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Bookviews - October 2012

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By Alan Caruba


My Picks of the Month

There are a number of new books that address major issues that were published last month and they are worthy of your attention.

 The Great Oil Conspiracy ($22.95, Sky Horse Publishing) by Dr. Jerome Corsi, PhD, concisely puts to rest all the manufactured hysteria about oil, documenting that it is not the result of dead dinosaurs and vegetation—so-called fossil fuels—but rather is continuously produced from deep within the Earth. The scientific term is “abiotic” and the book reveals how the U.S. government, following World War II, hid the fact that the German Nazi regime had perfected the way to convert coal to fuel to pursue the war. Thousands of documents describing the “Fischer-Tropsch process” were confiscated and kept from public knowledge. Dr. Corsi debunks the “peak oil” theory that said the world would run out of oil in 1970 and which has been thoroughly disproved by the many discoveries of vast oil reserves since then. Given the vast, untapped reserves of the U.S., the nation could be energy independent if the government would stand aside and open the domestic and offshore fields for exploration and extraction.

Love her or hate her, syndicated conservative columnist, Ann Coulter, already the author of eight bestselling books, is back with Mugged: Racial Demagoguery From the Seventies to Obama ($26.95, Sentinel, in imprint of the Penguin Group), One of the great mysteries of politics for me was the way the Democratic Party morphed into the party defending civil rights while the GOP was cast as the opponents of black and other Americans. It is quite absurd because it was the Republican Party that came into being just before the Civil War and it was for the abolition of slavery. Even after the war, the Democratic Party fought civil rights laws right up to the 1960s. Coulter does her usual superb, well researched and documented job of spelling out the reality of today’s politics and how, leading up to the election of Barack Obama and since, the charge of “racist” is almost exclusively one made by liberal politicians. Indeed, civil rights have been hijacked from black Americans and is now devoted to white feminist, illegal immigrants, and gays. Coulter is never boring, especially when she is challenging things you believe.

The Freedom of Information Act that permits Americans to secure government, i.e. public records, but it is being sorely abused. Congress is still trying to find the truth behind the “Fast and Furious” operation that involved running guns to Mexican drug cartels, so you can imagine the obstacles the present administration is creating for anyone seeking the truth. Christopher C. Horner, a Washington attorney and Senior Fellow with the Competitive Enterprise Institute, has authored The Liberal War on Transparency: Confessions of a Freedom of Information ‘Criminal’ ($27.00, Threshhold Editions, an imprint of Simon and Schuster). He details the stonewalling and the lengths that Obama administration officials have gone to hide what they are doing. It involves an epidemic of the use of private emails, even private desktop computers, and third-party servers used to hide the conduct of public business. This and other means of keeping the public in the dark are revealed. As always, shining light on these dark corners is essential when millions of public funds are at stake and policy decisions threat our freedoms. In a similar fashion Who’s Counting? How Fraudsters and Bureaucrats Put Your Vote at Risk by John Fund and Hans Von Spakosky ($16.99, Encounter Books) examines voter fraud which can defeat the majority by distorting election outcomes. It took the Supreme Court to determine the winner of the Bush-Gore election and it is an insidious threat to the right of all voters to be secure in the outcome of any election, but particularly the one that will occur on November 6 this year.

My friend, Burt Prelutsky, a popular blogger and former Hollywood writer for many sitcoms, is no friend to liberals and no fan of Barack Obama. His new book, Barack Obama, You’re Fired! And Don’t Bother Asking for a Letter of Recommendation ($19.95, softcover) has a forward by Bernard Goldberg, a regular on Fox TV’s Bill O’Reilly’s show, who said he believes Burt is the reincarnation of Mark Twain as he calls out liberals for their actions and beliefs. Burt is very funny. He has collected his commentaries that reveal the foolishness and chicanery of Obama and his fellow travelers. Noted personalities from Joe Wambaugh and Michael Medved, to Pat Sajak have praised his writings, including the late Andrew Breitbart. You can get your copy at burtprelutsky.com. B.K. Eakman’s Agenda Games: How Today’s High-Stakes Political Combat Works ($17.95, Midnight Whistler Publishers, softcover) takes the reader whose only information about politics comes from the mainstream media and pulls back the curtain on every political “game” in which legislators and candidates engage. She takes the reader, chapter by chapter to discover the way politicians address (or don’t address) issues involving health care, the budget, national security, education and others. Like many of her generation, she had moved from support for an ever-growing government to one that questioned Big Government. Only she devoted herself to uncovering the truth about how politics-as-manipulation had brought so many to this pace. Her book is well worth reading if you keep wondering why you are hearing and reading things that your eyes and common sense says just ain’t so.

Hardly a day goes by when some claim made in the name of science by those opposed to the benefits science provides is not in the headlines. Alex B. Berezow and Hank Campbell have authored Science Left Behind: Feel-Good Fallacies and the Rise of the Anti-Scientific Left ($26.99, Public Affairs) and for anyone trying to sort out the truth from the opposition to vaccines, use of the nation’s vast reserves of coal, oil and natural gas, genetically modified crops that yield more harvest along with other advantages, and, of course, issue involving climate, this is most certainly the book to read. Particularly valuable is their look at the way science journalism has been corrupted. Many of the most important issues for our nation’s future are examined and explained in ways that anyone can understand. Steve Goreman, Executive Director of the Climate Science Coalition of America, has written a very entertaining and informative book, The Mad, Mad, Mad World of Climatism ($22/95, New Lenox Books, softcover) that I would heartily recommend everyone read for the way he exposes the absurd claims made by those who would exploit public fears about global warming or, as it is now called, climate change. With a foreword by Harrison Schmitt, US Senator and former Apollo astronaut, Goreham systematically works through the absurdities behind eliminating incandescent light bulbs, driving electric cars, or using wind power, among others, as an alternative to understanding that the 4.5 billion year old Earth’s climate is not determined by anything mankind does and has everything thing to do with the Sun, the oceans, and elements beyond any possibility of control. An interesting phenomenon of modern life is explored by Giles Slade in The Big Disconnect: The Story of Technology and Loneliness ($19.00, Prometheus Books, softcover). He notes how, through our history, intimacy with machines has often supplanted mutual human connection. In a modern context, the reliance on smart phones act as substitutes for companionship and asks why sixty million Americans report that isolations and loneliness are major sources of unhappiness. I am not sure that he correct in his assertions, but neither do I want to ignore the questions he raises, nor the recommendations he offers.

For those with ambitions to write nonfiction, from memoirs to journalism, but who feel they haven’t adequate training, I recommend they pick up a copy of You Can’t Make This Stuff Up by Lee Gutkind ($16.00, Da Capo Press, softcover), the author and editor of nearly thirty books, founder and editor of Creative Nonfiction magazine. This is a grand tour of creative nonfiction providing challenging writing exercises, analytical reflections on the techniques the best writers use, tips on getting published, and much more. I have been a nonfiction writer my whole life and I can confirm this book will turn you into one as well. Offbeat and entertaining, Francine Brokaw takes one Beyond the Red Carpet: The World of Entertainment Journalists ($11.99, Sourced Media Books, softcover) provides an uncensored view of life as an entertainment journalist with the help of thirty colleagues who share their personal stories and funny anecdotes about celebrity interviews. The author has had a long career interviewing major celebrities over the years and if you aspire to this career, this is the one book you should read.

Reading History, Understanding the Present

If I were told I could only read one genre of books, it would be history. I have learned more about the past, the people who shaped it, the way its errors are often repeated, and why “the past is prologue” to our present times.

Quick! Who was the sixth President of the United States? It was John Quincy Adams, the son of the second President, John Adams, one of the Founding Fathers of the Republic. I have often wondered why he has been overlooked by biographers. Happily Harlow Giles Unger in John Quincy Adams ($27.50, Da Capo Press) has written an extraordinary biography of an extraordinary man who served the new nation is many roles, as the minister to six European nations, a Congressman for sixteen years, and as the sixth President. Returning to the House of Representatives, he was a champion of human rights, led the anti-slavery movement, saved free speech and the right to political dissent in Congress.. He is best remembered for defending the rights of self-liberated slaves from prosecution due to their mutiny aboard the slave ship, the Amistad. In so many ways he was the right man at the right time in the right place. I heartily recommend this book.

Lincoln’s Code: The Laws of War in American History by John Fabian Witt ($32.00, Free Press), a Yale law professor explores how slavery and the Emancipation Proclamation helped shape the modern laws of armed conflict. In particular, he reviews the code of 157 rules issued by Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War and how they became the basis for rules established in the Geneva Conventions and today’s internationally accepted laws of war. This is particularly timely in an era of asymmetrical warfare in the form of Islamic terrorism and the potential acquisition of nuclear weapons by Iran, a nation that has declared its intention to destroy Israel and maintained a state of war with the United States since its seizure of our diplomats in 1979. Witt points out that the conduct of war was subjects of great concern to George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and Abraham Lincoln, every bit as much as modern presidents. He charts the development of such laws in America from the founding to the cataclysm of the Civil War to the dawn of the modern era.

In 1962, I was discharged from the U.S. Army after having had my service extended as the result of the Cuban Missile Crisis that ended on October 28, 1962 when Krushchev agreed to removed nuclear missiles from that island prison, averting a nuclear war. It is agreed that it was John F. Kennedy’s finest moment in office. What followed is detailed in The Fourteenth Day: JFK and the Aftermath of the Cuban Missile Crisis by David G. Coleman ($25.95, W.W. Norton) and for those who love history as much as I it is an interesting account of what flowed from that confrontation as the Kennedy administration was greeted initially with acclaim and almost immediately found itself under siege by the media and political opponents. It is a narrative of events in the Oval Office from October 1962 to February 1963 and has the added benefit of being based on JFK’s secret tapes. As he and his advisors walked a thin, dangerous line with the Soviets, he fashioned a response to them that reduced tensions, but drew the line in Berlin, a victim of the Cold War and flashpoint.

As Hispanics have replaced Afro-Americans as a growing minority in the U.S., Danny Quintana presents the Hispanic voices of those who migrated throughout America after World War II from northern New Mexico, southern Colorado, and Old Mexico to America’s cities. Immigrants from Mexico were driven by the same forces as other nationalities, seeking employment, education, and opportunity in the magnet that America became from its earliest years. In Caught in the Middle: Stories of Hispanic Migration and Solutions to America’s Immigration Dilemma ($16.95, The Beckham Publications Group, softcover) Quintana counters the misconceptions about today’s migrants, legal and illegal. It is well worth reading to understand who they were and are, and the dilemma in which they find themselves.

Journeys on the Silk Road: A Desert Explorer, Buddha’s Secret Library, and the Unearthing of the World’s Oldest Printed Book by Joyce Morgan and Conrad Walters ($24.95, Lyons Press) is the story of the discovery of the Diamond Sutra, written in 868 AD, 500 years before the invention of the printing press by Gutenberg. It is the world’s oldest book and is the story of how Aurel Stein, a Hungarian-born scholar and archaeologist employed by the British service, traveled thousands of miles across the Gobi Desert to meet with the Chinese monk to secure the Diamond Sutra, unlocking the story of the famed Silk Route that, for centuries, was traveled by merchants to bring spices and objects from the East to the West. It is a totally fascinating story. Exploration is the theme of The Last Viking: The Life of Roald Amundsen by Stephen Brown ($27.50, DaCapo Press), the story of a man who accomplished in two decades when other explorers of his day couldn’t do in a lifetime. He became the first person to reach the four great geographical mysteries of the world—the Northwest and NortheasPassages, along with the North and South Poles. This first full-scale biography tells the story of an intensely private man whose life was fill with sordid affairs, family quarrels, and financial problems arising from borrowing money he did not repay. In the end, he gave his life trying to rescue a rival explorer. The world needs heroes like Amundsen, warts and all.

The third edition of The Handy History Answer Book by David L. Hudson, Jr. has been published ($21.95, Visible Ink Press, softcover) and for anyone who wants to grasp the role of history and its impact on the present, this is the book to own! This concise guide to all things historical is a treasure of information about invention, philosophy, politics, culture, sports, business, law, media and religion. It deserves to be in everyone’s personal library and provides hours of insight and entertainment.

Memoirs

People write memoirs for a variety of reasons, but often to help others who have experienced what they have and to offer their stories by way of encouraging them to overcome and cope.

Believe: My Faith and the Tackle that Changed my Life by Eric LeGrand with Mike Yorkey ($23.99, HarperCollins) is the story of how, on October 16, 2010, LeGrand, a Rutgers defensive tackle was injured by a tackle that left him paralyzed from the neck down. He knew his life would never be the same. He battled his way back to make a new life for himself and has become a hero to men like Tim Tebow and Gov. Chris Christie who lent their support. He has since become an analyst for the Rutgers Football Radio Network. His story is an inspiration to anyone on how to turn a setback into a new life. There’s also a younger reader’s edition. Many women have to undergo mastectomies as the result of cancer and Susan Cumming’s Adventures of a One-Breasted Woman: Reclaiming My Moxie after Cancer ($12.95, Booksmyth Press, softcover) will provide inspiration and entertainment in this memoir of her first six years after treatment for early-stage breast cancer. She was a struggling New York actress when diagnosed, she is now a twenty-year survivor and a gifted writer with a very active funny bone that will prove a tonic for any other woman encountered this in their life. She’s living testimony to the saying “When life hands you a lemon, make lemonade.”

Coming soon is Michael Aaron Rockland’s wry memoir of his life as a cultural attaché in the American embassy in Spain. The time is the mid-1960s. In An American Diplomat in Franco Spain ($15.00, Hansen Publishing Group, softcover) Rockland tells of “working to give Spaniards a favorable impression of U.S. culture and to help cultivate democratic forces in Spain, but my job was complicated by the fact that we were cozy with their dictator in order to maintain three nuclear bases during the Cold War with the Soviets.” The memoir is filled with behind-the-scenes stories including a day spent alone with Martin Luther King in Madrid to a search for missing hydrogen bombs, and much more. He recounts how his six years abroad changed him and instilled a life-long love affair with Spain. It is impossible to put down as he tells of the years that were the death-rattle of the Franco regime told in a very entertaining style. He is currently a professor of American studies at Rutgers University and the author of several acclaimed books.

Getting Down to Business Books

As always there is a continuous stream of new books devoted to various aspects of business and finance, all of which are intended to help the reader learn how to achieve success.

Combining public affairs, high finance, and reflections on the 2008 financial crisis, John Allison, former BB&T Corporation chairman and CEO who becomes the CEO of the Cato Institute—a leading DC think tank this month, has written The Financial Crisis and the Free Market Cure: Why Pure Capitalism is the World Economy’s Only Hope ($28.00, McGraw-Hill). It should be mandatory reading for every member of Congress and the White House. Allison, who was the longest-serving CEO of a top-25 financial institute, spells out why Wall Street was no the cause of the financial mess we’re in, why more regulation of the financial industry is not the answer, and why lower unemployment rates cannot be achieved by more controls on the free market of goods and services. He describes how government incentives to make more mortgage loans blew up the real estate bubble that burst in late 2008. It is an indictment of how Congress misunderstands and completely mismanages the nation’s financial institutions. When you are through reading the remarkable book, you will be a committed capitalist in the finest sense of the word as he spells out what can and must be done to promote a healthy free market. As America went down the socialist road that has ruined the economies of European nations, we have found ourselves on the precipice of collapse. Allison’s book explains how and why we must step back and restore economic growth and stability.

Raising capitol for a new enterprise has always been a challenge and an interesting new book, The Kickstarter Handbook, by Dan Steinberg ($14.95, Quirk Books, softcover) that addresses how “Creators. Innovators. Dreamers. Schemers” can find patronage in the digital age. The author discusses Kickstarter.com, an online platform for the purpose of “crowd funding.” It taps the ability of people to donate money to a project and tells how dozens of artists and inventors have tapped this source of funding and offers advice on how to go about making a good presentation. I enjoy watching the poker tournaments on television so naturally The Shark and the Fish: Applying Poker Strategies to Business Leadership by Charley Swayne ($19.95, ECW Press, softcover) caught my eye. The author discusses things such as how to avoid losing control and going “full-tilt”, a poker phrase for letting negative emotions control one’s actions. Other topics include how to turn losses into lessons, and how to perfect the art of negotiating a deal. For someone just starting out in the business world or seeking the keys to making the right moves in a business, this book is filled with interesting and useful ideas.

New Sales Simplified: The Essential Handbook for Prospecting and New Business Development by Mike Weinberg ($17.95, Amacom, softcover) is one of the many new books from a publisher that specializes in business books. The author asserts that maintaining a constant flow of buyers is clear and simple, and doesn’t depend on the economy. He advises against waiting for current economic trends to end and to apply the basics of salesmanship and being proactive. Anyone is sales can benefit greatly from this book. Also from Amacom, comes the second edition of The 7 Hidden Reasons Employees Leave: How to Recognize the Subtle Signs and Act Before It’s Too Late by Leigh Branham ($24.95, Amacom). Written by an expert on employee engagement, Branham believes that employee turnover is largely preventable and reveals what really pushes talented, dedicated people out the door. He provides an arsenal of innovative strategies to help business leaders and managers keep the people upon which their company depends. These range from loss of trust in senior leaders to feeling devalued, along with a lack of growth opportunities, stress, and the need for coaching and feedback.

Books for Younger Readers and Teens

Parents these days are so fortunate to have some of the best books in the world to give their children, to encourage learning, and guide them through stages of growth. Of course, it helps if your father, Jeffrey Wilson, is a novelist and you’ve grown up around books and even thinking about writing one of your own. That’s what Connor Wilson has done with A Giant Pencil ($12.95, Magic Dreams Publishing, softcover) and considering the idea occurred when he was eight years old and the book was published when he nine, that probably makes him the nation’s youngest traditionally-published fiction writer. Aimed at readers from 5 through 8 or so, it is an entertaining story about how a young sibling and thoroughly “fussed at” kid learns that the world is a lonely place when no one is “fussing” at you. And sometimes it is for your own good. This book marks a strong beginning for a young writer.

For the youngest readers, ages 6 and up,there’s Night of the White Deer by Jack Bushnell and illustrated by Miguel Co ($16.95, Tanglewood Books). It is a timeless, enchanting story about the appearance of a legendary white deer and a journey into the nighttime sky as a magical deer takes a young boy into the sky through the lights of the aurora and shows him countless other creatures. Was it just a dream or did it really happen? Closer to the Earth is a new addition to “The Kissing Hand” series by Audrey Penn, illustrated by Barbara L. Gibson, as we continue the adventures of Chester Raccoon, begun in 1993 ($16.95, Tanglewood Books.) In Chester the Brave little Chester learns the meaning of bravery and how to overcome his fears with a strategy, Think-Tell-Do. The artwork alone is worth the price, but the story is priceless. Molly, By Golly! The Legend of Molly Williams, America’s First Female Firefighter by Dianne Ochiltree, illustrated by Kathleen Kemly, ($16.95, Calkins Creek/Boyd Mills Press) tells the true story of a wintry day in the early 1800s when New York City’s Fire Company Number 11 is in trouble. A deadly snowstorm is blowing and many of the company’s volunteers are sick. When the fire alarm sounds, who will save the neighborhood? Molly Williams, the company’s cook, that’s who. Readers will learn how fires were fought in early America. Looking and Seeing: Learning to Observe by Carol J. Rosen ($17.00, Bookstand Publishing, softcover) provides photos of animals, insects and flowers by way of teaching the very young how to differentiate between them while learning about them. It will sharpen their ability to spot the differences and appreciate them at the same time. For readers 10 years and older, there’s a historical novel, Precious Bones by Mike Ashley-Hollinger ($16.99, Delecorte Press), a suspense-filled story set in 1949’s rural Florida that has all but vanished. Lori and her father, Nolay, who is part Miccosukee Indian, live on the edge of a swamp and when two men are found dead within two weeks, Nolay is accused. Lore, nicknamed Bones, sets out to investigate what really happened. This is a riveting coming-of-age novel that even adults would enjoy.

I am a great fan of American Girl and the many fine books it publishes for girls of all ages. Years ago I created a media spoof called The Boring Institute and for twenty years it made news with its lists of the most boring celebrities, films and television, so naturally my eye was caught by Bored No More! Quiz Book ($9.95) that is filled with ideas and advice to keep any girl, age 8 and up, so busy she won’t have time to be bored. A great investment for any parent as is Slumber Wonders: Make All Your Slumber Party Dreams Come True ($9.99) filled with advice on planning and throwing eight dream sleepovers, including shopping lists. I Love Art will bring out the artist in every little girl including some colorful stickers. In a similar fashion there’s Picture Yourself Here: Turning your favorite photos into silly scenes using the ideas and punch-outs inside ($12.99).

The teen years can be filled with all manner of fears that can inhibit their enjoyment and two books arrived recently that will be welcomed by parents of youngsters who are shy or just not getting the most of these development years. Both are published by New Harbinger Publications and are written by psychologists who help teens overcome these common problems. Get Out of Your Mind & Into Your Life for Teens ($15.99, Instant Help Books, a division of New Harbinger, softcover) has three authors to offer essential skills to teen readers to help them cope with anxieties and develop emotional intelligence to avoid or move passed unhealthy behaviors and simple self-doubt. It’s about self-acceptance and the lessons that counter some of the attitudes imparted by our culture. The Shyness & Social Anxiety Workbook for Teens ($16.95, Instant Help Books, softcover) by Jennifer Shannon will prove especially helpful for those teens who will learn how to grow more independent and focus on their social development if they suffer from too much social anxiety and shyness. It can provide a real breakthrough. Both books are written and illustrated in ways that connect directly to teen readers and are illustrated with cartoons in which they will see themselves, plus exercises and worksheets to develop their self-confidence.

Novels, Novels, Novels

Sometimes I think everyone wants to write a novel and, these days, anyone can get theirs published. I rarely take note of self-published novels, preferring to rely on those from large to small publishing houses whose livelihood depends on selling what they offer. Here’s a look at a selection from the deluge I receive every month.

The Lighthouse Road by Peter Geye ($23.95, Unbridled Books) addresses the universal themes of family loyalty, the need to be loved, and greed. Geye's novel has been compared with “Snowfalling on Ceders” and “The Shipping News." In his novel he uses the sea as the background, telling a story of Thea Eide, a young Norwegian immigrant who seeks a new life outside Duluth in the 1890s. still shocked to learn that her resident family has fallen apart and that she is adrift. It is an intricate and compelling novel that takes you to another time, but explores challenges common to every generation. Lovers of fantasy will enjoy Steven Erickson’s Forge of Darkness: Book One of the Kharkanas Trilogy ($27.99, Tor) as further proof of this author’s mastery of the genre. Filled with characters, it is an epic table of the fall of he Malazan Empire and involves the forging of a sword unlike any other for use in a devastating civil war, bitter family rivalries, wild magic, and unfettered power. Andrew Britton’s debut novel, “The American” won raves as an accomplished writer of internationally thrillers and he returns with The Operative ($25.00, Kensington) about a secret agent who is finally setting into a peaceful life after more than a decade on the deadly front lines of the war on terror. That is shattered when Ryan Kealey is swept into a merciless terror attack during a charity gala in downtown Baltimore. Dozens are death or injured, including the wife of CIA Deputy Director John Harper who turns to him as the one man with the expertise and freedom from government interference to pursue the perpetrators. He begins to uncover an unimaginable conspiracy and you won’t be able to put this novel down until the last page.

As usual, the bulk of the novels I receive are softcover books, so let’s look at some recent arrivals.

Just in time for Halloween, there’s Laura Levine’s Death of a Neighborhood Witch ($24.00, Kensington) and entertaining story, part of the Jaine Austin mysteries, is set in Beverly Hills where freelance writer and chocoholic, Jaine, battles crime and cellulite. One of her neighbors is Cryptessa Muldoon and when she is murdered, Jaine becomes the cop’s prime suspect. It’s great fun to read and the big question is whether Jaine will make it to Halloween without eating all the candy she’s bought for trick or treaters.

Shades of Orange with Many Greens is subtitled “visions of Paul Cezanne” by Walter E. Thompson ($15.95, Langson Street Press) an art historian and painter in his own right. Drawing on Cezanne’s life, the novel brings to life the erratic and bizarre character of the artists who, for 56 years, withstood intense criticism and constant rejection for the works that now costs millions to purchase. Not until late in his life was he hailed as a great impressionist. Thompson captures his travails the reader is taken to the era and the artist. The Miracle Inspector by Helen Smith ($12.99, Tyger Books) is a literary dystopian thriller set in the near future. England has been partitioned, women are not allowed to work outside the home, the arts are suppressed. A young couple, Lucas and Angela, try to escape London with disastrous consequences. The author has already earned plaudits for her previous novels and will no doubt earn more with this intriguing new one. We’re happy to see Juliette Fay’s new novel, The Shortest Way Home ($15.00, Penguin Books). Sean Doran has spent the last two decades working as a nurse in disaster-stricken countries around the world. When he makes one of his infrequent trips back to his boyhood home in Massachusetts he’s planning to be there for a few weeks at most, but finds the household on the brink of crisis. His Aunt Vivvy who raised him and his siblings after his mother died is showing signs of dementia and his sister Deirdre has moved to New York leaving no one to look after Sean’s 111-year-old nephew, Kevin. He finds himself playing a reluctant parent while falling in love with a woman from his past. Suffice to say there is plenty of drama here.

An interesting novel Aloha, Mozart by Waimea Williams ($18.95, Luminis Books, softcover) tells the story of young girl born into an impoverished Hawaiian family with the gift of a beautiful voice who rise in the world of European opera, attracting the attention of powerful men. In 1968, in Salzburg, Austria, she must confront the Nazi heart of the classical music scene in which she finds herself and, on the evening of her brilliant premiere with Soviet tanks threatening to invade the city, she must choose between recognition and the world stage or leave the city with her life and her conscience intact. Music lovers in particular will enjoy this one. In Gone to the Forest by Katie Kitamura ($15.00, Free Press) tells the story of a fiercely beautiful colonial country teetering on he brink of civil war. The novel is a gripping, psychologically intense story about the destruction of a family, a farm, and a country. The nation is not identified but embodies a bit of Kenya, Argentina, India and Zimbabwe. The author’s debut novel in 2009, “The Longshot”, won raves and this one is likely to do the same.

That’s it for October. Come back next month for a look at the best in non-fiction and fiction that may be overlooked elsewhere. And tell your book-loving friends, family and coworkers about Bookviews.com!

Bookviews - November 2012

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By Alan Caruba
 
My Picks of the Month

For a look at the obscene wealth of the Saudi Royal family and the way it is spent when some Saudi princesses and a huge entourage that accompanied them on a seven week visit to Los Angeles, they I recommend you read Jayne Amelia Larson’s entertaining book, Driving the Saudis: A Chauffeur’s Tale of the World’s Richest Princesses ($25.00, Free Press, a division of Simon and Schuster). Like many aspiring actresses, Larson, who has a degree from CornellUniversityand Harvard’s American Repertory Theatre Institute, would moonlight as a chauffeur to make ends meet. A seven-week visit by a Saudi princess, her family, and an army of people to tend to her every whim gave Larson the unique opportunity to see the royals up close and the picture that emerged was of obscene wealth and a lifestyle of excess that she reveals in her entertaining and disturbing book. She was the only woman driver among a small army of chauffeurs and her women passengers were not permitted to drive in Saudi Arabia, nor travel anywhere without a male relative. It is a velvet cage.

Mexicois on our southern border, but it might was well be on the other side of the globe except for the many Americans of Mexican descent and those here illegally. A good trading partner, Mexico nonetheless poses a great problem for the U.S.as the conduit for massive amounts of illegal drugs which find a ready market here. It poses a problem internally as well because, since 2006, more than 50,000 people have died there as the infamous drug cartels battle one another. In The Fire Next Door” Mexico’s Drug Violence and the Danger to America ($24.95, Cato Institute) Ted Galen Carpenter, a senior fellow for defense and foreign policies studies, has written a thoroughly documented look at what threatens to become a failed state as the result of the corruption and violence seeping across the border into the U.S. Carpenter reveals how the current U.S.-backed policies have been a disaster. Changes are necessary and Carpenter spells them out, as opposed to the band-aide approach that has failed. It is a true horror story and not one that current and future administrations can ignore.
 
Fast Food Vindicationby Lisa Tillinger Johansen, MS, RD, a registered dietician, ($11.98, J, Murray Press, softcover) dispels the widespread belief that Americans are getting fat because of the fast-food outlets throughout the nation. In a clear, easy-to-understand text she offers the reasons why there is an epidemic of obesity in Americaand, indeed, in many other nations. People are just eating too much, not getting enough exercise, and snack too often. She notes that sit-down restaurants, more often than not, offer too much food on the plate and fill up the bread tray, thus providing more food than you need to eat at a sitting, as opposed to fast-food outlets that now commonly offer alternatives to a juicy, delicious hamburger or other food choice. And it comes down to choices and moderation. One thing is for sure, it is not the government’s job to intervene in what your child eats in school or what you eat. That’s your job. How people arrive at their beliefs in all manner of things, true or not, is the subject of Second That Emotion: How Decisions, Trends, and Movements are Shaped by Jeremy D. Holden ($25.00, Prometheus Books) an advertising and communications professional knows a lot about how to influence people’s opinions and he has written a lively, interesting book about the way people form those opinions. Contrary to the view that we arrive at our opinions via slick Madison Avenue and other “spin”, Holden shows that while advertising and propaganda can provide a spark and social media can provide the kindling, individuals create consumer, political, and cultural trends based, more often than not, on thought processes that they know logically are flawed. This is a book about the decision-making process and how our passion for an idea, a politician, or a brand is often emotion-based and fuels our support for movements of all kinds. For writers who take their work seriously, Constance Hall has written Vex, Hex, Smash, Smooth: Let Verbs Power Your Writing ($26.95, W.W. Norton) and it will greatly enhance anything you write as she takes the reader through contemporary and classic examples to demonstrate how to overcome some of the “rules” we carry around in our head about what works and what doesn’t.

People who read books, fiction and non-fiction, are so much more fortunate than those who do not. The very act of reading imprints ideas on the mind while expanding one’s intellectual parameters. Lately a number of books about the joy of reading have been published. The Books They Gave Me by Jen Adams ($19.99, Free Press) is a collection of nearly 200 poignant, funny, and provocative stories that comprise a love letter to literature and the pleasure of a physical book. It is a delightful read. Joe Queenan is one of the most successful freelance writers on the scene today. He writes a column for The Wall Street Journal, but his credits include many of the leading magazines and newspapers around. In One for the Books ($24.95, Viking) he tells of how powerful books were in facilitating his escape from a bleak and dysfunctional childhood. An ironic beginning for someone noted for his wit. This book is a look at the entire culture of reading and what books mean in people’s lives. “The confraternity of book lovers are united by a conviction that literature is an endless series of expeditions.” I agree.

A very unusual, but intriguing book is From the Forest by Sara Maitland ($28.00, Counterpoint Press) who examines the origins of fairy tales, the first stories most of us hear or read. They are our earliest experience with culture and forests are our most ancient landscapes. So many fairy tales are set in forests, Rapunzel, Hansel and Gretal, Snow White, and Little Red Riding Hood come to mind. Ms. Maitland explores how nature itself informs our imaginations. You will never think of a fairy tale in the same way again. For anyone who has always wanted to read the classics they ignored earlier in life, Thunder Bay Press has released the Word Cloud Classic series, all for under $15. They make great gifts too. They run the gamut from The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn to Pride and Prejudice, Les Miserables to Anna Karenina. Check out the series at www.thunderbaybooks.com.

Memoirs, Biographies, Life Stories
 
No doubt, the many fans of Bruce Springsteen will welcome news of the first biography in 25 years to be written with the full cooperation of Springsteen. Peter Ames Carlin has written Bruce ($28.00, Touchstone, an imprint of Simon and Schuster) and was granted unprecedented access to the artists, his family, friends, and bandmates, past and present, including Clarence Clemons’ final interview before his passing. It does justice to his more than four decades of a remarkable career that has yielded twenty Grammy Awards, two Golden Globes and an Academy Award along with more than 120 million albums sold. It is a revealing account of an American music icon who overcame an unhappy childhood that included a mentally ill father who suffered from depression. It’s all here in a hefty book that is just short of 500 pages. Carlin has authored other such biographies including the Beach Boys and Paul McCartney. 

Who doesn’t like an inspiring biography, particularly in these times when “success” is considered a dirty word by some people. American Phoenix by Sarah S. Kilborne ($27.00, Free Press) is the story of William Skinner who moved from the slums of London to the United Statesin 1845, arriving penniless, a teenager, with a job offer and an unparalleled knowledge of silk dyeing. Over the next three decades he became a titan of the silk industry, the epitome of the self-made man, until it took a flood a mere fifteen minutes to destroy his life’s work in 1874. It was the worst industrial disaster of the era. He was the great-great grandfather of the author and she tells of his effort to rebuild his life after losing everything. It is a story of resilience, character, and the ability to recognize failure as opportunity.

The Fiddler on Pantico Run: An African Warrior, His White Descendants, a Search for Family($25.99, Free Press) by Joe Mozingo, a journalist who was always curious about where his father’s family was from until a college professor told him his name came from Africa. That sent Joe, a blue-eyed white man on a journey to find the truth of his family’s roots. He discovered he was descended from a slave brought to the Jamestowncolony in 1644. He sued for his freedom, becoming a tobacco farmer on the bank of a creek called Pantico Run in Northern Virginia, and married a white woman from a landowning family, fathering one of the nation’s first mixed race family lines. To research the story the author traveled around the USmeeting other Mozingo’s and to the rainforest of Cameroon. It is an astonishing, gripping story.

The Spin Doctorby Kirk Mitchell ($24.95, New Horizon Press) is about a man who may have killed his wife, but has eluded justice. When police arrived at Kurt Sonnenfeld’s house, they found his wife fatally shot in the head. Kurt claimed she shot herself because she was depressed and unhappy in their marriage. Most women would just file for divorce and police were suspicious of his behavior and signs that pointed to murder. Though arrested, he never stood trial. Instead, he fled to Argentinaand has avoided extradition. For anyone who loves a real-life murder mystery, this book will more than fit the bill.

Col. Scott F. Paradis, U.S. Army (Ret) has written Warriors, Diplomats, Why America’s Army Succeeds: Lessons for Business and Life ($24.95/$17.95, Cornerstone Achievements Publishing, hard and softcover editions) after more than thirty years of service that took him to the Middle East, Europe, and various stateside stations. He has an impressive educational background and his military awards include the Legion of Merit and Bronze Star, among others. It is not surprising that he has written about the lives of military heroes who were leaders, thinkers, and the kind of men who showed courage and selfless service to the nation, going back to its earliest days. The book is a tutorial on leadership and success. And a great book for a young man or woman who would benefit from its lessons.

Reading History
 
It is absolutely essential to read history if you are to understand the present and have some idea of what may occur in the near future. One of the great contributions to that was Larry Schweikart’s and Michael Allen’s “A Patriot’s History of the United States: From Columbus’s Great Discovery to the War on Terror” published in 2004. I am pleased to report that Schweikart has teamed with Dave Dougherty to write A Patriot’s History of the Modern World: From America’s Exceptional Ascent to the Atomic Bomb – 1889-1945 ($29.95, Sentinel/Penguin Group) and, despite its hefty 475+ pages, it reads like an exciting adventure story because it is the period of America’s ascendency why it came to be as the result of fundamental conservative values and the free enterprise system. It was also a period in which two world wars were fought and modern warfare led to carnage beyond the imaginations of those who initiated them. Why do they call their books “A Patriot’s History”? Because the tone and purpose of these two books is to take pride in America, not in a jingoistic fashion, but to recognize and celebrate that America was and is an exceptional nation among all others. Sometimes it’s called a “can do” spirit, but from the beginning it was a nation that demonstrated a deep devotion to God while practicing a level of tolerance for other faiths unknown anywhere else. It attracted and assimilated millions yearning to enjoy freedom that was (and is) a scarce commodity in most other nations, bounded by caste systems, ruled by kings, czars, and despots. No, America was not perfect, but its ideals were. I heartily recommend you read both, but in particular the new book for the way it explains how we arrived at 1945, having fought and won WWII in both the Atlantic and Pacific.

One of the great battles of WWII was the Battle of the Bulge and No Silent Night: The Christmas Battle for Bastogne by Leo Barron and Don Cygan ($26.95, NAL Caliber) captures the drama of Hitler’s armies as they attempted to deal a death blow to the American army and, failing, sounded the death knell for the Third Reich. The triumph of the battle occurred during the last Christmas of WWII against outnumbered and undersupplied American troops in freezing weather. The book is an exciting chronicle of the one day that changed the course of the war and the world. It is based on some extraordinary research and extensive interviews. Dog Company by Patrick K. O’Donnell ($26.00, Da Capo Press) tells the story of “the boys of Pointe du Hoc”, rangers who accomplished D-Day’s toughest mission and then went on to lead the way across Europe. On June 6, 1944, the 2nd Ranger Battalion’s D Company, landed on the beaches of Normandy to assault a sheer cliff under enemy gunfire. The story of the heroism of the men defies the imagination, but it is real and told well by a distinguished military historian. Anyone who loves military history will want to read these books and add them to their personal library

Life’s Learning Lessons

One of the genres of books that has plenty of new ones vying for attention are advice and self-help books. The subject is life’s many problems and challenges. For those passing through them they can be a lifeline providing insight and information.
 
For the mother of a son or sons, I recommend What a Difference a Mom Makes: The Indelible Imprint a Mom Leaves on Her Son’s Life ($17.99, Revell) by Dr. Kevin Leman. I can certainly attest to that because my Mom imparted the values that have guided my life. A lot of men who left their mark on history such the WWII leaders, Roosevelt, Churchill, and Gen. McArthur, all had mothers who paid close attention to their upbringing, often well into their adult years. The author, a psychologist, provides the kind of advice that is particularly useful to a new mother. He makes a lot of sense.

Jennifer Grim and Sarah Bradley have teamed up to write Heartbreaks and Cupcakes: Living, Laughing and Moving on After Infidelity ($11.95, softcover) that takes a look at infidelity by sharing their experiences regarding their spouse’s extramarital affairs. They address how to get over the shock and betrayal, put the pain behind them, hit the reset button, and gain strength physically and emotionally. Never Letting Go: Heal Grief with Help from the Other Side by Mark Anthony ($15.95, Llewellyn Publications, softcover) requires a belief in the afterlife and psychic mediums. An Oxford-educated attorney, his life as a medium marks him as an unusual man. He maintains that departed loved ones are still connected and watching out for those they leave behind. Anthony says that both his mother and father were clairvoyants as well and that this gift enables them to help those grieving a loss.

Having an endorsement from TV personality, Paula Zahn, is a pretty good indicator that Dear Dr. Vby Dr. Marilyn Varadi ($14.95, softcover) has written a lively book, a collection of her popular advice column as a psychologist, educator, and columnist who is a cofounder of the Varadi Ovarian Initiative for Cancer Education. Suffice to say her book is filled with good advice that covers many familiar situations and challenges in life. It is fun to read. Teenage girls will benefit from reading Graceful: Letting Go of Your Try-Hard Life by Emily P. Freeman ($12.99, Revell, softcover). It is based in faith in a higher power and addresses the way girls are told be nice, make good grades, don’t complain, and, in general, to be a good girl. This book gets behind the image that girls fashion for themselves as the author recommends the role of spirituality that is more than merely following the rules, fashioning a reputation, and developing a sense of oneself.

 Soul Songs: Reflections of Joy in Everyday Life by Heidi Levin ($15.00, Langdon Street Press, softcover) is one of those books written to help the reader cope with life by finding ageless paths to peace of mind. It is written for those who are caught up in the demands and obligations of work, home, family and the social pressure to stay busy all the time. Levin recommends we smile more, laugh more, dream more, love more, and appreciate the daily opportunities of just being alive. She does this in a very appealing way. Dog owners and lovers will enjoy Little Boy Blue: A Puppy’s Rescue from Death Row and His Owner’s Journey for Truth by Kim Kavin ($22.99, Barron’s). When a journalist decided to adopt a puppy, she had no idea that she was rescuing Blue from being put down. Though Blue was a happy, friendly brindle puppy, his manner indicated he had endured some hard times. Kavin began to trace his history and discovered a shocking reality that prevails in many of America’s taxpayer-funded shelters. She also discovered a grassroots canine rescue network of dedicated animal lovers seeking to save countless dogs from an unwarranted death. The upside was the great happiness that Blue has given his adopter.

Defining Moments: Breaking Through Tough Times by Dorothea S. McArthur, PhD, ($24.95/$19.95, Cove Press, hard and softcover editions) is a book for people whose lives have been battered by events beyond their control such as natural disasters or the economy. These people often cannot afford psychotherapy, but they can afford this book by a clinical psychologist with 33 years of private practice who cites many examples while emphasizing integrity, honesty, and ethical behavior as the means of building the depth of character and self-esteem that can withstand and overcome adversity. Issues of anger, anxiety, or depression are examined and solutions are offered. A lot of people worry about growing older and, frankly, at 75 I don’t know what the fuss is about. Both my parents lived well into their 90s and never seemed to be concerned, accepting age as a normal process. In a youth-obsessed society, however, I suppose it’s to be expected. The 17 Day Plan to Stop Aging by Dr. Mike Moreno ($26.00, Free Press), the author of “The 17-Day Diet” is pretty much more of the same as he offers his advice on avoiding “inflammation, oxidative stress, glycation, methylation, and immune impairment.” Big words, eh? Scary, too. I suspect I have seen too many diet books to take them seriously and this one is just one more talking about the merits of shellfish, meat, leafy vegetables, salmon, walnuts, ad infinitum. My guess is that, if you’re not drinking booze straight from the bottle or just eating too damned much, you will likely live as long as your genes permit.

