of any TR enthusiast.Get more detail about The Wilderness Warrior: Theodore Roosevelt and the Crusade for America.

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Cheapest Drinking: A Love Story


This book was all over the map None of her stories made any type of timeline. She jumped back and forth and gave looooong descriptions of too many incidents . The book made no sense. Just some half asses self analysis with a few stories thrown in for variety. I would like my money back for this one!Get more detail about Drinking: A Love Story.

Cheap Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith


Taylor has made a name for herself in the Episcopal Church as a speaker, and I read this book as an entree into her work. What I found was a woman so wrapped up in herself that her "vocation" was at best a soliloquy from the very start rather than the dialogue implicit in a call. The present Episcopal Church is in theological disarray, and her very fuzzy explication of even her own position, let alone that of the church she claimed to represent, is a good example of why. I read this book to the very end, hoping that there might be a substantial surprise in the last chapter, but it remained a picture of a woman looking at only herself in her mirror and empty to the last.Get more detail about Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith.

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Buying The Meaning of Matthew: My Son's Murder in Laramie, and a World Transformed


Very sad story that a young man's life was ended through hate and stupidity. Very moving story hearing it all from the mother of the victim. What amazing parents Matthew had to be able to moce on and do the work they are doing today. No parent should ever have to face the pointless death of a child. Highly recommended. There is nothing that compares to hearing a story straight from the person it affects.

I have a 19 year old gay nephew and luckily 12 years after Matthew was killed life seems to have moved forward and he is lucky enough to be supported and accepted by his family and friends. Hopefully he can lead a complertely happy and safe life.Get more detail about The Meaning of Matthew: My Son's Murder in Laramie, and a World Transformed.

Buy From Baghdad, With Love: A Marine, the War, and a Dog Named Lava (Thorndike Press Large Print Nonfiction Series)


The heart-wrenching true story of one soldiers fight to save a puppy named Lava from certain death in wartime Iraq.

If you love animals or have even heard a shred about this story you MUST check out this book!Get more detail about From Baghdad, With Love: A Marine, the War, and a Dog Named Lava (Thorndike Press Large Print Nonfiction Series).

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Where To Buy Cod: A Biography of the Fish That Changed the World


I've read that navies and explorers survived off the flesh of sea turtles and seals. Towns and economies developed over whales and whaling.

But, according to Mark Kurlansky, the "cod" fisheries (there are more than one species) were influential in maintaining the Caribbean slave trade, were a major basis of commerce and livelihood for hundreds of thousands in the western European countries, as well as Iceland, Canada, and the United States, and fed the world with a cheap and easily transported and stored protein - salted cod.

Kurlansky explores this topic in Cod: A Biography of the Fish That Changed the World.

In many regions, cod went from an "inexhaustible" resource to one missing from the landscape. For example,

"Canadian cod was not yet biologically extinct, but it was commercially extinct - so rare that it could no longer be considered commercially viable. Just three years short of the 500-year anniversary of the reports of Cabot's men scooping up cod in baskets, it was over. Fishermen had caught them all" (p. 186).

Kurlansky tells this tale from the beginning, starting with the discovery of huge schools of large fish, and the development and refinement of an industry to exploit this resource. You'll get a visual taste of this exploitation in The End of the Line.

My edition (Penguin Books) apparently won a "James Beard Award." I assume this is because of the cod recipes scattered throughout the text, all from a 500 year stretch.

Visit the Monterey Bay Aquarium's site for information on their Seafood Watch program. Only purchase seafood from sustainable sources!Get more detail about Cod: A Biography of the Fish That Changed the World.

Shop For The Professor and the Madman: A Tale of Murder, Insanity, and the Making of the Oxford English Dictionary (P.S.)


This book was a gift from a dear friend. She raved about it and sent me a copy several years ago. As with many books that were gifts or, unfortunately all too often my own purchases, I push them to the bottom of the reading pile in favour of more urgent reads like library copies or interlibrary loans.

The Professor and the Madman was a book I could not put down. After two disappointing junky books about a still living Elvis and demonic spirits masquerading as space aliens, I had a good time with this one. Winchester tells the story behind the creation of the pièce de résistance of all English dictionaries: the Oxford English Dictionary. Seventy years in the making, the first edition of the OED came out in 1928 with half a million entries spread over twenty-two thousand pages in twenty volumes. How can such a tale be so captivating?

Take the professor in the title, James Murray, who was the chief editor of the OED for several decades, and the madman, William Chester Minor. Murray made it his life's mission to publish the OED during his lifetime, but died thirteen years before it came out. His organizational skills and methodology for words and their inclusion was fascinating to read about. Minor contributed more to the OED than any other individual--all from his cell at the Broadmoor Criminal Lunatic Asylum. The story clears up some of the mythology that has grown about these two men, such as the fact that Murray had suspicions that Minor was a patient at the asylum from their first correspondence (and not merely a medical officer on staff there). One learns a great deal about nineteenth-century mental illness and how it was diagnosed and treated. Unfortunately the understanding of schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive disorders would come too late to help Minor.

The most gruesome part of the story concerns Minor's autopeotomy [1]. As I read this chapter I recalled all the restless writhing that accompanied my read of Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho twenty years ago. When I read that novel I so much wanted to skip sections and I even held the book further away from my eyes as I read it, as if increased distance could make the horror more palatable. Such was my behaviour as I read of Minor's autopeotomy.

I was most touched by the revelation that Minor reached out to the widow of the man he killed. She forgave him, and visited him several times at the asylum, even bringing him vast quantities of books so that he could continue his OED research.

This was a great read. I am so glad to have friends who give me great books!

[1] I won't spoil the story by revealing what this word means.Get more detail about The Professor and the Madman: A Tale of Murder, Insanity, and the Making of the Oxford English Dictionary (P.S.).

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

HOME GAME


Most (if not all) of the reviews here are from fathers and/or mothers. And they all recommend this book. I am not a father yet but soon to be. We are expecting our first child in mid-September. Ultrasound showed we will have a boy! :) I found this book very fun to read. So much fun I want more! Michael Lewis is really a great storyteller. I get drawn into his world as a dad while reading this book.