Now We’re Cooking

Not that many cookbooks this month, although there may yet be for December. For those concerned with their salt intake there’s You Won’t Believe It’s Salt-Free! ($17.99, Da Capo Press, softcover) Robyn Webb, a nutritionist and the online food editor for Diabetes Forecast magazine, has collected 125 “healthy, low-sodium, and no-sodium recipes using flavorful spice blends.” She knows that people don’t want to eat bland food is a turn-off. Her book will surprise and delight who will learn how to prepare meals to please the palate.
Get Cooking! A Jewish American Family Cookbook ($19.95, Behrman House) is proof that you don’t have to be Jewish to eat like one. What we call Jewish food is imported in large part from Eastern Europe, but includes dishes from around the world. The book arrives in time for holidays from Thanksgiving through Hanukkah/Christmas and, of course, Super Bowl Sunday! The book comes with a “Rockin’ Mama Doni Celebration” CD, filled with music by Doni Zasloff Thomas (Mama Doni), entertainer and a co-author of the book with Rachel Harkham, a noted food writer. It is written to include the participation of children, filled with pictures of them helping prepare meals and the delicious items with their recipes. It’s just plain fun.

As Bookviews readers know, my Mother was an international famed authority on wine and “haute cuisine”. I grew up eating all the traditional foods including meat, chicken and fish, but there are many who choose a vegan diet and, for them, there’s Terry Hope Romero’s new book, Vegan Eats World: 300 International Recipes for Savoring the Planet ($35.00, Da Capo Press) that really delivers the goods, offering recipes from a variety of cultures from Greek, Vietnamese, Spanish, and many other homelands. There are popular foods like lasagna, pad thai, wonton soup, and a whole range of flavorful delights. Humans were and are meat-eaters, but if one chooses to eschew such things, this book will surely please those who prefer vegetables and other food choices.

Getting Down to Business Books

New books about business arrive every week. Among the latest is The Trust Edge: How Top Leaders Gain Faster Results, Deeper Relationships, and a Stronger Bottom Line by David Horsager ($25.99, Free Press). As he notes, trust has become an elusive asset with the dawn of the new century and a recent Gallup Poll shows that America’s confidence in nearly every major societal institution is in decline. The Obama administration eroded trust in many ways and then blamed everyone and everything from banks to corporations as the source of the nation’s problems. Horsager is a business strategist who has learned how the world’s most successful people gain and keep the trust of their customers and colleagues. He shared that knowledge in his book. It is not only a necessity, but a competitive advantage. Going Social by Jeremy Goldman ($19.95, Amacom, softcover) examines how the social media, Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, and other platforms have provided a means to promote products and services, but as the author notes, it’s not something that can be mastered in six easy steps or ten immutable laws. It continues to evolve and expand. His book offers a range of advice that can be of value based on having managed e-commerce and social media engagement for major brands for nearly a decade. It is a very useful book.

Nowhere is the question and issue of trust more essential that the trust of citizens in any nation in the value of their currency. The Impending Monetary Revolution, The Dollar and Gold by Edmund Contoski ($19.95, American Liberty Publishers, Minneapolis, MN, softcover) provides the reader with an historic review of how money, currency, developed over the centuries, from trading furs and tools to today’s paper money. He also provides an easily comprehensible explanation of the ways governments debase their currency while, in past decades, spending too much—mostly on social programs—and relying on the national and international cartels of national banks or, in our case, the Federal Reserve (not part of the federal government, but granted the ability to simply print money without any actual value except trust. It is a very scary book. “As of June 2008, the notional amounts (face value) of financial derivatives, according to the Bank for International settlements, totaled $673 trillion—over 12 times the world’s nominal gross domestic product!” He warns that no nation has ever been able to spend its way to prosperity and, it must be said, that is exactly what the U.S. has tried to do with the failed “stimulus” program and other comparable efforts. If you want to understand what is happening in the U.S. and worldwide, this is the one book you absolutely need to read.

Michael R. Powers has authored Acts of God and Man: Ruminations on Risk and Insurance ($49.95, Columbia Business School) that looks at the private insurance industry and government’s role as both market regulator and potential “insurer of last resort.”  We saw this most recently in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina as billions in government funding flowed into the states that experienced devastation to varying degrees. The author begins by looking at how risks from natural disasters impact our lives, health, and possessions. From there he moves onto a discussion of statistical techniques necessary for analyzing the uncertainties of hurricane, earthquakes, floods, and other natural disasters. This is not a book for the general reader, but surely will be welcomed by those who must anticipate and grapple with such events.
 
 

No More Pointless Meetings by Martin Murphy (17.95, Amacom, softcover) takes a harsh, but accurate view of the way so many meetings fail to accomplish their goal of effective and productive collaboration. It doesn’t have to be that way says the author who presents an alternative he calls workflow management—how to get more done in less time and with much less grumbling for participants. Over the years I have seen any number of books on this topic and Murphy’s book offers a very comprehensive guide for managers to identify information gaps and use workflow sessions to create value for the entire organization. Murphy is the founder and president of Quantum Meetings, a management education consultancy whose clients includes some of biggest corporate names as well as nonprofits. If this is a problem within your organization, you should get a copy of this book.

An interesting book by a retired Army Colonel, Scott F. Paradis, is Success 101: How Life Works($24.95/$17.98, Cornerstone Achievements, hard and softcover editions). As an Army officer he spent the last three decades working national security issues in the Middle East, Europe, and various stations in the U.S. He was a National Security Fellow at Harvard’s Kennedy School and a Congressional Fellow with the U.S. Senate. In retirement, he has turned his attention to the ways anyone can achieve success and lays out a few simple, but important rules. “Once you know the rules you can play to win. It’s the way life works,” says Paradis and if you are seeking to learn how life works and how to achieve success in your own life, this book will open doors for you.

Books for Younger Readers

I am a great advocate for getting kids reading at an early age and I believe that there’s something special for a child to hold a book in their hands, read, turn the pages, and, in the case of the very young, enjoy the wonderful illustrations in books especially for them.
 

Here are some new books for kids age 4 through 7 years. In no particular order, there’s Steve Light’s Zephyr Takes Flight, a picture book about an airplane-loving little girl that teaches important lessons about imagination, friendship and family ($16.99, Candlewick). Zephyr wants to fly and she has a secret door in her room that leads to a place full of flying machines where she a little pig named Rumbus share all kinds of adventures. The author has written and illustrated many children’s books. Nightime Ninja by Barbara DaCosta, is mostly one of artwork by Ed Young, a Caldecott Medalist, ($16.99, Little Brown and Company) in which a pint-size ninja climbs and clambers around the house taking thevery young to hot springs, salt flats, oil ponds and other extreme
 environments. More fanciful adventure can be found in Waking Dragons by Jane Yolen and wonderfully illustrated by Derek Anderson ($16.99, Simon and Schuster Books for Young Readers) in which dragons do all the things that humans do when they wake up and get ready to go to school. It is a feast for the eye.

For those in the first years of school, The Poppy Lady by Barbara Elizabeth Walsh with extraordinary paintings by Layne Johnson ($16.95, Calkins Creek Books) tells the story of Moina Belle Michael who devoted more than 25 years to establish the red poppy as a universal tribute to U.S. war veterans in the wake of World War I. She was already in her 40s when the war began and the book is an excellent, short history of that horrific conflict. These days veterans in the weeks leading up to Memorial Day and Veterans Day distribute paper poppies to raise money for other veterans and their families. If there’s a veteran in your family, this is a good book with which to share their story of heroism and sacrifice. A very different book is Rangoli: An Indian Art Activity Book by Suma O’Farrell ($19.95, Mazaa LLC,www.mazaallc.com) and is a good antidote to today’s reliance on electric gadgets that often mesmerize both children and adults. Written for those age 9 through 12, it is filled with creative activities for boys and girls. Rangoli is a popular art form in India that is usually drawn on the ground with rice flour, colored powders, or chalk near the entrance to a home as a warm welcome to visitors. The book offers step-by-step examples and provides a variety of designs with easy-to-follow instructions.

For older young readers, ages 12 through 18, there’s Four Secrets by Margaret Willey ($$17.95 hardcover and $12.95 ebook, Carolrhoda Lab, a division of Lerner Publishing Group) that tells the story of Katy, Nate, and Renata, three teens who decide to rescue Renata from being bullied every day by a group of older boys and, in particular, the school’s biggest bully. Things go awry and they end up in juvenile detention and the question is whether they will keep their secrets and whether a social worker will discover the truth behind their silences. For any young person experiencing bullying or wanting to intercede for a friend, this will prove a very compelling story. A young adult novel, Refuge by Carole Rummage ($16.00, Sweetwater Books) tells the story of Laney whose parents and young brother have been killed in a car accident. She has accept the invitation of her aunt and uncle to move across the country and live with them in North Carolina next to a wildlife refuge. She meets and is attracted to a Gabe, a handsome artist with a mysterious disease and even more mysterious family. When she makes a shocking discover, she must face the dark truth about Gabe’s past.

Some time ago I reviewed Dr. Rick Niece’s book “Side-Yard Superhero” and gave it high marks. He’s back with The Band Plays On: Going Home for a Music Man’s Encore ($15.95, Five Star Publications, softcover). It is an autobiography of sorts as the author visits his childhood growing up in DeGraff, Ohio, population 900, and tells the story of the legacy of his father, Lewis Niece who for years was the director of the DeGraff High School’s marching band, teaching not just music, but lasting lessons of character. Rick D. Niece, PhD, has been a lifelong educator and, since 1997, he and his wife, Sheree have served as president and first lady of the University of the Ozarks in Clarksdale, Arkansas. It is a celebration of America’s heartland, of friendship, community, built around the story of an encore performance by “Lewie’s Alumni Band.” I heartily recommend it.

Novels, Novels, Novels

What would Christmas be without a good murder mystery? Kudos to Kensington Books for providing two entertaining holiday stories. Elvis and the Blue Christmas Corpse by Peggy Webb ($23.00, hardcover) continues her Southern Cousins series about the Valentine family plus Elvis the basset hound. When Uncle Charlie is pressed into service as Santa at a weekend charity event at Tupelo, Mississippi mall, the whole gang gets into the holiday mood, setting up a booth to raise money for a charity. A killer, however, has decided to ruin the holiday and the family must set a trap to capture him. Mistletoe, Merriment, and Murder by Sara Rosett ($7.99, softcover) continues the holiday theme with Ellie Avery—mother, military wife, professional organizer, and sleuth—to find a killer in her small Georgia town, using her white elephant swap gift as a murder weapon! This is the seventh book in a series about Ellie and a great read.

Most of the novels noted here are softcover, but Ashen Winter by Mike Mullin ($17.95, Tanglewood) is a hardcover and the second in the “Ashfall Trilogy” that began with Mullin’s novel about the eruption of the Yellowstone super volcano. The sequel has Alex and Darla staying with Alex’s relatives, trying to cope with the new reality of the primitive world where life and death battles for food and power between the remaining communities test the strength of the survivors. The volcano is the largest in the U.S. and could, indeed, erupt. When it does, it will wreak havoc and this novel reflects that. Another hardcover Lawyer-turned-novelist, James Sheehan, has penned a courtroom thriller in The Lawyer’s Lawyer ($22.99, Center Street) that is due out in January. He has two previous novels to his credit and this will add to his fan base. It is the story of Jack Tobin, a legend in Miami courtroom circles, who has regrets having freed a serial killer by ruining the prosecution’s weak case against him and is now desperate to hunt him down before he kills again. In the midst of his search, he finds himself falsely accused of murder. He must hire a lawyer to defend him and build a bullet-proof defense together. This is an outstanding example of this genre. For those who love a big, fat novel—nearly 700 pages—for those who like some heft to their books is The Day the World Trembled by Lee Levin ($16.95, Royal Heritage Press, softcover) whose previous novel “The Messiah of Septimania” was reviewed here. A historical novel, it tells the story of the most important few days when the Carthaginian Hannibal had invaded Italy and crushed every army the Romans had hurled against him despite being heavily outnumbered. His brother Hasdrubal joined him bringing the Gauls into the invasion with him. Thus, two mighty Punic armies were poised to destroy Rome. The fate of Western civilization hung in the balance and was decided by the outcome. Anyone who loves history will enjoy this excellent novel.

A number of softcover novels offer a variety of reading pleasure. Double Blind by Brandilyn Collins ($14.99, B&H Publishing) reflects the fact that some 20 million Americans suffer from depression and many hope for a magic cure. The novel is about an experimental brain chip. When 29-year-old Lisa Newberry, nearly immobilized by depression becomes a candidate for a medical trial for the chip, her illness is cured, but it is replaced with horrific visions that threaten to drive her mad. Millions of dollars are at stake and Lisa must make some major decisions and one wrong move could cost the lives of those who might elect to have the chip. Many Americans are facing foreclosure and Cadaver Blues by J.E. Fishman ($12.97. Stonegate Ink) tells the story of smoking hot Mindy Eider who walks into the office with a foreclosure notice aimed at her elderly Uncle Gunner, the cynical debt man, Phuoc Goldberg, just sees her as another month’s rent, but Mindy can’t find her uncle and suspicious characters lurk everywhere. A sleazy bank has designs on the old man’s little house. Phuoc gets sucked into playing detective and soon finds himself looking for cadavers instead of cash. The author has a number of novels to his credit and this one will add to his reputation as a story teller.
In the Keyhole Factory by William Gillespie ($16.95, Soft Skull Press) we find a poetic and experimental look at the world we know turned on its head. Set in an alternative present, it is filled with the interwoven destinies of disparate characters up to and beyond the world-as-we-know-it that begins at an academic poetry conference that links a poet-as-astronaut in deep space with a microbiologist, a sports-car-driving sociopath who murders utopian commune dwellers, and a lone pirate rate disc jockey who believes she is the last person left alive broadcasting her story to nobody. This involves science fiction and a dispensation of belief, but is likely to appeal to readers with its look at the near future. A novel based on today’s world of Islamic terrorism, The Ragnarok Conspiracyby Erec Stebbins ($15.95, Seventh Street Books) involves an American bin Laden, an FBI agent who now confront each other over acts of vengeance that bring the world to the brink of war. It is a classic thriller that spans the world in an ever-widening arc of intrigue, violence, and personal conflict. It is a real page-turner and, set against the real events occurring, will keep you reading to the last page. To end on a lighter note, there’s Rick Klass’s laugh-out-loud comedy, Excuse Me for Living ($14.95, Arcade Publishing, an imprint of Skyhorse Publishing) which is headed for a movie house near year. In this debut novel, Klass tells a story of Daniel Topler who is grabbed from a suicide attempt based on his drug addiction woes and put in the care of an elderly psychiatrist to avoid a jail term. He falls for the psychiatrist’s daughter and must come to terms with his wasted life and restore his life to sanity. This may sound a bit dark—and it is—but it is told with a deft feel for romantic comedy.

That’s it for November! We are nearing the end of another year of great fiction and non-fiction is behind us and we will discover lots of great reading in 2013. Come back in December and remember to tell your book-loving friends, family and co-workers about Bookviews.com for news of the many books that do not leap to the bestseller lists, but provide hours of entertaining and knowledge.

© Alan Caruba, 2012

Bookviews - December 2012

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By Alan Caruba
 
Editor’s Note: Due to Hurricane Sandy, the normal flow of books into our office was significantly diminished in November.
My Picks of the Month
There is no more serious threat to Western civilization than the Islamic revolution that is transforming many nations in the Middle East and Africa for the worse. The “Arab Spring” has turned out to be a challenge in many ways, not the least of which were the attacks on Israel last month; a continuation of sixty-plus years of wars on that bastion of the West, a holy land to both Jews and Christians. Sharia versus Freedom: The Legacy of Islamic Totalitarianism by Andrew G. Bostom ($32.00 Prometheus Books) expands on Bostom’s two groundbreaking compendia, The Legacy of Jihad and theLegacy of Islamic Antisemitism. It is a collection of his recent essays on Sharia—Islamic law—in which he defines its religious principles and the consequences of its application across space and time, focusing on contemporary illustrations. Americans became aware of this with 9/11 when our homeland was attacked, but may not be aware of the attacks on Christians in the Middle East, Africa, and anywhere Muslims are the dominant population. Sharia is totally incompatible with modern, Western-driven concepts, particularly human rights.
Turning to one of the most serious problems facing the nation; the potential for financial collapse, there’s one state that will get there before the others and that’s California. No one knows better how bizarre the politics, governance, and control exerted by civil service unions there than Laer Pearce. He spells it out in Crazifornia: Tales from the Tarnished State—How California is Destroying Itself and Why It Matters to America ($15.95, available from Amazon.com, softcover) When the agency responsible for California’s roads spends $4 million on new cars and trucks, then parks them, unused, for two years, that’s Crazifornia.Residents and businesses are literally fleeing the state these days and Pearce tells you why. The book has a surprising entertaining quality to it as he recounts what amounts to horror stories of a state that has taken environmentalism to a point where it is increasingly impossible to live there. In the most recent election, Californians actually voted for higher taxes.
Greg Gutfeld is one of Fox News’ stars with his own “Red Eye” show and as a member of “The Five.” He brings humor to otherwise serious topics, but it is clear that he has a very sharp mind as he contemplates our present times. He has written The Joy of Hate: How to Triumph Over Whiners in the Age of Phony Outrage ($26.00, Crown Forum). He has a real problem with the kind of intolerance seen in the double standard when fun can be made of Christians, but nothing bad can be spoken of Muslims. He’s no fan of those in the media who consider themselves open-minded, but have no problem denigrating anyone who disagrees with them. He compares the way the Tea Party is labeled racists and wackoes, but Occupy Wall Street protesters got romanticized. This is a very interesting and provocative book about the times in which we live and how out-of-sync much of the media and its reporting is with the reality on the ground and in our homes. I have one caveat and that is Gutfeld’s constant inclusion of asides and comments that draw away from the worthiness of what he has to say.
Another Fox News personality, former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee also has a new book out. Dear Chandler, Dear Scarlett: A Grandfather’s Thoughts on Faith, Family, and the Things That Matter Most ($24.95, Sentinel).The book began as a series of letters Huckabee began to write after the birth of his first grandson, Chandler, and continued with the birth of baby Scarlett one year later. The result is an inspirational book that addresses the timeless topics of faith, love, family, overcoming adversity, and staying true to your values in the face of failure and temptation. There’s a lot of good advice between its covers and, if you are a fan of his show, this is surely a book you will want to put under the Christmas tree for yourself or to send a friend.
I have been a fan of Burt Prelutsky for a long time. He was a top comedy writer in the heyday of television sitcoms, has been a movie critic, and like myself became a popular blogger. A Californian, Burt is no fan of the state’s and the nation’s liberal policies. He is a true conservative and his latest book is Sixty Seven Conservatives You Should Meet Before You Die ($24.99, available at Amazon.com or you can go to his website and order it directly from there. A softcover) It is a wonderful collection of questions and answers from entertainers, politicians, and others that run the gamut from former UN Ambassador John Bolton, a frequent contributor on Fox News, to Pat Boone. Along the way one can read the candid responses of Charles Krauthammer, Newt Gingrich, Bernard Goldberg, and even some who have passed from this world like Tony Blankley and Andrew Breitbart. And, oh yes, ME! Being in the company of these folks was earned by virtue of my own daily blog that recently passed the milestone of 2.2 million page views. Do I recommend this book? You bet! It is just so much fun to read. By asking essentially the same questions of each one, some commonalities emerge between them, even though each has achieved much as individuals. It is great fun to read their responses, open, honest, and often surprising.
An interesting book is The Real Story of Risk: Adventures in a Hazardous World by Glenn Croston ($19.00, Prometheus Books) which looks at the way we live in a world of risk and the way we are biologically and mentally wired to deal with risk, but still frequently are either blind to it or over-react to statistically minor risks. Croston is a biologist who reminds us that we are all the culmination of a long line of survivors who had to deal with life-and-death threats over the millennia from wild animals, starvation, disease, but who now life in a world of largely artificial or totally dubious threats such as the debunked global warming theory, as well as every manner of food we are told not to eat, or the real threats such as drug or alcohol abuse. He offers a wealth of information about health, sex, money, safety, food, and –yes—the environment. A good companion book to read is Loren Collins’ Bullspotting: Finding Facts in the Age of Misinformation ($19.00, Prometheus Books) and, as someone who founded The National Anxiety Center in 1990 as a clearinghouse for information about the many “scare campaigns” designed to influence public opinion and policy, I found it encouraging to read a book about will help the reader apply critical thinking to identify the common features and trends of misinformation campaigns. I spend a lot of time debunking pseudoscience on my blog and sorting out actual history from the more bogus versions. If you want to learn how and where to find the facts, this book will provide the compass. I highly recommend it.
Great Christmas Gift Books
Books make great gifts and, if they are in a slipcase and produced with the highest values of craftsmanship, they become heirlooms that are passed on to generations. This is the case of two books from the Folio Society, Elizabeth David’s Christmas ($54.95)and Andrew Lang’s The Olive Fairy Book ($84.95). A visit to the publisher’s website offers many comparable books, many of which are classics. Ms. David’s book is a cookbook filled with holiday dishes and ideal for anyone who loves to be in the kitchen to create memorable meals. The latter is by a Scots poet, novelist, and literary critic (1844-1912), part of a series, twelve collections of fairy tales that have been delighting generations, old and young, since they were first published. These and other Folio Society books represent some of the finest quality gift books you can own or give.

As a longtime student of history and a former photojournalist, I can heartily recommend 150 Years of Photojournalism as edited and written by Nick Yapp and Amanda Hopkinson ($39.95, H.F. Ullmann), the latest rendition of a collection of Getty images that represents one of the most important photo collections in the world. It is an extraordinary collection of black-and-white and color photographs in a single volume of just under 800 pages. It is a look at both mundane daily life over the many decades as well as its grandest events and personalities that include political, cultural, and scientific aspects of man’s journey to present times that provide a glimpse of life from the 1850s to present times with simultaneous text in English, French and German. These are photos that capture all the drama of the last, turbulent century, reminding us that history was written with the lives of real people. As a gift for oneself or for someone who shares a fascination with the past, this book will prove a worthy investment.
If you or someone you know is a fan of Mad magazine, Mad’s Greatest Artists: Mort Drucker—Five Decades of His Finest Works ($30.00, Running Press) features the greatest hits of his illustrious career, hand-picked by the artist, with page after page of movie parodies, TV spoofs, and satirical jabs at eight presidents. It has a forward by actor Michael J. Fox, essays by some of Hollywood’s greatest directors (his favorite targets) including George Lucas, Steven Spielberg, and others. Topping it off is a removable vintage poster, available only in the book. Another book, Mad Magazine’s 60th Anniversary ($34.95, Time Home Entertainment) went on sale in October. Like Mort’s book, it is a coffee table size format and has 256-pages have hilarity from its writers, cartoonists, and illustrators.
The Best Food Writing 2012 ($16.00, Lifelong Books, softcover), edited by Holly Hughes, represents the 13thedition of this successful series and is filled with wonderful stories and essays that explore our fascinating with the culinary arts. My late Mother taught haute cuisine for over three decades and dinners at our home still linger in my memory. There is, in addition, a memoir, Licking the Spoon: A Memoir of Food, by Candace Walsh ($16.00, Seal Press, softcover), Through the lens of food, she recounts her life and it was not an easy one, married, mother of two, divorced, and remarriage in a same-sex relationship. Her ancestors came from Greece, Ireland, and Cuba. They too encountered difficulties, but throughout it all were the wonderful meals. There are some recipes at the end of her story, but it is her story that makes the book worth reading.
The Amazing Kreskin and I have been exchanging Christmas cards for a long time though we have never met. He wrote to me at one point to ask my views on such subject and has stayed in touch ever since. He has a new book out, Conversations with Kreskin ($24.95, Team Kreskin Publishing) was written with Michael McCarty and has a special foreword by Roger Ailes, the Chairman of Fox News and Fox Television stations. Ailes had met Kreskin in the mid-1960s and was astonished at his mind-reading abilities, his often uncanny predictions, and his skill as an illusionist. The book includes an eight-page comic strip and lots of photos of his famous friends. After six decades in show business, Kreskin tells delightful stories of working with Betty Davis, the late Phyllis Diller, Johnny Carson, Regis Philbin and many others including Bob Hope and Milton Berle. The book reads like a trip down memory lane and, for those of a certain age—mine—it is a great trip, worth taking.
Know someone with a beloved cat? Peter Trachtenberg is a talented writer who tackles subjects in ways that often make readers say “That’s me” or “That’s my friend.” In Another Insane Devotion: On the Love of Cats and Persons($24.00, Da Capo Press) he has written a memoir in which he asks the reader to imagine that the two great loves of your life are both creatures who you fervently aim to please but you continuously disappoint. One is your temperamental cat and the other is your unpredictably moody wife. Trachtenberg tells of his marriage that is falling apart as he leaves to take a teaching position in North Carolina and she has departed for residency in Italy. The other is Biscuit, his mercurial, but beloved cat who has disappeared. It is a contemplation in which he tries to understand two different kinds of love and what they can teach us about sentiment, loyalty, privacy, and the reasons with try to make it work.
What better gift is there than happiness? You have to have it in order to share it and Jenn Flaa’s The Happiness Handbook ($14.99, Bush Street Press, softcover, available on Kindle) is an entertaining guide providing key steps readers can learn to identify what makes one happy. The author is a satellite engineer who began her career working for NASA and then started a new of businesses, earning clients like Microsoft, Dell and eBay. She wasn’t always happy. She transformed herself from a chubby, miserable divorcee, owner of a struggling high tech company, and even as a singer. She is now a successful author, entrepreneur, and rocker chick who is the CEO of two thriving companies. You can fulfill your dreams, too. You can be happy and a good place to start is her book!
A Historical Grab Bag
Two books about Louisa May Alcott are both published by Free Press. Alcott was one of the most successful and bestselling authors of her day, gaining everlasting fame with Little Woman, a mainstay of American literature since its release nearly 150 years ago. Biographers have consistently attributed her success to her father, Bronson Alcott, but Eve LaPlante, a grandniece and cousin of Abigail and Louisa—an award winning biographer in her own right—explodes this and other myths in Marmee & Louisa: The Untold Story of Louisa May Alcott and her Mother ($26.00). A companion book edited by LaPlante, My Heart is Boundless: Writings of Abigail May Alcott, Louisa’s Mother ($15.00, softcover) is also worth reading. As LaPlante reveals, drawing on a treasure trove of letters found in the attic and diaries in an archive, Abigail, an independent thinker, feminist and social reformer, who pushed Louisa to write and who inspired many of her most successful stories, while giving her the courage to pursue her unconventional path in life. Here is a look at what it meant to be a woman in 19th century America and its story will resonate with modern readers.
World War II continues to generate books about that tremendous struggle against the forces of evil and William F. Meller has written Bloody Roads to Germany ($25.95, Berkley), true and personal account of a man in combat who must transform himself from an ordinary GI into an audacious leader who showed, by example, how to survive a war. Anyone who loves military history will find this inspiring as he and his comrades in arms slog through the Huertgen Forest and confront the Battle of the Bulge. The images he paints remain as starkly ruthless as they were in 1944 when, in November of that year, a 20-year-old sergeant found himself promoted to squad leader by attrition since very single office in the rifle companies had been killed or wounded. This is war, raw, naked, and calling on him and others in the 28th Infantry Division to fight and defeat hardened Wehrmacht soldiers.
A Thousand Lives: The Untold Story of Jonestown by Julia Scheeres ($15.00, Free Press, softcover) revisits the horrifying day, November 18, 1978, when the followers of Jim Jones were told to “drink the Kool-Aid” laced with poison. The story of the Jonestown mass suicide is still etched in history and Scheeres reveals that it was planned by Jones and his lieutenants for several years before it happened. They were trapped and cut off from the outside world and, while Jones has been the subject of several books, Scheeres tells the stories of his victims and his survivors. It is a true horror story of what happened to those written off as crazed cultists and baby killers. In telling their stories her book restores their humanity as individuals. Based on FBI files only recently released the book contains material never before made public.
Getting Down to Business Books
As we try to make plans for the year ahead, there are a number of books with excellent advice on how to succeed in business. I liked The Leader’s Pocket Guide: 101 Indispensable Tools, Tips, and Techniques for Any Situation ($19.95, Amacom) by John Baldoni. A leadership expert and executive coach, he has compressed into a short, readable book, the kind of knowledge you could spend years acquiring in terms of practical and tactical advice. From developing your own skills to dealing with colleagues, to understanding the dynamics of an organization, this one is a keeper.
A famed teacher of leadership, time management, and other elements of business and life, Stephen R. Covey passed away in July 2012. Named one of Time magazine’s 25 most influential Americans, he sold over 25 million books in 38 languages and is best known for The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People. Now you can read The Wisdom and Teachings of Stephen R. Covey ($18.00, Free Press), a collection of his most memorable and important teachings, drawn from his bestselling books. He had a gift for motivating people to act in logical ways in order to transform their problems and challenges. You will discover your own potential in this short compendium.
Reflections of a Business Nomad: Stories and Poems from the Road by Pascal Dennis ($14.95, Skopelos Press, softcover) is a very different book by a businessman-philosopher who makes his living on the road “teaching the Toyota Way” which even he calls an odd life, but one he enjoys. It is a life that has taken him through countless airports, restaurants, and hotel bars. He kept a journal of his writings and this book is a selection of those which, while aimed at sharing his views on leadership and ethics, is an entertaining literary voyage. He has a unique, entertaining, and provocative way of looking at life.
Novels, Novels, Novels
In December you can always find new works of fiction around the Christmas theme and Scott Abbott and Amy Maude Swinton have collaborated to write The Ghost of Christmas Present ($16.99, Howard Books, division of Simon and Schuster, softcover). It is the story of Patrick Guthrie, a widowed public school teacher who learns that his insurance will only pay half of the cost for a procedure to fix his ten-year-old son’s heart. He tries moonlighting at a pizza place to earn the rest, but one night after a rehearsal of ‘The Merchant of Venice”, dressed as the ragged, bearded Shylock, he sits down at a bus stop with a cup of coffee and people begin to drop coins into his cup, assuming he is a begger. If he continues he may succeed in saving his son’s life. It is a compelling story.
A number of softcover novels are worth considering. Jerri Gibson McCloud debuts with The Liberators ($15.95, Hourglass Publishers), a WWII story about US Air Force Capt. Andrew Walters who enters the war with the human baggage everyone carries with them. It becomes a leader, despite his personal insecurities, and falls in love with a spirited Red Cross nurse who, in turn, rescues an orphaned toddler and becomes too attached, creating multiple problems with her commanding officer. This is a heartwarming story of the challenges, fears, and triumphs of ordinary people in extraordinary times.
A novel of choices is The Spirit of the Place by Samuel Shem ($16.00, Berkley, softcover) in which, following his mother’s death, Dr. Orville Rose learns that his mother has willed him a Victorian house with one catch. He must live in it for one year and thirteen days. As he struggles with his decision to return to his life in Italy or to stay in the home, he reconnects with family, unites with former friends, and comes to terms with old rivals and bitter memories. In the process, he discovers his own history, as well as his mother’s, and finally what it means to be a healer and to be healed. The author won the National Best Book Award in 2008 for his previous novel, The House of God, and is a skilled story-teller in addition to being a doctor, playwright, and activist.
For those who love mysteries, there’s Skulduggery by Carolyn Hart ($13.95, Seventh Street Books, an imprint of Prometheus Books). In Beijing, 1941, the ancient bones of the famed ‘Peking Man’ are placed in two wooden crates for shipment to the U.S. to save them from the invading Japanese Army. The bones are never seen again. Fast forward to New York in the 1970s when a mysterious woman offers to sell the bones to an unknown man at the top of the Empire State, but when someone takes a photo, he disappears. Then, in the 1980s, noted anthropologist Ellen Christie is contact is contacted by someone who says he has evidence of the bones, but he flees with the evidence from a couple of thugs who are also after the treasure. Ellen must navigate this situation and you get to go along. Also from Seventh Street Books is Mike Resnick’s Dog in the Manger ($13.95) in which a down-on-his-luck private eye, Eli Paxton, gets an assignment to pay his rent, find the number one Weimaraner, a prize-winning Westminster winner. The job turns out to be anything but a routine case. People start dying in mysterious ways, a cargo plane goes missing, and someone is taking shots at him. Paxton is bewildered. Even a top show dog isn’t worth all that trouble and he needs to find it to save his own skin. This is a fast-paced, exciting story.
All families represent a novel of some kind and The Brothers by Allen D. Anderson ($17.95, Langdon Street Press) is a story of Peter and Andrew Amonovitch see their own broken childhoods destroyed when they lose their mother and the hand of their alcoholic father, Theodore, whose mind was damaged by his service in WWII. They must make some sense of this tragedy and they both must go off to war in Korea and face its rigors. Alternately heartbreaking and uplifting, it is an account of resilience in the face of tragedy, the strength and fragility of families, and how love can coexist with hate. Also with strong family themes is Julie Lessman’s A Love Surrendered ($14.99, Revell) filled with romance, intense family drama, and emotional twists and turns. This is the third novel in her “Winds of Change” series that tells of Annie Kennedy, orphaned in Iowa, who moves to Boston to stay with her spinster aunt. She falls hard for a man who broke an engagement with her sister. This is an exploration of the heart by an author who was one of 2010’s Booklist Top Ten Inspirational Fiction winners. When you read her latest novel, you will know why.
The Bible has served as the basis for many novels and New York Times best-selling novelist Tosca Lee tackles one of the most challenging stories when she takes the reader back 2,000 years and examines why Judas betrayed Jesus in Iscariot($22.99, Howard Books, a division of Simon and Schuster). She raises some pertinent questions as she lays bare the soul of a troubled man whose name has become synonymous with “traitor.” Anyone with a love of the great stories of the Bible will find this a challenging story.
That’s it for December and 2012. No doubt 2013 has many new fiction and non-fiction books to entertain and enlighten readers. Bookviews will do its best to select the best of them. Happy New Year!

Bookviews - January 2013

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By Alan Caruba
 

My Picks of the Month


There are so many pressing issues facing Americans these days that we are fortunate that 2013 begins with a number of books that address and clarify them.


The first of five volumes, America: The Grand Illusion—Book I, Orphans of the Storm by Jeffrey Bennett represents a herculean task he set for himself to bring together the defining documents that set in motion the creation of America, going back to the Magna Charta in 1215 and moving forward through 1620 as men of extraordinary courage and vision rebelled against the world of their time, filled with monarchies and restraints on freedoms, and sought to build a better world in a place called America from a wilderness known only to the native tribes that inhabited it. Their achievement is stunning, even to this day. Book I has some familiar documents (that we often have heard of but not read) but there is much that further illuminates them. For example, as Bennett notes “September 25, 1789 – During the debates on the adoption of the Constitution, its opponents repeatedly charged that the Constitution as draft would open the way to tyranny by the central government. Fresh in their minds was the memory of the British violation of civil rights before and during the Revolution. They demanded a ‘bill of rights’ that would spell out the immunities of individual citizens.” And it was a good thing they did! This is a book whose individual elements need to be read as such but which ends up weaving a story of America’s beginnings that seem to have come together as inevitable. It was never inevitable and it is the result of some brilliant minds and brave souls. The book can be purchased from www.thebookpatch.com for $22.95 via a credit card and from the publisher, Kettle Moraine, Ltd., PO Box 579, Litchfield Park, Arizona 85340, for $29.95 by check (includes postage and handling). Anyone who loves America will find this book to be an exciting, inspiring adventure.

 
Since the late 1980s, Americans and others around the world have been told that the Earth is warming and that “greenhouse gas” emissions, chiefly carbon dioxide, must be reduced to avoid a terrible fate. The fact is, however, that the Earth is has been in one of its periodic cycles for the past sixteen years and it is a cooling, not warming, one. Global warming will go down in the history books as one of the greatest, orchestrated hoaxes to have ever been perpetrated and you can learn the facts in E. Kirsten Peters’ The Whole Story of Climate: What Science Reveals About the Nature of Endless Change ($26.00, Prometheus Books). Dr. Peters is a geologist and geology has a lot to say about the epochs through which the Earth has passed for the 4.5 billion years of its existence. For two hundred years, geologists have been studying the history of the Earth’s dramatic and repeated revolutions, as revealed in the evidence of rocks and landscapes. It is a fallacy to believe that the Earth’s climate has been essentially stable, but it is understandable that people believe this since the human race thrived in the current Holocene epoch of the last 11,500 years that followed the last major ice age. It was not greenhouse gases that brought that ice age to an end. It was, as always, the cycles of the Sun, increasing and decreasing the warming of the planet. Dr. Peters’ book is the most readable and accessible descriptions of the discoveries that, in combination with those of meteorologists, have provided an understanding of those cycles. Dr. Peters says “Because there’s no way to predict complex systems with many feedback influences we don’t understand, there is simply no way to know with certainty what global climate change will be like in twenty-five, fifty, or seventy-five years.” What we do know is that the interval between ice ages averages 11,500 years and the planet is at the end of its current interglacial period.

 
The month of December was taken up in the Congressional struggle to avoid going over “the fiscal cliff”, a combination of higher tax rates on everyone who has a job or is self-employed and the mandated spending cuts of the “sequestration” that Congress voted for after being unable to come to any agreement on how to deal with an economy that requires the government to borrow $4.8 billion every day! The theme the President has been talking about is “fairness” and his belief that taxing the “rich”, those earning $250,000, to solve the need for more revenue. In truth, the few billion that might be raised would keep the government going for about a week or so. If you want to learn the truth, however, you can and should read Stephen Moore’s new book, Who’s the Fairest of Them All? The Truth About Opportunity, Taxes, and Wealth in America ($21.40, Encounter Books). It is blessedly short, but filled with the facts about our present economic mess and why raising taxes on everyone is the well-known worst way to get out of a recession. Moore is a member of the editorial board of The Wall Street Journal and a frequent contributor on CNBC-TV and Fox News. He has a gift for making complex economic issues easy to understand. Putting more and more people on government programs like food stamps or eliminating the requirement that those on welfare seek work has resulted in a growing number of the poor. In a nation where 47% of its citizens pay no taxes at all, the need to reform the tax code and repair “entitlement” programs like Social Security and Medicare is the only way to get the nation out of the deeper and deeper debt which has been increased $6 trillion just during the President’s first term.

 
Nature Wars: The Incredible Story of How Wildlife Comebacks Turned Backyards into Battlegrounds by Jim Sterba ($26.00, Crown Publishers) will astonish most readers with its abundant facts about the reforestation of a stretch of land between Maine and Virginia, as well as other parts of the nation, a process that has been taking place since the end of the nineteenth century and throughout the twentieth. It is about a part of the nation’s history that is widely misunderstood as early Americans pushed west beyond the Appalachians both the early history of deforestation was reversed by nature. As suburbs developed where Americans could escape cities, yet take a short commute to their jobs, nature ensured the growth of wildlife creatures such as deer, bears, coyotes and turkeys, among many others literally adapted to life and thrived! It examines the way Americans now live isolated from nature in homes that provide a multitude of ways to enjoy the forest in which they live and how the increase in wildlife has created problems for the millions who no longer raise livestock or grow their own crops for food.

I recommend that everyone read this intriguing look at modern life.

 
A new year means a new edition of The World Almanac® and Book of Facts and it is now available ($12.99, The World Almanac®, softcover). I know that most folks go to Google to get facts, but the Almanac offers the value of bringing the most important facts together between its covers. In addition, it chronicles 2012’s most notable stories, people and places. (It is available as an ebook as well.) The 2012 edition boasts brand-new features that include the 2012 Election Results, as well as its annual sections like “Year in Pictures”, “Offbeat News Stories”, and “Time Capsule” that recount the last year. There are sections on last year’s sports including the 2012 Olympic Games. All the key facts are literally at your fingertips from the world at a glance to health and vital statistics, the economy and employment, et cetera! For students or anyone else, it is a terrific resource. Another fact-filled book is John Withington’s Disaster! A History of Earthquakes, Floods, Plagues, and Other Catastrophes ($14.95, Skyhorse Publishing, softcover). No question that Hurricane Sandy was a super-storm and did a lot of damage, but this book demonstrates that all manner of horrible weather-related and other events have filled history and, in the process, blighted and snuffed out the lives of millions of people. This is a useful book to read in order to put current events in context.


The reelection of America’s first black President was a historic event in 2012, but the history of blacks in America is filled with such events and Black Firsts: 4,000 Ground-Breaking and Pioneering Events by Dr. Jessie Carney Smith ($24.95, Visible Ink, softcover) is testimony to their achievements. Now in its third edition, it is 800+ pages that celebrate African-Americans from all aspects of the nation’s society, including the arts, entertainment, business, civil rights, education, government, invention, journalism, religion, science, sports, music and more. The book itself is an achievement and is filled with surprises such as the black explorer who joined the famed Lewis and Clark expedition. As taught in our schools, there is little emphasis on the facts presented in this book. For young black students, it is a treasure trove of information about black history and surely an inspiration.

 
The Noisiest Book Review in the Known World—The Best of Ralph: The Review of Arts, Literature, Philosophy and the Humanities ($50.00, Mho & Mho Works, Box 16719, San Diego, CA 92176, a boxed set of two volumes) drawn from the Fessenden Review, famed for its saucy take on books and the publishing industry that featured reviews by media writers at the Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle, Library Journal, and on National Public Radio among others. The Fessenden Review had too many creditors to survive, but it made a return online and to date more than 230 issues have been posted, receiving between 10,000 and 20,000 hits a day. For the lover of books, philosophy and the humanities, this two-volume set will be a treasure that will offer countless hours of enjoyment.


I am a fan of books that provide entertainment and information that is often called trivia. One such book is How Long Can a Fly Fly? 175 Answers to Possible and Impossible Questions about Animals by Lars-Ake Janzon ($12.95, Skyhorse Publishing, softcover). The author is the on-call biologist at the Swedish Museum of Natural History and, over the past decade, he has researched the fun facts in the book in response to the questions he has received. The answers involve more than animals to include insects as well.  If you ever wondered if fish can swim backwards or whether a mosquito hit by a rain drop will die, this book will provide the answer along with a lot of other interesting and entertaining information. If, by chance, you have questions about chickens other than how to prepare one for dinner, then Chickens: Their Natural and Unnatural Histories by Janet Lembke ($24.95, Skyhorse Publishing) is the book you have been waiting for. The award-winning author of nineteen books, she knows how to pull together a lot of information and, it turns out, chickens have quite a history. Lembke surveys chickens in ancient Greece, the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, the 19thcentury and modern times. It is, in many ways, an amazing story.

If you have trouble figuring out what people are actually telling you, then I recommend you pick up a copy of The Secrets of Body Language: An Illustrated Guide to Knowing What People Are Really Thinking and Feeling by Phillippe Turchet ($14.95, Skyhorse Publishing, softcover). In poker body language is called “tells” by which one player can deduce what kind of hand another has, but in ordinary life, we try to perceive what others are thinking by picking up whatever clues they body language can suggest. Since we do this ourselves, the books tells you what kind of negative, positive, neutral or mixed messages we are sending those around us. Filled with illustrations, you can learn how to read visible and hidden emotions, what the hands have to say and gestures that convey a message. The author has spent the last twenty years developing these insights and they can improve your own body language as well as interpret other’s.

Getting Down to Business Books

There are only a few new books on business topics as the year begins. What Management Is: How It Works and Why it’s Everyone’s Business by Joan Magretta ($26.00, Free Press) is an excellent guide that will help any reader understand what it takes to make an organization perform. Published initially in 2002, it has been reissued with a new preface by its author. It presents the basic principles of management simply, explains why you need a business model and a strategy, and why it is impossible to manage without the right performance measures. It is a beginner’s guide, and a very good one. The author is a former editor at the Harvard Business Review and has boiled all that she has learned over the years into a simple, clear volume, explaining both the logic of successful organizations and how that logic is applied in practice.

In these days when the Internet and social media have transformed out to market goods and services, companies are learning how they can grow bigger and faster by “reversing their business plan.” Start at the End by Dave Kavinsky ($22.95, Wiley), the cofounder of GrowThink, a consultancy that helps entrepreneurs and business owners identify and pursue new opportunities, has written a book for anyone that wants to sell millions of your product, expanding operations to a new location, and generate more profits, His book offers a unique approach and action steps to redevelop your business plan and readers will learn how to re-create your long-term vision and then make continuous progress in achieving that vision while continuing to hit your short-term goals. His book offers inspiring stories of entrepreneurs who have achieved success while providing easy-to-follow exercises and next steps.

Many people these days are turning to writing to generate income and to satisfy the itch to write a non-fiction book or novel. The publishing industry is changing rapidly these days, from self-publishing opportunities to major publishers purchasing self-publishing firms as a pipeline to acquiring books they can turn into bestsellers. Writers, however, even if they have been professionals for many years, are learning there are all manner of new rules to the game, particularly if one is seeking to secure a mainstream publisher. Jennifer Lyons is well respected as a literary agent with her own international agency. She has written The Business of Writing: Professional Advice on Proposals, Publishers, Contracts, and More for the Aspiring Writer ($19.95, Skyhorse Publishing). For anyone with aspirations to be published, I would heartily recommend reading this book and absorbing its advice. The book is enhanced by personal essays and interviews from a wide range of publishing experts, published authors, an ebooks editor, translators, a magazine editor, agents, an expert on self-publishing, and many others who will provide the kind of insider knowledge and insight that could take years to learn. A good companion book for beginning writers is by Stuart Horwitz. Blueprint Your Bestseller, ($16.00, Penguin Perigee, softcover) lays out his method to take a text from first drafts to a successful, published book. Asserting that every book can be broken down into individual scenes, the author describes how to identify each one, put them in order, and thus be prepared to construct a finished book. The first to say it is not easy Horwitz has a proven track record for helping writers.

War as a Human Enterprise

The Civil War was the bloodiest conflict the nation engaged into until World Wars One and Two. Some 700,000 men died with the South losing far more than the North. It kept the Union together, but at a terrible price and it is an interesting aspect of it that it is reenacted to this day. Battlefields of Honor: American Civil War Reenactors ($34.95, Merrell, London and New York) features the photographs of Mark Elson and a text by Jeannine Stein with a foreword by James Lighthizer, president of the Civil War Trust. The Civil War ended in 1865 just 72 years before I was born, so in terms of a generation or so, it is not ancient history, but one of the most interesting aspects of it are the groups that gather on its battlefields to reenact it, devoting themselves to learning its history down to the smallest details of uniforms and weapons. From Pennsylvania to Georgia and beyond, these living historians keep this history alive and this book is the most extraordinary collection of photos of real people representing those who fought or witness the great battles of that conflict. This book will appeal to anyone with an interest in that conflict and a lesson about it that is quite unlike traditional books of history, bringing its participants to life again.

World War Two was captured by the photos of John (Jock) Candler, MD, MPH, who takes the reader on an emotional journal behind the front lines. As a conscientious objector, Cobb volunteered as an American Field Service ambulance driver, serving from 1942 to 1944, saving lives when and where he could. Fragments of Peace in a World at War ($19.95, animist Press) is the story in text and 107 b/w photos of Cobb’s experiences, beginning with his training in Egypt, Lebanon, and Syria where he shows what life was like among the Arabs and then onto the North Africa desert war from Egypt to Tunisia from March to October 1943 and then onto the Italian campaign. The book and its photos focus on the lives of the men fighting it and the civilians who had endure and survive it. It is quite extraordinary in its own way and a reminder not just of that increasingly distant time but how contemporary it all seems today.

Perhaps the greatest difference today is the creation of Special Forces, the Green Berets, who came about during the Kennedy administration. In The Guerrilla Factory: The Making of Special Forces Officers, the Green Berets ($26.00, Free Press), Tony Schwalm takes the reader inside the grueling training regimen endured by every Army officer who aspires to become a leader in the Special Forces and explores the important, stand-apart role these highly specialized forces play in today’s often unconventional wars. The author is a retired lieutenant colonel with the Special Forces and a veteran of multiple combat deployments around the world. As Douglas Waller, an author of several books on military affairs, says, “The Guerrilla Factor isn’t just an account of how Green Berets are made. It’s a highly personal, compellingly written and thought-provoking story of one man’s journal from conventional soldier to unconventional warrior.” To understand this aspect of today’s wars, this book is a major contribution and, I might add, a real page-turner.

Memoirs, Biographies, Real People

I have always had a fondness for biographies, autobiographies, and memoirs because they deal with the lives of real people. A recent biography of John Quincy Adams, recommended here, was a lesson in the early history of the new republic that was fascinating.

Biographies are often testimonies to the way a single man can change the course of history and Young Thurgood: The Making of a Supreme Court Justice by Larry S. Gibson ($28.00, Prometheus Books) is an excellent example of that because Marshall transformed the nation’s legal landscape by challenging segregation, ending this backlash against the laws that freed the slaves, but left them second-class citizens for decades, indeed, for nearly a century after the end of the Civil War. Marshall won twenty-nine of thirty-three cases before the Supreme Court, was a federal appeals court judge, served as the U.S. solicitor general, and, for twenty-four years, sat on the Supreme Court. His biographer shows him to be a fascinating man of contrasts who fought for racial justice without becoming a racist. This is the only biography of Marshall to have been endorsed by his immediate family and anyone interested in law, civil rights, and American history will find much here to enjoy and celebrate. A bit further back in U.S. history, Prometheus Books offers Dear Mr. Longfellow: Letters To and From the Children’s Poet by Sydelle Pearl ($18.00, softcover) One of the most famed American poets of the late 19thcentury and his name is now enshrined among the great ones the nation produced. In his time he was known as the children’s poet because school children memorized his poems and they wrote hundreds of letters to him from all over the nation. The life of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow is charmingly told by drawing on the letters he received and those he wrote in response. His most famous poem was “The Village Blacksmith” with its opening line, “Under the spreading chestnut tree, the village smithy stands.” Here’s an opportunity to visit a distant, less complex time in the history of our nation.

Some humans demonstrate an extraordinary capacity to survive the worst that life can hand them and Ping Fu, the author of Bend, Not Break: A Life in Two Worlds, ($26.95, Penguin Portfolio) is testimony to that. It begins when eight-year-old Ping is living a privileged life in Shanghai, China, with her intellectual father and loving mother. All that ended with the Cultural Revolution let loose by Mao Tse Sung, the communist dictator. Her family was deemed an enemy of the state and forcibly split as Ping was placed in a camp with her four-year-old sister. She persisted despite horrid conditions and was briefly detained by authorities again after her college thesis on infanticide was objected to. She persevered during the Revolution that affected 36 million Chinese and in which three million were killed or maimed. Her salvation came with exile and, in 1984, she arrived in the United States with just $80 in her pocket. Despite that, she would graduate in 1988 with a degree in computer science from the University of California, San Diego, working with a team that created NCSA Mosaic, later known as the Netscape Web browser. She is the founder and CEO of Geomatic, a global technology company, was an Inc. Magazine Entrepreneur of the Year, among many other achievements. This is an inspiring book and a look inside the early decades of Communist China.

Peggy Parsons Sands tells a personal, heartwarming story of a boy born with developmental disabilities and the family that loved and supported him. A Cup of Joe ($14.95, softcover), says the author was her way of showing everyone “that mental retardation isn’t a curse or a hardship, and that people with special needs are just like everyone else. My brother Joe had good days and bad, but mostly he was a funny guy who got into some crazy situations.” A collection of short stories, anecdotes, and recollections of her brother, born with brain damage, relates a story familiar to many other families with the same experiences and an insight for those who do not. Zoo Station, ($12.99, Zest Books, softcover), a memoir by “Christine” is written as a cautionary story for younger readers, but older ones will find it of interest as well. For the author, growing up in the 1970s, Berlin was a struggle. Her family was poor, her father was abusive, and she never seemed to fit in at school. By the age of 12, Christine was smoking pot and drinking and, by 13 she started snorting heroin and going to clubs. By age 14 she was shooting up before school and selling her body to pay for her addiction. It is not a pretty story, but Christine wanted a better life. When first published in Europe in 1978, it became a great success and was made into a popular movie. Even now it will resonate with many younger people and remains relevant when you consider that an estimated 20% of high school students have abused prescription drugs, 12% have been forced to have sex, almost 40% drink alcohol, and that 19% of girls have seriously considered suicide, along with 12% of boys.

An interesting, alarming memoir, Fatlash: Food Police and the Fear of Thin—A Cautionary Tale is by Karen Kataline, ($14.99, Swift Ink Books, softcover) in which she relates being restricted to 500 calories a day as a child and, by age seven forced into the spotlight by her weight-obsessed mother, trapped in a world of pageants, performances, and perpetual hunger. To escape she began using food and weight-gain to shield herself. The media is filled with stories about an obesity epidemic, food regulations, and child beauty pageants. Her memoir is particularly timely and tells the story of an adult who finally came to understand how her experiences affected her. She exposes the consequences of putting children on display and policing what they eat. She urges action against both.  On a happier note, there’s Memories of The Catskills: The Making of a Hotel by Alvin L. Lessor ($16.50, GSL Galactic Publishers, softcover, $9.50 ebook) is a memoir his family asked him to write about his parent’s hotel called the Lesser Lodge in an area of Sullivan County, New York that became famous for the vacationers, mostly Jewish, who went there to enjoy the outdoors, the recreation, the entertainment and the food. What began as a modest house and some out buildings became a resort where unknown newcomers learned their art as entertainers to become stars. From 1922 until it burned down in 1963, Alvin’s life reflected a special time and place.

Deep Thinkers

For those who like to immerse themselves in subjects that challenge the mind there are a number of books that fit that description. For the record, I do not take sides in taking note of these books.


Kore: On Sickness, the Sick, and the Search for the Soul of Medicine by Andrzej Szczeklik ($26.00, Counterpoint Press) examines the connection between sickness and the soul. His first book, “Catharsis”, put him in the ranks of physician-philosophers and this one combines his immersion in art, music, and literature. To that he brings his thoughts on experimental medicine and daily clinical experience. It is a life-affirming work of science, philosophy, art, and spirituality. The Science of Consequences: How They Affect Genes, Change the Brain, and Impact Our World by Susan M. Schneider ($21.00, Prometheus Books, softcover), an internationally recognized biopsychologist, tells the story of how something so deceptively simple can help make sense of so much. For better or worse, we all learn that there are consequences from the decisions we make and the book addresses how our life experiences teach us to choose between short-term and long-term consequences. Personhood Revisited: Reproductive Technology, Bioethics, Religion and the Law by Dr. Howard W. Jones, Jr., MD, ($19.95, Langdon Street Press, softcover) visits the issues involving invitro fertilization. This is his eighth book and reviews his battles with the Vatican, the policy surrounding personhood, and society’s ever-growing ethical questions.

The Inner Philosopher by Lou Marinoff and Daisaku Ikeda ($12.95, Dialogue Path Press, Cambridge, MA, softcover) brings together Marinoff, a professor and chair of philosophy at the City College of New York, and Ikeda who writes and lectures widely on Buddhism, humanism, and global ethics. He heads the Ikeda Center for Peace, He is the founder of Soka Gakkai International, a lay Buddhist organization with twelve million members worldwide. Both share an optimism about humanity’s capacity for improvement and the book examines the many cultural problems throughout the world and the way philosophy can play a role in treating culturally-rooted problems that include, in their view, obesity, bullying, hedonism, and consumerism. The Fact/Faith Debate: Why Science Hasn’t Killed Religion by Jack Gage ($15.99, Two Harbors Press, softcover) looks at the way 18 major Christian religions and 9,000 denominations often lead to conflict, but share common beliefs. Gate pulls together religious history, both ancient and modern, to create an intriguing look at their connections, Doomsday predictions, and creation stories. It is a history lesson and analysis of religion.

Cataract by John Berger with drawings by Selcuk Demirel ($22.00, Counterpoint Press) records the effects of cataract removal operations on each of his eyes and the result is an illuminating take on perception. Berger ponders how we can become accustomed to a loss of sense until the dulled world becomes the norm and how the operation reawakened his sense of sight with an acute attention to sensory detail. This little book beckons us to pay close attention to our own senses and wonder at their significance.

Children’s and Books for Younger Readers

A favorite children’s book series of mine has at its central character, Howard B. Wigglesworth, a young rabbit with whom any child can identify. The artwork rivals the text for fun. In the eleventh book in the series, Howard B. Wigglebottom Learns About Courage, by Howard Binkow, Reverend Ana, and Jeremy Norton, ($15.00, Thunderbolt Publishing, www.wedolisten.org) aimed at ages 4 to 8, it teaches how to work with issues of fear and Howard begins by being afraid of everything until he sees a young bird work up the courage to fly from her nest for the first time and is told “If you’re not afraid, you can’t be brave.” There’s another series I have been following called “The Teacher Who Would Not Retire” and in this one she Becomes a Movie Star ($17.95, Blue Marlin Publishers). In others she discovers a new planet and goes to camp in stories told by Sheila and Letty Sustrin with illustrations by Thomas H. Bone III. When a Hollywood film study holds a contest for student’s favorite teacher, Mrs. Bella wins and her adventure begins. The story and artwork will keep younger readers turning the pages to find out what happens next.

Also for the younger readers, 4 to 8, is The Adventures of Lisbeth ($13.54, AuthorHouse Publishing, by Liesel F. Daisley with artwork by Omni Illustrations that has the unique feature of having a text in both England and Spanish. This one, the first in a series, is devoted to a day at the beach with her parents where she enjoys all the activities the beach provides. Another learning experience is provided in The Case of…Itch and Rash by Erika Kimble, illustrated by Laurel Winters ($14.95, Bandages & Boo Press, Medina, Ohio) and, as you may have guessed it has a medical theme featuring Malcolm Finney, a fourth grader who will no doubt grow up to be a doctor. The book is filled with useful information for any youngster who encounters the various things that cause an itch or a rash. It may even inspire a young reader to become a doctor. Draw Plus Science by Freddie Levin ($8.99, Peel Publications, Vancouver, WA) uses art instruction combined with different aspects of science for some fun activity that teaches life cycles, scientific classification, and other topics for those age 6 and up who love to draw and, as all children, are interested in the world around them.

American Girl is a publisher that knows just what girls, age 8 and up, love to read. They have just introduced a new character, Saige, and one of a series of three books built around her is about an effort to save the school’s art program and Saige’s training of her friend’s horse. The plot moves along engaging in a variety of themes that teach relationships and problem solving. Also in the series is Saige Paints the Sky (both $6.95) and just out this month. Another American Girl book that is debuting this month is Express Yourself: Use Art to Explore the Emotions Inside You! ($9.99) that is filled with questions, quizzes, and projects to help the reader, 8 and up, how to explore their emotions and use art to discover more about themselves and the world around them.

Novels, Novels, Novels

Over recent years, I have learned to look forward to Lior Samson’s new novels. A pen name for an award-winning writer, designer, and university professor, his previous novels include “Bashert”, “The Dome”, “Web Games”, and “The Rosen Singularity”, all published by Gesher Press. His new novel is Chipset ($14.95, print, $3.99 Kindle). Samson combines the details of places and technology with the events of your times as they occur or affect Israel. In this novel, Karl Lustig and Shira Markham are expecting an easy excursion to the picturesque Portuguese island of Madeira, where Karl is delivering new military microchips to MIRI, the Madeira Intelligent Robotics Institute, and lecturing at the University of Madeira. The two of them look forward to exploring the island together, but Karl’s talent for trouble leads him to uncover a puzzle in the advanced avionics chipset he helped design with Israel’s IsTac Systems. His digital detective work will put him in danger and demand decisive action from Shira. I guarantee that you will not be able to put this novel down once you begin to read it.

Just out this month is a novel that has already begun to get raves. Truth in Advertising by John Kenney ($24.99, Touchstone, a Simon and Schuster imprint) is a wickedly funny and honest debut novel about the absurdity of corporate life, the complications of love, and the meaning of family. Drawing on his own background in advertising, Kenney imbues the main character, Finbar Dolan, with details that enhance the story of a mildly successful career at a Madison Avenue agency. Though he regards himself he’s happy, in truth it’s a mess. He has kept a careful distance from others, perhaps the result of having a formerly abusive father that neither his brothers nor sister intend to visit despite the fact he is dying and alone. He has recently called off a wedding. This is the story reevaluating his life at age 39 and single. None of this may sound like a lot of laughs, but the author’s sardonic humor ensures that the reader will find much to laugh at. In Y: A Novel by Marjorie Celona ($24.95, Free Press, an imprint of Simon and Schuster) a comparable story is told. As a newborn, Shannon is abandoned at the local “Y” and then spends much of her young life asking ‘Why?”  Celona reconstructs Shannon’s life as she moves through several foster homes before she settles in with Miranda, a single mom with a daughter, Lydia-Rose. The relationship is rocky. Shannon is not the easier child to rear and throughout she struggles to understand her abandonment. This is an impressive debut novel.

For those who enjoy detective novels, they will be happy to hear that Inspector Banks, Peter Robinson’s creation, is back in Watching the Dark ($25.99, William Morrow). Robinson’s previous Inspector Banks novels have drawn high praise and the author has more than 20 award-winning and bestselling novels. When Detective Inspector Bill Quinn is found murdered in the tranquil grounds of the St. Peter’s Police Treatment Center, and compromising photographs are found in his room, DCI Banks is called in to investigate. It emerges that Quinn’s murder may be linked to the disappearance of an English girl called Rachel Hewitt, in Tallinn, Estonia, six years earlier. When he and a fellow detective visit Tallinn it becomes clear that someone doesn’t want the past stirred up again. This novel is sure to please. A new detective due has been created by two Mystery Writers Association Grand Masters, the husband and wife team of Bill Pronzini and Marcia Muller. The Bughouse Affair($25.99, Tor/Forge) introduces former Pinkerton operative, Sabina Carpenter, and her detective partner, ex-Secret Service agent, John Quincannon. What starts as two seemingly separate cases converge in a surprising fashion for the two when Sabina is hunting for a pickpocket and John is after a housebreaker who targets the San Francisco homes of the wealthy. The two cases eventually connect, but not before there are two murders, assorted other felonies, and a man claiming to be Sherlock Holmes joins in. It’s an entertaining novel that is sure to please.

Another page-turner is Trompe L’Oeil (To Fool the Eye) by Caroline Miller ($14.95, Kono Pono, softcover) whose previous novel, “Gothic Spring”, was recommended by yours truly. When a young college student, Rachel Farraday, gets an assignment in the French countryside to chronicle the story of a chateau during height of the French-Algerian war, she discovers his dark history of murder and, when her employer dies suddenly, she also learns that she has become the co-inheritor of the chateau with a likely insane young man. The inheritance threatens her life and I guarantee that you will want to read it through in one sitting.

Both the real world of insanity and the fictional one continue to hold our attention. In Shrunk, a novel by Christopher Hogart ($12.99, Bickerstaff Press, softcover) the author introduces us to Dr. Albert Prendergast, an eminent psychiatrist, a titled clinician at a leading hospital with a thriving private practice who is also crazy as a loon, the sole occupant of a paranoid rabbit hole, and the subject of a satirical novel that evolves out of his intent to destroy Henry Avalon, also a psychiatrist, whom Prendergast sets out to destroy both professionally and personally. This may not strike you as the subject of humor, but Hogart pulls it off against the background of psychiatric training and practice. We are reminded that psychiatrists are only human. A novel I previously reviewed, Next in Line to the Oval Office by David H. Brown ($25.99, AuthorHouse) has undergone a revision by the author because he took to heart the many suggestions he received regarding the plot which is filled with twists and turns. The subject, the succession to office, is not one that I have seen addressed and the revisions have, indeed, improved the new edition. When explosions kill both the incoming and outgoing presidents, along with many other notables, the novel takes off like a rocket.

For those who favor historical novels, they are in for a treat with Tracy Chavalier’s The Last Runaway($26.95, Dutton) that tells the story of a young Quaker woman, Honor Bright, who has fled romantic disappointment in her native England only to experience yellow fever that leaves her awkwardly dependent on her sister Grace in Ohio. The transition to the rough-and-tumble ways of Ohio in the pre-Civil War days is jarring and, for the first time, Honor encounters African-Americans, along with a ruthless runaway slave catcher. As a strong believer in the Quaker principle of human equality, she soon finds herself assisting fugitive slaves on their way north to Canada and at the same time befriending two surprising women who embody the remarkable power of defiance. Suffice to say, Honor must cope with many challenges and the story showcases the author’s trademark talent of bringing the past to life.

That’s it for January! The new year begins with many new books, non-fiction and fiction, among which readers with different preferences are sure to find an abundance of information and entertainment. Be sure to tell your friends, co-workers and family about any of the books noted this month and about Bookviews.com.

Bookviews - February 2013

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By Alan Caruba

My Picks of the Month

For most of the history of the nation, Muslims played virtually no role in its politics or culture, but journalist Paul L. Williams examines the phenomenal rise of Islam in the United States in Crescent Moon Rising: The Islamic Transformation of America ($20.00, Prometheus Books, softcover) that reviews Islam’s beginnings in the nation; initially as the rise and influence of the Nation of Islam among African Americans. In 1965, the Hart-Celler Act abolished national origin quotes and led to successive waves of Muslim immigrants who entered the nation from Palestine, Kuwait, Iraq, Southeast Asia, Africa, Turkey and other parts of the world. Given the attack on 9/11, a wake up call for most Americans, Williams addresses a number of disturbing concerns about the Muslim presence such as the proselytizing and recruitment among convicts and ties to terrorist organizations. Drawing on a large body of statistics and other data, Williams predicts that Islam will be a major religion in America in a matter of decade. Given the resurgence of al Qaeda in the recent attacks in Algeria and Mali, and the spread of the religion worldwide, this is a book that is well worth reading.


If you think that U.S. borders, particularly in the southwest, are adequately protected against drug smuggling and illegal immigration, pick up a copy of Homeland Insecurity: Failed Politics, Policies, and a Nation at Risk ($19.95, BookLogix, softcover) by Brett Braaten. The author’s career spans 29 years with the original Customs agency that, after 9/11, was integrated into the 2002 Department of Homeland Security. Braaten offers a unique and extremely well informed look behind the myths that surround Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) as the new law enforcement agency is now called. He warns that politics, no matter which administration, past and present, cripples the ability of special agents to do their job in many cases, not the least of which is deporting illegal aliens. The rivalries between the FBI, the IRS, the ATF and other agencies continue to this day, further degrading the effectiveness of ICE. Add in political correctness and you have a situation where potential terrorists are handled with kid gloves while wheelchair-bound senior citizens are manhandled by the Transportation Safety Administration agents. Braaten takes the reader behind the scenes, including the few notable cases where terrorists were thwarted—always by alert passengers and no thanks to the system that is supposed to track them and stop them. He offers some good suggestions as to what can and should be done to correct the current lack of real protection and one that has the nation playing host to several million illegal aliens, and to increasingly emboldened drug cartel gangs.

Late last year I received a fascinating essay by Don Fredrick titled “Can It All Be a Coincidence?” Fredrick looked at President Obama’s many friends and associates, indicating the inter-relationship between them and surrounding him. Many are unsavory in a variety of ways; close friends, the Ayers, were former domestic terrorists. The preacher of the church he attended for over two decades was famed for his anti-American sermons. Suffice to say it is a long list that raises many question. Fredrick has gathered together that article with more than a hundred others in a book, Can It All Be a Coincidence? ($15.99, via Amazon, $3.99 Kindle) that runs almost 600 pages that those who are not fans of Obama will find of great interest. The author maintains a website at http://www.theobamatimeline.com.

If you are among the many millions who depend on talk radio to get news and opinion from a conservative point of view, than you will enjoy Fred V/ Lucas’ new book, The Right Frequency: The Story of Talk Radio Giants Who Shook Up the Political and Media Establishment ($18.95, History Publishing Company, softcover). L. Brent Bozell III president of the Media Research Center, says, “Author Fred Lucas chronicles conservative talk-radio stars over the decades, reminding us how they kept the American idea alive. Lucas travels back to the early days of talk radio history, describing, for example how Fulton Lewis predicted to Mike Wallace in the 1950s that the Republican Party could be a majority party if they would only let the conservatives run it, instead of wishy-washy, me-too moderates.” That was quite prescient given the way the recent reelection of President Obama is widely attributed to a weak candidate and failure to wage a more aggressive campaign. The Republicans have had a succession of presidents from Eisenhower to Nixon to Reagan and the two Bush presidencies. It took until 1994 to gain control of Congress during the Clinton administration, but political power kept slipping away and today’s talk radio stars, led by Rush Limbaugh, will have plenty to rail against for the next four years. As history, this is an excellent book, well worth reading.

Memoirs, Autobiographies and Biographies

When Rolling Stone magazine published an article about Gen. Stanley McChrystal in which some critical views of his subordinates were published, the General felt compelled to submit his resignation to the President. It was accepted and a long, distinguished military career by a West Point graduate, son of a West Point graduate and a father her revered came to an ended. Gen. McChrystal has had his memoir published, My Share of the Task, ($29.95, Portfolio, an imprint of Penguin) and for anyone interested in our military and our wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, it says a lot about the way our modern army trains its leaders and how they accept that responsibility. In 2009 Gen. McChrystal was appointed the Commander of the NATO coalition in Afghanistan to lead 100,000 troops from 46 allied nations. He has had a distinguished career and it is unfortunate he was sabotaged by a journalist more interested in gossip and accomplishments. His memoir is an instructive look at the way our military is producing a unique blend of soldiers and scholars, but it is also an insight regarding the values that instruct the way they live lives devoted to the defense of the nation in what has always been a politicized military directed, as the Constitution requires, by civilians in office. An expert in counter-terrorism, Gen. McChrystal is an example of the meritocracy that our military represents. His memoir is close to 400 pages, not counting footnotes that document it. It is highly detailed and it reveals the values he learned at West Point and over the course of his career. As such it offers a useful look at the men who put their lives on the line for a nation they love.

Jane Austen has become a cottage industry, generating movies based on her novels, and still widely read today for such classics as “Pride and Prejudice” that will celebrate its two hundredth anniversary of publication this month. Paula Byrne has written The Real Jane Austin: A Life in Small Things ($15.95, Harper) in which the acclaimed writer of biographies focuses on the key moments, scenes and objects which helped determine the course of Austen’s life and then reappear, transposed, in her novels. Instead of just piling fact on fact as in the case of the usual biography, this book offers a portrayal of her life that lends further insight to the power of her novels, as well as the major influences such as her father’s religious faith and her mother’s aristocratic pedigree. She was determined to become a published author and it was her father’s support that led to the publication of her first book, an effort that took several years. Anyone who is a fan of her novels will greatly enjoy this biography.

People who have passed through major trials in their lives often examine them in the form of a memoir. This is the case of Jennie Morton who has written Standing Strong ($17.95) who fought a long battle to regain custody of her children after losing them to her ex-husband. Now the founder of the Children’s Justice Foundation, Morton says “It’s a widespread and very damaging myth that mothers always get custody.” Her memoir recounts how her two former husband teamed up with their friends in the local courts to systematically strip her of her rights and deny her access to two of her children. She lost her job and her savings due to the cost of litigation, but she also discovered an inner strength she never knew she had. She would eventually graduate summa cum laude with honors, earning a Bachelor of Science degree and was accepted into South Texas College of Law in 2003. For women encountering this problem, the book will be an inspiration.

Another memoir provides an insight to life in Uganda during the 1960s as the physician-author tells the story of a turbulent political time when Uganda transitioned to self-rule. Dr. Negesh Tajani is currently Professor Emiritus of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the New York Medical College and a professor at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. This is the story of her 42-year marriage to a Ugandan colleague and her move to Kampala where they spent eleven years. I Hear a Song in My Head: A Memoir in Stories of Love, Fear, Doctoring, and Flight ($26.00, New Academia Publishing, softcover) is a love story on one level and of the practice of medicine on another.

Relationships, Making Them and Saving Them

An interesting approach to finding love can be found in Much Ado About Loving by Jack Murnighan and Maura Kelly ($14.00, Free Press, softcover) that is subtitled “What our favorite novels can teach you about data expectation, not so-great Gatsbys, and love in the time of internet personals.”  Finding love these days isn’t easy in an era of online dating and open relationships, even if they have increased our choices. As a result, people turn to advice about modern-day courtship, but much of it, the authors note, can be found in classic novels by authors ranging from Jane Austin to William Faulkner. This is a lively exploration of common dating issues such as the worst kinds of people to date, how we handicap ourselves when it comes to finding good relationships, and, in the process we discover how classic literature is still relevant today.

 As Leil Lowndes, the author of How to Create Chemistry with Anyone: 75 Ways to Spark It Fast…and Make It Last ($16.00, Da Capo Press, softcover) reminds us, love is one of the most fundamental human needs, but the chemistry of love and attraction is fickle. It can be mutual or painfully one-sided. It fades when the “spark” fades. Lowndes, who has written a number of bestselling books on communications techniques returns with an examination of the chemistry of love, drawing on the latest research in cognitive sciences, she makes it understandable and applicable for anyone looking for long-term love. Marriage Rescue: Overcoming Ten Deadly Sins in Failing Relationships by Gary Direnfeld, MSW, RSW ($14.95, New Horizon Press, softcover) will officially be published in April explores for unhappy spouses why their marriages are unsatisfying, dysfunctional, and deteriorating with a look at ten ways spouses can cause marital strife, learn how to identify what they are doing wrong, and provides strategies to mend and revitalize their unions. It is his belief that the divorce rate of fifty percent can be avoided by identifying the behaviors and attitudes that every struggling couple must address. If this describes your marriage of that of someone you know, this book will prove very helpful. Also from the same publisher it is well known that, while the arrival of a new baby brings couples much happiness, after the birth many women feel overwhelmed by feelings of sadness, fear and despair. During the postpartum period, it is estimated that 85% of women experience some mood disturbance. Dr. Susan Benjamin Feingold, a psychologist, has written Happy Endings, New Beginnings: Navigating Postpartum Disorders ($14.95, New Horizon Press, softcover) and provides proven techniques for overcoming unhappiness during postpartum. It doesn’t have to be a frightening, overwhelming time. Her book dispels misconceptions and myths about postpartum depression. Utilizing her vast experience, Feingold guides women on how to prepare for or recover from stressful times, frightening systems, and conflicting problems in relationships, complex maternity issues, and the feelings of anxiety that often follow a birth, getting themselves off to a good start.

Some of our habits contribute to bad relationships and, while Making Habits, Breaking Habits: Why We Do Things, Why We don’t, and How to Make Any Changes Stick by Jeremy Dean ($26.00, Da Capo Press) isn’t strictly about relationships, it is about those habits we embrace and often have difficulty breaking. Dean explores the anatomy of habit-forming behavior, offers tips and solutions for those who have tried and tried again to alter bad behavior or institute good behavior, only to give up after the first week. This is serious psychology and an often fascinating look at the way habits are formed, reinforced, and strengthened throughout our lives. Not all habits are bad, but the ones that are can often take weeks and months to eliminate from our lives. The vices, smoking, drinking, and comparable bad behaviors can be changed and this book can help anyone seeking to make that change.

On Writers, Writing, and Selling Books

If there is one thing that reviewers these days are aware of it is that many people are not only writing books, but they now have the capability of publishing them on their own. Though writing is a literary endeavor, it is also for some like myself a business and, in fact, has always been whether the topic is fiction or non-fiction. That is why The Business of Writing: Professional Advice on Proposals, Publishers, Contracts, and More for the Aspiring Writer ($19.95, Allworth Press), edited by Jennifer Lyons, is a good investment who has gathered together thirty industry professionals to share their perspectives on the nuts and bolts of publishing. One could spend years learning what this one book imparts. Similarly, Blueprint Your Bestseller: Organize and Revise Any Manuscript with the Book Architecture Method ($16.00, Perigee, softcover) by Stuart Horwitz is less about the business of writing as about the techniques involved in transforming first drafts into something that would gain publication. Here again, aspiring writers would benefit. Finally, once one has published their own book or been published, it usually falls to the author to do the bulk of the promotion unless one has a publisher with a budget to advertise and publicize the book. Phillip Lopate is a preeminent writer of the personal essay and has written a guide to for anyone who wants to pursue this genre. To Show and Tell: The Craft of Literary Nonfiction ($16.00, Free Press, softcover) will help a writer navigate between fiction and nonfiction while discussing the state of writing, publishing and creative nonfiction today. If you want to read some of his work, Portrait Inside My Head ($26.00, Free Press) is also out this month as a collection of essays that paints a vivid, personal portrait of a major literary figure’s lifetime in New York. If you haven’t read his work, this is a good introduction and, if you have, his guide may inspire you to try your hand at it.

Patricia Fry has written Talk Up Your Book; How to Sell Your Book Through Public Speaking, Interviews, Signings, Festivals, Conferences, and More ($19.95, Allworth Press, softcover). If writing a book is hard work, promoting it is as well. One has to be prepared to travel, speak, and create an audience and market for it. This book is filled with excellent advice on how to find speaking opportunities, handle yourself in front of an audience, organize and present workshops, and generate publicity for your presentations. Years ago such books did not exist, but in this era of the Internet, mass media, and other opportunity to call attention to one’s book, it is essential to master these skills. I am always surprised to be contacted by self-published authors who have no idea how to make a presentation, even briefly in an email or who just cold-call. It would be wise to invest some time in learning the ropes and these books will prove helpful.

Getting Down to Business Books

Get Rich Click! The Ultimate Guide to Making Money on the Internetby Marc Ostrofsky ($15.00, Free Press, softcover) whose initial, self-published book on the subject became a New York Times bestseller and topped other comparable lists. That book is now available in paperback. Ostrofsky is an online pioneer and internet entrepreneur whose various enterprises earn $75 million annually, so the man knows whereof he writes. The Internet is arguably the most powerful business tool in history and you too can make your own fortune on it, but it would be a good idea to read his book first.

Building Winning Enterprises Through Productivity by Isaac Johnson ($13.95, Mill City Press, Minneapolis, softcover) comes at a time when many businesses are concentrating on short-term fixes to improve the bottom line; lay-offs, budget cuts, and product development short cuts. Johnson’s slim guidebook walks the reader through a five-step process that takes a longer view by taking steps to improve productivity and thus maintaining one’s business with a blend of consistency, adaptation, adaptation, and an unwavering focus.

There’s no doubt the economic climate is battering American businesses and one way to help is to “buy American.” My Company ‘Tis of Thee: 50 Patriotic American Companies American Consumers Should Know About by Roger Simmermaker($12.95, www.howtobuyAmerican.com) features companies that deserve consumer support for their products that, in turns, aids the economy. This is a passion of the author who has written four books on the subject since 1996 and been a guest on many news programs and featured in newspapers and magazines as a result. Whether it is products for the home and office, food and beverages, toys and other items one routinely uses, you will find a U.S. company that provides them in this book.

Books for Younger Readers

I am a great believer in getting children reading early, often by reading to them in their pre-school years, perhaps before they go to sleep. Later they can be given books appropriate to their age to encourage the habit of reading. I know that ebooks are the future, but nothing can replace the feel of a real book being held in one’s hands, pages turning, and the magical communication between the author and reader. Books for the very young are enhanced by artwork and photos. All of it engages and enriches their minds.

Many children’s books author want to impart good values and what better one than Peace which just happens to be the title and subject of Wendy Anderson Halperin’s new book ($16.99, Atheneum Books for Young Readers, Simon and Schuster Children’s Publishing). Given the conflicts that have been raging around the world, Ms. Halperin has gathered a collection of inspiring quotes on the question of how to bring and spread peace worldwide. Buddha said “Friendship is the only cure for hatred, the only guarantee of peace. The poet Walt Whitman who witnessed the Civil War said, “Peace is always beautiful.” The book is beautifully illustrated by the author and ideal for children aged 4 to 8. Elaina Redmond has a mission. She wants to teach and inspire young readers, ages 6 to 12, to appreciate The Power of the Penny, the title of her book, subtitled “Abraham Lincoln Inspires a Nation” ($18.09, available via Internet outlets and via www.thepowerofthepenny.com). It is handsomely illustrated by Scott Stewart and has won a Benjamin Franklin Award and a Mom’s Choice award. The book teaches children the value of civic duty, philanthropy, and financial literacy, fancy terms for learning the value of saving for the future, participating in the life of one’s community and nation, and to appreciate the value of something as small as a penny. She integrates the life of Lincoln, who appears on the penny, into the book as an example of the personal values one should strive to attain. By any measure, this is a book one would want any child to read.

Lincoln plays a major role in another book, Emancipation Proclamation: Lincoln and the Dawn of Liberty ($24.95, Abrams Books for Young Readers) by Tonya Bolden, the author of a number of award-winning books. This is a book for readers about ten and older, but it also serves an adult reader quite well  The Emancipation Proclamation was issued by Lincoln 150 years ago and for the generations since then, it is difficult to imagine what it must have been like for the estimated eleven million slaves. The issue was divisive enough to spark a Civil War. For the South, it was an issue of state’s rights and the financial future of the slave-owners. This is an excellent book of the history of those times, an examination of how the Constitution dealt with slavery prior to the war, the various laws passed to preserve slavery or avoid its spread. The book is extensively illustrated with artwork and photos from that era. Lincoln joined the ranks of liberty’s greatest heroes when he issued the Proclamation, but it would take a century more before African-Americans gain their full rights as American citizens.