The book is mainly broken into 3 parts. One for each of his kids. The stories are not step-by-step chronological accounts of his experiences but descriptions of his fatherhood moments. These "moments" are probably typical (I wouldn't know yet) in a family setting but the way he wrote them is just plain funny! More than half the time I find myself laughing out loud like I'm in a stand up comedy show.

This book is not really a guide to fatherhood or even lessons for fathers and fathers-to-be. He's not lecturing, not even giving pointers. This is an account of his experiences as a father; but as we all know we learn from experiences, some from our own some from others. As I said earlier, I am a first time expectant father and by no means I can say this book got me prepared for what is to come. But I do know this, now I have a little better idea of what it's going to be like.

By the way, I bought this book through Kindle and read it between my iPhone and the iPad. The texts were rendered cleanly and Whispersync was flawless. There were no pics or diagrams in this Kindle version of the book.

**Spoiler Alert: He talked about vasectomy in the book. I really did not like that (as you can probably understand with my situation). It was a pretty detailed account that I honestly skimmed and skipped over. Sorry, it's not for me right now and maybe ever.Get more detail about HOME GAME.

The Story of a Lifetime: A Keepsake of Personal Memoirs Review


The seller offering this used book said it was in good condition. It is. There is some wear on the jacket cover, but that is to be expected in a used item. The gold leaf is still on all the pages, and the book corners are intact and not dented or marred. We are giving this gift for Mother's day and so for now it's sitting on a bookshelf. We are very excited and proud to be giving a beautiful book such as this that my mother-in-law can create stories and memories in to last generations. She has been researching genealogy and past generations, so we're hoping that this will be a meaningful exercise for her and a lasting treasure for her family! Thank you for selling a great book at a really great price!Get more detail about The Story of a Lifetime: A Keepsake of Personal Memoirs.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

The Strangest Man: The Hidden Life of Paul Dirac, Mystic of the Atom Top Quality


Paul Dirac was one of the original founding fathers of quantum theory. In his fusing of quantum theory and the special theory of relativity, while working with linear algebra, the positron popped out as something that mathematically had to exist... better known today as anti-matter. The author tells a story that is more than just a biography. He gives us a history of the birth of quantum theory, more interestingly he tells us about the people surrounding Dirac. The author suspects that Dirac may have been autistic and given his letters, other correspondences and relationships, it seems a possibility. The tale of how his wife had pursued Dirac, put up with his strange ways and came to marry and live with him is heartwarming and an amusing story that caps off this wonderful novel about Dirac's life that is scientific and human. Reading his precise numbered answers to his wife's letters leaves you to wonder what kind of woman it took to live with this brilliant man. You end up admiring her, as well as him.Get more detail about The Strangest Man: The Hidden Life of Paul Dirac, Mystic of the Atom.

The Tender Bar: A Memoir This instant


This is a wonderful memoir - everyone should read it - I missed having a father in my life, also - it made me cry to hear of JR listening to the radio as a little boy, in hopes of hearing his father's voice. don't know if a book review is what you wanted here!Get more detail about The Tender Bar: A Memoir.

Monday, August 23, 2010

Rock and Roll Will Save Your Life: A Book by and for the Fanatics Among Us (with Bitchin' Soundtrack) Immediately


In Rock and Roll Will Save Your Life, Steve Almond enters new territory as a writer. Where his previous collections have worked toward the brutally honest, self-depreciation Almond fans have come to expect, this book accomplishes far more. It's still funny--Almond's natural ability to engage the reader through the universality and emotional trauma of human existence is still present--but he's certainly addressing something deeper, more personal.

The book is structured to include lists, notes, and asides, effectively breaking up the narrative with research, interviews, and exposition. As a book, it does not overwhelm the reader, but enlists their help in understanding the way music makes us feel. In addressing the less technical aspects of music and the music industry, Almond is able to appeal to a multitude of generations with varying musical taste--and if that isn't enough, he's included a free soundtrack to emphasize the impact of certain artists.

Almond's approach to writing about the musicians he has most admired in uniquely honest, exploring the human side of all heroes outside of the industry. Rock and Roll Will Save Your Life is a book that truly travels; as readers, we see Almond as a young writer and eventual father, we see the ways in which music has evolved, and we see famous and not so famous musicians as the people they are and have become. Finally, Almond explores his role in shaping his children through music, their own tastes already developing. Rock and Roll Will Save Your Life offers a reflective look at music, life, and the human condition.
Get more detail about Rock and Roll Will Save Your Life: A Book by and for the Fanatics Among Us (with Bitchin' Soundtrack).

The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit: A Jewish Family's Exodus from Old Cairo to the New World (P.S.) Best Quality


My father was put on a train at 11 years old, alone, by his parents. He was going to be lynched that evening, for not moving out of the way fast enough, in Alabama. He, too, was never able to adjust and reconcile. He did not see his parents again for over 30 years. I am 65 years old, his youngest child. Like LuLu, I was privileged to be "turned over" to him while the rest of my family got on with their lives. I cried when LuLu dad died, because I understood her love for him. I feel the same way about my dad. Judgement I will leave to those of you who had perfect parents.Get more detail about The Man in the White Sharkskin Suit: A Jewish Family's Exodus from Old Cairo to the New World (P.S.).

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Jesus the Christ Get it now!


Note that there are reviews here for two different books by the same title. They are the Talmadge (LDS) and Kasper (Roman Catholic) books. Just be sure you know which one you're looking at and you'll be fine.Get more detail about Jesus the Christ.

Leaves of Grass Buy Now


Steven B. Herrmann, PhD, MFT
Author of "Walt Whitman: Shamanism, Spiritual Democracy, and the World Soul."