Girls in their teen years are especially fortunate insofar as there are publishers who pay attention to their interests and needs. Zest Books is one of them, publishing books for young men as well, but two of its latest are A Girl’s Guide to Fitness by Erin Whitehead and Jennipher Walters ($12.99) and The Prom Book by Lauren Metz ($16.99). Both are officially due off the press in April. The fitness books offers good advice on how to fit physical activity in their busy lives and addresses a lot of issues such as eating disorders, why trying to be perfect is boring, avoiding over-training, and much more that any girl should know as part of their pursuit of health. The prom is a major social event in a girl’s life and the book will help the reader plan for it in every way necessary. This is some serious, no-nonsense advice that will go far to make the special evening memorable. Another of my favorite publishers is American Girl.
Its magazine of the same name is celebrating its 20th anniversary with its January/February issue. The magazine has enriched the lives of girls age 8 and up. There’s a year-long birthday celebrating that includes a contest for girls who want to appear on its cover with entries to be postmarked no later than February 28. The magazine has a circulation of 441,000 with the average age being 10.5 years. It’s wholesome and worth giving any girl a subscription in contrast to much of the trash vying for their attention.

Novels, Novels, Novels

Between the major and smaller publishers, as well as the increase in self-published novels, the numbers keep growing. Here’s a look at some of the latest.

J.A. Jance has more than 22 million books in print and returns with Deadly Stakes ($25.99, Simon and Schuster). After suffering heartbreak at the hands of a cyber-sociopath, Lynn Martinson believes she has finally found happiness with her new boyfriend, Chip Ralston. However, when his gold-digging ex-wife is found murdered and abandoned in Arizona’s Camp Verde desert, the couple find themselves in jail with a rapidly expiring plea deal designed to make them testify against one another. This is the kind of heart-pounding action that has amassed a huge audience of fans for her novels. James Sheehan is the master of the legal thriller and he is back with The Lawyer’s Lawyer ($22.99, Center Street, imprint of Hachette Book Group). After agreeing to represent a convicted serial killer whom he believes was framed, Jack Tobin has enraged the system, but he relentlessly searches for the truth where it is often spoken of, but is often not found. He’s in the fight for his life and the outcome is in doubt right up to the last page. It is, as they say, a real page-turner. Make sure you have the time to read it through as you will have a hard time putting it down.

A bevy of softcover novels represent the many genres of fiction. Aric Davis’s new novel, Rough Men ($14.95, Thomas & Mercer) is about a father who must confront the demons of his past and risk the promise of a better future to avenge the killing of his son. This is an edgy crime fiction and solid crime thriller that begins when a detective shows up one cold night with the news that his son is dead, killed under dubious circumstances after taking part in an armed robbery. He enlists his brother and others to track down the killers as it explores the bonds of family. Also from the same publisher is Rules of Crime by L. J. Sellers ($ 14.95) whose bestselling Detective Jackson series has earned many fans. In this novel, he takes on the case of the kidnapping of his ex-wife. At first he suspects his alcoholic former wife, Renee, has hidden herself away, but the truth is far worse as becomes evident when the kidnappers demand a ransom from her wealthy fiancé. Meanwhile, his protégée, Lara Evans, is working on a troubling case of her own, the savage beating of a University of Oregon coed who may have been involved in a secret sorority. The action never stops as the solution to these parallel crimes run their course. Camilla Lackberg is the top selling female author in Europe, having sold more than ten million copies of her books worldwide with four million sold in her native Sweden. Americans were introduced to her in 2010 when this crime sensation’s “The Ice Princess” was published. The third segment of her chilling series is The Stonecutter ($15.99, Free Press) has just been published and continues the story of local detective Patrik Hedstrom and his girlfriend, Erica Falck, a crime-solving duo whose first child has just been born. The suspicious drowning that claims the life of the young daughter of close friends and, as they investigate, it threatens to tear apart the rural fishing village where a secret lurks that spans generations.

Stephen Dau’s haunting debut novel, The Book of Jonas, ($16.00, Plume) is about war, memory, guilt, and atonement as the author, a former international aid worker turned writer, takes the reader deep inside the human cost of military intervention, exploring war’s rippling repercussions and soul-searing wounds. It focuses on the refugee of a Middle East war who is taken into the family in the U.S. after an American soldier saves him the night he flees his village. There are many interesting twists and turns in this novel that will appeal to those who oppose war and its shared tragedies. On a far happier note, Gerrett Mathews takes the reader back to 1965 in Barking Signals (Badly) During Goldwater ($25.00, www.pluggerpublishing.com). It an underdog story of a 14-year-old boy, puny and shy, living in a little town in Virginia’s mountains where it is decided that he can be helped by playing second-string quarterback on the school’s jayvee team. Written by a retired journalist who has eight other books to his credit, this will appeal to anyone who grew up in those years and who love sports as much as he does. It will remind any male reader of the aspirations of those teen years, but it is in many ways a timeless, entertaining story that will remind you why you first fell in love with sports.

There is a genre of books intended to appeal to women readers. The Girl’s Guide to Love and Supper clubs by Dana Bate ($14.95, Hyperion) whose debut novel chronicles irrepressible Hannah Sugerman’s rebellion from her academic parents and wonky career path in the nation’s capital as she explores the underground supper-club business. His power-broker family don’t like the match with her boyfriend and, when that relationship falls apart, she continues to explore life as it takes many unexpected changes. Disasters and political careers collide while friendships and love affairs thrive. This author knows Washington. D.C. in ways that do not make it into the newspapers as power, policy, and real life combine for a delightful first novel.

Mary Ellen Taylor’s The Union Street Bakery ($15.00, Penguin) tells the story of Daisy McCraes’ life. She has lost her job, broken up with her boyfriend, and been reduced to living in the attic about her family’s store, a bakery, while learning the business. When a long-standing elderly customer passes away, he bequeaths Daisy a journal dating back to the 1850s, written by a slave girl named Susie. When she reads it, she learns more about her family and her own heritage than she ever dreamed. What she finds are the answers she has longed for her entire life and a chance to begin again with the courage and desire she thought she had lost.

Three novels have a spiritual theme. Karen Kingsbury’s The Chance ($22.90. Howard Books, a division of Simon and Schuster) a hardcover due out in March; One Sunday by Carrie Gerlach Cecil ($14,99, Howard Books); and My One Square Inch of Alaska by Sharon Short ($16.00, Plume), a debut novel. The “Alaska” book brims with Midwestern 1950s nostalgia and is devoted to the importance of fulfilling one’s dreams as Will Lane and his ambitious older sister, Donna, shake off the strictures of their small industrial Ohio town and embark on the adventure of a lifetime. In “One Sunday” Alice Ferguson’s career as the assistant editor of a Hollywood tabloid gets turned upside down when a charming Southern doctor not only gets her pregnant, but dares to fall in love with her. When she moves to Tennessee, she is befriended by her African-American neighbors, Pastor Tim and his wife. Alice learns the power of forgiveness and lets real love into her life. “The Chance” is hard to describe except to say it has an intricate plot that will capture your imagination as a chance meeting with singer Rod Stewart has a powerful impact on Karen Kingsbury’s life.

That’s it for February! Remember to come back in March and to tell your book-loving friends about Bookviews.com.

Bookviews - March 2013

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By Alan Caruba

My Picks of the Month

To understand what is wrong—and has been wrong for a very long time—with our healthcare system, you must read Catastrophic Care: How American Health Care Killed My Father and How We Can Fix it by David Goldhill ($25.95, Alfred A. Knopf). It is singularly the most cogent, must comprehensible book on the subject and his analysis explains why the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) will only make the system worse, more costly, and fail to address our individual healthcare decisions and options. He begins with telling the reader how his father died in a hospital from an infection he contracted there and then reveals that a hundred thousand Americans die each year from similar infections. A hundred thousand! The healthcare industry—and it is an industry—takes in $2.5 trillion annually and then identifies the factors that affect our health, “your wealth, education, and lifestyle—not your access to healthcare.” Amidst all the babble about health care insurance, Goldhill points out that “We call it health insurance, but in reality health insurance has little in common with traditional insurance and provides few of its benefits.” This is because “health insurers can achieve long-term profit only if the amount of money spent on health care increases.” On page after page Goldhill dissects the health care industry and the insurance programs, including Medicare and Medicaid, that have destroyed the traditional doctor-patient relationship; corrupting it. If you read no other book this year, you must read this one.

The most powerful factor in human history is demography, the study of the birth and death rates, the migrations of people, and the impact these have on our current society and nation. Jonathan V. Last, a senior writer at the Weekly Standard, has written What to Expect When No One’s Expecting: America’s Coming Demographic Disaster ($23.99, Encounter Books) that looks at America’s failing fertility rates in which not enough babies are being born to replace the current population, leaving the nation with a growing population of the elderly dependent on a decreasingly smaller group of workers to fund its entitlement programs such as Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. The U.S. fertility rate hasn’t been above replacement rate since the 1970s! It is part of the problem that is exacerbated by out of control spending by the federal government. Michael Novak, the recipient of the 1994 Templeton Prize and author of “The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism”, says of Last’s book that it “explodes old ways of thinking. Not moralizing, not blaming, Jonathan Last peers methodically ahead at the cold consequences of plunging global birth rates, aging, ever small national populations.” Another book sounding a warming is Present Shock: When Everything Happens Now by Douglas Rushkoff ($29.95, Current, an imprint of the Penguin Group) argues that our society has been so conditioned to live in the present, devoid of knowledge or understanding of ours and world history, that a younger generation of Americans has lost touch with the ability to analyze what is occurring or why. Rushkoff notes that the one reason that civilizations and their values persist over centuries is their shared faith systems and national histories. This explains the global interest in the naming of a new Pope or a generalized concern about the revived Islamism that uses terror worldwide to impose itself on all peoples. The role of the media, Rushkoff warns, creates “false and misleading narratives by elites who mean us no good, but also tends to leave everyone looking for direction and responding or over-responding to every bump in the road.” An example of this is the global warming hoax that has no basis in science, but which intrudes into every aspect of the global economy and our lives, contributing to enormous waste of money and time. The rise of technologies that encourage people to post every insignificant aspect of their lives, often ignoring the greater issues affecting them, is another example cited.

With terrorism in the headlines daily, Dr. Jeffrey D. Simon has taken a look at Lone Wolf Terrorism: Understanding the Growth Threat 26.00, Prometheus Books), noting that a new era of terrorism is emerging in the form of the lone wolf, individual terrorist such as Anders Breivik in Norway who killed scores of young people to the mass-shooting by Nidal Malik Hassen, the U.S. Army major who killed many soldiers at Fort Hood. An expert on this topic, Simon cites several key factors. They are more dangerous that many terrorist groups, the Internet has provided a breeding ground for isolated individuals with terrorist tendencies, and that the common perception that nothing can be done about them is wrong because innovative strategies and policies can be developed to prevent and respond to this type of terrorism. Most recently the killings in Newtown, CT, evoked a tremendous response among Americans, but also spurned those opposed to the common sense option of armed citizens to call for more restrictions, not less. Drawing on twenty-five years of experience, Dr. Simon offers an interesting book for anyone concerned about the threats posed by violence-prone individuals in our midst.

Now that Hillary Clinton has concluded her role as Secretary of State, many are already asking if she will make a second run at the presidency. For her many admirers, The Secretary: A Journey with Hillary Clinton from Beirut to the Heart of American Power by Kim Ghattas ($27.00, Henry Holt and Company) will prove irresistible reading as the BBC’s State Department radio and television correspondent tells the story of a popular but polarizing politician (she was a Senator from New York) to her role as America’s envoy as she strove to restore American leadership in a rapidly changing world. Ms. Ghattis does not come with the baggage of American reporters, being a half-Dutch, half-Lebanese citizen, so her insights are detailed and keen as she seeks to answer whether America is still a powerful force or if it is in decline, and what that will mean for the world.

Some books are just too long for their own good. A recent example is Power, Inc: The Epic Rivalry Between Big Business and Government—and the Reckoning That Lies Ahead ($16.00, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, softcover) by David Rothkopf. This is a writer who will take a thousand words to say when a hundred would do. He often seems a reluctant apologist for capitalism and the free market that says consumers will decide if a product or service is worth purchasing. He has taken on a very big subject, some 800 years of struggle between the powers in charge—mostly monarchs—and the emerging merchant class. He argues for a public-private partnership and believes it has worked for the U.S. it did in the days, for example, of the first railroads, but now all it does is “invest” in ideological enterprises such as solar and wind power that can never compete with the abundance of traditional sources of energy the U.S. possesses, wasting billions in the process. Too often the government has inserted itself into the marketplace with the 2008 mortgage-based crash as the latest example. Rothkopf examines the growing power of multinational corporations and doesn’t like what he sees in terms of their power versus that of government power, but government power often leads to failure when it intervenes and interferes in the marketplace and it is dealing with taxpayer’s money; the latest example being Obamacare. So, feel free to take a pass on this book. The author has impressive credentials, but so much to say that whatever point he is trying to make is lost in a Niagara of words.

To Your Health

Americans may be among the most health-conscious people on planet Earth. There are a number of new books on health-related topics. Among the latest arrivals are The Best Things You Can Eat by David Grotto, RD, a national spokesman for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics ($15.95, Da Capo Press, softcover). It is an interesting and informative look at common foods and their benefits as he relates their nutrient value, which foods help reduce or ward off common problems such as high blood pressure and various diseases, and the best choices one can make from dairy, grains and vegetables to induce sleep, improve memory and aid overall health. Much of what he relates is quite surprising in a good sort of way. I would recommend this book for anyone interested in learning more about what they eat daily.

The Family Guide to Mental Health Care by Lloyd I. Sederer, MD ($25.95, W.W. Norton & Company) is officially due off the press in April. The author is the medical director of New York State’s Office of Mental Health and an adjunct professor at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health. As he notes, mental disorders left untreated can devastate a family and a community, but often the families of the more than fifty million people a year diagnosed with a mental illness feel they have nowhere to turn for authoritative advice. Now they do with a book that provides the answers families need to understand a variety of disorders, to assess whether they are receiving proper help and to help choose the right treatment. The author takes one through illnesses from depression to schizophrenia and evaluates the medications prescribed.

Life After 50: The Road to Longevity by Dr. Paul M. Valliant ($16.99, Mill City Press, softcover) offers advice on how to take control of your life as you age via diet, daily exercise, and other techniques to address the changes that occur as one grows older. With more and more Americans entering this age group or already in it, this book provides easy-to-follow rules for aging gracefully, increasing one’s stamina, and being less stressed about it. Dr. Valliant has authored 32 psychology, health, and sports-related research papers. If you or a family member are entering or in “the golden years”, this book will prove of interest. One of the problems associated with aging is dementia and I will Never Forget by Elaine c. Pereira ($20.95, iUniverse, softcover) tells the story of her mother and her journey through dementia and how the author learned to cope with its affects. She tells a heartbreaking story with a dash of humor that will help others encountering this condition in a parent for its excellent advice. The book was a finalist in the Best New Non-Fiction category of the 2012 USA Book Awards.

We all know people who struggle to keep their heads above water, trying to cope with work and family situations that are overwhelming. Fast Minds: How to Thrive If You Have ADHD (Or Think You Might($25.95, Berkley Books) by Craig Surman, MD, Tim Bilkey, MD, with Karen Weintraub says that the ADHD brain is structurally different in the areas that control behavior, manage habits, and maintain attention. These are biological differences, not character defects, and the authors address why such folks are often forgetful, achieve below their potential, are time challenged, motivationally challenged, impulsive, and easily distracted, among other attributes of the problem. If you or someone you know needs to take control of their lives, this book provides the knowledge, tools, and resources to address these behaviors.

One publishing company, Central Recovery Press, devotes many of its books to issues involving various kinds of addictions. Among its new and forthcoming titles is Game Plan: A Man’s Guide to Achieving Emotional Fitness; The Light Side of the Moon: Reclaiming Your Lost Potential; It’s Not About You, Except When It Is: A Field Manual for Parents of Addicted Children; and Intimate Treason: Healing the Trauma for Partners Confronting Sex Addiction. If any of these topics interest you, I recommend that you visit their website at www.centralrecoverypress.com. I have received and perused many of their books over the years and have no doubt they will prove very helpful.

Getting Down to Business

The headlines are filled with news of government spending debates, fiscal cliffs, and sequestration, to it is natural that people and businesses are trying to make the best decisions about their finances. Financial Fresh Start: Your Five-Step Plan for Adapting and Prospering in the new Economy by Shari Olegson ($26.00, Amacom) offers a lot of information regarding the new rules that are causing changes in banking, borrowing, credit, debt, savings, investments, home ownership, and everything else that involves planning for the future as well as current options. The author is a legal, financial and real estate expert who has simplified what often seems an impenetrable maze. Reading this book will help you adapt your banking and borrowing, fix your credit and debt status, protect your savings, investments, and retirement, and determine if home ownership is right for you.

Likewise, The Facts of Business Life: What Every Successful Business Owner Knows That You Don’t by Bill McBean ($24.95, Wiley Global Finance) should be must reading for every business owner today. The author has been a successful business owner in the automotive industry for nearly forty years, purchasing and transforming underperforming dealerships into businesses that generate more than $160 million in annual sales. McBean writes about the need to understand how changes occur as a business goes through an inevitable life cycle and the need to adapt to those changes. The books chapters include “If you don’t lead, no one will follow” and “If you don’t control it, you don’t own it.” In easily understood chapters, he addresses how one must protect a company’s assets, plan for the future, and understand that the marketplace is a war zone. When you finish reading Bean’s book you will be ready for whatever changes occur. A slimmer book by Beverly D. Flaxington, Make the Shift: The Proven Five-Step Plan to Success for Corporate Teams ($19.95, ATA Press, softcover) outlines the goal-achievement process she has developed over decades of working with individuals and businesses. This is nitty-gritty advice such as avoiding the top mistakes interviewers make when questioning potential hires and how poorly planned interviewing procedures impact hiring results. She discusses how to match a candidate’s behavioral style to the position to be filled and the candidate’s values to those of the firm’s culture. There’s a lot of useful psychology discussed such as being aware of the real problem one is trying to solve, anticipating obstacles, and why brainstorming solutions should be a regular part of the process. This is one of the books that can help the reader break through problems that are delaying success.

The ocean plays a role in two business-related books. Into The Storm by Dennis N.T. Perkins with Jillian B. Murphy ($24.95, Amacom) is sub-titled “Lessons in teamwork from the treacherous Sydney to Hobart Ocean Race.” Those who love sailing will thoroughly enjoy this account of the 35-foot sailboat and its crew that needed to survive hurricane-force winds and giant waves. They knew they could die in the storm and they knew that teamwork would help them survive during the 1998 race. It’s a heart stopping tale. Grand Ambition: An Extraordinary Yacht, the People Who Built It, and the Millionaire Who Can’t Really Afford it by G. Bruce Knecht ($26.99, Simon and Schuster) describes the building of a 187-foot luxury yacht, the Lady Linda, at a cost of $40 million. It is filled with interesting, audacious characters and events from the explosion of wealth that made it possible for Doug Van Allmen to dream of having such a yacht and the 2008 economic implosion that suddenly made his lifestyle unsustainable, leading him to fall for an outrageous Ponzi scheme. It is a fascinating story.

Reading History

I love to read history and a new book, The Birth of the West: Rome, Germany, France, and the Creation of Europe in the Tenth Century BY Paul Collins ($29.99, Public Affairs) provides an extensive look at that century that preceded the first millennium. The Renaissance was still several centuries to come and the 900s was a century in which “Europe” did not exist. Instead it was an era of chaos in which the Vikings marauding the continent along with the Magyars from the East. The average life span was a scant 35 years and everyone was dependent on the weather for crops to sustain life. As such bad years produced much starvation and almost any illness resulted in death. Childbirth was fought with danger to mother and child. Healthcare was virtually non-existent and superstition was widespread. It was the spread of Christianity—Catholicism—that saved Europe despite the constant strife between the various “nobles” of the era. They did, however, stop the spread of Islam. Religion infused the lives of everyone within the context of a strong system of castes, mostly based on protecting them as much as possible. In parallels that reflect our times, this look at the earliest century of an emerging concept of a Europe and its nation-states, the book provides a look at the harsh times and ruthless history of those who shaped it.

The Second World War was brought to a dramatic end with the use of two atomic bombs against the Empire of Japan. They enabled the U.S. to avoid estimated casualties in the many thousands had we been required to invade mainland Japan. A little known aspect of the story of the development of those first nuclear weapons is told in Denise Kiernan’s The Girls of Atomic City: The Untold Story of the Women Who Helped Win World War II ($27.00, Touchstone, an imprint of Simon and Schuster.) It arrives just in time for Women’s History Month and tells of the thousands of young women who were recruited by the U.S. government to serve the top-secret Manhattan Project. Their destination was “Site X”, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, a city that did not appear on any map at that time. The author introduces us to a half dozen young women who worked in a variety of roles from secretaries, statisticians, to calutron cubicle operators and chemists. The year was 1943 and Oak Ridge would go from being a ramshackle mud-pit top a bustling city of 75,000 by 1945. Despite the shroud of secretary that included gates and security fencing, watch towers and armed guards, the workers held Saturday night dances, enjoyed movies, and, with the surplus of army men, scientists and doctors, many of the girls became married women. Based on interviews with dozens of the surviving women and others, it was not until August 6, 1945 that many realized what their efforts had led to. It’s a great read.

The period of history leading up to and including the end of WWII is captured in A Line in the Sand: The Anglo-French Struggle for the Middle East, 1914-1948 by James Barr ($18.95, W.W. Norton, softcover). These are the last years of colonialism and few know of the machinations, the politics and espionage, the secret deals, as both nations vied to determine who would control the Middle East, all of which climaxed with the birth of Israel in 1948 and the emerging nations, many of which that had been drawn as lines on a map by British and French diplomats. It is a compelling tale of clashing efforts, moving between London, Paris, and New York; Jerusalem, Beirut, and Damascus, Cairo, Baghdad and Tel Aviv. The personalities involved included Lloyd George, Woodrow Wilson, Harry Truman, Winston Churchill, and Charles de Gaulle. It is filled with many more characters who come alive again on its pages. The world is still engaged in the Middle East and, as a region in turmoil, this book provides invaluable insights as to how we have arrived at this point.

War, as always, provides much of literature and Fire and Forget: Short Stories from the Long War, edited by Roy Scranton and Matt Gallagher ($15.99, Da Capo Press, softcover), provides snapshots of the wars fought in Iraq and Afghanistan, and most importantly how they affected the lives of its participants. The book brings together fifteen stories by writers that include front line soldiers, staff officers, and a military spouse. It is a way for those who only read about the events or saw bits and pieces on television to grasp the truth of the battlefield, the “fog of war”, and the lurking promise of death around every corner and down every road. Scranton, an Iraq veteran, was an artilleryman in the Army. Gallagher is a form Army captain who served 15 months in Iraq. I previously reviewed and recommended his account, “Kaboom”. Anyone who served and anyone who wants to know what it was to serve will value this book.

The ocean liner, Titanic, continues to attract the attention of the generations, already the subject of many books and several movies. Titanic Tragedy: A New Look at the Lost Liner, by John Maxtone-Graham ($15.95, W.W. Norton, softcover) is regarded as the dean of ocean liners historians and has long been fascinated by the story. He turns his talent and knowledge to the ramifications of that fateful night it sank.

Let’s round out Women’s History Month with One Glorius Ambition: The Compassionate Crusade of Dorothea Dix by Jane Kirkpatrick ($14.99, Waterbrook Press, an imprint of Random House, softcover) which, though a novel, has much to tell us of the life of this remarkable woman. Born to an unavailable mother and abusive father, she longed to protect and care for her younger brothers, but at age 14 she was sent away to live with relatives. She discovered she wanted more of life than the social expectation and limitations. Discovering a gift for teaching and writing, her pupils became her new family and she went on to become a leading voice for the mentally ill at a time when they were institutionalized and forgotten.

Odds and Ends

As is often the case, some books do not fit into easily recognizable categories. For example, Practical Classics: Fifty Reasons to Reread 50 Books You Haven’t Touched Since High School by Kevin Smoker ($18, Prometheus Books, softcover). An older generation of Americans will recognize titles such as “Catcher in the Rye” and “Slaughterhouse-Five”, but I am unsure that these and classics such as “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” are even being assigned in schools these days. That would be a great loss to a new generation. Reading these and other classics are a great aid as well as great reading experiences and enjoyment. If you have been thinking about revisiting the books of your youth or those you have promised yourself to read, but haven’t, this entertaining book provides practical, real-world reasons by you should read them.

In my youth, I was a magician entertaining at many children’s birthday parties and other events. I learned a lot of valuable skills in the process and made a fair amount of money as well. Fifty years ago, two magicians, brothers, founded The Magic Castle in Hollywood, now a landmark and still a magical mecca for fans and practitioners of illusion and prestidigitation. Milt Larsen, one of the founders, has written a history in My Magical Journey: The First 30,000 days ($40.00. Book ledge, softcover) that is extensively illustrated with photos and artwork collected over the years. Located in the Lane Mansion, it became the clubhouse for a private magician’s group in 1963. It now includes thirteen performance areas plus a museum for many artifacts. In addition to famed magicians, it has also hosted many amateur illusionists including Cary Grant, and Johnny Carson. The current president is Neil Patrick Harris. Anyone who loves magic will treasure this wonderful history.

Fans of college basketball will enjoy Gene Wojciechowski’s The Last Great Game: Duke Vs. Kentucky and the 2.1 Seconds that Changed Basketball ($17.00, Plume, softcover).  The date was March 28, 1992 when the Spectrum in Philadelphia was packed for the NCAA East Regional final. What occurred was a game that was so well-played, so close, and so dramatic that it is remembered twenty years later. The shot that ended it was an 80-foot inbounds pass from Grant Hill to Christian Laettner with 2.1 seconds in overtime. It gave Duke the 104-103 victory that is remembered to this day. The author has written a delightful account of the game along with the discipline, strategy, gamesmanship, philosophy and group psychology that lifted it to legendary status.

Novels, Novels, Novels

The flood of new novels continues and includes many self-published books. There used to be a time when self-publishing was frowned upon by reviewers, but no more. The new technologies and companies such as Amazon that have created their own imprints have transformed the way new novels make their way into the marketplace.

I have known “Samuel Jay” the nom de plume of the author of Shadow of Love ($17.95, available from Amazon and Barnes and Noble)since I was a young journalist and he was already a successful New Jersey public relations professional. In recent years he has turned his talents to writing novels and his latest is a sequel to “Shadow of Guilt”, two novels that will greatly entertain anyone who loves a fast-paced story, filled with realistic dialogue and plenty of action as its main character, Chip Keller, copes with life’s disappointments and challenges in ways with which the reader can identify. In his latest novel, Keller is the victim of a deliberate crash by a heavy pick-up truck, survives, and hires a detective, a boyhood friend, to find out who his would-be killer is. He is also drawn into an effort to thwart the building plans of a powerful developer with corrupt political allies who threatens an ancient north Jersey forest area. And he wrestles with a complex love life that is woven into an intricate plot. I guarantee that, once you begin to read this novel, you will not put it down until the last page. To learn more, visit www.samueljaynovels.com.

The Mapmaker’s War by Ronlyn Domingue ($23.00, Atria Books) tells of a long ago age when a young woman named Aoife is allowed the rare apprenticeship to become her kingdom’s mapmaker, tasked with charting the entire domain. When she discovers a secretive people who live in peace among great wealth and when she reports their existence, the community is targeted as a threat. When she tried to warn them, she is exiled and finds refuge among them. The story is told as an autobiography and contains all the elements of life we recognize from our own lives. It is a mesmerizing, original adventure. The Sunshine When She’s Gone by Thea Goodman ($24.00, Henry Holt and Company) tells the story of Veronica Reed who wakes in her Manhattan apartment one frigid morning, rested for the first time in months, and her husband, John, and baby, Clara, are gone. What she does not know is that John has left for a weekend in the Caribbean. It isn’t a kidnapping. Just an impulsive choice he made. The story is told from their alternating points of view as both grapple with the sacrifices of parenthood and any parent, particularly a new one, will find this a sometimes hilarious, always eloquent story.

Alan Bradley has authored a series of books featuring an eleven-year-old heroine, Flavia de Luce, a chemist and sleuth-extraordinaire, that has captured the imagination of readers of all ages as almost a million copies combined have sold in print thus far. His fans will welcome news of Speaking Among the Bones ($23.00, Delacorte Press) the latest in the series in which Flavia returns to solve another murder—one that hits close to home. When she discovers that the tomb of St. Tancred, she cannot pass up the event. When opened, a priceless heirloom is missing Flavia is on the case. This and the other novels in the series are a lot of fun. Lee Child’s debut novel, “Helpless”, a thriller, generated raves and he is back with Stolen $25.00, Kensington) in which John Bodine discovers a malignant melanoma growing on the bottom of his wife’s foot. It is just the beginning of a nightmare that proceed from one bad decision after another when he steals an identity and files a false insurance claim to cover the cost of her healthcare. When the real person discovers what he’s done, he blackmails him, and Bodine must play a very dangerous game with the blackmailer.

Softcover novels abound and here’s a quick look at several new ones. Fight Song by Joshua Mohr ($15.95, Soft Skull Press) begins when Bob Coffen, out riding his bicycle, is intentionally run off the road by a neighbor’s SUV. Something snaps in him. Modern suburban life has been getting him down and Bob is suddenly desperate to reconnect with his distant wife and children. He embarks on a weekend quest, meeting a motley crew of strange and wonderful characters who help him discover his fight song and the way back to a meaningful life. This novel is a call to arms for anyone who feels beaten down by life in which many feel they are losing control. A very contemporary novel, it is well worth reading. For those who enjoy a good thriller, there’s Scent to Kill: A Natural Remedies Mysteryby Chrystle Fiedler ($15.00, Gallery Books) featuring the sleuthing adventures of Dr. Willow McQuade, N.D., a naturopathic physician. This is a story of interlocking relationships when she is invited to a party on the estate of Roger Bixby, a television producer. Willow is more interesting in the lavender farm on the estate, hoping to pick up ideas for her new aromatherapy workshops in her story. Roger, it turns out, is working with her ex-boyfriend, Simon, who is dating Rogers soon-to-be-ex-wife, Carly. After the party is long over, Willow gets a frantic text from Simon saying Roger has drowned and been found on the beach. He is now the main suspect. When an autopsy report turns up lavender in Roger’s lungs, she is instantly suspicious. You will be, too!


Seventh Street Books, an imprint of Prometheus Books, has published three novels for spring. They are Fear of Beauty by Susan Froetschel ($15.95), Hammet Unwritten by Owen Fitzstephen ($13.95), and Dante’s Wood by Lynne Raimondo ($15.95).  All three are quite distinct. In Fear of Beauty, the battered body of an Afghan boy is found at the base of a cliff outside a remote village in Helmand Province. His mother, Sofi, is desperate to know and so does US Army Special Ranger, Joey Pearson. Together they must confront extremists in their search for answers and both learn that the urge to preserve a way of life can lead to a fundamentalism that destroys a society’s basic value. Hammett Unwritten stars the famed detective, Dashield Hammett, who closes his final case as a private eye, acquiring as a souvenir the counterfeit statuette that he will later make famous in “The Maltese Falcon.” A dangerous series of events takes Hammett from 1930’s San Francisco to the glamorous Hollywood of the 1940s, to a federal penitentiary, and finally to a fateful meeting on New Year’s Eve. You will want to go along for the adventure. In Dante’s Wood, psychiatrist Mark Angelotti knows that genes don’t lie. Or do they? Back to work after a devastating illness, Mark believes he has put his past behind him when he is asked to examine Charlie Dickerson, a mentally handicapped teenager whose wealthy mother insists he is the victim of sexual abuse. He diagnoses a different reason, but his prescription turns deadly when a teacher is murdered and Charlie confesses to the police. This is a case in which nothing that first meets the eye is true as Mark seeks to prove Charlie’s innocence.

That’s it for March! Tell your book-loving friends, family and coworkers about Bookviews and come back in April for a bevy of new non-fiction and fiction. 

Bookviews - April 2013

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By Alan Caruba

My Picks of the Month

One of the best biographies I have read in years is Roger Ailes: Off Camera—an Inside Look at the Founder and Head of Fox News by Zev Chafets ($26.95, Sentinel). Firstly, it is written with a style that engages the reader in a way that says that it, like the motto of Fox News, is fair and balanced. Secondly, it is a true Horatio Alger story of a boy born in a small Ohio town who rises to success by dint of hard work and a knack of being in the right place at the right time. It is a book about how Ailes’s attitudes, values, and personal courage made friends even of his competitors. To this day he numbers leading liberals among his personal friends. It is clear that Ailes has transformed the modern news media, providing with the backing of news tycoon, Rupert Murdock, an alternative to the liberal media, print and broadcast, that has dominated news and the way it is reported. Ailes had an instinctive understanding of television and the way it reported the news that has made it the most popular news outlet in the nation today. Does it have a conservative point of view? Yes, but its daily fare also includes liberal spokespersons every hour to debate and discuss the news of the day. To understand the times in which we live and the impact that Ailes’ Fox News has had on events, personalities, and issues, this book is must reading.

Fully forty percent of Americans self-identify as conservative, but decades of government expansion have put nearly fifty percent of Americans on some form of government program such as Social Security and Medicare, and countless others that cut a check to assist them in some fashion. One of the most venerable think tanks in Washington, DC, is the Heritage Foundation, 300 scholars addressing every public issue, producing studies that are provided to members of Congress to aid them in their decisions. Lee Edwards has written Leading the Way: The Story of Ed Feulner and the Heritage Foundation ($27.50, Crown Forum) that tells how, founded in 1973, the foundation has grown under the leadership of Ed Feulner. It produced the Mandate for Leadership in 1980 in which fifty-five percent of its recommendations were adopted by the during the Reagan years. It was responsible for the historic welfare reform act of 1996, passed during the Clinton years, and produced a study of homeland security in advance of the 9/11 attacks and implemented in large part by George W. Bush. Its emphasis has always been on timely, concise, and reliable information. This is a book for people who are intensely concerned with the policies affecting the life of the nation and of all Americans. It has hundreds of thousands of members, always advocating traditional conservative values of fiscal prudence, a strong defense, free enterprise, and maximum freedom for individual Americans. It is well worth reading.

In 1955 when I was graduating from high school, Allen Ginsburg, the now celebrated poet, was writing “Howl” and on his way to joining the handful of writers who would become known collectively as the “Beats” and icons of the “beat generation.” It was and still is hokum. The lives of Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, William S. Burroughs, and others in their circle included drug addiction, alcoholism, homosexuality, and an adolescent self-involvement that translated itself into their writing and, when they burst on the cultural scene in the late 1950s, they helped to shape their times and set in motion change that is with us today. One half of the population is desperately trying to hold onto the values of their parents and grandparents; the other is content to live off those who still have jobs. All this is captured in Mania: The Story of the Outraged and Outrageous Lives That Launched a Cultural Revolution by Ronald K.L. Collins and David M. Skover ($26.00, Top Five Books). It is an impressive piece of literary history and for those who recall the “beats”, well worth reading. Individually and as a group, theirs was a pathetic effort to avoid the norms of their times and who influenced much of the decline of our society that has followed in their wake.

My Mother was a cookbook author and famous teacher of haute cuisine, as well as an authority on wines. I grew up dining on a rich variety of dishes. I did not give much thought to taste, however, and I doubt that most of us do other than to prefer some kinds of food and drink over others. Barb Stuckey unlocks the mysteries of taste in her book, Taste: Surprising Stories and Science about Why Food Tastes Good ($16.00, Atria Books, softcover). A professional food developer, she has written an entertaining book about taste and why some of us prefer some kinds of foods over others, why we taste foods differently than others, and the science behind how, what, and why we taste what we eat. It is entirely sensory and some of us have better abilities to taste while others have lost that due to illness or injury. This will surely enhance your own ability to enjoy what you eat even more and, for those who love science, it explains the whole world of taste and why food producers invest a lot in developing foods that are designed to meet our specific preferences.

Readers are frequently writers as well and you have aspirations to be one (or already are), then you will enjoy The True Secret of Writing: Connecting Life with Language by Natalie Goldberg ($25.00, Atria). The author has written twelve books including two others on the subject of writing and has taught seminars on the topic for thirty-five years. Her book addresses the lessons learned from her workshops over the years and discusses how meditative actions are important to the creative process. April 15 is the day tax returns must be filed with the IRS and, if you haven’t begun yours, check out Julian Block’s Easy Tax Guide for Writers, Photographers, and Other Freelancers (Amazon Kindle price is $5.99. softcover price is $22.95, including shipping, available at www.julianblocktaxexpert.com). He is a nationally recognized attorney and a former IRS agent who has been cited as “a leading tax professional” by The New York Times and “an accomplished writer on taxes” by The Wall Street Journal, so you know you find some excellent information that could save you money when you file. A lot of good advice can be found at http://bookmarketingbuzzblog.blogspot.com, a blog by Brian Feinblum, the chief marketing officer of Media Connect. If you want to promote and sell your book these days, you should check it out.

April is National Poetry Month. On my blog,"Warning Signs", I ask if it has become an oxymoron in an era when poets and poetry are largely ignored. Treat yourself to a good poetry anthology. It will provide hours of pleasure.

Memoirs, Biographies and Autobiographies

Though I have never been a fan, there is no denying that Bruce Springsteen is already a rock and roll legend. His fans will enjoy Bruce Springsteen and the Promise of Rock’n’Roll by Marc Dolan ($17.95, W.W. Norton) whose softcover edition of his book now includes a new chapter. A native of Freehold, New Jersey, came from humble beginnings. His mother encouraged him to learn to play the guitar after noticing that pop music was an interest of his. As a teenager he joined a local band, playing clubs up and down the Jersey shore. It took several years of writing songs and developing his own music that reflected his working class background. His first two records sold modestly, but 1975’s “Born to Run” was his breakthrough album. While the basic facts of his life are known to fans, this book fills in all the parts of his life. It will prove very interesting and, in many ways, inspiring. Another memoir from the world of music is Official Truth, 101 Proof: The Inside Story of Pantera by Rex Brown with Mark Eglinton ($26.00, Da Capo Press) in which Brown, the bassist with the heavy metal group that still has four million fans on Facebook ten years after breaking up, takes the reader behind the scenes of the group intended “to fill the spot Metallica had vacate” after the murder of lead guitarist Darrell “Dimebag” Abbott in December of 2004. After 9/11, the band returned to America from a European tour, never to play a live show again. This is a look at the highs and lows of superstardom, and the hedonistic lifestyle of the band, fueled by drugs and alcohol.

Imagine now being able to listen to music. More than thirty million people suffer from hearing loss in the U.S., but only ten percent are considered profoundly deaf. Little has been written about the remaining ninety percent, the partially deaf for whom life is characterized by verbal misunderstandings and conversational riddles. Song without Words: Discovering My Deafness Halfway Through Life by Gerald Shea ($24.95, Da Capo Press). A childhood illness left the author with partial hearing loss, but he didn’t realize anything was wrong, assuming everyone had a similar problem. Despite the problem, he excelled through elementary and boarding schools, Yale and Columbia Law School, eventually working his way to a partnership in a New York law firm. His condition remained undiagnosed until he was 34! This is a candid and deeply moving story that anyone with a comparable hearing loss will find a comfort and an inspiration.

Another inspiring story is found in A Teacher Grows in Brooklyn ($14.95, Mill City Press, softcover) as Albert Mazza tells the story of his introduction to teaching in a public high school in 1963 and his realization of the failures of the educational process as it was practiced then and now. Unlike others, he wanted to change it and to spread his successful methods of motivating students. In the 1960s and 1970s, he perfected his methodology with a dream to make improve the system. He created the Young Diplomats Program that focused on the constantly changing global issues, helping to make the 1980s an age of discovery for his students. He would join the New York Board of Education in 1979, become the director of the Youth Leadership Program, and continue his role as a pedagogic pioneer. After his retirement in 1995, he became the Director of Education for the America-Israel Friendship League. This is a truly inspiring memoir and particularly for educators. Inspiration can be found in Once Upon a Gypsy Moon, a memoir by Michael Hurley ($19.99, Center Street/Hachette Book Group, softcover) in which the author chronicles his decision to live about an aging 32-foot sloop called the Gypsy Moon after he had lost his job, was short of money, and his 25-year-old marriage had ended. He began in Annapolis, Maryland and headed south for two years seeking to salvage “a life that has foundered”, but the experience was one that let him grapple with issues of faith and disbelief, love, marriage, and the challenged faced by the adult children of alcoholics. When rough seas forced him ashore, he met his future, new wife. This is a deeply moving book, especially for anyone grappling with the challenges that life throws at everyone.

Parenting & Relationships

Parenting may be the greatest challenge anyone undertakes and fortunately there are books to help. Marriage, too, is a challenge and there are books to help deal with them as well.

Your Child’s Path: Unlocking the Mysteries of Who Your Child Will Become by Susan Engel ($15.00, Atria Books, softcover) says it is time for parents to be liberated from all the worry about their child’s development, much of it coming from the media and other sources of information about the latest societal ills plaguing children and teens, and I agree. She says you cannot dictate who your children will become, but you can get a good sense of who they are and where they are heading by paying attention to what they do, say, and feel. As often as not problem reveal themselves as a thread that will reveal itself over time. “And when there are problems, there are gentle ways to help.” A mother of three sons, the author is a developmental psychologist in the Department of Psychology at Williams College who has worked with students of all ages for nearly twenty years. There’s plenty of good advice packed into this book.