Like the shamans of all archaic societies, Walt Whitman speaks a secret language of reptiles and birds and what comes out of him is purely electric. In 1855, he writes, "I SING the body electric." In this opening line, he describes the poem's aim; he says he is going to "charge them [us!] full with the charge of the soul." What he means is that there is an energy-charge in the soul, an electromagnetic vibration, that is not only psychic energy, but physical energy too, energy pulsating with Light in the living cells, glands, tissues, and atoms of our physical bodies. In section four of "Body Electric," moreover, he says: "I do not ask any more delight, I swim in it as in a sea" (LG, 253). A few lines later, he writes about the female body: "A divine nimbus exhales from it from head to foot," and he follows with this beautiful metaphor: the "Bridegroom night of love working surely and softly into the prostrate dawn" (LG, 253). This is one of the loveliest passages in American poetry. He has re-created language to reveal the union of opposites. Not only does he penetrate the psychoid barrier (the "hard coal and rocks and solid bed of the sea") but he sees the same field of psychophysical energy at play in the galaxy whirling around his head, as in his poem "When I heard the Learn'd Astronomer." While looking up in the "mystical night air... in perfect silence at the stars" (LG, 410), he says in a sacred manner: "I believe a leaf of grass is no less than the journey-work of the stars" (LG, 217). The idea that the cosmos is a universal sea of pulsating energy in which we are all swimming as in a sea of universal Delight is something Whitman--not to mention his shaman-brothers Herman Melville and William Blake--was very well aware of. "I CELEBRATE myself and sing myself," he says in "Song of Myself" "And what I assume you shall assume, / For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you" (LG, 188). Here, he is basically saying that the energy inside each atom of his body is charged with an electrical current that is active inside each of us, and that the atoms that make up his body are the atoms that make up our bodies as well--that there is no distinction, no separation; we are all one; one sea of universal intelligence. Thus, the sea in which Whitman swims is in essence the same water in which we swim, when we read him, and the one who can tap into this universal sea will benefit most from his spiritual bounty. In my book I have referred to Walt Whitman as a shaman and I suggest that he was a great medicine man too. Whitman is the first American poet to make a breakthrough for the field of depth-psychology to a concept of the soul where the soul is not seen as above the body or the body above the soul; each are viewed as one. This unity of the body and soul are captured most beautifully in his notion of spiritual democracy. This is perhaps the most important spiritual document in the history of humanity. Leaves of Grass is a celebration of cosmic consciousness and the Ecstasy that comes through the unification of the opposites. It spans the period from Whitman's initiation by the Fierce Wrestler in his 1847 Notebook to his final leave-taking poems in old age, "Passage to India," "Sands at Seventy," and "Good-Bye my Fancy."

Get more detail about Leaves of Grass.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Little Heathens: Hard Times and High Spirits on an Iowa Farm During the Great Depression Order Now


I recommend Little Heathens completely. Mildred A. Kalish captures the experience of growing up during the depression on a farm so completely. Her book is an inspiration and so very highly recommended. Although I am somewhat younger than Mrs. Kalish, I grew up in similar circumstances on a Michigan farm & found it hard to put the book down. Enjoy.
Robert JonesGet more detail about Little Heathens: Hard Times and High Spirits on an Iowa Farm During the Great Depression.

Istanbul: Memories and the City Decide Now


If you've ever been to Istanbul, I'm sure you've been to all the major MUSTS: The Bosphorus, The Haghia Sophia, The Blue Mosque, The Basilica Cistern, Bartering at the Bazaars, Topkapi Palace, a Whirling Dervish Ceremony and so on.

I would also add this book to that list.

Almost as fascinating as seeing a new city for the first time, is hearing how a native views their own city. While most foreigners would praise the exotic Istanbul skyline, native Orhan Pamuk dwells on the "huzun" or melancholy that has sunk into every stone in the city. Where a foreigner would be amazed and proud of something like the Haghia Sophia, Orhan Pamuk explains that the native would feel depressed at knowing that it is a symbol of better times gone by.

Weaving back and forth throughout the narrative (like those rugs every Turk tries to sell you) are snippets of autobiography. At the very beginning, when the author mentions "the other Orhan", I was heavily reminded of similar themes by Argentinian author JORGE LUIS BORGES, who often wrote about "the other Borges", as if there were another of him in the world.
The parts about family life were interesting too, such as the descriptions of how some of the people in the apartment kept rooms as "museums".

Scattered throughout the text--which can admittedly be dry at times--are dozens of photos and drawings of Istanbul through the ages. Most of the pictures are from other sources but there are a handful that the author himself took.

Although I have once been to Istanbul, this book succeeds--perhaps unintentionally--in creating a longing for one to return, to view the city through native eyes.Get more detail about Istanbul: Memories and the City.

Friday, August 20, 2010

Nine Lives: Mystery, Magic, Death, and Life in New Orleans Right now


After I finished this wonderful book, I wanted to see what the other reviews were. Just for fun, I read the reviews of those who had unbelievably given it 1 star. "Not enough character development??" Apparently, the author of this review does not understand that the "characters" in this book were real people? "dysfunctional characters?" Has the author of this review ever been to New Orleans??...it is a city like no other because of the strikingly colorful diversity of the characters who live there. I loved this book...got to know every one of the featured residents of the incomparable city. Dan Baum's writing allowed me to smell what they smelled, taste what they tasted, hear their music and feel what they felt...Get more detail about Nine Lives: Mystery, Magic, Death, and Life in New Orleans.

Lowest Price Generation Kill


I was excited to discover this book--always interested in accurate accounts. Unfortunately I didn't get but a few pages into the book before becoming annoyed by the authors self-promoting. It's clear that this is a classic example of a reporter using the military to promote his own career without giving proper credit. Military men and women typically don't think much of embedded reporters, and this is a good example of why. Unfortunately the Marines in this book got the shaft when it comes to the proper telling of their story.

I won't be finishing the book, in fact, I'll be returning it. Semper Fi to the men who sacrificed so much so that this reporter could make some money.Get more detail about Generation Kill.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Low Price Three Chords for Beauty's Sake: The Life of Artie Shaw


Review of Three Chords for Beauty's Sake
The Life of Artie Shaw

A biography of clarinetist Artie Shaw has been published. Its title is Three Chords for Beauty's Sake...The Life of Artie Shaw, W.W. Horton Co., by Tom Nolan. While this biography is a welcome survey of Shaw's life, it is far from definitive. Mr. Nolan, like many interviewers, researchers, and documentarists before him, devotes far too many pages to quoting Mr. Shaw, thus perpetuating many of Shaw's "rationalizing smokescreens", as they were so aptly described by Gunther Schuller in his book The Swing Era (Oxford University Press, 1989). Mr. Nolan might have been able to get away with this if he had balanced Shaw's version of reality with independent research. Unfortunately, the balance in this biography is tilted in the direction of Shaw's recollections, and his unseemly rants against most of his colleagues in the music profession, which undercuts the authoritativeness of this biography.

Nevertheless, Mr. Nolan did do some original research (as opposed to citing to periodicals or memoirs). He located information about the birth and death dates of Shaw's parents, and about Shaw's various childhood homes. He also interviewed a number of persons who either lived with Artie Shaw or worked closely with him over lengthy periods of time, especially in the later decades of Shaw's life. The information gleaned from those interviews assists greatly in trying to understand Artie Shaw.

Most notable among these were the recollections of Joanne Lupton, who lived with Shaw from 1973 to 1980. Ms. Lupton, now Dr. Lupton, a person who obviously has great intelligence and a discerning mind, provided many insights into Shaw's personality, and at least one hilarious, and very characteristic, anecdote involving Shaw's behavior in a Chinese restaurant. She also recalled Shaw's various attempts to write, and how she felt that his writing very often was emotionally empty, and why she felt that way.

Another woman in Shaw's life was Jan Curran, a journalist and publicist with whom he worked in the 1980s, after he had allowed formation of the Artie Shaw Orchestra, led by clarinetist Dick Johnson. Ms. Curran is described as resembling "Ava Gardner in her prime". She related a number of rather chilling episodes involving Shaw's temperamental outbursts, and his outsized ego. She also related a very sad episode where Shaw's son Jonathan attempted to reunite with his father while the then-new Shaw band, with a curmudgeonly Artie acting as non-playing front man, was appearing at the Blue Note in New York City in 1985. This incident pointed up Shaw's inability to bond emotionally with anyone, even his own son, indeed even with himself, and his psychotic insistence on "rigidly maintaining his impenetrable intellectual façade", as Gunther Schuller so accurately described it. Jonathan himself is later quoted in the book, and revealed an understanding of his father that few others ever had.

The title of this biography indicates that it is about the life of Artie Shaw. This is misleading, because so much of Artie Shaw's life was wrapped up in the music he made. Yet there is almost nothing about Shaw's music in the book, aside from a few awkward descriptions of some of Shaw's most famous records. Perhaps a more accurate title would have been: "Who Was Artie Shaw?" Unfortunately, the Nolan biography leaves unanswered as many questions about that as it answers.

The crux of that inquiry is as follows. Shaw was an only child. His mother Sarah Straus, an Austrian Jewish immigrant, by all accounts, was an insecure and manipulative woman. His father Harry Arshawsky, a Jewish immigrant from Odessa, Russia, was largely baffled by life in America, and was insensitive, but not malicious. Shaw's parents appear to have been mismatched, so there was constant marital discord in the home young Arthur grew up in. Early on, Shaw's mother became suffocatingly protective of her only child, and marginalized her husband from their son by spoiling young Arthur. This process was later exacerbated by Harry's dislike of his son's obsessive and unending squeak-filled saxophone practice sessions, which Sarah tolerated. Soon, it became a situation where Sarah and Arthur were aligned against Harry who was endlessly vilified by Sarah to Arthur. Soon thereafter, Harry departed. From that time on, it was Sarah and Arthur against the world. She inculcated Arthur, who as a Jewish son of foreign parents in an American Christian world, had developed a severe inferiority complex, with the idea that he was as good as anybody, indeed he was better than anybody, and that if he was challenged, he had to fight back and show them. This was the source of Shaw's arrogance, his insufferable pedantry, the mile-deep chip on his shoulder, and his inability to trust anybody. It was also the source of his obsessive drive for perfection, first as a saxophonist/clarinetist, later as a bandleader and jazz virtuoso.

Within a short time thereafter, a teen-aged Arthur began to earn money playing the saxophone, and began to provide the bulk of the money needed to run the household. Sarah's smothering "concern" for her son, and Arthur's growing desire for independence, led to an emotional rupture between them, with Sarah heaping guilt on Arthur. Although Arthur began live on his own away from his mother, he continued to provide money to her to assist with her living expenses, and to endure her meddling, albeit from afar.

Much later in his life, after years of psychoanalysis, Artie Shaw unraveled this family dynamic, and came to understand it intellectually. Unfortunately, he was never able to clear the emotional wreckage in his own psyche. Shaw's relationship with his mother (who died in 1964) remained distant and strained; his early resentment of his father, who died in 1930, hardened into pernicious hatred. Mr. Nolan cites an incident that evidently occurred when Shaw was ninety-two years old. Shaw's son Jonathan, who must be commended for repeatedly attempting to have a relationship with his father, was trying to discuss Shaw's father with him. Shaw turned this conversation into a diatribe against his father, who at that time had been dead for over seventy years. He still felt that he had to prove something to his father. Artie Shaw never learned how to get over things. And he never learned how to trust other people, or to have a relationship with them based on mutual respect. With Shaw, it was his way or no way. As he so often told Joanne Lupton: "He who pays, commands." He felt he always had to position himself to command.

Mr. Nolan buys into Shaw's obsessive assertions that the music he made with his last Gramercy Five (1953-54) was the best of his career, and after having ascended to that rarefied plateau, he felt it was impossible to remain in music and do anything better, so he retired. This is another of Shaw's "rationalizing smokescreens". From 1938 until the end of his career as a performing musician, Artie Shaw made music that was always of very high quality, and with each of his bands, he made at least some music that was truly remarkable. The ratio of remarkable music made by Artie Shaw's last band was no higher or lower that at previous times during his career. If Shaw had wanted to remain on the scene, he could have continued to do new things and make remarkable music. But by 1954, for a number of reasons, he did not want to remain on the scene any longer. He no longer wanted to do the intense practicing/playing that any virtuoso has to do to keep his performances at top levels. He also knew that audiences were never again going to receive his music, regardless of its quality, as enthusiastically they had during the swing era. Jazz was moving in directions that did not coincide with his tastes or preferences. And he wanted to permanently get off the road and do other things. The royalties from the recordings he made in the 1930s and 1940s allowed him the financial independence to retire at age 44.