Parenting Your Emerging Adult: Launching Kids from18 to 29by Dr. Varda Konstram ($14.95, New Horizon Press, softcover) officially debuts in May and addresses an age group that has been called narcissistic and self-absorbed, not that different from previous generations of that age, but this one faces a higher cost of living, higher college debt loads, and a sense of material entitlement says the author. Moreover, they are clinging to the parental nest, often because they are unable to find employment or earn enough to live on their own. An estimated 56% of men and 48% of women, 18 to 24 years of age, are living with their often cash-strapped parents who are often stressed out by the situation and in need of practical advice. The author offers the advice parents need to get their emerging adults living successfully out on their own while providing an understanding of their developmental period and how it intersects with the current economic, social, and political times. If you or someone you know is in this situation, this is the book to read.

Available in June, The Secrets of Surviving Infidelity by Dr. Scott D. Haltzman ($19.95, Johns Hopkins University Press) addresses the fact that an estimated 40% of marriages are rocked by infidelity every year. This book debunks many of the myths that surround cheating and that triggers complex emotions and events. The author does not advise ending a relationship that might well have been a happy marriage, teaching both the victim and perpetrator how to acknowledge their feelings, reduce their sense of despair, and begin to rebuilt a strong relationship. Interestingly, he says that the chances of cheating go up each year a couple is together and among the 60+ crowd, some 29% of men and 15% of women have had at least one indiscretion. He also says that love matures, but doesn’t have to grow old, offering tips on how to keep the relationship fresh. This book is filled with good advice on how to avoid and how to deal with this chronic problem of marriage. Marriages, however, do end, either from divorce or the death of a partner. This is examined in Suddenly Solo: A Lifestyle Road Map for the Mature, Widowed or Divorced Man by Harold Spielman and Marc Silbert ($14.95, www.suddenlysolo.org or from Amazon.com, softcover) This is a guide for men that offers a positive sense of renewal, filled with advice on how to move forward from the loss. The book is aimed at those over 50 who are most likely to encounter this change and it is written with humor as it provides transitional guidance in a culture that has changed radically since these mature men were lost “solo.”  Spielman is a sociologist and co-founder of a market and communication research company from which he retired in 2008. I think this book will prove very helpful to any man who is seeking to emerge from divorce or the death of his partner in life. And isn’t just men, of course, who must grapple with such changes. An entertaining and informative book, Ask Avery Anything: A Woman’s Journey Through Midlife Dating ($10.99, Second City Books, a division of Windy City Publishers, available via www.AskAveryAnything.com and Amazon.com, softcover) uses her own and other’s real life stories to offer her advice for women who are re-entering the dating scene for the first time after a long time in a relationship. Many conclude that finding a good man is a frustrating process at a certain age, but Avery offers advice and, best of all, the knowledge that you are not alone. She does so with honesty and humor.

To Your Health

As Obamacare transforms the U.S. healthcare system in ways most Americans are as yet unaware, Dr. Cary Presant, MD, has written a very useful book, Surviving American Medicine: How to Get the Right Doctor, Right Hospital, and Right Treatment with Today’s Health Care ($17.95, iUniverse, softcover) that may very well save your life. Bringing four decades of experience and knowledge to the task, Dr. Presant has written a book that answers some of the most important questions you need to ask, including what changes you need to make today to prepare for Obamacare reforms. He addresses what you need to know to get the best care in a hospital and how long you should stay, as well as finding affordable medications. He offers advice on what to do when your insurance company denies authorization for a treatment. In fact, there isn’t a page in this book that doesn’t offer excellent advice. The author has credentials to spare including, in addition to his own practice, being a professor of clinical medicine at the University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine, past president of the Association of Community Cancer Centers, and Chairman of the Board of the Medical Oncology Association of Southern California, to name just a few. If your health, maintaining it and, if necessary, surviving an illness is important to you, read this book.

According to the National Health Council, incurable and ongoing chronic disease affects approximately 133 million Americans, 45% of the nation’s total population. I am inclined to think that figure is high, although it is true that Baby Boomers are joining the ranks of the nation’s elderly at a rate of 10,000 a day. Many have a least one chronic illness and some have more than one. When you consider that today’s healthcare system was designed for the last century, this poses a problem, but for those encountering this challenge it is a personal one. Richard Cheu is the author of Living Well With Chronic Illness: A Practical and Spiritual Guide ($16.95, Dog Ear Publishing, softcover and ebook). He is a neurophysiologist and a pastoral counselor, an ordained deacon and hospital chaplain in the Archdiocese of New York at Bellevue Hospital. He is a believer in taking charge of one’s own well-being as the way to improve the quality and length of one’s life. He has been a care-giver to a chronically-ill wife for nine years. In short, he knows what he is talking about. His advice covers a range of ways one can keep motivated, keeping mind and body active and fit. He discusses the negative emotions unleashed by a chronic illness diagnosis and how to take control of the shock, stress, and grief that accompanies the condition including how to overcome the loneliness that often accompanies it. There is a spiritual component to this and other aspects of chronic illness and I think this is one of the best books on the subject I have read in many years.

Honest Medicine: Effective, Time-Tested, inexpensive Treatments for Life-Threatening Diseases by Julia Schopick ($14.95, Innovative Health Publishing, www.HonestMedicine.com, softcover) introduces four life-saving treatments that have been effectively treating—and is some cases curing—people for many years. They do not generate large profits for pharmaceutical companies and have not been universally accepted. They include low dose Naltrexon for autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis, lupus, Chrone’s disease, and rheumatoid arthritis and some other conditions. There is Ketogenic Diet for pediatric epilepsy, intravenous alpha lipoic acid for terminal liver disease and, with LDN for some cancers, and Silverion for non-healing wounds. Her writings have appeared in American Medical News, Alternative & Complementary Therapies, and the British Medical Journal. The book comes recommended by a number of physicians. Check it out at her website and you may well conclude that it offers some real relief and help.

The Family Guide to Mental Health Care by Lloyd I. Sederer, MD ($25.95, W.W. Norton) addresses a problem that left untreated can devastate a family and, as in the case of the school murders earlier this year, an entire community. The book is a comprehensive resource for families dealing with a loved one’s mental illness, providing the answers needed to understand a variety of disorders, making informed judgments as to whether doctors are really helping, and getting the right treatment.  The author is medical director of New York State’s Office of Mental Health and an adjunct professor at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health.

A growing number of women are putting off marriage and children until later in life, beyond their twenties. Your Pregnancy after 35 by Dr. Glade B. Curtis, MD with Judith Schuler, MS ($15.99, Da Capo Press, softcover) addresses pregnancy for older women, offering information on the risk of high blood pressure and similar issues. There’s advice on job-stress relief and how to dal with fatigue while working during pregnancy, special dietary recommendations including vitamin and mineral intake. The good news is that there are benefits as well for being an older mom. A wealth of information is provided in this book by an author of 18 books.

Getting Down to Business Books
 
In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, more regulations were imposed on the financial sector of the nation’s economy and regulation is a signal of a lack of confidence. The crisis was brought about by the housing mortgage bubble and the bubble was the result of the government’s role in which two government sponsored entities, Fanny Mae and Freddie Mac, encouraged banks to issue loans that even they knew might not be repaid. Both GSE’s bundled toxic loans and sold them as assets. The circle was complete and, after the government had to bail out the GSE’s with billions of taxpayer dollars, it is incredibly being repeated. That’s why The Death of Corporate Reputation: How Integrity Has Been Destroyed on Wall Street by Prof. Jonathan Macey’s new book is important ($39.95, FT Press). As he points out, trust and reputation are central to the operation of capital markets. He warns that when the public loses confidence in them fails, markets and societies fail as well. Ironically, more regulation only makes the problem worse. Macey, a Yale professor and expert in financial market regulation spells out how and why poorly considered regulation has undermined traditional trust mechanisms throughout financial institutions, accounting and law firms, credit ratings agencies, and stock exchanges. For anyone in the financial sector or who wants to understand why the last financial crisis occurred and is likely to occur again, this is an important book to read.

Surviving in the workplace is increasingly a topic for authors who offer advice. Meredith Fuller has penned Working with Bitches: Identify the Eight Types of Office Mean Girls and Rise Above Workplace Nastiness ($14.99, Da Capo Press, softcover). Ms. Fuller is a psychologist who is a consultant for major organizations, specializing in career development. She brings thirty years of experience to this book and it is aimed at women in the workplace who will recognize the same “mean girl” behavior they encountered in high school and who bring their bitchy behavior into the office. There’s the “excluder” who pretends you don’t exist and doesn’t pass alone important information. Others include the “insecure” who micromanages everyone, trusts no one, and thinks no one knows better than she. There’s the “toxic”, the “narcissist”, the “screamer”, the “liar”, the “incompetent, and the “not-a-bitch” who may have a disagreeable manner, but is just trying to do her job. All are discussed and their behavior is explained along with practical advice for coping with and protecting oneself against the mean girls, whether they are one’s peer, subordinate, or your boss. Make Your SHIFT: The Five Most Powerful Moves You Can Make to Get Where YOU Want to Go ($15.95, ATA Press) by Beverly D. Flaxington may just get you jump-started if you feel you are not moving ahead in your career and your life. The author is a business woman, co-founder of a boutique sales and marketing consultancy, and is a certified Professional Behavior Analyst, among other credentials. Offering more than motivation, her book is about a goal-achievement process that anyone can apply to their own life, learning how to identify attitudes that might be blocking progress, identifying obstacles in order to focus on those that can be controlled. Research has found that employees described themselves as possessing one or more five career-limited traits that include unreliability, responding with ‘it’s not my job’, procrastination, resistance to change, or projecting a negative attitude. If the feedback you’re receiving suggests this describes you in some fashion, you should read this book.

Walt F.J. Goodridge brings a lot of passion to his book Turn Your Passion into Profit: A step-by-step guide for transforming any talent, hobby or product idea into a money-making venture ($24.95, www.PassionProfit.com, softcover). The author draws on his own experience because he walked away from a career as a civil engineer to pursue his passion for music, writing, and helping others. Since then he has written 16 books and for several business magazines. Interestingly, he says you don’t need a degree to succeed because your desire will be your degree and the steps he spells out will help avoid some of the pitfalls while concentrating on what works if you want to be a writer, singer, designer, or chef. Clearly the book is written for those with a creative urge. Turning it into a career takes passion and some practical knowledge of what to do. This book will be helpful to creative folks. The Barefoot Spirit: How Hardship, Hustle, and Heart Built America’s #1 Wine Brand by Michael Houlihan and Bonnie Harvey with Rick Kushman ($15.95, Evolve Publishing, softcover) debuts next month and tells the story of how the authors started Barefoot Wines in the laundry room of a rented farmhouse with no money, no industry experience, and no clue what they were doing. It’s an inspiration to see how they broke all the rules and still succeeded against all odds. For anyone contemplating starting a business, there are lessons to be learned here and an entertaining story as a bonus. You can check it out at http://www.barefootwinefounders.com/ 

Kid Stuff

Not too many new books for younger readers have come in of late, but two are well worth recommending. Yes, Let’s by Galen Goodwin Longstreth and illustrated by Maris Wicks ($15.95, Tanglewood) is about a family’s day in the woods, making it a fun read-aloud book for those with children aged one through five. It’s the right size for smaller hands and its text rhymes from page to page in a loving tribute to family togetherness. For a slightly older group of young readers there an interesting and educational book, Tool. Time. Twist: A Brief History of Tools Through Time ($17.99, Craigmore Creations, Portland, OR). Written by David Shapiro and illustrated by Christopher Herndon, it takes the reader from the invention of stone axes, the discovery of how to make fire, hunting tools, drills and wrenches, and all the tools we take for granted, placing their beginnings in the proper time frame, up to automobiles and rockets that let us explore outer space. Even an adult will enjoy this one!

For teens, Zest Books publishes a number of books to help them navigate through life at a time when a lot of questions need an answer. The How-To Handbook ($10.99) is a good example, providing short, but good advice on everything from how to address an audience to pop a pimple. It offers advice on how to manage money, take great photos, and even how to iron a pair of pants. Other Zest titles such as How to Make the Grade ($14.99) offers advice on how to study better, avoid stress, and succeed in school while Seven Deadly Clicks: Essential Lessons for Online Safety and Success ($6.99) can save a youngster a world of trouble. A visit to www.zestbooks.net is a good place to visit whether you are a parent or a teen.

Novels, Novels, Novels

So many novels. Here are a few well worth considering.

All the Light There Was by Nancy Kricorian ($24.00, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt) is about an Armenian family’s struggle to survive the Nazi occupation of Paris in the 1940s. Meticulously researched and told with great style, it is an excellent story of loyalty, love, and the many faces of resistance. It is told through the eyes of Maral Pegorian, whose family survived the Armenian genocide and endeavors to build a new life in their homeland. As the Nazis march down the Rue de Belleville, the adults brace for the suffering and oppression they know all too well, while the children see it as a new, bewildering experience. This story is about an aspect of the war that has not been widely or sufficiently told. War has always provided many novels and Jerome Gold has written The Moral Life of Soldiers ($16.95, Black Heron Press, softcover.) It is a novel and five stories in which one is told by an elderly officer retired from the People’s Army of (North) Vietnam. It is about the reasons a man takes up arms. In a novella that is part of the book, 1950’s Georgia is evoked in a story about a white family that moves there from the north and the moral compromises they must make to live peacefully among their white neighbors and the compromises they resist making. This is, in many ways, an unsettling group of stories, but one that asks the reader to question his or her beliefs.

The House at the End of Hope Street by Menna van Praag ($25.95, Viking) is a whimsical story of hope and feminine wisdom in which Alba Ashby, the youngest PhD at Cambridge University suffers a traumatic event and finds herself on the doorstep of 11 Hope Street where she is welcomed under the condition that she will have 99 nights there in which to turn her life around. It is no ordinary house in which many literary figures like Virginia Woolf and Dorothy Parker have stayed in the form of talking portraits on the wall! Yes, it is a bit of a fantasy, but as Alba begin her journey to heal her wounds, it is a place that will save her life. Women, in particular, will enjoy this one. In Hand Me Down ($16.00, Plume softcover) Melanie Thorne offers a heartbreaking study of a contemporary family in the darkest of circumstances. It is the story of two young people who must face incredible odds to forge lives of their own in the face of an uncertain future. Fourteen-year-old Elizabeth Reid is devoted to protecting her little sister, Jaime, shielding her from the dark side of their alcoholic, abusive father. When they are separated she must rely on the begrudging kindness of distant relatives. A move to the mountains of Utah is an idyllic life with her Aunt Tammy, but Elizabeth worries about her sister. She is soon packing for another, even less secure home, but she will rejoin her sister. This is about the power of the human spirit in the face of adversity and a story that you will read start to finish.

For those who love a good crime thriller, there’s Shadows of Doubt by Mell Corcoran ($16.95, Mill City, softcover), an impressive debut. Women are being hunted, tortured, and killed by an assailant that leaves the same clue on each of them, but it has no scientific explanation. Detective Lou Donovan must figure out this killer’s signature because he’s escalating and no one knows where he will strike next. It’s a case he did not want, but when it is taken from her, she tries to work below the radar, but is foiled at every turn. It’s as if someone is watching her and knows her every move. When she keeps meeting a mysterious stranger, his presence disarms her initially, but she is having the same effect on him. Is he the killer? You’ll have to read this novel to find out!  From one of Scandinavia’s best crime authors there’ Killer’s Art by Mari Jungstedt ($14.95, Stockholm Text, softcover) in which a man is found hanged on the old city wall of Visby. He is a well-known art gallery owner and it sends fear throughout the island. Days later a famous painting is stolen in Stockholm and there are disturbing links to the murder. The world of art, gay prostitution, and drugs unfolds in this fast-paced novel about an investigation that challenges Superintendent Anders Knutas.

That’s it for April! Lots of new non-fiction and fiction books are arriving daily so make sure to come back in May to learn about them. Tell your family, friends, and coworkers about Bookviews so they too can enjoy the latest and best new books.

Bookviews - January 2014

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By Alan Caruba

My Picks of the Month

The one book you must read as the new year begins is Murray Holland’s A Nation in the Red: The Government Debt Crisis and What We Can Do About it ($28.00, McGraw Hill) for its chilling message about the economic collapse of America and the steps that must be taken to avoid it. In recent years I have received a number of books on this subject, but Murray’s stands out, not only for the facts it cites, but for the way it can be easily comprehended by someone who has little to no grasp of our economic system. “The national debt can never be paid off. It is like a cancer we will have to live with for the rest of the life of the nation,” says Holland and the facts about the size of our debt, the matrix of socialist programs that contribute to it, and the explosion in spending and borrowing that is driving the nation to collapse. The debt stands at $19 trillion and may be over $33 trillion in just ten years. The nation’s Gross Domestic Product—how much we take in for the sale of goods and services—is less than what it is paying out for its many socialist programs (Social Security, Medicaid, Medicare, unemployment, student loans, and housing). The financial problems that European nations that embraced socialism are a clear warning sign that it can and will happen here without a significant reduction in the federal government’s spending and borrowing. Murray calls it a Debt Trap and the implications for Americans, now and generations to come, are frightening. For eighty years since the Great Depression, Americans have been adopting socialist programs precisely as its enemies have wanted. The bill is coming due. Another recent book, The Financial Crisis and the Free Market Cure,by John A. Allison ($28.00, McGraw Hill) is also worth reading.

It’s hard to believe that the U.S. has been engaged in a military conflict in Afghanistan since 2001. For most Americans it has been a war to which little attention was paid unless one had a son, daughter or loved one stationed there. Now the noted photographer Robert Cunningham, along with Steven Hartov, has captured the lives, the dedication, the sacrifices, and service of our military that served there in Afghanistan on the Bounce: Boots on the Ground with the U.S. Military and the International Security Assistance Force ($40.00, Insight Editions), a large format book that will fill your heart with pride. Cunningham was embedded with our troops over the course of 132 missions, photographing all aspects of the military operation there, including photos of Afghans old and young. The book is a real treasure and beautifully produced as page after page testifies to their courage, humor and humanity.

A book you are not likely to hear about in the vast leftist media of the nation is by a former CIA espionage officer, Kent Clizbe. It is Willing Accomplices: How KGB Covert Influence Agents Created Political Correctness, Obama’s Hate-America-First Political Platform, and Destroyed America ($18.99, softcover, $5.99 Kindle, and $21.95 audio, Andemca Publishing, available from Amazon.com.) Clizbe tells how, shortly after Lenin was able to seize control of Russia and establish communism there, he instituted a program to undermine America under the direction of the KBG, its security service. While historians have written about Russia and its massive espionage program, they lack Clizbe’s background and thus have not made the connection between its program of political correctness, the infiltration of the media, academia, education and entertainment. The result is an educational system that falsely depicts our Founders, our history, and our values of individualism and, of course, capitalism. In these major factors of our society, America is constantly depicted as racist, sexist, and imperialistic. The result is generations of Americans who have been encouraged to loath the greatest nation in the world. Clizbe documents who the major players in this effort have been and are. His book explains much of Obama’s agenda. We are dangerously close to being destroyed as a nation by at least half the population that has been corrupted by political correctness, a hatred of America.

The Conscience of the Constitution: The Declaration of Independence and the Right to Liberty by Timothy Sandefur ($$24.95/$12.99 ebook, CATO Institute) combines law, history and political philosophy for a powerful defense of the Constitution. Like many Americans, I came late to reading the Declaration, response to the arrogant actions of the British crown and parliament to colonies that had ruled themselves for a century and had grown weary of taxation without representation. Sandefur notes that the word “democracy” does not appear in the Declaration, but “liberty” does and that it should set the framework for interpreting the Constitution, a governing instrument notable for putting limits on a central government while ensuring that the states and citizens retain their rights, not granted but acknowledged by it. “Liberty comes first, and order arises from it. We have gone astray in our constitutional understanding because we have upended that relationship.” As the current administration demonstrably limits our liberties—Obamacare is a prime example, requiring Americans to purchase something they may not want or need—current polls indicate that they have begun to awaken to the danger and are swinging back to a more conservative interpretation and practice. This book will interest anyone who takes a serious interest in the subject.

In an era in which we are all constantly being manipulated by government, special interest groups, and others, Push Back! How to Take a Stand Against Groupthink, Bullies, Agitators, and Professional Manipulatorsby B.K. Eakman ($14.95, Skyhorse Publishing, softcover) examines scenarios of mass indoctrination and demonstrates how to recognize and counter them effectively. An educator and international and national human rights advocate, Eakman, provides a guide to spotting how professional manipulators exert power over a room and steer discussions back to their agendas without ever answering audience questions or addressing their concerns. They often employ techniques to ostracize those who challenge their assertions, questioning or criticizing them. This is an extremely useful book when hoaxes and deceptions are advanced by such people.

For anyone who loves films, both old and new, there is a special treat to be had in The Big Screen: The Story of the Movies by David Thomson ($18.00, Farrar Straus Giroux, softcover) because this British-American film critic and historian has written a fat volume based on his encyclopedic knowledge of movies. It is a sweeping history of cinema that an enthusiast will enjoy in every respect. One cannot talk of film history without noting the legendary director John Ford ($22.95, Lake Street Press, softcover) by Joseph Malham who takes us into the life of the six-time Oscar winner for classics such as “The Grapes of Wrath”, “How Green Was My Valley”, and “The Quiet Man.” He is perhaps best known for his Westerns, “Stagecoach”, “The Searchers”, and “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance”, all made with his longtime friend, John Wayne. The book is subtitled the “Poet in the Desert” and Malham provides interesting insight into Ford’s faith and Irish roots, that both contributed to his portrayals of families, communities, and history.

I am born and bred in New Jersey, so when I received Lynda L. Hinkle’s new book, Breaking Up: Finding and Working with a New Jersey Divorce Attorney ($12.44, Amazon.com, softcover), which, though it is focused on New Jersey law, is filled with excellent advice even if you live elsewhere. As she makes clear, divorce is one of the most stressful situations one can encounter. What I found notable was the tone of the book. It is clear-headed, the kind of advice one needs to receive. Hinkle is a divorce attorney and has been through her own divorce. If I were getting a divorce, I would want her in my corner. Her book will put her there for you.

Getting Down to Business (Books)

There are a number of books devoted to achieving success in business and we can count on many more to come in the year ahead.

A lot of people are stuck in jobs they don’t like or battling hopelessness as the seek employment these days. For them, Sander A. Flaum’s book, written with Michele Flaum, The Best Thing That Could Ever Happen to You: How a Career Reversal Can Reinvigorate Your Life ($16.95, Big Shoes Publishing, softcover) should be at the top of their reading list. With a foreword written by former astronaut, Senator John Glenn, it is an easy-to-read, how-to guide that moves readers out of their no-win employment rut and gets them back in charge of their job search. Flaum, who is chairman of the Leadership Forum at Fordham University’s Graduate School of Business Administration, shows how to work harder and smarter to come out on top in the interviewing process. The bottom line is that the book teaches readers how to deal with their fears and shortcomings, get passed their inhibitions, and find the job that is right for them. The author really knows what he is talking about and, if you’re seeking a new job, this is the book for you.

An interesting book about a classic case of what happens when a corporate leader plunders his corporation is found in Taking Down the Lion by Catherine S. Neal ($28.00, Palgrave Macmillan) as she examines the rise and fall of Tyco’s Dennis Kozlowski. He had grown a little known New Hampshire conglomerate into a global giant, but in a stunning succession of events, he suddenly lost his job and was indicted during the post-Enron era.  He was convicted of wrongfully taking $100 million from Tyco to engage in a lifestyle that put him in jail. He is due for release soon.

The 25thanniversary edition of The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey ($30.00/$17.00, Simon & Schuster, hard and softcover) is widely regarded as one of the most inspiring books ever written and been read by leaders of business and industry, as well as students preparing to enter the employment marketplace. More than twenty million copies have been sold. Covey presents a holistic, integrated, principle-centered approach for solving personal and professional problems. This is a book devoted to fairness, integrity, honesty and human dignity. In sum, no matter your age or status, this book can give your life a boost.

Totally beyond anything I understand or know about is data science, so I will trust those who recommend John W. Foreman’s Data Smart: Using Data Science to Transform Information Into Insight ($45.00, Wiley, softcover). The book shows you the significant data science techniques, how they work, how to use them, and how this will benefit your business, no matter if it is large or small. And the best part says the author is that anyone can learn how to do this. The author is the Chief Data Scientist for MailChimp.com where he leads a data science product development project. As an analytics consultant, he has created data science solutions for the Coca-Cola Company, Royal Caribbean International, the Department of Defense, the IRS and the FBI, among others. Sergiusz Prokurat, an economist and historian, takes a look at the way work is changing and, in some cases, disappearing as robots replace people, in his book, Work 2.0: Nowhere to Hide ($9.99, Kindle $4.99, softcover). It is an intellectual examination of how the introduction of new technologies, particularly the computer and the Internet, has begun to transform the way work has been defined in the past and, in addition to the skills required to be connected to the world, how work is increasingly about knowledge and the provision of services needed to convey it in the digital age. Gone are the days one gets hired by a corporation and stays there for his career. Mobility, flexibility and other traits will play an important role in the new age. This is a book that anyone involved in organizations large and small as well as a young man or woman coming out of college will benefit from reading.

Mental States

Some publishers specialize in various topics because it interests them and presumably might interest a lot of other people. The world of the mind is a topic about which Prometheus Books has a number of titles that, if you find yourself thinking about what you’re thinking, you might want to read.

Let’s start with Think: Why You Should Question Everything by Guy P. Harrison ($16.95. softcover) which challenges everyone to think like a scientist and embrace the skeptical life. This book will help you improve your critical thinking skills, see through most scams at first glance, and learn how your own brain can trip you up.  It shows you how to navigate through the maze of biases and traps that are standard features of every brain. As a result, we often trick ourselves into thinking, remembering, and believing things that are not real or true. It is an upbeat book that’s fun. Are you moody? Who isn’t? Maybe you should pick up a copy of Patrick M. Burke’s Mood: The Key to Understanding Ourselves and Others ($18.95, softcover). The author is a clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of Arizona and his book is a comprehensive developmental approach to understanding mood and the role that it plays in determining our outlook on life and our ability to cope with its challenges. We all know people who are generally happy and others who always seem to be in a bad mood. Most of us fit in somewhere between the two poles. Mood, says the author, is the way we are tuned into the world and begins early in our lives as relationships play a central role in shaping our moods. Security or insecurity, loss or the fear of loss of key relationships, especially in childhood can have lasting effects on the way we view the world. If you’re in a mood to learn more, this book will prove of interest.

Believing: The Neuroscience of Fantasies, Fears, and Convictions by Michael McGuire ($19.95/$ll.99, softcover or ebook) asks and answers the question what are beliefs and how have evolution and culture led to a brain that is seemingly committed to near endless belief creation? Once established, why are most beliefs difficult to change? The author is professor emeritus of psychiatry and behavior sciences at the University of California, LA. He takes the novel approach of focusing on the central and critical role of brain systems and the ways in which they interact with the environment to create and maintain beliefs. This is fairly heavy duty reading, but for the inquiring mind, it will prove quite satisfying. It seems like “fairness” is the being spoken of all the time these days, particularly in a political context. Fairness has intrigued philosophers and social thinkers in both Eastern and Western societies for millennia. L. Sun, a professor of biology at Central Washington University, trained initially at East China Normal University in Shanghai before pursuing further studies in the United States. The result of that is The Fairness Instinct: The Robin Hood Mentality and Our Biological Nature ($24.95/$12.99, hardcover and ebook). Sun examines the innate sense of fairness displayed by human beings in all kinds of societies throughout history and argues that it is an emotion and behavior rooted in our DNA rather than a product of ideology or convention. He cites studies that show that even monkeys react negatively to patently unfair treatment.  While we generally regard fairness as a good thing, Sun shows that there’s a down side when it plays too great a role in leveling inequalities, producing rigid social structures where only mediocrity is condoned. Well worth the time to read.

Many books on the subject of leadership have crossed my desk in the many years I have been a reviewer. The Way of the SEAL: Think Like an Elite Warrior to Lead and Succeed by Mark Divine, Commander, U.S. Navy SEALs (retired) with Allyson Edelhertz Machate ($21.99, Reader’s Digest) examines those attributes of military life that can be translated to the civilian world with exercises, meditations, and other techniques to train your mind for mental toughness, emotional resilience, and uncanny intuition. Divine served in the SEALs for twenty years and has led a number of multimillion-dollar business ventures since his retirement. His book distills the fundamentals of success into eight powerful principles that impart his experience to teach you to think like a SEAL in order to take charge of your life at work, at home, and in life.

Moving on from Prometheus Books, there’s Happily Ever After: The Life-Changing Power of a Grateful Heart by Trista Sutter ($24.99, Da Capo Books). Twenty-six million viewers watched ABC’s first Bachlorete get swept away in a fairytale romance and many wished they could be as lucky as the author. Courted by a handsome, poetry-writing firefighter in some of the world’s most luxurious destinations, the match was for read, Trista and Ryan celebrated their ten-year anniversary in December of last year. They now have two children, a dog, and a fulfilling family life. In her book, she shares her thoughts on the importance of living a thankful life while chronicling her personal journey and including stories from friends as well as experts. I have no doubt this book could help someone hoping their dream of lasting love come true and wondering, perhaps, why it hasn’t yet.

Alan C. Fox’s People Tools: 54 Strategies for Building Relationships, Creating Joy, and Embracing Prosperity ($16.95, SelectBooks, softcover) is filled with good advice on how to deal with many of life’s many problems such as having the same argument with a sibling, parent or child, deciding whether to end a relationship, determining if it’s time to make a career change or whether a business partner is trustworthy, to name just a few of the topics addressed in this book. At age 72 Fox has university degrees in accounting, law, education and professional writing. Along the way he has had his own law firm and founded a commercial real estate company in 1968 that manage more than seventy major income-producing properties in eleven states. With more than seventy years of experience, he shares it in a way that can help the reader avoid life’s pitfalls and develop successful relationships.

To Your Health (Books)

Americans more be more obsessed about their health than any other people. The books devoted to it keep coming and here are some of the latest that have arrived.

The media is filled with images of beautiful bodies, but in real life, a lot of the people we encounter are overweight or just not the “hard bodies” we’re told should be a goal. If one of your New Year’s resolutions was to lose weight and get gorgeous, then you should consider Burn the Fat, Feed the Muscle by Tom Venuto ($27.00, Harmony) who has worked in the fitness industry since 1989, including 14 years as a personal trainer. He promotes all-natural, healthy strategies. The book is not about becoming a fitness model or a body-builder, but rather how to use the same techniques they employ to improve your own health and fitness. It’s a big book and it has plenty of advice that answers pretty much the answer to every question one might have and lots of information you may have encountered. He makes sense on every page. I
 
If you’ve been wondering about the reason you are seeing more gluten-free foods for sale and wondering if it is just the latest trend, you should read Toxic Staple: How Gluten May Be Wrecking Your Health—and What You Can Do About It by Anne Sarkisian ($17.95, Max Health Press, LCC, New London, NH, softcover). The author notes that true celiac disease, the body’s inability to process the wheat protein known as gluten, is only found in a small percentage of the world’s population, but she regards them as just the tip of the gluten iceberg, estimating that at least 10%, but perhaps as many as 40%, of Americans may be sensitive to gluten. That sensitivity results in chronic health conditions from arthritis to zits, asthma, cancer, fatigue, migraines, memory loss, and osteoporosis. The test for such sensitivity, however, is rarely used in the U.S. Since I lack the knowledge to verify or dispute the author’s assertions, the best I can suggest is that, if the subject interests you, this book will surely prove helpful. As she says, “Eliminating it from the diet is the easy part. The hard part is getting doctors to take gluten sensitivity seriously and test for it adequately.” Judging from the praise the book has received from health professionals, she is clearly onto something.

What to Do When You Can’t Get Pregnant by Dr. Daniel Potter with Jennifer Hanin ($18.99, Da Capo Press, softcover) is now in its completely revised and updated second edition as “The complete guide to all the options for couples face fertility issues.”  For those couples struggling with fertility issues, navigating the clinical medical jargon while trying to communicate with partners, doctors, friends and family can be a challenge. Dr. Potter was named one of 2012’s top reproductive endocrinologists by the U.S. News and World Report. Team with Ms. Hanin, a freelance journalist and the mother of twin girls conceived through in vitro fertilization, their book walks the reader through the various aspects of fertility procedures. For those couples dealing with the issue, they will take comfort in known they are not isolated and without direction in facing their problem.

At the other end of the spectrum, postpartum depression, This Isn’t What I Expected: Overcoming Postpartum Depression by Karen R. Kleiman, the founder of The Postpartum Stress Center, and Dr. Valarie Davis Raskin, a psychiatrist ($17.99, Da Capo Press, softcover) us also in its second edition, revised and updated. It is a condition that affects in in five women and the authors who both spent two decades working with women who experienced it have written a book that anyone encountering it or who knows someone encountering it should definitely read. The healing process involves combatting negative thoughts and taking the time to take care of oneself, including if needed medications and therapy. The good news is that one can recover if they take the right steps. Another aspect of motherhood is discussed in The Big Lie: Motherhood, Feminism, and the Reality of the Biological Clock ($19.95, Prometheus Books, softcover) by Tanya Selvaratnam as she confronted the biological clock that determines childbirth and, as she points out, biology does not bend to feminist ideals and science does not work miracles. A self-described feminist, the author learned this the hard way. Part personal account, part manifesto, Salvaratnam dispels myths about women’s biological clocks, the difference between being child-free versus childless, and the many other aspects of fertility and infertility involved. She wants a wider discussion about delayed motherhood and she has filled her book with valuable information to advance that goal.

Greg S. Pergament is a clinical associate at the Las Vegas Recovery Center and an ordained Zen Buddhist and Taoist priest who has written Chi Kung in Recovery: Finding Your Way to a Balanced and Centered Recovery ($14.95, Central Recovery Press, softcover). Chi Kung is the art of cultivating life force energy and the book describes a selection of exercises that are designed to boost health, enhance vitality, and increase mind-body-spirit consciousness. An ancient Chinese health care system, it integrates physical postures, breathing techniques, and focused attention. Westerners are more inclined to want to pop a pill or embark on some strategy to quickly get to recovery. If that’s not working for you or someone you know, this book unlocks the ancient secrets that may ensure that recovery becomes a long term solution.

Novels, Novels, Novels

Every day novels arrived here at Bookviews and, while they provide a bit of entertainment, one wonders what compels their authors to write them. This is particularly true of the self-published ones which have been a growing trend in recent years. My job is just to let you know about some of those that have been received.

The husband and wife team of Marcia Muller and Bill Pronzini have authored the second installment in a lighthearted historical mystery series set in the early days of San Francisco’s nineteenth century. It is The Spook Lights Affair ($24.99, Forge) and it stars a former Pinkerton operative, Sabrina Carpenter and her partner, ex-Secret Service agent, John Quincannon. It is a sequel to “The Bughouse Affair.”  Each is pursuing a case, one of which involves a socialite’s mysterious suicide while another is the pursuit of a bank robber. The reader is treated to a tour of the city’s gaming houses and brothels, taking them back to that era. It is a lively, entertaining read.

Jason Porter makes his debut with Why Are You So Sad? ($15.00, Plume, softcover) whose main character is Raymond Champs, an illustrator of manuals for a home furnishings corporation. Raymond is unhappy. He can’t sleep. He can’t communicate with his wife. And his job provides no inspiration beyond a paycheck. No one seems to understand him, including himself, which surely explains why he is sad. Raymond concludes that everyone he knows and maybe everyone on the planet is suffering from severe clinical depression and is equally convinced that something major has gone wrong. This may not sound like an amusing story, but Porter brings a lot of talent to examining Raymond’s problem and, in the process, will make you laugh as you join in a search for why life in America today provides “things” but not purpose. J. Alec Keaton makes his debut as a novelist with When Love Never Ends ($16.00, Two Harbors Press, softcover). Sam has never gotten over his one true love, Sara, but he walked away amidst racist threats from her bigoted father. They went their separate ways. Sara got married and Sam threw himself into work, becoming a successful lawyer for a prestigious firm. A decade later they meet again when Sara seeks legal help and they spend three whirlwind days today, but her jealous husband ends the reunion with a single shot. Wild with grief Sam seeks consolation with a grief-ridden college professor who lost his wife four years earlier and who has been obsessed with time travel, trying to help him give up his fantasies while he seeks to cope with his own loss. It is a mix of romance and science fiction.

For a story filled with different characters involved in triangular love, art and its future of the Jazz Age. It is 1924 in New York and Lillian Moore, a painter, and Leon Shaffer, an accountant, narrate The Bohemians ($14.95, Black Heron Press) and take you back to an era of early cars and telephones, silent movies, sham medical cures, speakeasies, gangsters, and jazz. Lillian’s desires and needs, as well as Leon’s attraction to her form the plot. Published in July of last year, it got lost in the stacks, but is well worth reading if you enjoy a historical novel.

Seventh Street Books is an imprint of Prometheus Books and has sent along three softcover novels that offer some interesting reading experiences. Styx & Stone: An Ellie Stone Mystery ($15.95) by James W. Ziskin is built around a comment by Sgt. McKeever, “If you were a man, you’d make a good detective.” Ellie is sure he meant it as a compliment, but she bridles at the thought that she is a woman trying to do a man’s job as a reporter. She is adrift in her career, living in New York City when she receives news that her estranged father, a renowned Dante scholar, is near death after a savage bludgeoning in his home. The police suspect a routine burglary, but Ellie has her doubts. When a second attempt on his life is made when he is in the hospital, she embarks on her own investigation that holds the prospect of redemption in her father’s eyes and the risk of loving him forever. White Ginger by Thatcher Robinson ($15.95) introduces the reader to Bai Jiang who combines Buddhist philosophy with wicked knife skills. When a girl goes missing in San Francisco’s Chinatown, she is called upon to track her down. The trail leads to wannabe gangsters, flesh peddlers, and eventually to those who have marked Bai for death. It is a cocktail of wit, charm, sex, and violence. In E. Michael Helms novel, Deadly Catch: A Mac McClellan Mystery ($15.95), the recently retired U.S. Marine hooks a badly decomposed body while enjoying a leisurely fishing vacation in the Florida panhandle and then discovered a bag of rare marijuana is found stashed aboard his rental boat. He realizes someone is setting him up to take the fall for murder and drug smuggling. Along with Kate Bell with whom he has struck up a promising relationship, the two must butt heads and match wits with local law enforcement officials, shady politicians, and strong-armed thugs. It’s a story you won’t want to put down until the last page.

Three novels are written for young adults and will evoke a keen enjoyment of reading. Phoenix Island is by John Dixon ($19.95, Gallery Books) and is the inspiration for the CBS-TV show “Intelligence” that premieres this month and introduces the reader to a world where orphans are sent to boot camp and forced to fight for their lives.  When 16-year-old boxing champ Carl freeman jumps in to defend a helpless stranger, he is sentenced to a two-year sentence at an isolated boot camp for troubled orphans. He is determined to tough it out, earn a clean record, and get on with his life. But then kids start to die.  Realizing that Phoenix Island is really a Sparten-style mercenary organization turning “throwaway kids” into super-soldiers, Carl risks everything to save his friends and stop a madman bent on global destruction. The book is based on real-life stories in his home state of Pennsylvania. In Jennifer Walkup’s Second Verse ($15.95/$11.95, Luminis Books, hard and softcover editions) Lange Crawford’s move to Shady Springs, Pennsylvania, lands her in a group of awesome friends, a major crush on songwriter Vaughn, and life in a haunted 200-year-old farmhouse. It also brings The Hunt, an infamous murder mystery festival where students solve a fake, gruesome murder scheme during the week of Halloween. Well, supposedly fake. It is a mix of suspense and romance with a supernatural element that is sure to entertain readers from age 12 and up. Lastly, there’s How to Lose Everything by Philipp Mattheis that is “a mostly true story” ($14.99, Zest Books) about a summer in 1994 in which a group of four teenagers find a small fortune hidden inside a mysterious abandoned house and what starts out as a blessing soon turns into a curse as stress, drugs, criminal behavior, dwindling funds and even death raise serious questions about their choices and their futures.

That’s it for January and the year ahead promises to be filled with many new non-fiction and fictional books that are sure to inform and entertain you. Tell your book-loving friends, family and coworkers about Bookviews.com, a unique, eclectic report. And come back in February!
 