Another reason why Shaw left music when he did, and left the United States for several years, was addressed somewhat in the Nolan biography: the McCarthy hysteria that swept him up, and resulted in him testifying before the House Un-American activities committee. Shaw's performance before that committee in May of 1953 may have resulted in him "naming names" (off the record), that is, revealing the identity of persons he knew to be Communists. This was a tack that proved to be disastrous to the careers of others who worked in the entertainment business. They were regarded as "stool-pigeons", reviled by their co-workers, and at the same time regarded as pariahs (Reds!) by those who were in positions to offer them employment.

Also, I found a number of factual errors which make me wonder how Mr. Nolan cross-checked information that ultimately appeared as fact in the book. For example, on page 47 it is stated that Shaw "...said an adamant no to Claude Thornhill's offer to help get him onto Ray Noble's band..." while he was on his first great hiatus from his career in music, living in Bucks County, PA in 1933. Neither Claude Thornhill nor any of the other American musicians who joined his American band could have joined Ray Noble's American band in 1933 because it didn't yet exist. Ray Noble did not come to the United States from England until early in 1935. On page 56, again relying on Shaw's memory alone, Mr. Nolan quotes Shaw as saying there were three bands on "that Camel program" (Benny Goodman) "...Xavier Cugat, and some sort of American band, terrible. They were the three." What Shaw was remembering was not the CBS Camel Caravan network radio show on which the Benny Goodman band alone was featured in the late 1930s, but the NBC Let's Dance radio show, which ran from late 1934 into mid-1935, where BG did indeed appear with two other bands, Xavier Cugat's and Kel Murray's. On page 63 we are told that Shaw, in the spring of 1936, went to the Famous Door, a jazz club on 52nd Street in Manhattan, "...to play with (Bunny) Berigan's outfit that included (Joe) Bushkin, (Eddie) Condon, Bud Freeman and Dave Tough." Bunny Berigan was not the leader of that combo; vocalist Red McKenzie was. Bud Freeman and Dave Tough were then employed by Tommy Dorsey, and were not members of that group, though they did occasionally sit-in. On page 70-71, it is stated that while the Shaw string quartet band was in Dallas, TX at the Adolphus Hotel in late 1936, and very early 1937 "...Tommy Dorsey ...was across the street at the Baker Hotel...riding high...with Bunny Berigan on trumpet and a couple of hit records (Marie, Song of India)." In fact during this time, Tommy Dorsey was in Manhattan. He had just started his tenure as the featured band on the NBC Raleigh-Kool radio show. So was Bunny Berigan, who was then still being featured on CBS's Saturday Night Swing Club, and getting together his own big band. The TD band, with Berigan being used strictly as a featured trumpet soloist, would not record Marie and Song of India until January 29, 1937. The Victor record bearing those two tunes would not have been released until probably March of 1937. By then, Shaw's string quartet band had been disbanded.

I am also somewhat puzzled by Mr. Nolan's decision not to include in the book the surname of the young woman who was probably Shaw's first "serious" girlfriend, Betty Goldstein. Shaw began a relationship with Ms. Goldstein in Cleveland in the late 1920s while he was there serving an apprenticeship with the Joe Cantor and Austin Wylie bands. She was also in the car on the night of October 14, 1930 in Manhattan when Shaw accidentally struck and killed a pedestrian while driving.

Mr. Nolan also fails to mention the substantial loan made by Shaw's last wife, actress Evelyn Keyes, to him, which Shaw never repaid while he lived. After Shaw's death, Ms. Keys sued Shaw's estate and finally did obtain repayment.

And so it goes.

There is much more to the story of Artie Shaw's life than what is presented in the Nolan biography. Still, what is presented is a good first step in the direction of finally answering the vexing question: who was Artie Shaw?

Michael P. Zirpolo,
Canton, Ohio
All rights reserved, 2010.




Get more detail about Three Chords for Beauty's Sake: The Life of Artie Shaw.

Save The House at Sugar Beach: In Search of a Lost African Childhood


Wonderful book. Excellent historical autobiography. I normally would not read autobiographies, but I recommend this to everyone. Would make a great high school requirement reading!Get more detail about The House at Sugar Beach: In Search of a Lost African Childhood.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Discount The Lady in the Tower: The Fall of Anne Boleyn


I loved Alison Weir's other two books on Henrican history, "The Six Wives Of Henry VIII" and "Henry VIII". "The Lady In The Tower" is a similarly engrossing read, rich in detail and insight. It is worth reading for the refined glimpses into the personalities of Henry, Anne, and Thomas Cromwell alone. However, when coming to her final conclusion, she seems to ignore the elephant in the room. Let me explain:

Her thesis is that Thomas Cromwell, once "the Queen's man", fell out with Anne over several political issues, most notably the uses to which proceeds from the dissolution of the monasteries would be put. These disagreements escalated to the point where Anne threatened to have Cromwell beheaded, and he responded by concocting a plan to bring the entire Boleyn court faction down. In Weir's telling, after elaborate and meticulous planning of the kind that was Cromwell's trademark, Henry was truly duped into believing the preposterous proposition that Anne was guilty of committing serial adultery with multiple partners, including her own brother. And it was for this reason, rather than his desire to be rid of Anne so that he could marry his newest love interest, Jane Seymour, that he signed Anne's death warrant. If this were so, why would Henry, five months into his new marriage, say to Jane that "the last queen died from meddling too much in affairs of state"? To my mind, this simply does not comport with the picture of Henry as a dupe, albeit a willing one. To me it indicates that, at best, Henry was aware that Cromwell's case against Anne was concocted. At worst, it indicates that it may have been concocted at Henry's implicit or explicit behest.

While I do not accept Alison Weir's final conclusion, I thoroughly enjoyed reading the detailed account of Anne's final months, and recommend the book to anyone interested in this fascinating period in English history.Get more detail about The Lady in the Tower: The Fall of Anne Boleyn.

Cheapest The Wordy Shipmates


This book is just America bashing, thinly veiled in a commentary on Puritans. It reads like a bad blog with cardboard covers. It was selected by a book club member, and I had to read it. To the author, 911 just happened and could be cured by donating toothpast. The only America left is Canada, and New York, with a million homeless, is the most exciting city. If you measure your books by the number of Reagan bashings, this one's for you.Get more detail about The Wordy Shipmates.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Cheap The Unforgiving Minute: A Soldier's Education


What makes the book compelling is Mullaney's commitment to excellence. What makes it perplexing is his unforgiving attitude towards his own father. His father is flawed and makes mistakes, but Mullaney decides to not speak to him again. This is an immature overreaction, and makes him seem petty. Something is clearly out of whack here.
The book confirms my opinion that selection for being a Rhodes scholar is purely political. The guy that graduated first in class at West Point wasn't selected, and my guess is it was because he was too religious.Get more detail about The Unforgiving Minute: A Soldier's Education.

Buying Homer's Odyssey: A Fearless Feline Tale, or How I Learned about Love and Life with a Blind Wonder Cat


This is an endearing book about an abandoned two-week-old kitten with a severe infection that took his sight. Gwen, the vet's client, agrees to see the kitten, falls in love with him, and takes him home. Since Homer was named after the blind poet of the Greek epic, Odyssey, each chapter starts off with a quote from that poem. Gwen tells a humorous, touching story of life with Homer. Homer doesn't let his "handicap" stop him. His senses of hearing and smell are enhanced. He is a bundle of energy, curious and affectionate. Find out how the two established female resident cats adjust to their new little brother. Read about how Homer enriches Gwen's life and those who meet him (including her parents who were professed dog people). Gwen and Homer lived in New York on September 11, 2001. The book has an upbeat ending.

You might also enjoy these feline tales: Dewey: The Small-Town Library Cat Who Touched the World by Vicki Myron and An Unlikely Cat Lady: Feral Adventures in the Backyard Jungle by Nina Malkin.Get more detail about Homer's Odyssey: A Fearless Feline Tale, or How I Learned about Love and Life with a Blind Wonder Cat.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Buy Chronicles of Avonlea: In Which Anne Shirley of Green Gables and Avonlea Plays Some Part ...


I loved this book as a child and really enjoyed it again as an adult. Received it very quickly at a low cost.Get more detail about Chronicles of Avonlea: In Which Anne Shirley of Green Gables and Avonlea Plays Some Part ....

Purchase My Own Country: A Doctor's Story


I picked this book up at the library and am not sure why it caught my attention. I started reading it and found it to be well written, engaging, genuine, and with depth. I learned a lot but was also carried along by the story of the lives of those who Dr. Verghese treated. I understood his love for his patients and appreciated the challenges that he faced. I purchased and read all his books after reading this one.Get more detail about My Own Country: A Doctor's Story.

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Order Wishful Drinking


Having not read previous books by Carrie Fisher, I was first taken aback by her frank disclosures and acerbic wit. This is not a tentative storytelling but a scathing commentary on some of her life issues.

She talks frankly and sarcastically about her ECT treatments and effect on her memory. She discusses ex-spouses, former step-parents and family with equal openness. She certainly is not easy on herself either, when it comes to her drug use and mental issues.

At several points she remarks on the extraordinary life she has lead and knows it is not remotely normal. What really struck me, was that there seems to be no parental direction. It is like she was treated like an adult from birth. She has a great relationship with her Mom, but Mom is more like a sister...

You can see her hyper personality as she zings from one topic to the next and can easily imagine she would be a blast to talk to. However there were points, the commentary seemed brittle like the edges of a wound. She doesn't turn away from that either, nor does she dwell.

This book was hard to put down. I'm not sure if it was due to the lurid detail or great dialogue.
Get more detail about Wishful Drinking.

Where To Buy A Big Little Life: A Memoir of a Joyful Dog


I'm kind of a sucker for dog stories that rein in the sappiness a bit but still yank the heartstrings. I listened to MARLEY & ME (ABRIDGED CD AUDIOBOOK) during a road trip but was frustrated most of the time with how irresponsible the humans were in the story, although I did cry pitifully in the car for miles while the last part unfolded. There is only one way that these stories end, and Dean Koontz really hits hard when it's his turn. Do not read the last two chapters in public, as if you have a heart, then you will full-on sob and get tears on your pages, and people will stare at you if you're not alone.

Other than the inevitable catharsis of the end of the book, though, the story to get there is pretty good. Koontz presents himself as a humble and devoted parent of his first dog, and he draws the reader in for quiet moments with the family, as Trixie displays an intelligence and presence that make her far more interesting than any fictional character I ever read in a Koontz novel (back when I was a teenager and they interested me). This book is a beautiful eulogy for a remarkable dog, and it speaks more universally to why people (should) love dogs, and I want to buy a copy for just about everyone I know with a family that includes at least one canine member.

On a side note, I tend to dislike celebrities when I read their autobiographies that make reference to their own fame - honestly, I was a Jimmy Buffett fan until I read A Pirate Looks at Fifty and saw that he had drunk his own kool-aid - but Koontz pulls it off well. From time to time, people in this book will tell him they like his writing, but only when it has an impact on Trixie's story. Koontz is not the focus here, he's writing about his girl, and he succeeds while remaining likeable.Get more detail about A Big Little Life: A Memoir of a Joyful Dog.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Shop For A Little Bit Wicked: Life, Love, and Faith in Stages


For anyone who's a Kristin Chenoweth fan, a Wicked fan, or simply a Broadway fan, this is a great book. I love her sense of humor. Kristin tells of her journey from Oklahoma to Broadway to LA with wit and humility. It reminds us that behind the glitz and the glam, she's only human too.

Get more detail about A Little Bit Wicked: Life, Love, and Faith in Stages.

The Time of My Life


Patrick Swayze was a very hard working, very driven man. I so admire his unending devotion to his wife Lisa. You don't see that in Hollywood anymore. Or, in the "real" world for that matter. I really liked this book. I want to watch City of Joy again. I remember liking that movie when it came out, but I've forgotten it. They were a very wonderful hard working and loving couple. My best to his widow Lisa!!! A brilliant person in her own right too.Get more detail about The Time of My Life.