Bookviews - February 2014

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By Alan Caruba

My Picks of the Month


The new “hot” book of 2014, debuting last month, and likely to remain newsworthy through the November 2014 midterm elections is Duty: Memoirs of a Secretary at War by Robert M. Gates ($35.00, Alfred A. Knopf). As one reads this book, what becomes evident is that he writes, not just about Iraq and Afghanistan, but about the various “wars” he fought as he became the only Secretary to serve two Presidents, Bush and Obama, both with very different personalities and policies. One of the wars was a political war with Congress every day he was in office. He describes “the dramatic contrast between my public respond, bipartisanship, and calm, and my private frustration, disgust, and anger.” Gates arrived at the job having served for more than two decades in the Central Intelligence Agency where, under President George H. W. Bush, he was its director. Under George W. Bush, he had to direct the latter years of a conflict in Afghanistan that continues to this day as efforts were made to introduce democracy, Western values regarding women, education, and the training of an Afghan military almost from scratch. If this wasn’t enough, Bush43 undertook a war with Iraq’s Saddam Hussein that led to his removal, but also led to fierce fighting ably led by General Petraeus. While the media has emphasized what appeared to be conflicts with Obama, he points out that he fulfilled Obama’s objectives that included a surge in Afghanistan and the coming withdrawal by the end of this year. The withdrawal from Iraq when it refused to agree to ways in which the U.S. forces were to be treated has led to a renewed conflict as al Qaeda has returned to seize portions of the nation. What impressed me was the candor with which Gates wrote of his experience, providing insight into the incredible challenges of the job. What is most inspiring, though, is the reason he shouldered these responsibilities and endured so much political conflict. Simply put, it was his love for the troops and his sense of a personal responsibility for them. On his last day in office in 2011, President Obama awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom, America’s highest civilian honor. He earned it!

A new book takes a look at Vladimir Putin, the Russian republic’s version of Stalin. Kicking the Kremlin by Marc Bennetts ($16.99, Oneworld Publications, softcover) takes a look at Russia’s new protest movement composed of those who want to see Putin removed from power, but it is also an excellent look at the way he came to power, his biography before that occurred, and how he has exercised it. As 2011 came to a close, 100,000 took to Moscow’s freezing streets to protest his election victory. A few months later, Pussy Riot, a girl band, was arrested from their anti-Putin demonstration in a Russian orthodox cathedral. As the book makes clear, opposing Putin can get you arrested and even killed. A series of assassinations of Russian journalists and protest leaders is far more than just a coincidence. Despite his protestations that the Russian constitution which protests free speech and public protests, doing so has become hazardous at best and Russia has no history of such activity, having been run by dictators from the czars to the communist dictators who replaced them. It is a good book to read as we get ready for the Winter Olympic Games, but it is worth reading to understand more about Putin and Russia whose economy is heavily dependent on its exports of oil and natural gas. Bennetts is a British journalist who has reported from Russia, Iran and North Korea for many years and, from late 2011 through early 2013, he worked for RIA Novosti, the now dissolved Russian state-run news agency. Suffice to say Putin controls the media.

 
The Revolt Against the Masses: How Liberalism Has Undermined the Middle Class by Fred Siegel ($25.99, Encounter Books, imprint of the Perseus Books Group) may sound like some boring political or historical treatise, but, if you want to understand how we have reached this point in our society where Socialism has given us the disaster called Obamacare, then this will prove to be an interesting, easy-to-read re-write of history of much of what you may have come to believe about Socialism. For example, it did not begin with Teddy Roosevelt’s Progressivism or Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal. Siegel tells how it began after World War I in the 1920s when a group of writers and thinkers—intellectuals—disillusioned with American society began to call themselves liberals as they adopted the hostility to the bourgeois—the masses—that was already in vogue among European intellectuals. Liberalism was born among a new class of politically self-conscious intellectuals who were critical of mass democracy and middle-class capitalism; you know, the values that made the U.S. the greatest economic power the world has ever seen! Well worth reading!

An interesting book about an aspect of history that is generally unknown is Nicholas Johnson’s Negroes and the Gun: The Black Tradition of Arms ($19.95, Prometheus Books). A professor of law at Fordham Law School where he has taught since 1993, Johnson chronicles the underappreciated black tradition of bearing arms for self-defense that reaches back to the pre-Civil War era. From Frederick Douglass’s advice to keep “a good revolver” handy as a defense against slave catchers to the armed self-protection against the KKK, it is clear that owning firearms was commonplace in the black community. He also addresses the issue of young black men with guns and the toll that gun violence takes on many in the inner city.

The Home Book: The Complete Guide to Homeowner and Homebuilder Responsibilities($49.95, Building Standards Institute, Sacramento, softcover) is intended to show homeowners what to expect with any new or remodeled home. It covers every possible condition referencing homeowner and homebuilder maintenance, providing 380 residential workmanship guidelines that are presented in are easy-to-read. Most homeowners don’t know where to find answers when they discover a defect in their new or remodeled home and this is particularly true if they aren’t detected right away. What, for example, are homeowners to do when the roof of their new home springs a leak? Or kitchen cabinets sag? Or they smell mold in the bathroom? The book was vetted by more than 70 industry professionals as well as government building officials, trade organizations, and consumer interests groups. It is the real deal and will no doubt save homeowners a lot of grief if they read it and keep it handy.

I enjoy what even I admit are “silly” books, but that is because many are written to entertain as well as inform. A good example is Scared Stiff: Everything You Need to Know About 50 Famous Phobias by Sara Latta ($12.99, Zest Books, softcover). We are generally aware of common phobias such as fear of heights, acrophobia, or confined spaces, claustrophobia, but there are others that include fears of insects, dogs, cats, mice or rats, to name a few. And let’s not leave out fear of germs. The book helps readers understand that they are not alone in have extreme fears. Ms. Latta comes from a science background so the fears noted in the book are treated seriously and she includes helpful information on how to cope with phobias, although some must surely require professional counseling when they interfere with living a normal life.

The baseball season is around the corner and for fans of the Boston Red Sox, Lew Freedman has authored The 50 Greatest Players in Boston Red Sox History ($17.95, Camino Books, softcover) that takes a look at its 110-year history that had it share of great players like Cy Young, Babe Ruth, Ted Williams, Carlton Fisk and David Ortiz, to name some of those that come to mind. Freedman has authored more than sixty popular sports books and this one will be a must-read for fans of this ball club. In addition to examining the personal stories of the best-known players, Freedman studies the careers of some of the excellent athletes who represented the club so long ago as to be nearly forgotten.

Getting Down to Business Books

In addition to having been a business and science writer for decades, I have largely earned my living as a public relations counselor, so I know something about PR. It is an essential element of success for entrepreneurs, corporations, the government, associations and individuals seeking to call attention to their causes and achievements. That’s why I am happy to recommend Christina Daves new book, PR for Anyone, ($14.95, Morgan James, softcover). Proof of the good advice she offers to small business owners is the fact that she has appeared on more than fifty media outlets in less than one year! It is filled with easy, actionable tips that would make that possible for anyone who reads her book. Public relations is an essential element of marketing one’s products and services, but many are unaware how to put it to work for themselves. Her book will open doors and create the “buzz” that lifts one’s business into public view, the kind of thing that can increase sales and achievement. It’s also a good reason to consider hiring a PR professional if you lack the time to do it yourself. Knowing the process helps you judge their success.

Another excellent book for entrepreneurs is Tom Panaggio’s The Risk Advantage ($14.95, River Grove Books, softcover). We all approach risk from our personal point of view and clearly some people are greater risk-takers than others. For those less inclined to take a risk, this book will prove very helpful as it explores our inclination to do so or not. As the author says, “The unexpected edge for entrepreneurial success starts with identifying a worthy risk and then having the courage to take it. It is the story in part of how Pannagio and his partners created a thriving American business and he uses his amateur racing exploits as a metaphor. “By viewing risk as just another challenge when opportunity presents itself, you’ll grab that edge—and win!” That’s true, but he also addresses how to deal with the failure than might occur from taking a risk and that’s an important part of being ready to risk again. This is fundamentally a book about the choices and judgments that anyone engaged in business must make and, after reading it, you will be better prepared to do so.

Advice on How Live More Wisely

There is virtually no aspect of life that someone has not written about to provide advice on how to cope, how to succeed, and how to make it better in some respect. As 2014 begins, here are some of the latest.

Mastering the Art of Quitting: Why It Matters in Life, Love, and Work by Peg Streep and Alan Bernstein ($24.95, Da Capo Press) runs counter to what we are told about never giving up and thinking positively. Sometimes those negative thoughts about our habits, our relationships, or our jobs are the right ones and should be acted upon. As the authors say, “Quitting is a healthy, adaptive response when a goal can’t be reached or when a life path turns out to be a blind alley. Simply putting quitting on the table—seeing it as a possible plan of action—is a necessary first step to changing your perspective.”  They argue that the most satisfied people have mastered the art of disengaging from unproductive goals and creating better ones to move them in a new direction. Grounded in the latest research, the book examines why people persist when they shouldn’t and how to fully disconnect from unproductive goals, cope with emotions caused by quitting, and form, prioritize, and implement better objectives to move people forward.
 
The Upside of Down: Why Failing Well is the Key to Success by Megan McArdle ($27.95, Viking), a Bloomsberg columnist, examines how to find success by how quickly and nimbly we learn from our mistakes. A Libertarian, she makes a case for the way America is unique in its willingness to let people and companies fail, but also in the determination to help them pick themselves up afterword. She argues effectively that we have become too risk averse and that it is bad for ourselves and our children, as well as for enterprises that fail to compete effectively. The nation is in an era of “bailouts” that tap taxpayer dollars and may not serve as well as a trip to the bankruptcy court. Drawing on new research in science, psychology, and behavioral economics and insights from many who have experienced failures, she offers good advice on how to learn to make better decisions and break bad habits in business and life.

Another book about transforming our lives is I Like Giving: The Transforming Power of a Generous Life by Brad Formsma ($14.99, WaterBrook Press, softcover). If you feel that you’re not as generous as you should be, you’re not alone. We have been told that it is better to give than receive and Formsma is on a mission to change the way we see generosity as he challenges us to give wherever they are and in whatever manner they can. He wasn’t always that way, but a number of experiences convinced him of the truth of this. He is a successful entrepreneur and a philanthropist who, in 2007, sold his business to helping others.

Two problems that some encounter are addressed in Cheating Parents: Recovering From Parental Infidelity ($14.95, New Horizon Press, softcover) and Facing the Finish: A Road Map for Aging Parents and Adult Children (15.95, Bascom Hill Publishing Group, softcover).
The former, written by Dennis Ortman, PhD, a clinical psychologist, reflects his more than 35 years of counseling experience working with individuals suffering from the trauma of parental infidelity and examines how that affects their lives, especially when they too become adults. It affects their ability to have intimate relations, often cheat on their partners or marry those who cheat on them or are emotionally disengaged in their relationships. In a society where nearly forty percent of men and twenty percent of women in all economic stratus admit to having affairs during marriage, this is a very big problem. Their children often end up as walking wounded. Like so many others these days when parents are living longer lives and encounter the problems of old age, I could have used Sheri L. Samotin’s book on how adult children and their parents can address those problems. No one wants to think of their parent’s death and this includes the parents as well. Her book tackles the issues involved, offering advice on choosing the right caregiver, choosing to live at home, with family, or in the perfect senior housing community, as well as the fear of outliving one’s money or living on a fixed income when the cost of everything is rising. If this book reflects your present situation, I would strong recommend reading it.

We all have concerns about our health and fitness, and Ken Blanchard, the co-author of the bestseller, “The One Minute Manager”, and Tim Kearin, a fitness coach, have teamed up to write Fit at Last: Looking and Feel Better Once and For All ($24.95, Berrett-Koehler Publishers, San Francisco). It has been lauded by both fitness experts and those in the business world, but Lt. Gen. Robert Caslen summed it up saying, “In the Army, teamwork and discipline are key to building successful teams and leaders.” In their book, “Ken Blanchard and Tim Kearin team up to deliver a disciplined holistic formula laced with personal challenges and successes that many of us have experienced in our quest to maintain physical fitness. This book will inspire you to not only begin but persevere toward the sheet job of being fit—at last.” The book is filled with excellent advice and I agree that it will change your life for the better after you have read it. And, for those with a big tummy, pick up a copy of 21-Day Tummy: The Revolutionary Diet that Soothes and Shrinks Any Belly Fast by Liz Vaccariello ($25.99, Readers Digest). Based on the latest research on the importance of eating anti-inflammatory and carb-light foods, the book is enhanced by more than 50 recipes that are delicious recipes to make weight loss easier, as well as inspirational stories and advice from those who found success with its recommendations. It’s about healthy eating and we all can benefit from that.

Memoirs

For many, the desire to set down the details of their lives and what they have learned from them results in writing a memoir. We can often gain some insights from them.

The Hero Among Us: Memoirs of an FBI Witness Hunter by Jim Ingram with James L. Dickerson ($19.95, Sartoris Literary Group, Brandon, MS, softcover) is filled with Ingram’s personal experiences with some of the events of his career. Ingram passed away in 2009 after having served as well as Mississippi’s Public Safety Commissioner. It sheds light on some of the notorious cases of the modern era such as the assassination of President Kennedy, the “Mississippi Burning” civil rights murders and bombings, the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., the murder of Federal Judge John H. Woods, the FALN bombings by Puerto Rico separatists, and the FBI counterintelligence operation known as COINTELPRO. It is about the remarkable career of a remarkable man.

Dancing Fish and Ammonites: A Memoir by Penelope Lively ($26.95, Viking) has an intriguing title as one might expect from a successful author of many books for both adults and children, including the Man Booker Prize-winning novel “Moon Tiger” and others. She was appointed Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 2012. It is a reflection on old age and, if that describes you, then you may find it of interest. It spans many years of her life from a childhood spent in Cairo and later at an English boarding school when her family was forced to leave due to the turmoil that occurred in Egypt and led to the seizure of the Suez Canal. I must confess I was unaware of the author’s career and books, but it must be said that she tends to ramble at length throughout so I suspect it will be of greater interest to those who are fans of her books and interested in the subject of old age.

The Most Beautiful Girl: A True Story of a Dad, a Daughter, and the Healing Power of Music by Tamara Saviano ($16.95, American Roots Press, softcover) has a foreword by Kris Kristofferson, the singer and actor. Saviano has achieved remarkable success and happiness in the music industry as an award-winning producer of albums. In 2012, she won the Americana Music Association’s Album of the Year award for tribute albums, but growing up she lived in fear as the frequent victim of her father’s abuse when he was under the influence of alcohol. When he wasn’t drunk, he was an adoring father who was her staunchest ally. The title of the book comes from the famous song of the same name. Now a 52-year-old woman, she shares her story and anyone who loves country music and may have experienced a similar childhood will find it of interest and value.

Antoinette Tuff put her life and her faith on the line when she confronted a young school shooter and talked him back from the brink of killing students at the school in Atlanta. She tells her story in Prepared for a Purpose ($24.99, Baker Publishing Group). This memoir will inspire those who share her faith in God. She averted a tragedy while demonstrating courage. This is a story as well of how she faced up to and overcame tragedies in her own life. The account of her confrontation with the shooter is worth reading as is her life.

Novels, Novels, Novels

The deluge continues. For every novel mentioned there are many others, but since reading fiction is a great way to relax or gain insights that may not be addressed in a non-fiction book, I am happy to recommend a few of those that have arrived.

I have been reading and reviewing Lior Samson’s novels now for several years and enjoying each one. He has a special talent for taking issues and events from real life and turning them into fictional suspense and action. This is true of his latest novel, Gasline ($14.95. Gesher Press, an imprint of Ampersand Press, Rowley, MA, softcover). Samson is comfortable addressing science and technology, but they are the background to the plot which, in this case, involves a safety engineer for a company that owns natural gas pipelines. Kat Gaudet in the field and Len Bergen, a technician in the company’s control center are drawn into events that involve a cyber-attack that could set off a huge explosion. It is so real because the events in the book reflect those that have occurred and, as he says in the author’s afterword, “The threat is real. Many parts of our natural gas transmission pipeline system are controlled by networks that are wide open to intrusion and to sabotage by relatively simple methods. Having written “Web Games” Samson knows his way around the technical aspects involved, but this new novel takes it to a new level of riveting storytelling.

Novels reflect real life or potential risks and Todd M. Johnson addresses what would happen if a nuclear facility that turned out plutonium during the Cold War suddenly has a huge explosion. Critical Reaction ($14.99, Bethany House) focuses on the fictional Hanford Nuclear Facility’s poisoned buildings that must be guarded by men from sabotage as they monitor the building which they have been told the dangers are under control. The main character, Kieran Mullany, survives the blast, but is met with threats and silence when his attempts to discover what really happened are raised. He reconnects with an old friend, an inexperience lawyer, Emily Hart, and both are convinced that those in charge are hiding something, concluding they will not get far in the courts. Emily’s estranged father, Ryan, has the courtroom experience they need and, together, he digs for answers and, as he does, the court case gets stranger and more dangerous for them. This is an excellent debut novel.

I liked “Miss Peregine’s Home for Peculiar Children” by Ransom Riggs when it was published in 2011 as a unique fantasy story paired with haunting vintage photography. Though a “young adult” novel, it could be equally enjoyed by older readers and it spent more than 60 consecutive weeks on The New York Times bestseller list. Film rights were sold to Twentieth Century Fox with a release date of July 2015. A sequel arrived in January, Hollow City: The Second Novel of Miss Peregine’s Peculiar Children ($17.99, Quirk Books) and begins where the first book ended, opening as Jack and the other peculiars are on the run from “wights” posing as soldiers. Desperate to reach London before it’s too late, the children hope to find a cure for their beloved Miss Peregine who is trapped in a bird form! Along the way they encounter a menagerie of peculiar animals. The story doesn’t let up until the end and the sequel is likely to be another bestseller. One has to wonder what Riggs has in store for book three.
 
We can welcome the debut novelist, K.C. Woodworth who has authored Cutting Off A Whale’s Head ($14.95, Page Publishing, softcover) whose intriguing title is just the start of a fast-paced story that introduces us to Cree Quinn, a victim of the recession that has wreaked havoc on his adult-novelty business and other investments. He finds himself facing a vast financial loss that threatens to take away the family home and the fund for his young son’s college years. Suffice to say he is desperate until he learns of a decomposing carcass of a killer whale near the Golden Gate Bridge and, even though it is against the law, decides to cut off its head and sell it. Sounds bizarre? Yes, but that’s just where the fun begins. This novel will make you laugh and make you root for Quinn right up to when he is arrested and becomes a public hero of sorts. I won’t tell you how it ends. Along the way you will encounter a variety of wonderful characters.

I am a bit late in taking note of To Sleep…Perchance to Dream, an October debut novel by Donald A. Grippo ($24.00, Turn the Page Publishing) as a sexy, psychological thriller starring an Eurasian beauty, Mai Faca, who plots to marry Jake Warden, a successful oral surgeon forbidden to her because of family honor. In a bizarre scheme a fellow surgeon falls victim to Mai’s seduction as she and Jake play a cruel game in order to be together. Jake acts with surgical precision to clear the path to Mai’s happiness that threatens lives, including his own. The novel has a dense plot that will keep you turning the pages.

William F. Nolan, the author of “Logan’s Run”, notes that there have been more than 450 books written about the Kennedy assassination, but that John A. Gaetano’s novel, America’s Deceit ($23.40, WD Murray, softcover) “is the only one to explore the full truth regarding the death of our thirty-fifth president” noting that it is backed by thirty years of research that dismantles the “lone gunman” theory. Gaetano is convinced that Lee Harvey Oswald did not kill JFK! At close to 700 pages, it is a novel “that conspiracy buffs have been waiting for”, calling it “a mind-blower.” It fully fits the description of being an epic novel and it is one whose author is convinced that the government has engaged in a cover-up. That catch is, of course, this is a work of fiction about a Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist whose life is changed by his investigation into the assassination. Gaetano was an active member of the Screen Actors Guild from 1977 through 1988 and is a skilled story-teller.

Two softcover novels from Langdon Street Press debuted in December. The Last Ferryman by Gregory D. Randle ($14.95) is set in Millerville, Minnesota, a ferry town and Buck Shyrock is certain it will stay that way. A local ferryman, his livelihood, like his father’s and grandfather’s before him, depends on it, but there are rumors that a bridge is coming to cross the Wabash River, though he dismisses them as gossip. It isn’t and as the construction begins, his family tried to help the old man accept the unstoppable progress. This isn’t just a story about progress, but also its impact on people’s lives and that of the community in which he lives. Randle grew up on the Wabash River in southeastern Illinois. This is his debut novel and a very good one. Here By Mistake: The Secret of the Niche by David Ciferri ($14.99) is about Brandon and his friends, Stephen and Sarah, who sneak into his Aunt Faye’s basement that is filled with antiquated treasures. They find more than they were looking for. It is a trove of gold coins, a knight’s armor, a stuffed grizzly bear on a pedestal and a mysteriously decorated niche. As they read the Latin inscription they leave New York 2005 and are transported back to another time and place, New Orleans 1965. They find the niche again, but gain a new perspective, not only about their history, but about the lives of people they think they know best. It is an intriguing story.

That’s it for February! Tell your book-loving family, friends, and co-workers about Bookviews.com so they too can enjoy its eclectic report on books, some of which are bestsellers, but which focuses on books that may not receive the attention they deserve.

Bookviews - March 2014

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By Alan Caruba

My Picks of the Month

When the U.S. Justice Department announces it will not enforce the Defense of Marriage Act you know that same-sex marriage has the full support of the White House. An interesting new book by William Tucker, Marriage and Civilization: How Monogamy Made Us Human, ($27.95, Regnery) takes a look at monogamy and how its adoption by societies in the West made all the difference in their development as opposed to those that retained polygamy. Monogamy contributed to less aggressive societies, ones with less crime, less internal friction, and humanity benefitted from men who took a greater role in raising children. Spousal relationship benefitted because they were more devoted to one another. The story of humanity has been one of growing trust and cooperation between the sexes and this has led to more stable communities and nation. Every human society has created some form of marriage. Not only do a couple pledge fidelity to each other, it draws the line between the bonded couple and the group. Tucker says that everywhere polygamy is practiced, it creates conflict. There is much to be said for traditional marriage and its history and practice is presented in this book.
 
Craig R. Smith has written seven books individually and, with Lowell Ponte, another five. These books look at economic and governmental issues with a particular emphasis on the way progressivism has undermined the dollar and the ability of the nation to achieve and maintain our remarkable leadership in manufacturing and in finance. That is beginning to falter and you will want to read The Great Withdrawal: How the Progressives’ 100-Year Debasement of American and the Dollar Ends ($19.95, Idea Factory Press, Phoenix, AZ). Far from being a dry analysis, it is a dramatic examination of what is happening in America today and why. The book opens with a look at Detroit, the largest American city to declare bankruptcy and why decades of bad management and corruption have led to its debasement. This is happening in many cities across the nation led by progressives. These cities build huge ranks of government workers with ample pension and other benefits that thrive off of the middle class until it begins to move to the suburbs to escape the ever rising taxes and other costs. In addition to the $17 trillion in debt on the books, the U.S. has off-the-balance-sheet federal liabilities estimated to be at least $87 trillion. The trillions pumped into the economy in recent years have largely been wasted via crony capitalism or simply failed to “stimulate” growth. I cannot recommend this book highly enough. Your life and that of your children and grandchildren are being affected.

In a nation that appears to be seriously divided, we owe Dr. Wayne Baker, the author of United America ($15.25, Spirit Books, @ Amazon.com, softcover) a debt of appreciation for a book about “The surprising truth about American values, American identity, and the 10 beliefs that a large majority of Americans hold dear.”  Dr. Baker is the chair of the Management & Organizations area at the University of Michigan Ross School of Business and his book is based on his research over several years. The values American share include respect for others, freedom, security, self-reliance and individualism, justice and fairness, among others. They are shared by a vast cross-section of Americans of differing political outlooks, gender, and other elements. These values are strongly held. The book is not some boring academic study, but a lively examination of the values and one that will be of use to individual readers as well as educators and groups devoted to preserving the nation that is suffering the deliberate effort to divide Americans by class, sex, and other attributes. I recommend this book for anyone concerned about the current divisions we hear and read about daily.


Fans of Hillary Clinton with an eye on the 2016 elections will find HRC: State Secrets and the Rebirth of Hillary Clinton by Jonathan Allen and Amie Parnes ($26.00, Crown Publishing) of interest as these two journalists, the former who covers the White House for Bloomberg News and the latter for The Hill, look back over the past years since 2008 when her political ambitions took a hit from an unknown Illinois Senator when he was became the Democratic Party nominee for President and won. In the six years since then, she has reemerged on the world stage as one of its most influential figures. She is now regarded as the front-runner for the Democratic ticket in 2016 and this book provides a look at what they regard as a master strategist at work. She would become Obama’s Secretary of State and one of his greatest allies and advocates. While the authors report both her successes and stumbles, based on numerous interviews, take the reader behind the scenes. Both hold her in high regard and this book provides readers with their coverage and views of the decisions she made and their likely effect on the next national elections.

A book that is likely to generate a lot of discussion is The Meat Racket: The Secret Takeover of America’s Food Business by Christopher Leonard ($28.00, Simon & Schuster). I must confess I was astonished to learn that when you’re buying beef, pork or chicken, it turns out that four beef companies control 85% of the national market while four companies control 65% of the park. As Leonard points out, forty years ago there were 36 companies that produced chicken, but now there are two that provide half of the chicken we eat, controlling every aspect of the process from the egg to the chicken to the chicken nugget. The result is that meat prices relentlessly increase while the share of every dollar that goes to farmers is falling. The profit margins of the nation’s biggest meat packers continue to rise even as the national economy is lagging in other sectors. The Big Four, Tyson, Cargill, JSB, and Smithfield saw their average profit margin double between 2008 and 2009, and then double again between 2009 and 2010. Why the federal government felt it necessary to send millions to these and other farmers in “farm aid” begins to raise serious questions for consumers and 80% of the farm bill was devoted to funding food stamps. Anyone interested in how this sector of the economy functions will find this book very interesting and just a tad scary. 

One of my enduring childhood memories was riding the train to the New Jersey shore where my grandparents lived and, since it was the war years, I recall visiting with the many young soldiers who were on the train, all destined for combat. At my grandparent’s home, the trains came by every day and it was a treat to wave at the engineers and have them wave back. Trains in those days belched huge clouds of black smoke. These memories were evoked by Tom Zoellner’s book, Train, ($32.95, Viking) in which he tells of his rail travels around the world, starting in the birthplace of the locomotive in England. He shares the history of trains in the various nations he visits from Russia, China, India, in South America and, of course, the U.S. where the train transformed and expanded the nation to the West. Along the way he talked with many others on those trains and gains a glimpse into their lives. He does so with a gift for prose that borders on poetry. He is a very good writer and that greatly enhances the trips he invites the reader to take with him.

Readers are just as frequently writers and many wish to polish their skills. A book that will help them is Natalie Goldberg’s The True Secret of Writing: Connecting Life with Language ($16.00, Atria Books, softcover) in which she draws on her four decades as a teacher and writer to share her practical experience. She has written twelve books and this one will prove helpful to anyone who wants to learn how to tap into their own life. For anyone headed for college this fall or attending one, Halley Bondy has written an entertaining book, 77 Things You Absolutely Have to Do Before You Finish College ($14.99, Zest Books, softcover). A great gift for high school grads and college students, it is filled with ideas that will surely enhance the experience beyond the classroom. Among her tips are starting an on-campus club, learn how to prepare a perfect meal, and learn self-defense. There’s bound to be a recommendation in the book that a student will find worth trying out.

Getting Down to Business (Books)

For those coming out of college and looking toward a career in the world of business, Robert L. Dilenschneider provides a lot of good advice in The Critical First Years of Your Professional Life ($15.00, Citadel Kensington, softcover). The author made his name in the field of public relations, but has found time to author a dozen advice books. This one includes a foreword by TV business news host, Maria Bartiromo, who notes that “Mobility, personal and professional, has dramatically increased” and that “Technology has created new opportunities for advancement in the world of work.” Dilenschneider recalls an era when mentors helped the newcomer learn the ropes. His book “substitutes for all those generous men and women who would have helped you in an earlier era.”  If you or someone you know is just starting out, make sure they read his book. It will give them an advantage of those who do not.

These are nervous times for investors, but there are some fundamentals and Timothy F. McCarthy, a former president of Charles Schwab & Company before leading overseas asset management companies. His book, The Safe Investor: How to Make Your Money Grow in a Volatile Global Economy ($30.00, Palgrave Macmillan) should be your first investment whether you are just starting out or whether you are questioning your present investment program. Despite the plethora of investment information available, most people feel uncomfortable to some degree these days. This book shows the reader how to mesh three dimensions of investing, asset classes, countries, and time to create a strategy that will ensure they have enough to get them through their retirement years. Since many have others manage their investments, McCarthy tells readers what they need to know to make a good choice and what to expect.  There are so many choices an investor can make that it is surely helpful to understand one’s own psyche before putting money on the line and that is what Brian Portnoy’s new book is all about. The Investor’s Paradox: The Power of Simplicity in a World of Overwhelming Choice ($27,00, Palgrave Macmillan) is the work of a man who has been advising hedge funds and mutual funds for the past 14 years. Portnoy is currently the Head of Alternative Investments and Strategic Initiatives for Chicago Equity Partners, a $10 billion asset manager and he came to them with an impressive resume so the reader can be confident he really knows what he is writing about. He addresses how to select the right money managers and investment vehicles and how to avoid the losers. With literally tens of thousands of investment choices, his advice and insights regarding what he calls behavioral finance, he demystifies the opaque world of financial entities, providing practical tools for investment success.

All of us have sat through too many meetings that had no structure and did not lead others in the room toward successful cooperation. In Moments of Impact: How to Design Strategic Conversations that Accelerate Change ($32.00, Simon and Schuster) authors Chris Ertel and Lisa Kay Solomon are on a mission to eradicate time-sucking, energy-depleting meetings and workshops, and replace them with high-engagement strategic conversations that foster better cooperation. Their book offers a few core principles on the best ways to get an organization facing a high-stakes challenge to address it despite conditions of uncertainty using inter-active problem-solving sessions that engage participants, not just analytically, but creatively and emotionally as well. This book will help leaders at all levels achieve this whether it is a business challenge, educators and healthcare practitioners mired in slow-to-change sectors, or enterprising business school students with ambitions to tackle the big challenges.
 
For those who have to make a presentation, the first problem to overcome is the “jitters”, the fear of not being able sell ideas by using visual thinking. In Show and Tell: How Everybody Can Make Extraordinary Presentations Dan Roam ($27.95, Portfolio, an imprint of Penguin) presents a powerful guide to give everyone the confidence they need to share their story with any audience. Roam has previously authored two international bestsellers and this book is relatively short, but goes right to the core of how to help others see what we see. Filled with page after page of illustrations, he demonstrates how to entertain, educate and motivate an audience. He has worked with major corporations and his book will show you how to achieve the success that he has had.

There isn’t an industry, business or enterprise of any kind that doesn’t have associations. There are an estimated 100,000 professional and trade societies that can help anyone open the doors to their personal success. Robert Skrob, CPA, CAE, is an expert and he has written Your Association Shortcut: The Definitive Guide for Generating Customers Through Associations ($7.86, Association Marketing, softcover). This book, officially published in April, but available now via Amazon.com, will teach you how find associations in your field and to select the best ones for your brand. Then he teaches how to get the most value from your association. He has coached a diverse range of associations including some of the largest in the world in fields that include medical, manufacturing, chambers of commerce, from the local to the state and national levels. And he has helped thousands of companies tap into the power of associations to generate customers for their own business. “Associations are the affiliate partner you never knew you had, promoting your company as a member benefit” says Skkrob, “Plus association marketing gives you more credibility as everything you do carries the implied endorsement of the association.” As someone who has provided public relations services to associations over the years, this is a book you definitely should read.

To Your Health

We now live in times when you’re not old until you have gotten passed 70 or so. Maintaining one’s health to ensure that the senior years are not beleaguered by ill health has become a significant concern. That’s why books like Robert Moroney’s book, Total Body Detoxification: The Way to Healthy Aging ($16.95, Swing-Hi Press, softcover) is well worth reading even if you are still in your early years. The author details his own battles with lung cancer and hepatitis that causes stress and addictions to alcohol and drugs. Then he shows, step by step, the research, modalities, and healing regimens he employed to help himself and others recover from physically and mentally debilitating conditions. He’s been in private practice for 16 years as a nutritionist and peak-performance coach. As someone who has taken vitamins and minerals to enhance my own health, there is much in this book that will benefit any readers. You can avoid the toxins and you were learn which ones and why.
 
Healthy Joints for Life by Dr. Richard Diana, MD, ($17.95, Harlequin, softcover) an orthopedic surgeon and a clinical instructor at the Yale School of Medicine was a former National Football League player and he uses that experience and his later profession to learn how to deal with problems involving inflammation, a common joint ailment. He has put his plan to reduce pain and inflammation, how to avoid surgery, and to get moving again into his book. Having been named a Top 100 Doctor, he has been an orthopedic consultant to several collegiate athletic programs, as well as the Boston Red Sox.  His book provides a proven 8-week program that can help any reader with joint-related physical ailments.

Biographies and Memoirs

Reading about the lives of real people, past and present, is an excellent way to not only learn the lessons of history, but to learn how others coped with the challenges of their times.

A new look at James and Dolly Madison is provided by Bruce Chadwick in a biography of the same name, America’s First Power Couple: James & Dolly Madison ($24.95, Prometheus Books) regarding the fourth President’s service and the role that his wife played. Historians have tended to regard Madison, credited with much of the creation of the Constitution, as a boring, average President, while others have regarded him as a vibrant, tough leaders and a very successful commander in chief during the War of 1812. A new portrait emerges as the result of recently uncovered troves of letters at the University of Virginia, among other sources. He credits a lot of Madison’s success to the political savvy of his much younger wife whose social skills created a dynamic role for the position of First Lady with parties and backdoor politicking. This makes for lively reading about a couple whose life together contributed much to the future course of the nation.

We remember F. Scott Fitzgerald for his book, “The Great Gatsby.”  In Careless People: Murder, Mayhem, and the Invention of the Great Gatsby, ($29.95, Penguin Press) Sarah Churchill takes us back to the autumn of 1922 when he was at the height of his fame for “Tales of the Jazz Age.”  His return to New York that year coincided with another event, the discovery of a brutal double murder in New Jersey, an unsolved case that is all but forgotten today. The news coverage of the event, however, would influence Fitzgerald who began writing “Gatsby” in the autumn of that year. He would write of his fictional characters, “They were careless people, Tom and Daisy—they smashed up things and creatures and retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made.” 

An interesting memoir by Tony Cointreau, Ethel Merman, Mother Teresa…And Me: My Improbable Journey from Chateaux in France to the Slums of Calcutta ($24.95, Prospecta Press) is the story of a life of a man who was an heir to the French liqueur family who enjoyed a successful international singing career and, after several years on the Cointreau board of directors, found himself seeking something more meaningful for his life. Despite the wealth and success, his youth was impacted by an emotionally remote mother, an angry bullying brother, a cold and unprotective Swiss nurse, and a sexually predatory school teacher, all of which led him on a lifelong quest for unconditional love and for a mother figure. Initially he found her in the internationally acclaimed beauty, Lee Lehman, and then the famed Broadway diva, Ethel Merman, who became his mentor and “other mother.” His memoir addresses his close family relationships with both women and, then in quest of more meaning to life, his years of work and friendship with Mother Teresa as his “last mother.” He speaks of the value of sharing even a small part of oneself with others.
 
 Ethel Merman was a legendary Broadway musical star and Nothing Like A Dame: Conversations with the Great Women of Musical Theatre by Eddie Shapiro ($39.95, Oxford University Press) will delight anyone who loves the musical theatre with its interviews of twenty of the greatest leading women of Broadway. Among them are Carol Channing, Chita Rivera, Angela Lansbury, and Patti LuPone, along with some of the younger stars such as Audra McDonald and Kristin Chenoweth. Shapiro’s encyclopedia knowledge enhances the conversations. He is a longtime critic who has covered the arts for several publications.

The man who conceived of the method of saving the life of someone choking on something is told in Heimlich Maneuvers: My Seventy Years of Lifesaving Innovation by Dr. Henry J. Heimlich, MD ($19.95, Prometheus Books, softcover). His memoir tells of his best known procedure as wll as his other life-saving inventions. He is the inventor of the Heimlich Chest Drain Valve that saved thousands of lives during the Vietnam War and the MicroTrach which provides a remarkably efficient way to for people to take oxygen. Anyone interested in medicine will find this memoir of interest as he describes his research, as well as the controversy and resistance he encountered. A very different memoir is found in The Bosnia List: A Memoir of War, Exile, and Return ($16.00, Penguin Books, softcover) by Kenan Trebincevic and Susan Shapiro who brought her journalist skills to bear on the story that begins when Tebincevic was age eleven, living a happy life in the quiet Bosnian town of Breko. In the spring of 1992, war broke out and his friends, neighbors, and teammates all turn on him because he was Muslim. He relates his family’s final terrifying year in Bosnia and their miraculous escape from the brutal ethnic cleansing that ravaged the former Yugoslavia. Though he swore he would never return, after two decades in America he honored his father’s wish to visit their former homeland. The visit in which he wanted to revenge the treatment his family received tells a story of redemption for the horrors to which they and others were subjected. 

Books for Young Readers & Teens

One of my favorite publishers of books for young readers is Charlesbridge of Watertown, MA. In February they published for the very young, Feathers—Not Just for Flying by Melissa Stewart, illustrated by Sarah S. Brannen, ($17.95) that provides a glimpse into the real lives of birds in the wild and the role their feathers play for flight and camouflage or to line a nest. It’s educational and entertaining. This month Wild About Bears by Jeannie Brett ($17.95) will also appeal to those aged 6 through 9. They author introduces them to all eight species of bear and via some great watercolors, takes them around the world where they live including a map of where they can be found, as well as interesting information about bear traits and behavior, how they raise their young, and how they find food. This book, too, is both educational and entertaining. For those aged 4 to 7, there’s Music Everywhere! By Maya Anjera, Elise Hofer Derstine and Cynthia Pon, ($17.95) published in February as a celebration of music and the joy it brings. It is filled with photos of children around the world singing, dancing, and playing instruments. It will inspire some youngsters to explore their own musical passions. Behold the Beautiful Dung Beetle by Cheryl Bardoe and illustrated by Alan Marks ($16.95) is aimed at those age 5 to 9 and they might find fascinating to learn about a beetle that loves to feed on dung. Sounds disgusting, but it isn’t. It is filled with amazing facts and compelling images that will appeal to the very young. Older readers, age 10 and up will find Ocean of Fire: The Burning of Columbia, 1865 by T. Neill Anderson ($16.95) an insight into the Civil War as the author tells of Sherman’s march on Atlanta that included the destruction of southern cities like Columbia in South Carolina. The story is told through several characters, both real and imagined. This is historical fiction that makes such events come alive for younger readers.

Tony Tuso Faber has teamed up with Benton Rudd, an illustrator, for a series of books in “The Poodle Tales” series and book one is Poodlemania ($15.99, Mindster Media) that readers from age 4 to 9 will enjoy for both the artwork and the delightful story of a boy and girl poodle who get together and share various growing up skills, life lessons that readers will learn as well. The stories are light, comical, heartfelt, and educational. You can check out this book and the series at www.thepoodletales.com. The author is a very talented lady who began her modeling career at age 13, published a California magazine, and pursued many other interests. She and her husband, Bruce, live in Orange County with their three poodles. Find Momo ($14.95, Quirk Books) is filled with photos by photographer Andrew Knapp of his border collie. He began posting photos of Momo in Instagram hiding out in all kinds of settings from Central Park in New York as well as fields, snow banks, and toy stores. They became an Internet sensation and young readers age 4 to 7 will surely enjoy them in this delightful book.

From Blue Martin Publications, there’s Sofia’s Stoop Story: 18thStreet, Brooklyn by Lou Fancher and Steve Johnson ($17.95) that is set in the 1960s as Uncle Frankie begins telling Sofia and her counsins a story about the day he met the baseball geat, Carl Furillo. Sofia is called away by her Nana to do some errands and when she returns the story is over, but Uncle Frankie shares the whole story with her and he gives her a keepsake that he has saved since 1947. It is evocative of the era and locale, and beautifully illustrated. A series of books from Wigu Publishing is devoted to the theme of “When I Grow Up I Want to Be…” and the latest is A Teacher ($12.99) that begins with a girl named Carlee who wants to become one. Her own mother is a new teacher at her school and readers journey with Carlee on first day there as she learns about her own independence and identity. This series is quite inspiring.

For readers age 9 to 13, two books from Capstone will provide some reading pleasure. Sherlock, Lupin & Me: The Dark Lady by Irene Adler which draws on the original Sherlock stories and offers a romp through 1870s France in pursuit of both a murderer and a thief. The twist is that the characters are introduced as children, making the story more accessible to a young audience as they find themselves caught up in a web of crime they must investigate. It is the first in a new series. Secrets & Spies: Treason by Jo Macauley delves into the world of England’s Reformation era as a young spy unravels dangerous plots against the kind. A second book in this series is title Plague and features a 14-year-old Beth Johnson, a talented and beautiful young actress. The year is 1664 and she becomes embroiled in a perilous adventure to unravel a plant to kill Charles II. Both books are priced at 12.95 and are a good investment in encouraging a young reader to discover the pleasures of fiction.

Novels, Novels, Novels


Fans of J.A. Nance is back with her 50th book. Moving Target  ($25.99, Touchstone, an imprint of Simon & Schuster) is yet another detective novel in which a police academy-trained former reporter, Ali Reynolds, embarks on a trip to England with her longtime household assistant and right-hand man, Leland Brooks. Her greatest concern is helping her friend face his long-estranged family, but Ali soon finders herself investigating violent crimes spanning two continents and eras as vicious attacks unfold in Texas and an unsolved murder from the 1950s Bournemouth, Leland’s hometown resurfaces. Though they seem unconnected, they are and readers will not put this book down until they get to the last page.

Some years ago I reviewed Cynthia Hamilton’s novel, “Lucky at Love” and since then she has published three more, the latest of which is Spouse Trap ($14.00, Woodstock Press, softcover) in which Madeline Ridley, a Santa Barbara fundraising socialite sees her perfect life collapse in a swirl of blackmail, sabotage, and deceit after she awakens in a hotel room—alone, naked, and with a splitting headache and no idea how she got there. A group of lurid photos has been sent to her husband. She is in for the battle of a lifetime, but she discovers who her real enemy is. This is the first installment in a new series and provides lots of provocative, interesting reading.

Just out this month is Bobby Cole’s novel, The Rented Mule ($14.95, Thomas & Mercer, softcover). It is a tough, clever caper about a businessman who has been set up by a mysterious criminal to take the fall for his wife’s kidnapping. Behind what seems a good life, Cooper Dixon has been caught up in a never-ending cycle of arguments with his wife and his cocaine-addicted business partner is scheming to sell his business out from under him. When his wife is kidnapped his face is all over the television news and Dixon must depend on an unlikely ally to rescue his wife and clear his name.

Robyn Carr has won a number of awards for her previous novels and you will find out why when you read Four Friends ($24.95, Harlequin MIRA) that debuts in April. It is a gripping story of four forty-something women whose lives hit the marital skids, but they find the strength and courage to face the difficult challenges they face. Set in the San Francisco neighborhood of Mill Valley, friends and neighbors think Gerry has the perfect marriage with her husband Phil. It is a relationship that is more comfortable than passionate after 25 years, three children and demanding careers. She discovers an affair her husband had years before and he is committed to do to make up to her, but she finds it difficult to forgive him. With her friends she must come to terms as they too must cope with marital problems. The shifting relationships make for interesting reading, one they many will see in their own lives and around them.

That’s it for March! Tell your friends, family, and coworkers about Bookviews.com, a monthly report on books that include nonfiction and fiction that may not receive the attention in the mainstream media they deserve.

Bookviews -- April 2014

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By Alan Caruba

My Picks of the Month

If there is no other book you read this year, read Philip K. Howard’s The Rule of Nobody: Saving America from Dead Laws and Broken Government ($23.95, W.W. Norton). If you have been wondering why those elected and appointed to public office do not seem able to do anything more than either pass more laws, add more regulations, or not be able to approve a public project such as a needed new bridge or run a business such as a nursing home without being subject to regulation that is so detailed they cannot provide simple, principled service, this book will explain why. As Howard says, “Government’s ineptitude is not news. But something else has happened in the last few decades. Government is making America inept. Other countries have modern infrastructure, and schools that generally succeed, and better health care at little more than half the cost.” This true is demonstrated in the Affordable Care Act—Obamacare—that was 2,700 pages when passed and has now generated regulations that when stacked stand seven foot high. “The U.S. is now ranked below a dozen or more countries in terms of ease of doing businesses and effective governance. These are our competitors in global markets.” Howard calls for a return to our founding values of individual responsibility and accountability. “This requires abandoning the utopian dream of automatic government and giving responsible officials—real people—the authority to make practical choices.” In 1994 Howard authored “The Death of Common Sense: How Law is suffocating America” and he’s back with a look at our present state of stagnation and retreat.

Here, too, is another book you should read if you have concluded that there is no global warming (the Earth has been in a natural cooling cycle since 1997) and that the dangers of climate change are the same ones that have existed for centuries, floods, blizzards, droughts, et cetera. Dr. Tim Ball has been among a number of climatologists and other scientists who have outspokenly resisted and exposed the lies behind the global warming hoax that asserts that carbon dioxide (CO2) is trapping so much heat that all manmade emissions of it must be curtailed. In The Deliberate Corruption of Climate Science ($22.95, Stairway Press) Dr. Ball relates how initially he “watched my chosen discipline—climatology—get hijacked and exploited in service of a political agenda, watched people who knew little or nothing enter the fray and watched scientists become involved for political or funding reasons—willing to corrupt the science, or, at least, ignore what was really going on.” The global warming hoax was generated out of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and dates back to the mid to late 1980s. Dr. Ball calls it “the greatest deception in history and the extent of the damage has yet to be exposed and measured.”  I have read dozens of books about the hoax and this one sums up everything you need to know even as the claims and deceptions continue at the highest levels of our government, the United Nations, and the media. This book is detailed, documented, footnoted, and very interesting.

If you want to know what really happened leading up to and in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, you should read Bob Ivry’s The Seven Sins of Wall Street: Big Banks, Their Washington lackeys, and the Next Financial Crisis ($25.99, Public Affairs). Ivry is an editor and investigative reporter for Bloomberg News. The tendency is the think of any book about the business community, particularly banking, is likely to be rather dull, but this one is lively from page one and remains a surprisingly entertaining read even as its revelations scare the daylights out of you. For one thing, it is Joe Taxpayer who now guarantees the success of the top banks in America, all of whom were bailed out, paid back the hasty government loans they received, and then went on to make huge profits as the same banks foreclosed on countless homeowners penalized for the failure of the banks to put the brakes on thousands of “liar’s loans”, bundling and peddling them. As Ivry makes clear, the legacy of the financial crisis in 2008 isn’t stronger banks, but a weaker nation. We normally accord respect for the men at the top of the banking industry. They are often called “titans”, but the reality that Ivry reveals will have you calling them something else and the shenanigans since the crisis. Moreover, Ivry shows how the too-big-to-fail banks and their supporters in Washington, D.C., are getting closer to an even greater economic calamity. Neither they, nor their Washington facilitators in major agencies come off looking good and for good reason.

Living through what many feel is the second Great Depression, anyone who loves history will enjoy Bill Friedman’s All Against the Law ($17.99, $9.99, Old School Histories, hardcover and ebook, available from Amazon.com). Based on 47 years of research, it is filled with new information about more than a hundred major critics committed during the Great Depression era by bank robbers, the Mafia, FBI, politicians, along with the misdeeds of police detectives, prosecutors, and judges. Hard times tend to bring out the worst in people, particularly if they are inclined toward crime in the first place. Many from that era became legendary and include John Dillinger, Baby Face Nelson, and Alvin Karpis whose partner, Doc Barker, killed lawmen in multiple police escapes. It is also the story of the lawmen that pursued them. The FBI under the leadership of J. Edgar Hoover gained fame during this period. Politics during the era is also described where it involved corruption, particularly that of the Kansas Penderast machine. It makes our current times pale by comparison.



Having lived through the beginnings of the atomic age, I think a lot of readers who enjoy history will enjoy Craig Nelson’s The Age of Radiance: The Epic Rise and Dramatic Fall of the Atomic Age ($29.99, Scribner). The Atomic age began with a past-his-prime German physicist working in his lab and continues to the present day with fears that reflect the failures in Chernobyl and Fukushima, as well as those of terrorists with dirty bombs. It began with discoveries of the nucleus by Marie Curie, Enrico Fermi, and Edward Teller. Craig brings nuclear energy into a modern context. While atomic energy provides electricity (all of France is powered by it) and includes its use for medical purposes, its invisible rays can trigger cancer. This is, however, the story of the people who discovered it and the issues it evoked. As a bomb it was used to end America’s war in the Pacific, but not used since.

The one thing that I do not review, with the exception of anthologies, is poetry. I grew up reading traditional poetry, the kind that rhymed and had a distinct cadence, but over the years many poets abandoned that form, treading close to prose. One who did it to great success was Maxine Kumin whom I met in the 1970s at an annual Bread Loaf Writers Conference where she was already a star. She had since won a Pulitzer Prize and was a U.S. poet laureate. She passed away in February.  And Short the Season ($24.95, W.W. Norton) is the final collection of her work. Though I still prefer traditional poetry, hers demonstrates how a poet can turn the ordinary into something extraordinary. While she will be missed by family, friends, and fans, her great body of work will live on. In contrast, death took Marina Keegan too early, shortly after she graduated magna cum laude from Yale in May 2012, but The Opposite of Loneliness: Essays and Stories ($23.00, Scribner) gives us the opportunity to enjoy a body of her writings; enough to make us wish that an auto accident had not taken her life. She was just twenty-two. Anyone who loves good writing will enjoy this collection. They reveal a great talent.

Some books are so thoroughly amusing that they stand alone. That describes How to Make Your Cat an Internet Celebrity: A Guide to Financial Freedom by Patricia Carlin with photography by Dustin Fenstermacher ($12.95, Quirk Books, softcover) and it is a satire that offers tongue-in-cheek advice on how to turn your cat from just a pet that lays around a lot into your door to a fortune. Carlin purports to tell the reader how to identify their cat’s special talents, choose a stage name, film and edit a viral video, and more. Anyone who loves cats will find themselves laughing on every page while enjoying the many color photos. Also from Quirk Books comes William Shakespeare’s The Empire Striketh Back Part the Fifth by Ian Doescher ($14.95) which is a merry reimaging of George Lucas’s classic film. If the film has been an Elizabethan play, this is how it would sound and for anyone who loves the former this is an entertaining way to enjoy it again. Quirk Books has definitely earned its name!

I sometimes ask myself why a particular book was written and why a publisher thought it was worth publishing. This is what came to mind with The Mammoth Book of Shark Attacks by Alex MaCormick and Rod Green ($14.95, Running Press). Going back to 1900 and moving forward to 2013, this is a collection of stories about shark attacks. They have made headlines that reflect our natural horror regarding such events. There surely are readers who will find this of interest and it will be thoroughly sated by this book.

People, People, People

We read about people of every description, selecting those who interest us. Memoirs, biographies and autobiographies are in a class of themselves. Here are some books that have arrived that illustrate a more general approach.
 
Let’s start with a fun, lighthearted book about what it’s like to be a Hollywood paparazzi and, more specifically, how Jennifer Buhl became one. She writes about that in Shooting Stars: My Unexpected Life Photographing Hollywood’s Most Famous ($14.99, Sourcebooks, softcover). She has a lively style and begins by telling of her realization that she could make a lot more as a photographer with one good celebrity photo than she could waiting tables as she was doing the day she witnessed Paris Hilton being protected by her entourage amidst a gang of paparazzi. After that it was a question of learning the business. Along the way she made the acquaintance with many of today’s celebrities. Despite the money and fame, she makes it clear that the downside of celebrity is being hunted by the paparazzi. It’s a lifestyle most of us would not want.

Villains, Scoundrels, and Rogues: Incredible True Tales of Mischief and Mayhem is one of those titles that tells you everything you need to know about its subject. Paul Martin ($18.95, Prometheus Books) has brought together stories about folks you may not have heard of, but who played a role in history or literature. Take, for example, the drunken cop who abandoned his post at Ford’s theatre, given assassin John Wilkes Booth access to Lincoln. How about a notorious Kansas quack who made million implanting goat testicles in gullible male patients? Or America’s worst female serial killer ever? Or Ed Gein, Alfred Hitchcock’s inspiration for “Psycho”? Thirty brief biographies offer an entertaining look at some unforgettable characters, especially for anyone who enjoys history.

If you like true crime stories, you will like A Rookie Cop Vs The West Coast Mafia by William G. Palmini, Jr. and Tanya Chalpupa ($24.95. New Horizon Press, softcover) which is just out this month. Palmini was a rookie detective who began a crusade to take down the West Coast Mafia by gaining the confidence of a notorious mob operative, William Floyd Ettleman. When he and his gang, skilled safe crackers, set out to rob a popular Sausalito restaurant, the Trident, a one-time mecca for Hollywood, the music industry, and New York gang members, Palmini determined to bring them to justice. He was joined by the FBI and, with the aid of an informant, they were able to bring put an end to their crime. From the same publisher comes Deadly Vows: The True Story of a Zealous Preacher, a Polygamous Union and a Savage Murder ($24.95) by Leif M. Wright. It is the story of Joy Risker’s gruesome death at the hand of Pentecostal preacher, Sean Goff. He had been the author’s best friend for 16 years, during which time he weaved a tangled web of deceptions, religion and polygamy in his life and marriage to multiple women, one of which was Risker. Rather than losing his youngest wife when she wanted to continue her education and have a career, Goff set about to commit the perfect crime. After killing her, he took the body miles into the Arizonan desert and used knowledge of forensics from television to ensure it could not be identified. That changed when a couple came upon a stack of lava rocks and notices a foul odor. Reported missing in October 2003, Goff would turn himself in and confess. As is often the case, truth is stranger than fiction.


Due out next month, Damien Lewis’s Zero Six Bravo ($26.99, Quercus, an imprint of Random House) tells the story of a British Special Forces Squadron that were accused of running away from the enemy, but the true story of sixty men who, in March 2003, 600 miles behind enemy lines, accomplished the extraordinary, the surrender of the 100,000-strong Iraqi Army 5th Corps. Their mission was so dangerous that it was known as “Operation No Return” and they encountered an ambush by thousands of Saddam Hussein’s Fedayeen, backed by the Corps’ heavy armor. M Squadron should not have survived, but their courage got them through and this story will rivet anyone interested in military history. Our military is in our thoughts these days as the Obama administration seeks to reduce its budget to pre-World War Two levels. We honor them for their service and for their sacrifice, but a new book, A Trust Betrayed by Mike Magner ($27.50, Da Capo Press) tells the story of the Marines who were stationed at Camp Lejeune a few decades ago, thousands of whom suffered serious illnesses including lymphoma while their children suffered birth defects as the result of the failure of the Corps to take action when it became clear that the water they were drinking was contaminated. There were miscarriages and babies died. This is an ugly chapter in our history and the book argues for compensation for the victims.

The biography of a gifted baseball pitcher, Bill Denehy, is told in cooperation with Peter Golenbock in Rage ($16.95, Central Recovery Press). He was at the top of his game with the New York Mets until he threw a pitch that changed the course of his life. It was a life shaped by his bad temper that would cost him many opportunities. He had had an injury-plagued career, but would ultimately loose his vision due to injections used to keep him in the game. After that he would descend into addiction, but find recovery. His experience will resonate with athletes, baseball fans and others who struggle with addiction.

A very different story is told in Faraday, Maxwell, and the Electromagnetic Field: How Two Men Revolutionized Physics ($25.95, Prometheus Books) by Nancy Forbes and Basil Mahon. It is the story of two of the boldest and most creative scientists, separated in age by forty years, discovered the existence of the electromagnetic field and devised a radical new theory that overturned the strictly mechanical view of the world that had prevailed since Newton’s time, centuries earlier. It is a lively narrative. Faraday who had no mathematical training rose from being a bookbinder’s apprentice to become director of the Royal Institution of Great Britain. Maxwell was regarded as one of the most brilliant mathematical physicists of the age. Their theory would join Albert Einstein’s theory of relativity and gave rise to many of the technological innovations we take for granted today—from electric power generation to television, satellites, and cell phones, among many others. Anyone with an interest in science will enjoy this excellent book.

Getting Down to Business Books        

Power by Sarah Morgans and Bill Thorness ($19.95, Fenwick Publishing Group, softcover) is the story of how J.D. Power III became the auto industry’s advisor, confessor, and eyewitness to history. His award for consumer satisfaction is highly valued by auto manufacturers. It began when Dave Power founded his company in 1968 to aid auto makers understand the value of listening to consumers’ preferences and complaints. It changed the industry. The book tells the story of Power and those who worked most closely with him. The book is hailed by many industry leaders such as Akio Toyoda and the former chairman and CEO of General Motors, Rick Wagoner.


Success is measured and achieved in different ways and Coach Wooden’s Greatest Secret: The Power of a Lot of Little Things Done Well by Pat Williams with Jim Denney ($16.99, Revell, softcover) looks at why Coach Wooden became one of college basketball’s most revered coaches. His years at UCLA are testimony to that with ten NCAA national championships in a 12-year period, including seven in a row, a fear unmatched by any other coach. Pat Williams has more than fifty years of professional sports experience and is the author of dozens of books. He tells how Wooden taught his players every aspect of the game including how to put on their socks and shoes to avoid blisters. When asked, he said that little things matter. Williams takes Coach Wooden’s lesson, along with stories of people whose lives have exemplified the importance of little things one does or doesn’t do that affect one’s integrity, reputation, health, career, faith and success.

Carol Liefer was a successful comedian at a time when television comedy was an exclusive all-boy’s club. Part memoir, part guide to life, and very funny, How to Succeed in Business Without Really Crying: Lessons from a Life in Comedy ($19.95, Quirk, softcover) is a collection of essays that charts here three-decade journal through show business that provides valuable lessons for women and men in any profession. How good was she? She was an opening act for Frank Sinatra. Leifer is a four-time Emmy nominee for her writing on such shows as Seinfeld, Modern Family, Saturday Night Live, and the Larry Sanders Show. She has starred in five of her own comedy specials. Happily she is still active these days and her book will is both entertaining and instructive.

The Joy of Eating

One of life’s great joys is eating. People love cookbooks and reading about various aspects of dining.

Let’s start with a favorite of everyone, maple syrup. It is the subject of The Sugar Season: A Year in the Life of Maple Syrup—And One Family’s Quest for the Sweetest Harvest by Douglas Whynott ($24.99, Da Capo Press). Like many I do not give much thought to where the syrup comes from, just that I have a bottle on hand to pour some over pancakes. This book introduces the reader to entrepreneur Bruce Bascom whose family business, Bascom Farms, produces 80,000 gallons of sap a day. Whynott takes us through one tumultuous season as we learn the art of the boil, the myriad subtle flavors of syrup, and the process by which syrup is assigned a grade. You will discover that maple syrup is a multimillion dollar industry, one that contains a black market, was subject to a heist monitored by Homeland Security, and an OPEC-like organization called The Federation—which is fitting since a barrel of maple syrup is worth more than a barrel of oil!

Two other Da Capo books are devoted to food. If you like almonds, you will love Almonds Every Which Way by Brooke McClay ($18.99, softcover). Almonds have become a key ingredient in vegan, Paleo, glutan-free, low-carp, and alternative diets as a substitute for grain flours and dairy. Almonds, we learn, can reduce heart attack risk, lower bad cholesterol, help build strong bones and teeth, and aid in regulating blood sugar and insulin after meals. And I like them because they taste good! McClay takes one on a tour of every meal of the day with more than 150 almond flour, almond milk, and almond butter-based recipes. You don’t have to be a vegan to enjoy this book, but if you are one, check out Mayim’s Vegan Table by Mayim Bialik with Dr. Jay Gordon, a pediatrician ($21.99, softcover). As she notes, getting kids to eat their vegetables can be tough enough, but getting them to eat an exclusively plant-based diet can seem impossible, especially when you want them to take a pass on cheese pizza, hot dogs, and other popular food items. She provides more than a hundred recipes along with chapters that address the principles of vegan nutrition for growing bodies. If her name sounds familiar it is because Mayim Bialik is an Emmy-nominated actress who stars on The Big Bang Theory. She is also a Ph.D. and trained neuroscientist, and the mother of two sons.

Advice  

There is no end to books with advice on every imaginable topic. Here are a few that run the gamut.

Mindful Anger: A Pathway to Emotional Freedomis by Andrea Brandt, a Ph.D. with more than thirty years of working with individuals, couples, groups, and children, all of whom seeking help with emotional issues that include anger and aggression ($22.95, W.W. Norton). As we know, anger can be especially destructive to one’s relationships and interfere with achieving one’s goals. When expressed as rage or aggression, it can land you in jail. “There isn’t an area of our lives—relationships, careers, health—that wouldn’t improve with the proper handling of our anger,” says the author. A pioneer in the field of anger management, her book is a guide to making the kind of self-assessments and identifying the causes that generate anger and thereby finding ways to reduce and control it. If you know a constantly angry person, this would make a good gift for them.

Another psychological problem that men in particular encounter is borderline personality disorder. It causes them to have extreme difficulty regulating their emotions. Joseph Nowinski, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist, has authored Hard to Love: Understanding and overcoming Male Borderline Personality Disorder ($15.95, Central Recovery Press, softcover.) It is due out in May. Interestingly, it is frequently misdiagnosed in men, leading to no treatment or the wrong treatment. This book will


help any man examine if BPD is the problem he is experiencing. Such men are difficult, but not impossible to love says Dr. Robert Doyle, an assistant medical director at Harvard Medical School’s McLean Child and Adolescent Impatient Union. 

For the gals, there’s a delightful, very funny book by Jenny McCarthy, Belly Laughs: The Naked Truth about Pregnancy and Childbirth ($13.99, Da Capo Press, softcover). The co-host of “The View”, is also an actress, mother, and a former Playboy playmate. She dishes about prenatal cravings, leg cramps, fainting spells, and all the other experiences that go with becoming a mother with the frankness and humor for which she has become known. And despite the various challenges a woman must engage to give birth, she says “Welcome to the best job you will ever have, mommyhood.” 

Kid Stuff          

Every so often a really outstanding book comes along for younger readers. U.S. history is something every American should read, but it is no secret that our schools are not doing a good job of teaching it. When a book like World War I for Kids comes along, it offers an opportunity that a parent should embrace. Written by R. Kent Rasmussen ($17.95, Chicago Review Press, softcover) it is a comprehensive look at a chapter in American history of which many adults are unaware, but WWI was a major turning point in the last century for Americans and, as we know, it set the stage for WWII that started within twenty years. Americans were reluctant to participate in either and did so when provoked by attacks such as the sinking of the Lusitania in 1915 that took the lives of many American passengers. Extensive illustrations enhance an excellent text that tells of how the war stimulated technological development as well as changing the way wars had been fought. It became far more lethal. Younger readers from age 10 and up will find this book an exciting look at the event, the people involved, and the activities it invites them to do. In truth, an adult can read this book with as much enjoyment. The For Kids series also offers World War II for Kids and The Civil War for Kids.

Last month I noted a number of new books from Charlesbridge Publishing and I will continue this month.

Kids get a head start on school if they get to read books that introduce them to the alphabet and numbers.  Teddy Bear Addition by Barbara Bardieri McGrath ($16.95) uses images by Tim Nihoff of teddy bears to entertain and educate at the same time. It’s lively verse takes the reader through the basics while they learn important vocabulary such as sums and digits. Once the basics are acquired, it’s time to move onto learning about fractions and that is made easy and fun in Fractions in Disguise by Edward Einhorn with illustrations by David Clark ($16.95) that features George Cornelius Factor who loves fractions so much he collects them. I take my hat off to authors that understand how young minds can absorb these things through stories and artwork. If read by an adult to a child or those age 4 to 8, these books open doors early in their lives.

I confess I never expected to be reading a children’s book about dung beetles, but then I forgot how almost any creature can capture the imagination of young readers. Behold the Beautiful Dung Beetle by Cheryl Bardoe and illustrated by Alan Marks ($16.95) is for the early reader and one who finds nature of interest. It’s not disgusting, despite what they collect and dine upon, but rather an interesting introduction to the ecology of how everything serves some purpose and how this beetle is a perfect adaptation to take advantage of it.


Three Charlesbridge books provide interesting reading for early readers ages 9 to 12. At Home in Her Tomb: Lady Dai and the Ancient Chinese Treasures of Mawangdui ($19.95) by Christine Liu Perkins and Sarah S. Brannen tells of how, in December 1971, the tomb of Xin Zhui, the Marchioness of Dai, was discovered. It revealed the almost perfectly preserved body of Lady Dai. The book will transport back to an earlier age in China and the amazing archeology and forensic science that revealed much about her. In Stone Giant: Michelangelo’s David and How He Came to Be by Jane Sutcliffe and illustrated by John Shelley ($16.95) tells the story of how the genius of Michaelangelo turned a giant block of marble into one of the greatest works of art from a statue others had tried to create, but failed. From Under the Freedom Tree by Susan VanHecke and illustrated by London Ladd ($16.95) tells the story of how, on the night of May 23, 1861, three slaves made history when they decided to escape across the Confederate line to the Union-held Fort Monroe. Declared “contraband of war” by the Union General, they were allow to stay and as word of their successful escape spread, thousands of runaway slaves followed suit, pouring into the fort and building the first African-American community in the country. It was under the branches of a sheltering tree that they heard one of the first readings of the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863.

From Wigu Publishing comes another in their series “When I Grow Up I Want to Be…” It is devoted to being a firefighter ($12.95) and begins with a boy whose field trip to a local fire station introduces him to the exciting world of firefighting, as well as home fire safety, in a fun and educational book. Upcoming books will include being in the U.S. Navy, a veterinarian, and even a race car driver. Check out the series at www.WhenIGrowUpBooks.com.

Novels, Novels, Novels

I have no idea how many novels are being published these days, but there are thousands of them. I stick to the established publishing houses with regard to those I recommend though I will occasionally recommend one that is self-published, a trend that is growing. All those noted are softcover editions.

Max Barry has written one of the most curious novels I’ve seen in a long time. Lexicon ($16.00, Penguin Books) It ranges between thrilling, horrifying, and hilarious as a fast, funny, cerebral thriller. Imagine an exclusive school somewhere outside of Arlington, VA where students aren’t taught the usual subjects, but rather the skills of persuasion. Their teachers are a secretive organization of “poets”, elite manipulators of language who can wield words as weapons and bend others to their will. Emily Ruff is running a three-card Monte game on the streets of San Francisco when this orphan is spotted by the organization’s recruiters. When admitted to the school she becomes its most talented prodigy until she makes a big mistake; she falls in love. There is a subplot that is just as unique, involving rival factions of the “poets.” As the two narratives converge, the shocking work of the poets is revealed. I shall say no more! Another novel offers a comparable narrative about a future in which the world’s social order is near collapses and children are abducted for genetic enhancement to become super fighters. In The Devereaux Disaster ($16.95, Two Harbors Press) the son of retired secret-agent Jeremiah Jones has been abducted. Five years have passed and he is determined to rescue him. Soon after his arrival on the Moon, his mission turns sour. He discovered that while Joshua’s body is near perfect, his mind has been poisoned to hate and destroy. With his fellow cadets, they have a mission to attack specific targets on Earth to unite its warring nations. Suffice to say this is a most unusual science fiction novel and one that means Jeremiah can only save the world if his son and fellow cadets are destroyed.

The Catholic church has been in the news for its failure to respond to the problem of priests who abuse children and a novel by Gregory Alexander, The Holy Mark: The Tragedy of a Fallen Priest ($14.99, Mill City Press) takes on this issue as it delves deep into the psyche of a man whose reprehensible acts are perhaps only surpassed by those intent on destroying him. It is a psychologically compelling novel of family, power, and revenge. The author brings insight to the subject having taught English at several Catholic schools in New Orleans. For those who love an old-fashioned mystery, they will welcome news that Johnny Shaw is back. His 2011 novel, “Dove Season” won the Spotted Owel Award for a debut mystery and now he’s returned with Plaster City ($14.95, Thomas & Mercer). Set in California’s Imperial Valley, it’s another raucous caper starring Jimmy Veeder and his best friend Bobby Maves from his earlier novel. Jimmy has settled into a steady life as a farmer and family man, but when Bobby’s teenage daughter goes missing, the two launch their own investigation only to end up in the middle of a violent turf war between a fierce motorcycle gang and a powerful crime lord fighting it out on a desolate strip of desert known as Plaster City. It’s a big-hearted escape that establishes Shaw as a novelist to watch and read.

I love a good title and Six Months of September ($10.00, available from Amazon.com and other outlets) surely qualifies as eye-catching. Mark Allen gives us Duncan Walsh, a former reporter who has struck up a friendship with tour guide Agnes, a beautiful college student working at the Chicago Museum of Natural History. When she disappears he makes national news and Duncan decides to launch his own investigation. With the help of his best friend, Luis, and Agnes’s boyfriend, James, the search is on. James’ father is a Chicago Police Commander, This is already working on the second installment in the Duncan Walsh detective series and you will enjoy going along as he and his friends uncover secrets and discover who is working hard to conceal them in this debut. Allen is a graduate of the University of Illinois in Urban and the John Marshall School of Law in Chicago, so he knows the territory of which he writes. The pace never slackens.

That’s it for April. Come back in May as I can guarantee you that many new books are on the way. And tell your book loving friends, family and co-workers about Bookviews.com so they too can learn about many fine books that do not necessarily get the attention they should.

 

Bookviews - May 2014

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By Alan Caruba

My Picks of the Month

If you have been trying to understand what is going on in the Middle East and the Maghreb (northern African) nations of Tunisia and Libya, among others in the wake of the “Arab Spring” that occurred in 2011, then you must read Walid Phares’ excellent analysis, The Lost Spring: U.S. Policy in the Middle East and Catastrophes to Avoid ($27.00, Palgrave Macmillan). Phares is an expert on the Middle East, terrorism, and Islam. He is a frequent guest on news programs and an advisor to members of Congress and the European Parliament. Like the mythical Casandra who could predict the future, but who no one believed, Phares predicted that a younger, technologically connected generation, along with secular Muslims, were reaching a point where they would no longer accept the oppression of the region’s despots. The “Arab Spring” was ignited in Tunisia, but spread rapidly to Egypt, Libya, and Syria. He documents how, in each case, the Muslim Brotherhood waited for the demands, often of millions of citizens as occurred in Egypt, brought about the removal of men who had ruled for decades. Then, as a well-organized force, took over the revolutions and sought to exert their Islamism, Sharia law, and the same controls against which the people had revolted. What also emerges is the fact that the U.S. sided with the Muslim Brotherhood against the will of the people. Other U.S. policies failures followed, as in the case of Syria. This is the best book you will read about what occurred, why, and what the future may hold.



If you are of a political frame of mind, you may want to pick up a copy of The Benghazi Report ($12.95, Skyhorse Publishing) that was produced by the U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. With an introduction by Roger Stone, a consultant who played a role in the election of Republican presidents from Nixon to George H.W. Bush. “The revelation that the U.S. government has made an affirmative choice not to bring the killers of four Americans to justice is disturbing and unconscionable,” says Stone and many agree. As the event recedes in time and memory, the short report contains the relevant facts. One caveat; Hillary Clinton’s role in the events is never mentioned, nor is she named at any point in the report. In late April we learned that the White House told a complete falsehood, discounting the fact that it was a terrorist attack, calling it spontaneous, and blaming it on a video.

Those who favor conservative politics will thoroughly enjoy Guardian of the Republic by former Congressman, Allen West ($26.00, Crown Forum), a memoir that is also a presentation of the personal views and values that shaped a life devoted to faith, family, and freedom. West earned two master’s degrees, one from Kansas State University in political science and the second from the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College in military arts and sciences.
 
He is a natural born teacher and his book is valuable for its chapters about conservative political thought; its origins and application. An African-American, he rose through the ranks of the U.S. Army to Lt. Colonel, serving in both Iraq and Afghanistan. While much of the African-American community shares a liberal political philosophy, West found purpose and value in conservatism and it took him to a term in Congress as a Representative from Florida. Along the way his experiences and beliefs deepened his views. He is likely to have a real impact on American politics in the years ahead.

 
James Madison was our fourth President, but other than being mentioned among our nation’s Founders, he tends to take a back seat to Washington and Jefferson in the minds of most people, if indeed they even know he exist. Dr. Lynn Cheney, PhD, a noted scholar, a member of the Commission on the Bicentennial and a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, has gifted us with an extraordinary biography, James Madison: A Life Reconsidered ($36.00, Viking).
Madison, though younger than most of the Founders, was recognized by all of them and others with whom he dealt as an extremely gifted intellect. He is generally credited with much of content of the Constitution, most certainly its Bill of Rights. In his day, the idea of a large republic composed of the people’s representatives initially was greeted with skepticism, but he pushed for a strong, but limited federal government to replace the failed Articles of Confederation and respond to the ways the colonies were printing their own money and engaging in practices that harmed other colonies. Dr. Cheney brings him to life, not only with the facts, but with an engaging, entertaining text that provides valuable insights to the times in which he lived. Put this book on your list for summer reading. You will be glad you did.

I have always enjoyed books based on a clever idea and that describes Mario Giordano’s 1,000 Feelings for Which There are No Names ($16.00, Penguin Books, softcover). He has captured those moments that we react to emotionally without necessarily being aware of it. They are moments from our lives such as the hesitation before sending an important email and the happiness of fulfilling one of your mother’s lifelong dreams. It’s the kind of book you can open at random although it does have sections of sorts. This is the kind of book you keep around to remind you of life’s many pleasures and fears. We all share them. For the sheer pleasure of reading good writing that spans a wide variety of his experiences, I recommend Christopher Buckley’s But Enough About You, ($27.50, Simon and Schuster), a series of essays, by an esteemed humorist, traveler, and an irreverent historian. He is extremely gifted and as one goes from essay to essay, one is treated to reading his insights, friends such as authors Joseph Heller and Christopher Hitchens, dinner at the Reagan White House, flying a Cessna through Alaskan mountains, working aboard a freighter, gardening, and other topics galore. One is both entertained and enlightened in so many ways that reading Buckley, for aspiring writers, is a lesson in how to observe life and write about it in a superb fashion.

Readers are often aspiring writers and, if you have to write as part of your job, you will benefit from How to Write Anything: A Complete Guide by Laura Brown ($35.00, W.W. Norton). It lives up to its title as it teaches how to organize, draft and revise what you write and gets into the differences between academic writing, how to write instructions, and expository writing. Everything from a business letter to a memo, an apology to a speech is discussed. There are rules and there are options. You can learn about all of them in this definitive book on the subject. More and more these days, people are choosing to write memoirs and, for them, there’s Roberta Temes’ How to Write a Memoir in 30 Days ($14.99, Readers Digest, softcover). It offers step-by-step instructions for creating and publishing your personal story. Janell Burley Hofman has authored iRules: What Every Tech-Healthy Family Needs to Know About Selfies, Sexting, Gaming, and Growing Up ($17.99, Rodale, softcover), a particularly useful book for parents who want to teach their sons and daughters about the boundaries and expectations of how to use the many communications technologies that are available to the younger set. It is well worth reading to keep one’s children how to deal with cyber-bullying, and aspects of their lives that should not be instantly shared online and in cyber-space.

In a month, a lot of young Americans will be graduating from high school. They are doing so in some very bad economic times that add to the uncertainties that come with the transition. For high school students, figuring out what to do after graduation can be a major question because there are many options. That’s why Undecided: Navigating Life and Learning After School by Genevieve Morgan ($14.99, Zest Books, distributed by Houghton Mifflin, softcover) is just the right book to give a young man or woman at this point in their lives. It helps by putting the decision-making power back where it belongs, with the teens themselves, while exploring the options that are available whether it be a training program, a community college, the military or a four-year university. It provides an in-depth look at what they can expect to earn, what kind of lifestyle to expect, and possible downsides of different scenarios. Being undecided is what being human is all about. Providing a helping hand is a great gift.

Memoirs, Biographies

My youth happily included the movies that starred Roy Rogers and Dale Evans. When the first volume of The Touch of Roy and Dale I was very pleased to read it and revisit those days. A second volume is out and includes many new photos, some 600, along with an excellent text by Tricia Spencer ($21.95, West Quest). In volume II the author draws on 40,000 pieces of fan mail from the Rogers estate, plus new perspective from Roy and Dale’s grandchildren, along with the thoughts of those close to them during their long career. A portion of the sales will go to their Happy Trails Children’s Foundation. They touched the lives of thousands and had a huge fan base. How nice to read about two celebrities whose lives were not touched by the often tawdry things we read about the generation that followed them.

Almost fifty years after its release, “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling” is thirty-fourth on Rolling Stone’s list of the 500 Best Songs of All Time and remains Broadcast Music Inc’s most played song of the twentieth century. It was sung by the Rightous Brothers, Bill Medley and the late Bobby Hatfield. Together they left an indelible impression on the music theirs and succeeding generation loved. Medley has penned The Time of My Life: A Rightous Brother’s Memoir ($26.99, Da Capo Press) and fans of their music will thoroughly enjoy his account of growing up as the son of musicians in Orange County, California, where he recorded his first solo songs on two tape recorders in his living room. His first paying gig was with a four-piece group, The Paramours, where he met his future partner, Bobby. Together they enjoy enormous success, making more money that two men who were “young, dumb, and full of rum” to know what to do with. They were performing with groups like the Beatles and Rolling Stones, as well as Elvis Presley. After they split up, Medley went onto a successful solo career, but his life was not without tragedy as he tells in the heartbreaking account of his first wife’s brutal and unsolved murder, and his struggle to raise their son Darrin as a single parent. His second marriage is in its 27th year. The memoir is enhanced by a foreword by Billy Joel. Medley was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003 and continues to tour and perform.

War always generates memoirs and a particularly moving one is by the late Max Gendelman, A Tale of Two Soldiers, ($14.95, Two Harbors Press, softcover) and begins on December 18, 1944 when the then 12-year-old soldier was captured by the Germans during the Battle of the Bulge. A Jew, he had more reason to fear for his life than other prisoners. While imprisoned, though, he met Karl Kirschner, a lieutenant in the German Luftwaffe. It turned out that both had a passion for chess and, in time, they decided that both, captor and prisoner, would escape the prison camp! Their friendship would last sixty years and transcended the bigotry of the times they shared. It is a story of courage, faith, and honor. Gendelman returned home, married and started a family and a successful business. In 1952 he helped his friend come to the United States. He died in June 2012 and was buried with military honors.

One of the most dramatic incidents of World War II was the torpedoing of the USS Indianapolis on July 30, 1945 as it made its way to a small island in the South Pacific, sailing unescorted after delivering uranium to be used in the first atomic bombs. Told that the waters were safe, Edgar Harrell and several other Marines were sacked out on deck when six torpedoes sank the ship, leaving him and other survivors in the ocean for five horrifying days, until those not killed by sharks, were picked up. The story of his courage, ingenuity and faith is told in Out of the Depths ($16.99, Bethany House Publishers). Mike Huckabee, former Governor of Arkansas and TV personality, said, “There aren’t too many times when the word ‘hero’ is appropriately used. Heroes are people who do extraordinary things and in the service of others, Edgar Harrell is a true American hero.” One of the tragedies of World War II was the refusal of the U.S. government that on May 13, 1939 that denied entry to the MS St. Louis, sailing from Hamburg, Germany, and filled with Jews seeking to escape the Nazi government. Among those on board were the grandfather and uncle of Martin Goldsmith and they and the other passengers were returned to Europe where many were sent to concentration camps where they died. In Alex’s Wake, ($25.99, Da Capo Press), he details his six-week quest to retrace their journey to assuage the guilt he carried for living happily in America despite his family’s tormented history. The book is more than just his and his family’s, but one that many experienced, including Germans who regretted the horror the Nazis inflicted on Jews and others. It is 75 years since that event and a reminder that America only entered World War II after being attacked by Japan. The Nazis were defeated, but not before they killed millions, among whom were the victims on the MS St. Louis. 

A memoir by the mother of Tim Burroway, Losing Tim, ($14.95, Think Piece Publishing, softcover) is dedicated to him, “Captain, Ranger, Paratrooper, husband, father, hunter contractor for humanitarian mine removal in Iraq, Republican, romantic, idealist, perfectionist, gun nut, my first born, my baby.”  After serving in the U.S. Army, Tim became a private contractor, essentially undertaking the same jobs as those in service, but without many of the benefits. How big a role do they play? A large number of those serving the nation in Afghanistan are private contractors, but according to a recent RAND survey, many return home with mental health issues at a higher rate than the soldiers and there are 22 suicides a day in the veteran population. Janet Burroway has authored fifteen books for adults and three for children. The journey that Tim took was one from a defender of America to one deeply disappointed by both the origin and outcome of the war in Iraq to depose Saddam Hussein. As she notes, one in three returns from our war zones with a mental disorder and the life Tim imagined and then lived was filled with disappointment despite his commitment to it. Some lives are just filled with too much tragedy, but Tim was fortunate to have a mother who could relate the facts of his life.

Minding the Mind

The power of our minds and the way it exerts that power over our lives always makes for interesting reading and, in many cases, useful insight.

One of the problems that have increasingly come to public attention has been autism, an affliction that parents notice early on. The diagnosis often is devastating, but Autism Breakthrough: The Groundbreaking Method that Has Helped Families All Over the World by Raun K. Kaufman ($25.99, St. Martin’s Press) will come as very good news for those families dealing with it. Kaufman is the director of global education for the Autism Treatment Center of America. He is living proof autism can be treated and overcome. He shares the groundbreaking principles and strategies that helped him and offers new hope through a scientifically proven roadmap that helps autistic children overcome it. His parents literally turned all the recommended cures on their head and chose to work with him instead of against the symptoms he displayed, building a bridge to his world. The book is an accessible, step-by-step guide.

For those who like to explore the scientific side of things, there’s Mental Biology: The New Science of How the Brain and Mind Relate by W.R. Klemm ($19.95, Prometheus Books, softcover.)  The author focuses on how the mind emerges from nerve-impulse patterns in the densely-packed neural circuits that make up most of the brain, suggesting that the conscious mind can be seen as a sort of neural-activity-based avatar. As an identity in its own right, the mind on a conscious level can have significant independent action, shaping the brain that sustains it through its plans, goals, interests, and interactions with the world. He also delves into the role of dream sleep in both animals and humans, and explains the brain-based differences between non-conscious, unconscious, and conscious minds. Dr. Klemm has written extensively on this subject.