Friday, August 13, 2010

Assassination Vacation Review


The beauty of reading history is that the diversity of opinion and interpretation of facts are such a subjective enterprise that one can read many tomes on a single subject (such as Abraham Lincoln for example) and still get a wide range of understanding and literary experiences. We can assuredly add Sarah Vowell to the list of "diverse" authors of history as she pens a unique view on the assassinations of presidents Lincoln, Garfield and McKinley. More like hanging out than lecturing, Vowell takes us on an untraditional journey into these nation altering events and along the way provides a smart and sassy view of presidential history.

Purported to be a study of the first three presidential assassinations, Vowell instead allows us to tag along on road trip after road trip as she pursues dark and anachronistic memorabilia pertaining to these tragedies. With unique anecdotes and astute observations, we learn that the McKinley assassination spot is memorialized by a decaying stone plaque...Garfield's is now the National Archives building (it was the Baltimore/Potomac railroad station) and we follow various paths of the Lincoln conspirators with possibly the most lurid being the prison site of Dr. Samuel Mudd (in the Dry Tortugas west of Key West). Her passion, curiosity and literary skills are only exceeded by the nerdy, sometimes melancholy, always affecting attitude. The reader (this reader anyway) at the end suddenly concludes that this peculiar approach serves the historian well...all the while being delightfully entertaining.

A work that would captivate my seventeen year old daughter as well as the (semi) serious historian, Sarah Vowell conclusively combines history with sentiment and proves that, yes, history can be fun!
Get more detail about Assassination Vacation.

Last Words: A Memoir Top Quality


George Carlin made the modern world a better place to understand, Laughing at the serious things that in our world gone a little mad and at our selfs, or at least me. To know more about him as a person and were he came from and see how he shaped his life is a wonderful read for me. I have passed this one on to my son at 28 years old I believe that the life lessons George shares are of value to others. As an ex-catholic this is very easy to understand, how he always pushed on things to see the whole picture and then look at the small things that make you laugh. All I can say now is enjoy, George you are missed now more than ever.Get more detail about Last Words: A Memoir.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family This instant


Bear River Spirit The book covers the historical lives of the Hemings family during the patriarchal reign of Thomas Jefferson. The focus is the Hemings family including other family slave connections. I have never read such an unbiased historical record before. Normally biographical records are dry and dull merely parroting previous biographers. The sense of putting the scene together pulls you into this book. It is about the family the society and the culture. At no time in the book do you feel the author is representing their attitudes and ideas of today on the society of the past. Instead the history is represented by the society and culture of the time, not ours. Instead of platitudes, the author presents ideas that could have driven actions or motives. This book is definitely a keeper and I recommend it as an excellent read to understand actions of the past, not necessarily the attitude of the current day writer who never really knew the character of the past. In fact, all biography is fiction. It is the mind of the writer and not the interaction or thoughts of the character. This book is true to biography in that it does not represent the characters as the author sees them, but actions and attitudes based upon study of the culture and society. This book is truer to non fiction as a genre than most biographies.Get more detail about The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family.

Damaged Immediately


Jodie's story is interesting and heartbreaking and Cathy Glass is an adequate writer. Unfortunately, she's "tells" as opposed to "shows" and the book suffers for the dry, removed style of her writing.

Instead of relating incidences in Jodie's life as they happen, she relates them in the past tense, which lessens the dramatic structure of the book.

More use of adjectives and color would have helped the book tremendously.Get more detail about Damaged.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

The Accidental Billionaires: The Founding of Facebook: A Tale of Sex, Money, Genius and Betrayal Best Quality


I am a big Ben Mezrich fan. He is probably one of my favorite authors of all time for his capacity to educate and entertain. Even now I am wondering when his next book will be published, despite that fact the Accidental Billionaires was a huge steaming pile. I'll admit initially my expectations were high, but even after the first few pages when I realized this was going to be a different kind of book...it just disappointed. The fact that AB is being published in paperback means he sold enough copies that he might get the wrong impression that he wrote a decent book.

The big problem for me was that he did not get the story from Mark Z., so there aren't enough real details to dig your teeth into and the literary license he normally takes that adds some sparkle to the story, leaves a bad taste in your mouth. Its like just eating the marshmellows out of a box of Lucky Charms, without the substance of the oats, it just makes you sick.Get more detail about The Accidental Billionaires: The Founding of Facebook: A Tale of Sex, Money, Genius and Betrayal.

Born Standing Up Get it now!


I've always liked Steve's work including his books. This is by far his best book to date. One reviewer wrote that it was sad, lonely, and full of the dues of fame. Well that is part of Steve's life but it was not what I got out of the book. I liked every personal story, every name he brought up was a charming reminder that he regards 'the little people' as actual persons. The whole story is great. Contrary to the title, and popular belief; fame was not an easy road for Steve. But after reading the book I felt like I knew Steve- and let me tell you Steve is a funny guy. His humor is in how he looks at things, not just how he presents them. The book is only 200 pages and well written.

Oh and one more thing, just the pictures are worth the price, seriously!Get more detail about Born Standing Up.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Henry Clay: The Essential American Buy Now


Henry Clay was one of the central figures in American history; his political career spanned the first half of the 19th Century, a tumultous period in the early Republic. He would be a key player in the events of the period: a War Hawk in the run-up to the War of 1812 (he was first elected Speaker at 34); a negotiator in the Ghent conference that ended the war; the Missouri Compromise of 1820; the Bank of the U.S. crisis in the 1830's; the Mexican War; the last Compromise of 1850. He worked with, and fought with, some of the most vivid characters in American history -- Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson, John Quincy Adams, John C. Calhoun, Daniel Webster, Stephen Douglas. And as a Speaker, and later, one of the Republic's most powerful Senators, he would help craft the compromises that would postpone the Civil War. Indeed, the reader gets the sense that, by 1850, he must have known that this would be a desperate and ultimately futile effort, the "firebell in the night" that Clay, Jefferson and others had sensed was coming.

It's a thoroughly-researched work, and for all its length is a smooth read that loses nothing of the political, personal and family drama that a long and full life would see. The prose is interesting, the story clearly told, and the emotions of the day fully understood. Given Henry Clay's centrality to U.S. political history, it's important -- and the result is an important, and readable, history of his life, his times, and the country he helped frame, for better or for worse.

Highest recommendation.Get more detail about Henry Clay: The Essential American.

A Wolf at the Table: A Memoir of My Father Order Now


This was one of the most annoying books I've ever read. I was waiting, until the bitter end, for the author to finally get around to what made his father such a monster. Mind you, his father was not effectionate nor involved in his son's life but that was, to a degree, the norm back in the 50's and 60's......the father was the bread winner and the mother held up the emotional aspects of their children's lives.

Having grown up with a bi-polar father myself, I know what it's like to live in a hellish home yet I don't whine as much as this author does.Het took random, insignificant situations that all parents find themselves in and he twisted them to paint himself as a victim. For example, he explains how his father took him to the store but would not allow him to throw junk food in the cart. SO WHAT!!! I'm a parent and I don't allow that either yet he described it as being so traumatic.

Aside from the fact that he comes off SO utterly whiny, the strangest parts, or rather, the creepiest parts of the story were that in which he explains his odd behaivor as a child. What is really screwed up is the way that he describes his lifestyle as an adult. I found that part more distrbing than anything his father or mother ever did.

Waste of time. I'd be willing to bet that half of you have lived through more traumatic up-bringings than this guy!Get more detail about A Wolf at the Table: A Memoir of My Father.

Monday, August 9, 2010

Factory Girls: From Village to City in a Changing China Decide Now


There is not a soul who will disagree that Leslie Chang's Factory Girls is valid now more than ever. To date, Microsoft and Apple continue to conveniently overlook the deplorable conditions of their factories in South China. Meanwhile, China has yet to actually enforce the laws it passed years ago regulating OT and improving working conditions. Only when the western media gets involved do the rich white CEOs of America suddenly become concerned and "vow to take immediate action" against the corrupt Chinese overlords they left in charge of their factories.

The paradox of this drama is that as long as Middle America continues its blind consumerism of the latest gadgets and "stuff", neither China nor the American CEOs who outsource to the PRC have any incentive to change. FDI and GDP are obviously more important than the well-being of some teenage migrant worker from Anhui. Just know, people, that someone in China suffered to get you your precious iPhone!

Leslie Chang did a good thing by publishing this book. However I do have to ask why only a Chinese-American who happens to be married to an over-hyped American author and have career connections to the world's most powerful media conglomerate can get a book like this published. What about the workers themselves? Are they so undeserving of being heard unless it's through the voice of a Harvard graduate? Were their diaries not worthy of being directly published? Such hypocrisy was not lost on me as I progressed through this book.

Factory Girls was heavily reviewed by Chang's pals in the mainstream press, which is probably the only reason why many of you have read it. But for anyone who really cares about this issue, I also suggest reading Ngai Pun Made in China: Women Factory Workers in a Global Workplace and Chun Yu Wang Chicken Feathers and Garlic Skin: Diary of a Chinese Garment Factory Girl on Saipan, who offer more sincere, first-hand perspectives about life in China's factories but whose books lacked the million-dollar marketing campaign that Chang enjoys.Get more detail about Factory Girls: From Village to City in a Changing China.

Laura Bush: An Intimate Portrait of the First Lady Right now


I got this book at the library because it was the only biography of Laura Bush that my branch had. Reading through it, I thought it must have been mis-cataloged, because it appears to be written for a Young Adult reader, but checking the publication information, it appears to have been intended for an adult audience. My confusion was understandable given that this book repeatedly assumes no prior knowledge of basic reality prior to about 1995, by multiple instances of including information such as that there was no Internet back in the 1960s when Mrs. Bush was in high school and that the south was segregated. After referring many dozens of times to one of Mrs. Bush's friends, he inserts a note as to how her name is pronounced, seemingly apropos of nothing. The information of the book is extremely thin and spread out between pages of vacuous insights of the fact that Mrs. Bush's friends like her and speak highly of her. I hope for Mr.Kessler's sake that he did not actually write this book and the poor quality of the writing is the fault of his writing "assistant"/ghostwriter. I guess the editors of the Broadway Publishing firm were not worried about the target audience of readers seeing this work as a poor reflection on them.Get more detail about Laura Bush: An Intimate Portrait of the First Lady.

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Lowest Price High On Arrival


Entertaining, gut wrenching and a real story of tragedy, triumph and life in the fast lane.Get more detail about High On Arrival.

Low Price Cleopatra: A Biography (Women in Antiquity)


As a youngster, my ideas about Cleopatra were first shaped by the Liz Taylor movie. (She also surfaces as a ghoulish monster in an Anne Rice novel.) As I grew up and read more, I came to realize that her defeat at the hands of the Romans and the fact that she was a woman shaped all the myths we hold about her. Far from a scheming, sex-mad seductress, she had only two known relationships with men, and was a great intellectual scholar and able leader. This book taught me a lot more that I didn't know about a truly fascinating woman.Get more detail about Cleopatra: A Biography (Women in Antiquity).

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Save On Gold Mountain: The One-Hundred-Year Odyssey of My Chinese-American Family


I like Lisa See's books, especially the ones that talk about the Chinese culture. "On Gold Mountain" is very interesting and also sad because of the way the Chinese were treated when they came to the U.S. I would recommend this book.Get more detail about On Gold Mountain: The One-Hundred-Year Odyssey of My Chinese-American Family.

Discount Bella Tuscany: The Sweet Life in Italy


I couldn't finish the book. I found it trivial and boring. The author writes well, her little vignettes are pleasant, but they don't connect very well. I suspect if she weren't already a best-selling author this book would never have been published in its current form.Get more detail about Bella Tuscany: The Sweet Life in Italy.

Friday, August 6, 2010

Cheapest Poems By Walt Whitman


If you can make your way around by your self, it is great--but the table of contents is difficult and it is hard to flip through and find your well remembered poems. Probably should have bought an annotated version. Will probably buy a paper used version instead.Get more detail about Poems By Walt Whitman.