Can love and anger co-exist? Yes say the authors of Riding the Passionate Edge: Converting Tension into Emotional Intimacy, ($15.95, Langdon Street Press, softcover). In an intimate relationship it is a common error to believe that emotional closeness and tension can’t co-exist. Mary and Tom Cushman provide concrete skills for transforming relationships, even those that may feel beyond repair, into those that recapture the original feelings that drew two people together. They make a powerful case for engaging tension directly and skillfully through empathetic listening, straight talk, compassion and forgiveness to heal the damage caused by unresolved emotional wounds. The authors are a married pair of long-time counselors, having been clergy and teachers, who for the past 16 years have been private practice counselors. Another book that can prove helpful is Be Real: Because Fake is Exhausting by Rick Bezet (19.99, Baker Books), the pastor of New Life Church in Arkansas. “God makes it simple for us,” says Bezert. “Being fake is exhausting, and it drains us and eventually kills our body and our soul. But being real requires us to put God first in our lives and to allow his love to overflow into every area of our lives. Our hope in him is real.” Well, I did say he was a pastor, but he is also an engaging author who knows that the world is full of fakers and even some who attend church every Sunday can be included among them. His book is a call to readers to live a life based on authenticity. For those with a healthy spiritual life, this book will prove supportive and instructive.

Books for Tots & Teens

The greatest gift for any child is the enjoyment of reading, so get them started early.
 
A new addition to her series is Cynthia Bardes’ Pansy in Paris: A Mystery at the Museum ($18.95, Octobre Press), illustrated by Virginia Best. Her previous book was “Pansy at the Palace: A Beverly Hills Mystery.”  In this one Pansy, a poodle and Avery, a little girl who adopted her, solve who is stealing paintings with a story that will surely entertain those to whom it is read or old enough to read it for themselves. It is told from Pansy’s point of view and this large format book with full page artwork is just delightful. The same age group, from 2 and up, will enjoy A Bee Named Bea by Candace A. Dietz with illustrations by Virginia J. Rost ($14.95, Mixed Media Memoirs), a collection of poems about various animals such as a cow that can’t stop mooing or a lonely bee that everyone is afraid of. Each poem ends with a cheerful resolution. The book has twenty poem-stories to keep young minds engaged. Some books for the very young with the intention to teach important life lessons and A Simple Idea to Empower Kids by Kathleen Boucher ($13.95, Balboa Press) offers three principles to young readers age 3 to 12, about the power of love, choice and belief to help them develop self-confidence and deal with whatever comes their way in life. Parents will find this book very helpful to get a child off to a good start.

Miss You Like Crazy by Pamela Hall and illustrated by Jennifer A. Bell ($15.99, Tanglewood) is written for those ages 6 to 8 and is a story that reminds children that, even when parents are away at work, they are always thinking about them. It is a lighthearted way to reassure children of their importance in their parent’s busy lives. Also from Tanglewood is Audrey Penn’s A Kissing Hand for Chester Raccoon ($7.99) for the even young set, ages 2 to 4. It is now a board book, made study enough to withstand all manner of handling. This book is becoming a children’s classic, having already touched the lives of many readers who benefit from Mrs. Raccoon’s secret for making a child feel safe and secure.

For the younger set, pre-teens, there is an excellent book based on American history, Pilgrims to Patriots: A Grandfather Tells the Story by Alex Bugaeff ($24.95, print, $8.99 Ebook, Create Space) that, in fact, the older reader will enjoy as well. A grandfather shares his knowledge of the years that led up to the American Revolution and brings to life the nation's founders as real, living men, along with a host of other characters from our early years such as Molly Pitcher, a cannoneer, and events like the War of Jenkins' Ear, to Elizabeth Key, the slave who sued the Virginia Colony for her freedom. It is both educational and very entertaining. The book's value is enhanced by the need to impart such knowledge to a younger generation that is not receiving it sufficiently in our schools.

Pre-teens and teens benefit from reading novels that overcome today’s “tweet” reduction of everything to 140 characters. Cara Bertrand begins her “Sentantia” series with a fantasy story, Lost in Thought($19.95/$11.95, Luminis Books, hard and softcover) about Lainey who everyone thinks has severe migraines from stress and exhaustion. In truth, Lainey, age 16, has visions of how people died or are going to die, a secret she keeps to herself. Doctors advise she be enrolled in a private New England boarding school to help cure her, but while there is no cure, she discovers that everyone at Northbrook Academy has a secret too where half the students and nearly all the staff are members of Sententia, a hidden society of the psychically gifted. This paranormal theme, along with a bit of romance, and lots of action-packed twists to the plot will keep any young reader turning the pages.

Don’t Call Me Baby by Gwendolyn Heasley ($9.99, HarperTeen, softcover) will gain the author even more readers, especially if they have read her two previous young adult readers. It’s about the daughter, a teenager, whose Mommy Blogger has no concept of boundaries, having been writing about her since before she was born, telling everything about her on the popular blog. At age 15, Imogene has been protesting to no avail. When a mandatory school project requires her to start her own blog, she is reluctant to expose any more of her life online until she realizes that the project is an opportunity to define herself for the first time on her own terms and to give her mother a taste of her own medicine! This is a story that is heartfelt and often laugh-out-loud, sure to please the girls for whom it is written.

Novels, Novels, Novels

Spring for the publishing world is—as is the autumn—the time they roll out many new books and, when it comes to novels, it would appear that fiction still has a large audience to satisfy.

You can’t write novels unless you have an active imagination and Anna Godbersen surely does. She already has two bestsellers, “The Luxe” and “Bright Young Things”. Having come of age when Marilyn Monroe was the quintessential superstar, I must confess the theme of her new novel, The Blonde, ($26.00, Weinstein Books, a member of the Perseus Books Group) was a bit off-putting, but that will surely not be the case for most others younger than myself. In this book, Godbersen conjures up a Marilyn Monroe who, through the help of a mysterious stranger, rises from being the young, unknown Norma Jeane Baker with aspirations of being an actress to the famed movie star twelve years later. Her benefactor, however, is a member of the then-Soviet KGB and she is told to find something about John F. Kennedy that they can use in some fashion. Instead of aiding the KGB she falls in love with him and, when she learns of plans to assassinate him, she must escape her Soviet handlers to save him and herself. The novel incorporates the Hollywood of her era, the murderous intrigue, and the elements of a well-known actual history. Together they become a novel that makes for a great read and is likely to end up a film at some point. Intrigue and murder from an earlier era, that found in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s novels, is found in The Conan Doyle Notes: The Secret of Jack the Ripper by Diane Gilbert Madsen ($28.95, MX Publishing, London, available via Amazon.com). The publisher is the world’s largest specialist in books featuring the most famous fictional detective, Sherlock Holmes. Steve Emecz, the MX managing director, says “There has never been a better time to be a Sherlock Holmes fan” he is thrilled to have her novel. “It’s perfect for a fan base with an appetite for modern thrillers with a link back to Conan Doyle.”  Her novel involves a wealthy Chicago lumber baron’s diary which reveals that Doyle left some valuable handwritten notes during his 1894 visit to Chicago. They contain vital information about the Ripper murders. When the diary is stolen, D.D. McGil, an academic turned insurance investigator, comes upon information she believes confirms the identity of Jack the Ripper and finds herself a target in a deadly game to locate a literary find that could rewrite history.

In Monday, Monday Elizabeth Cook tells the story of a tragedy in Texas that changes the course of three lives ($26.00, Sarah Crichton Books). Based on an actual incident when, in August 1966, Charles Whitman hauled a footlocker of guns to the top of the University of Texas tower and began firing on pedestrians below. He killed sixteen people and wounded thirty-two. It was the first mass shooting of civilians on a campus in American history. The novels follows three students caught up in the massacre, Shelly who walks into the path of the bullets and two cousins, Wyatt and Jack, who heroically rush from their classrooms to help the victims. On that day a relationship begins that entangles them in a forbidden love affair, an illicit pregnancy, and a vow of secrecy that will span forty years. Reunited decades after the tragedy, they will be forced to confront the event that changed their lives and that has silently and persistently ruled the lives of their children. At its core, it is the story of a woman determined to make peace with herself, with the people she loves, and with a history that will not let her go.


A very different story is told by Mike Mullen in Book 3 of the “Ashfall Trilogy”, Sunrise, ($17.99, Tanglewood). It takes place after the Yellowstone super-volcano has nearly wiped out the human race. It is now almost a year after the eruption and the survivors seem determined to finish the job as communities wage war on each other, gangs of cannibals roam the countryside, and what little government survived has completely collapsed. Sickness, cold, and starvation are the survivor’s constant companions. The debut novel “Ashfall” in 2011 was a big hit as was Book 2, “Ashen Winter” in 2012. No doubt Book 3 will enjoy a similar acclaim as it is a triumph of imagination as Mullen takes on the task of writing about a world of survivors must overcome the horrendous outcome of the eruption. It addresses questions of responsibility, and bravery, civilization, and society. Though written as a young adult novel, I think older readers will enjoy it as well.

A number of softcover novels provide some entertaining as well.  We have entered an era in which anyone who wants to write a novel can get it published. Jeff Turner has had a long, successful career as a college professor with more than twenty college-level textbooks to his credit and he draws on his experience in academia and life to have written The Way Back ($14.95, Page Publishing). It is about a college professor who is at the top of his game, living a posh live in a Connecticut shoreline town, whose world is turned upside down when he faces trumped up charges of academic harassment. In the midst of that crisis he discovers his wife has been unfaithful and that his son is being bullied by high school thugs. If that isn’t enough, a seductive and mysterious woman enters his life, along with troubling memories of an incident from a family swimming pool party that went horribly wrong. He and his family must cope with uncertainty and upheaval. It is the story of the emotional frailty that can strike anyone without warning and how his family must deal with the family’s inner demons. This is a novel that demands to be read from cover to cover because it is going to be hard to put down. A very different story is told by Lynne Raimondo in Dante’s Poison, a novel, featuring a blind psychiatrist, Mark Angelotti, who is helping Hallie Sanchez defend her oldest friend against murder charges. A muckraking journalist, Rory Gallagher, has died from a fatal dose of Lucitrol, a powerful antipsychotic drug and suspicion immediately falls on his longtime lover, Jane Barrett, who has just defended the drug’s manufacturer against product-liability claims. Mark and Hallie succeed in obtaining Barrett’s release, only to discover that Gallagher’s killer may still be on the loose and targeting them as his next victims. Angelotti was in Raimondo’s novel, “Dante’s Wood.”  The author formerly was a general counsel for Arthur Anderson and later the Illinois Department of Revenue. Her background, combined with her talent, combine for a new novel that anyone who enjoys such intrigue and danger will enjoy.

In J.T. Prescott’s thriller, Arts and Crafts, ($16.95, Two Harbors Press) a former covert operative. Ken Frazier, is looking forward to retirement after leaving the clandestine world behind is sought out by a former colleague, George Larson, and confronted with outrageous claims about a government conspiracy that includes major U.S. cities falling prey to snipers. Hesitant to believe the claims, he is suddenly thrust back into action when Larson shows up dead and the rumors turn out to be true. This is a fast-paced adventure, filled with conspiracy and murder, as Frazier’s experience and instincts kick in and he recruits the help of two members of his former team. Together they band together for one last desperate mission. In a somewhat similar theme, Johnny Shaw tells a story in Plaster City ($14.95, Thomas and Mercer) of Jimmy Veeder who is enjoying life as a farmer and family man with occasional breaks to act as wingman to his best friend’s booze-fueled misadventures. When Bobby Maves teenage daughter does missing, Jimmy will be along for the rescue mission and what begins as a bad situation turns into something else entirely involving a violent turf war between a fierce motorcycle gang and a powerful crime lord, fighting it out on a desolate strip of desert known as Plaster City in the landscape of the California-Mexico borderland. Shaw’s previous novels received awards and his long career as a screenwriter and novelist demonstrate his skills.

That’s it for May! Tell your friends, family and coworkers who enjoy reading about Bookviews.com so they too any get the latest word about new fiction and non-fiction. And come back next month for more!

Bookviews - June 2014

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By Alan Caruba

My Picks of the Month

The world is a very complex place and that is true of the issues that directly and indirectly affect our lives. There is, in addition, a legion of people and groups eager to lie to us about those issues in order to achieve their goals. That is why books like Robert Bryce’s Smaller Faster Lighter Denser Cheaper ($27.99, Public Affairs) are “must” reading if we are to gain any understanding. I first encountered Bryce through his writings about energy. He knows the subject from A-to-Z. His book, “Power Hungary”, is well worth reading and his latest expands to define the true agenda of all those people telling us that we are destroying the Earth. “Their outlook rejects innovation and modern forms of energy, It rejects business and capitalism. Whether the message is explicit or implicit, the message coming from many of the “greens” is an anti-corporate, anti-capitalist stance that is rooted in the nation that any large business is one to be feared.” Bryce’s book takes the reader through the transitions from mankind’s earliest history through to the present showing how the development of the various forms of power, from the use of oxen to plow, to water power, to steam, to coal and oil, have all contributed to the remarkable world we share and why the use of fertilizers and genetically modified crops are feeding an extraordinary seven billion people on the planet. The enemies of mankind include those who preach a return to “a simpler life” when life expectancy in the past was often little more than age 35. These are the people who are forever crying out against the use of coal, oil and natural gas, as well as nuclear power. These are the people who insist organic food is better than that produced on modern farms. It is not better and, indeed, may be less safe to eat. If you want to shake loose of all the lies we’re being told about the climate and about modern life, you must read this remarkable book.

A lot of people complain that there is no difference between the Democratic and Republican Parties and they are right when it comes to the growth of Big Government. Both bear responsibility for it no matter who was President. As regards the Republican Party, Richard A. Viguerie, often called one of the fathers of the conservative movement, has written a fascinating book, Takeover, ($27.95, WND Books), subtitled “The 100-year war for the soul of the GOP and how conservatives can finally win it.”  This is a very lively, entertaining, and never boring history of how, more than a century ago, Teddy Roosevelt abandoned the Republican Party to advance his progressive political viewpoint that became the philosophy of the party’s establishment, thereby condemning the Party to being largely out of power for a half century until over fifty years ago, conservatives began to battle for control of the Party. When the establishment is in control, you get candidates like Dole, McCain, and Romney, all of whom lost elections. And, while Goldwater, the first to really challenge the GOP establishment did not win, he set in motion the election of Ronald Reagan in the 1980s. Viguerie notes, too, that while Nixon, Bush 41 and 43 won with conservative messages, their agendas were compatible with those of the Democratic Party. Anyone with an interest in politics will find this a lively, fascinating look at the past and a prediction of what is to come.

In February 2013, Dr. Ben Carson gave a speech at the National Prayer Breakfast that warned about the dangers facing the nation and called for a return to the principles that made America great. It caused quite a stir, perhaps because President Obama was at the head table. Since then Dr. Carson has even been spoken of as a possible candidate for President, but he is more interested in sharing his concerns. He does that in One Nation; What We Can All Do to Save America’s Future ($25.95, Sentinal, a Penguin Book imprint). “We are the pinnacle nation in the world right now, but if the examples of Egypt, Greece, Rome, and Great Britain teach us anything, it is that pinnacle nations are not guaranteed their place forever. If we fail to rediscover the basic principles of common sense, manners, and morality, we will go the same way they did.” He shares his life as he shares his views and, by any measure, a black boy living in poverty with an illiterate mother should not have risen to attend Harvard and become a leading neurosurgeon. Except, of course, in America where merit counts the most. If you share fears of the future, you will find this book of interest.

Parenting must be one of the greatest challenges anyone encounters. I had two wonderful parents who provided me with a happy youth and all the years thereafter. I was always encouraged to pursue my interests and always supported in doing so. That’s why Alfie Kohn’s The Myth of the Spoiled Child: Challenging the Conventional Wisdom about Children and Parenting($25.99, Da Capo Press) caught my eye. One hears so much about today’s kids being spoiled that it was enlightening and pleasurable to read a book that says it’s just not true. Kohn challenges the assertion that education and quality child-rearing are in decline, saying that claim has been made about every prior generation. Well, it is definitely true that education in America is not turning out students with the same body of knowledge their predecessors had.  Kohn also doesn’t believe there is too much over-or-under parenting going on and says that being an involved parent is far better than being a detached or dictatorial one. Kohn has written a book he hopes will serve the interests of both liberal and conservative minded parents. My Mother took the view that children are guests in the adult’s world and that there are rules for both to respect. They’re not new and include showing respect, being honest, the value of work, etc. For the parent who needs a bit of advice, this book will prove helpful.

If you are one of those people who lives, breaths and dreams about baseball, you will find Down to the Last Pitch: How the 1991 Minnesota Twins and Atlanta Braves Gave Us the Best World Series of All Time by Tim Wendel ($25.99, Da Capo Press) as he recalls the series game-by-game, rehashing the defining moments and reach back into baseball history to show the reader just what made those moments great. Wendel feels that the 1991 series was on the cusp of a new era for baseball. A founding editor of USA Today Baseball Weekly, Wendel is the author of ten books about the game and is currently a writer-in-residence at John Hopkins University. The 1991 series was the first time a last place team climbed its way to the top—both teams were cellar-dwellers in 1990. Five of the seven games were decided by a single run with four by the last at bat. Here’s the story of two teams that took risks, followed their guts, and play from beginning to end with integrity and heart.

Business, Finance, Etc

As students graduate from college and grapple with choosing a career, find a great job, or start a business, there’s a new book by Ben Carpenter that will prove very helpful. It’s The Bigs ($25.00, John Wiley and Sons) and is about “the secrets nobody tells students and young professionals” about to begin an important stage in their lives. Carpenter’s career has been in the world of finance, much of it spent in Greenwich Capital which became a respected, profitable firm on Wall Street. He went from being a salesman to being its co-CEO. These days he is the vice chairman of CRT Capital Group. I cited this because he has written a common sense, up to date book that is filled with the kind of advice you would want your son or daughter to know as they enter the workforce. The book benefits as well from being very readable. For the generation trying to plan for their later years, Ric Edelman has written The Truth About Retirement Plans and IRAs ($15.00, Simon and Schuster, softcover), a step-by-step guide to making the most of one’s retirement plans and assuring long-term financial security. In these times, this is a critical matter in an economy that has been stagnating now since the 2008 financial crisis and two terms of the current administration. Edelman is a familiar voice to those of us in the tri-state area because his commercials air daily along with his radio and television shows. Edelman Financial Services provides planning and investment management to more than 23,000 clients and has more than $12 billion in assets under its management. As Edelman says, “Unlike members of past generations who were able to rely on their employers or the government to provide financial security in retirement, your success will be determined almost entirely by you.”

For those in management positions, Robert Bruce Shaw has authored Leadership Blindspots subtitled “How successful leaders identify and overcome weaknesses that matter” ($35.00, Jossey-Bass). The book is filled with detailed case studies that examine how blindspots operate and cites examples from firms like Apple, Amazon, Hewlet-Packard and others. If not corrected they can lead to devastating mistakes. These are often common problems that result from factors such as over-confidence in one’s own judgment, the complexity of large organizations, and being surrounded by yes-men. Changes in the marketplace seem to be happening at an accelerated pace these days, so this book can help anyone at the top or on his way there.

People, People, People

What we most enjoying reading about is other people. Their real lives often tell us things about ourselves or provide insights into the values we share (or not) with them.

For anyone who cannot get enough of the late singer, Michael Jackson, they are in for a treat. Remember the Time: Protecting Michael Jackson in His Final Days ($26.00, Weinstein Books) is by the two men who spent 24/7 with him throughout his final years, protecting him and ensuring he had the privacy he desperately wanted. Bill Whitfield and Javon Beard have written their story with Tanner Colby. Jackson’s final years were spent moving from city to city, living with his three children in virtual seclusion. Whitfield, a former cop and veteran of the security profession was joined by a brash rookie, Beard, both of whom were single fathers as well. This is likely the only first-person account of those final years you are likely to need or read if you are a fan. Jackson was struggling to live a normal life under extraordinary circumstances after having been driven from his Neverland sanctuary by the tabloid media. Imagine having crowds screaming your name every time word got out wherever he was. Hardly a normal life and, at the end, not a particularly happy one.

I was looking forward to reading The Good Spy: The Life and Death of Robert Ames by Pulitzer Prize winner, Kai Bird ($26.00, Crown Publishers) who had written some very well regarded biographies of men like J. Robert Oppenheimer. Ames was a CIA officer who was killed in April 1983 when our embassy there was bombed by Islamic terrorists. Bird had known Ames as an older neighbor while he a teenager living in Saudi Arabia with his family. As a secret agent Ames job was to befriend those who could provide useful information for the agency and, while the CIA never responded to his requests, more than forty retired CIA and Mossad officers shared their memories of Ames. He was universally liked by all who worked with him. As for his Arab contacts, it helped that he spoke their language fluently and Ali Hassan Salameh, Yasir Arafat’s intelligence chief, enjoyed a clandestine relationship with him that became the seed of the Oslo peace process. For those following events in the Middle East the biography has value, but the portrait of Ames is so dominated by the author’s admiration that it fairly rapidly become rather cloying to read. That is a personal reaction and others might well disagree.

Americans understandably became weary of the long wars in Afghanistan and Iraq that followed in the wake of 9/11. On that day, however, two Naval Academy roommates vowed to defend America and four weeks after Navy SEALs had killed Osama bin Laden, President Obama, on the Memorial Day that followed the event, was in Arlington National Cemetery to honor the nation’s fallen where Travis Manion, a fallen U.S. Marine, and Brendan Looney, a fallen U.S. Navy SEAL, killed three years apart, lay buried. Their story is told in Brothers Forever by Tom Sileo and Col. Tom Manion, Travis’s father ($16.95, Da Capo Press) It is the story of their bond and ultimate sacrifice for the nation. It is the story of real people engaged in real combat and seeing their comrades die. Sileo is a nationally syndicated columnist and editor of The Unknown Soldiers blog and, as noted, Col. Manion was Travis’s father and retired Marine. Together, the two men defined a small segment of their generation’s sacrifice who put their nation’s defense first and foremost.

Jerry Sandusky, arrested and found guilty of child molestation, has ruined the name Sandusky for others who share it. One of them is Gerry Sandusky, the sports director at WBAL in Baltimore and the radio play-by-play voice of the NFL’s Baltimore Ravens. His book is a tribute to his father, Jon Sandusky, a former player for the Browns and Green Bay Packers who went onto become head coach of the Baltimore Colts, as well as assistant coach under legendary Don Shula at the Miami Dolphins. Jon’s life was about family and football, so it is not surprising that his son chose a career path with the game. Forgotten Sundays: A Son’s Story of Life, Loss, and Love from the Sidelines of the NFL ($25.00, Running Press) will please anyone who loves football and, in particular, was a fan of the teams with which Sandusky was associated. Gerry grow up spending his summers observing his father in NFL training camps and his Sundays with superstars, Hall of Fame players, and coaches from Johnny United to Dan Marino, Don McCafferty to Tom Landry. He saw the glory days and he watched his father face a losing battle with Alzheimer’s Disease. This is a heartfelt story told with intelligence and humor that explores a father-son relationship and the legacy of values and enthusiasms his dad left him.

We all wonder what it would be like to be caught in in avalanches, shipwrecks, or the wake of tornadoes where life and death hangs in the balance. Alive is a compilation of such stories ($15.99) by Readers Digest editors. We all hope our will to survive will kick in when we need it and the stories provide fascinating examples from a mountain climber who has to crawl out of a crevasse on Mt. McKinley and must drag himself to safety, knowing his partner did not survive. There’s hiker Larry Bishop’s harrowing 48 hours clinging to the side of a mountain waiting to be rescued. There are two women who were being mauled by a grizzly and had to defy death. It is a reminder that Mother Nature doesn’t much care if you live or die, even if you do! Interesting reading for sure. Center of Gravity by Geva Salerno ($12.95, Levity Press, softcover) is the true account of how a woman changed her entire life in one year and found her personal power. She conducted an experiment in which she gave up dating for a year so she could focus on her transformation and, in the process, make some discoveries that can impact other women who are overworked, divorced, and obsessed with society’s vision of the perfect life. It’s a leap of faith on her part. She tells of dismantling her false life and building a new authentic one. She has since become an advocate for women’s empowerment.

We have a way of turning outlaws like Billy the Kid and the Sundance Kid into American icons and this is particularly true of the Mafia that became the subjects of movies and television series. C. Alexander Hortis has written “the hidden history of how the Mafia captured New York” in The Mob and the City ($24.95, Prometheus Books) and it is a fascinating look at the Sicilian gangs in the 1930s evolved into the Mafia families that gained power as Prohibition became the law and as drugs became widely used, dominating crime through to the 1950s. This is a thorough and authentic history unlike “The Godfather” and countless other books. As such it is filled with surprises, based on primary sources and even secret files obtained through the Freedom of Information Act; as always, the truth is often more interesting than the fiction. The author is an attorney and an authority on the Mafia.

To Your Health

Americans may be the most health conscious people on Earth, despite the obvious fact that many are overweight and enjoy smoking and other things that we are constantly reminded will kill us.

I have been told that meditation is good for one’s mental health and I received Janet Nima Taylor’s Meditation for Non Meditators: Learn to Meditate in Five Minutes ($15.00, available from Amazon.com, softcover). Having spent 20 years as a corporate executive, her passion has been to help people change their behavior to create positive habits. Following her corporate career she became an American Buddhist monk and is now the director of the Temple Buddhist Center in Kansas City and executive director of the Dzogchen Foundation, a national non-profit Buddhist and meditation organization. The thing I liked about this book is that it does not require you to sit on the floor, close your eyes, or do it as a religious exercise. Instead, it is a pragmatic manual on how focusing on your breathing can help lower stress and create a sense of peace and well-being no matter what your religious beliefs may be or whether you even have any. A short way of describing this is that you will learn how to hit the pause button and rest in the present moment. That strikes me as a very good idea and this book is a way to learn to do it.

Since my Mother taught gourmet cooking for three decades I concluded that you are what you eat. That’s why The Power of Food: Enhancing Stem Cell Growth and Decreasing Inflammation by Bonnie Raffel, R.D., ($29.95, Langdon Street Press) caught my eye. After being diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2001, the author discovered she was allergic to the drug prescribed to slow the disease’s neurologic deterioration. As a registered dietitian, Raffel search for a way to combat the disease through nutrition and the result is her book that combines original recipes and nutritional advice to help MS patients and anyone seeking a natural, healthier lifestyle. The New Greenmarket Cookbook by Gabrielle Langholtz ($24.99, Da Capo Press, softcover) combines healthy eating with good health as it offers recipes by New York’s top chefs to take advantage of the produce available from farmers markets. It’s one thing to have access to freshly picked vegetables and fruits, and another to know how to take advantage of them with delicious salads and other delightful dishes that include fish, lamb, and other delectables. It helps if you live in New York, but these markets exist in most big cities.

Athlete, Not Food Addict: Wellspring’s Seven Steps to Weight Loss ($15.95, New Horizon Press, softcoverby Daniel S. Kirschenbaum, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist, shatters widespread beliefs about the addictive nature of food and offers an empowering method for effective weight loss. It is his view that overweight problems are caused by resistant biological forces within us, our culture, and a lack of knowledge about how to manage and overcome these challenges. He wants the reader to be a “weight-controller athlete” and learn how to use their brains to mold their bodies in a healthy direction, just as athlete’s do. One might say it is mind over platter, instead of mind over matter. For women athletes there’s The Pregnant Athlete by Brandi and Steven Dion with Joel Heller, MD, and Perry McIntosh ($17.99, Da Capo Press, softcover). The book says there is no reason that someone used to a high level of physical activity should continue her training through a normal, healthy pregnancy. It charts the changes a woman can expect in her strength, agility, and stamina each month and includes lots of good advice. Brandi is the mother of two, so this book is author-tested.

For Younger Readers

Getting children accustomed to reading books early on is the key to their success later in life. We’re fortunate to have so many books written for the pre-school, early readers, and teens.

Time for Kids is a publisher of some really excellent books for younger readers. They are particularly educational, but distinguished as well by extraordinary use of photos that make every page exciting. Among the latest are Big Book of When ($19.95) that makes history come alive answering questions such as “When did a human first travel in space?” and “When did the Egyptians build the pyramids of Giza?”  There are 801 such questions covering many topics that will interest any younger reader. Time for Kids also has a series, “Book of Why”, smaller, shorter softcover that also pose and answer many questions ($4.99 each) that include “Really Cool People and Places”, “Awesome Animal Kingdom”, “Amazing Sports and Science”, and “Stellar Space.”  Children tend to lose some of the knowledge they learn during the school year so these books, particularly during the summer, increase their knowledge and deepen their need to keep learning.

Aimed at those kids age 3 to 6, Early Birdy Gets the Worm created by Bruce Lansky and illustrated by Bill Bolton ($15.99, Meadowbrook Press) is a book without text so that the story is told entirely by its illustrations. It is the 2014 Gold Winner in Children’s Picture Books from the Mom’s Choice Awards. In effect, the children “read” the pictures of Early Birdy learning how to catch a worm after watching Mother Bird. It is a very funny adventure and a great way to introduce a child to the joy a book can offer. Others in this series include Polar Brrr’s Big Adventure and Monkey See, Monkey Do.  Next step are books with a text.

From Ideals Children’s Books, Nashville, TN, comes a new series, “Shine Bright Kids”, (http://shinebrightkids.com) the creation of Christy Ziglar, the daughter of famed motivator, Zig Ziglar. A mother of twins and a certified financial planner, she wanted to publish books that will help younger readers develop good money management skills. Must-Have Marvin! ($14.99) will ring a bell for any parent whose child wants to have the latest new things he or she learns about and is, in fact, the second in the series which began in 2013 with Can’t-Wait Willow ($14.99)about a little girl who spends all her time and money on things she doesn’t really want or need. Both are written by Christy Ziglar and are illustrated by Luanne Marten. Both impart valuable lessons from Willow’s need to learn how to delay instant gratification and Marvin’s need to learn that people matter more than things. For early readers, 5 and up, the texts are easy and entertaining, benefitting from the artwork. For parents, they teach good lessons in life in ways that just explaining them might not.

I’m a fan of a series, “When I Grow Up I Want to Be” from Wigu Publishing (www.WhenIGrowUpBooks.com) of Laguna Beach, California. I recommend you visit their websites because you are likely to find a title that fits your child’s interest. The latest is devoted to being In the U.S. Navy ($12.95) that features young Noah who dreams of being in the Navy just like his grandfather who is taking him to tour a real aircraft carrier. Noah’s little sister is coming along as well and as they discover how interesting the carrier is with its crew and different decks, the readers will too. For the early readers of this series, doors open up thanks to the useful, accurate information they provide.

Young adults will enjoy Pandemic by Yvonne Ventresca ($`6.95, Sky Pony Press/Skyhorse Publishing), the story of Lilianna Snyder’s sudden change from a model student to a withdrawn pessimist who worries about all kinds of disasters. One arrives in the form of quick-spreading illness that doctors are unable to treat. With her parents away on business, she finds herself on her own when the bird flu pandemic arrives and friends and neighbors begin dying around her. She must find a way to survive the deadly outbreak and, at the same time, deal with her personal demons, the result of a teacher’s sexual assault. If this sounds very grownup, it is. Also for young adults and for those who like a bit of magic in their fiction, there’s Dangerous Creatures by Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl whose previous book, “Beautiful Creatures” is now a motion picture. This novel is part of a series by them and is a tale of love and magic in which a woman with magical capabilities, Ridley Duchannes, and her wannabe rocker boyfriend, Wesley “Link” Lincoln leave Stonewall Jackson High School and their adolescence behind as they head to New York City, each for their own reasons. Ridley is accustomed to using her powers to control Mortals, but her overconfidence has cost her and now she has debts to settle in the city. Link has dreams to become a rock star and joins a band comprised of “Dark Supernaturals.” It’s hard to describe this novel, but that is not to say it will prove entertaining to younger adult readers.

Novels, Novels, Novels

The flow of new novels into my office reflects the even greater number of novels being published these days by large and small publishers as well as self-published. The best I can do is to select from the many I receive and take notice of them for your consideration.

Dodendal: Valley of Dreams by Jim Holmgren ($14.95, softcover) is a good example of a self-published book. The author has created a fictional future of the United States, one very different from the present where we continue to have faith in our Constitution. By tweaking some current trends, his novel suggests the importance of protecting the freedoms we often take for granted. It is fifty years hence and the action takes place over the course of one fateful weekend during the celebrating the tricentennial of the “former” U.S, one bankrupted after Mideast oil wars in the 2030s and missing four states including California after the Second Mexican-American War. The nation is now run by a corporation that has imposed a totalitarian society. Dissenters tend to disappear. You can learn more at www.holmgrenBooks.com. A debut novel by Jeff Critser, Cold Shadows, ($16.95, Dark Matters Press, softcover) has a similar feel to it. It is a techno-thriller that reflects the public’s distrust in government and activities taken outside of any oversight, something in the news as we read of concerns about the National Security Agency. Playing off those concerns, the novel explores themes of smuggling and murder, all committed in the name of an undefined and ill-conceived “greater good.”  When Philip Kurchow, the IT manager for a transportation company in Munich, aware of a smuggling operation in Eastern Europe is murdered, his friend Kip Michelson tries to find out why and how it happened only to find himself ensnared in a dark world of betrayal. A lethal virus, stolen from Russian vaults, is up for sale and Kip is recruited by the FBI to uncover the smuggling. Secretly, the CIA is trying to intercept the technology for clandestine research. Kip finds himself being stalked and must race to expose what is occurring. You won’t put this one down until you’ve read it cover to cover.

Lovers of thriller novels will enjoy The Argentine Triangle ($16.95, Select Books, softcover)  by Allan Topol, the author of “The Russian Endgame” that hit the bestseller lists. Topol has authored nine novels of international intrigue and, in this novel former CIA director Craig Page is enjoying a new, exhilarating life racing cars across Europe. When an old friend goes missing during a covert mission in Argentina, he gets involved. It takes him undercover into the glamorous world of Buenos Aires’ wealthy elite and the plans of two colonels that requires him to implement his experience and skills to expose their plot for a cataclysmic future for South America. This is a classic espionage novel and international thriller with villains and exotic locales. Two Soldiers by Anders Roslund and Borge Hellstrom ($26.99, Quercus) takes you to Stockholm, Sweden where it was originally published and into the life of Jose Pereira, a police officer who heads up the department’s Organized Crime and Gang Section, who must find two ruthless young criminals. It is a look at the dark and dangerous world where gang life is the only place that boys from broken, impoverished families can find acceptance and from which there is no escape. The novel has been called an “unsettling portrait of the gangland cycle of violence, desperation, and hope.” It is all that and a very compelling read as well.

A High Price to Pay is a Madeline Dawkins novel by Cynthia Hamilton (www.cynthiahamiltonbooks.com). I enjoyed her last book, “Spouse Trap”, and in this one Madeline’s dual professions as event coordinator and private investigator cross paths during the most lavish affair of her career—a weekend-long fortieth birthday extravaganza for the wife of a famous film director. A simple background check after the disappearance of some family jewels quickly turns into a murder investigation, and before Madeline and Mike can put the pieces together, another body turns up. As the Santa Barbara police and sheriff’s departments search for clues, the Mad Dog P.I.’s use their own methods to untangle the crimes, discovering some unsavory truths behind the glittering façade of their clients. To add to Madeline’s already overflowing plate, the D.A. informs her that Rick Yeoman, one of the men who had abducted her three years earlier, has been prematurely released from prison after cutting a deal with the Feds. Besides fearing reprisals from the man she helped to convict, his parole also triggers the reappearance of soulless Lionel Usherwood, lured out his hideaway by the call of revenge. When Yeoman’s body surfaces in Lake Cachuma, Usherwood moves on to the next target: Madeline.

The Never Never Sisters by L. Alison Heller ($15.00, New American Library, softcover) is a story of a woman who just needs to get away and relax. Paige Reinhardt, a hardworking marriage counselor, is looking forward to reconnecting with his busy husband for a summer in the Hamptons, but a mysterious emergency at work ruins their travel plans and everything begins to unravel. As Paige tries to figure out what is really going on in her own marriage, her sister suddenly returns after twenty years and Paige discovers that she may not know her family as well as she thought as she digs into her husband’s work crisis. She must figure out if it is worth it to find herself at the risk of losing her most precious relationships. This is about the complicated bond between sisters and the secrets kept to protect the ones we love. The author is a divorce lawyer and this brings a special level of insight to the story.

That’s it for June! Be sure to come back in July and, in the meantime, tell your friends, family and coworkers who enjoy reading about Bookviews.com.

Bookviews - July 2014

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By Alan Caruba

My Picks of the Month

I have written about energy issues for decades and yet The Fracking Truth by Chris Faulkner ($21.95, Platform Press) was so filled with hard data and informed opinion that I found myself being educated all over again on what is likely the most important factor of life in America and around the world, the provision of affordable energy. What I have known prior to reading this book is that “fracking”, the short term for hydraulic fracturing, has widespread opposition by some environmental groups and others who have bought into the lies being told about a technology that is over a half century in use and which has unlocked America’s vast reserves of natural gas and oil to transform our prospects for being energy independent as well as a major exporter, generating needed revenue for a nation $17 trillion in debt. The author is the founder, president and CEO of Breitling Energy Corporation and become over the years a trusted source of information for Washington lawmakers, journalists, and policy analysts from respected think tanks. America is home to people who simply do not like “fossil fuels”, but have no idea how dependent we are upon them, nor that they represent a better life, a stronger economy, and benefits we take for granted, not the least of which is the electricity on which we all depend. This is one of the best books on energy I have read in a while and I recommend you read it too. Learn more by visiting http://www.thefrackingtruthbook.com.

June marked the fiftieth anniversary of the passage of the Civil Rights Act and, a year later, the Voting Rights Act. Many Americans, both black and white, felt that the nation had moved on passed the ills of the past and that a bright future of opportunity for Afro-Americans existed. For a relatively small part of the black population that was true, but for too many, it was not. Jason L. Riley, a black member of the Wall Street Journal’s editorial board, has written Please Stop Helping Us: How Liberals Make it Harder for Blacks to Succeed ($23.99, Encounter Books) and I cannot recommend it highly enough because the statistical data on which it is based clearly demonstrates that, rather than external restrictions as existed prior to 1964, it is black culture combined with government programs that undermine the family structure and diminish the desire to work hard that have proven to be the cause of why so many blacks remain not just unemployed, but unemployable due to a widespread indifference to education and other factors that such as violence that leads to crimes, mostly against other blacks, and extraordinary high rates of incarceration. As is too frequently the case, when one turns to government to solve problems, it fails because only individuals and private groups can effectively address what is happening in the streets and neighborhoods of America.

If often seems that politicians invent issues around which to create laws. Thomas E. Hall, a professor of economics at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, takes a look at “the unintended consequences of public policies” in his book Aftermath ($24.95/12.99, Cato Institute, hardcover and digital). What emerges is a look at the way ideas that seemed necessary at the time turned out to impact life in America, as often as not for the worse. The result has been the creation of a vast welfare state, organized crime, and a scarcity of jobs for teenagers and the working poor. The creation of the income tax provided a source of money to grow government because politicians cannot wait to spend it. Hall takes a look at the creation of federal income taxes, taxes on cigarettes that generate criminal activity, the minimum wage that increases unemployment for teens, and what occurred as the result of Prohibition which took a constitutional amendment to repeal. The history of the economic impact of these programs is a graphic example of unintended consequences.

The scandal at the Veterans Administration puts the lie to all the talk we hear from politicians about the value they put on the lives of those who put their lives on the line to defend our nation. The VA management problems have been known for years and the current administration is only one among others who have not addressed them. When a government agency gets too big, it is the individual veteran that too often pays the price. That’s why, in part, Mark Lee Greenblatt’s Valor: Unsung Heroes from Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Home Front ($22.95/$11.99, Rowman & Littlefield, hardcover and ebook) is so timely and so needed at a time the Middle East is in turmoil to remind us of those who volunteered to serve their nation. This book takes you to the battlefield as seen through the eyes of individual soldiers, sailors, and Marines as they faced fearful decisions and overcame enormous odds. They all heroes and we duly honored, but unknown to the public. America has always been blessed with men of this stature and courage. It’s good to read about them.

Those who love to read often enjoy exploring the historical aspects of literature and Truth’s Ragged Edge; The Rise of the American Novel by Philip D. Gura ($16.00, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, softcover) looks at a portion of literary history in America largely overlooked and unknown, but interesting in its own right. A cultural historian, Gura reveals that the American novel has its roots in “the fundamental religiosity of American Life”, an aspect of our history that many try to ignore in the secular present. From the time of the nation’s first novel, The Power of Sympathy in 1789 to the start of the Civil War in 1860, writers were more interested in serving up tales about morality while nurturing broad cultural shifts from broader social concerns to individualism and from faith in a distant God to faith in oneself. In doing so we are taken back to the worlds of Hawthorne and Melville, along with others who have faded into history.

Money, Money, Money

Income inequality has become a political theme among Democrats; yet another way to divide Americans, but the fact is that there has always been income inequality and the best way to address it is by encouraging entrepreneurism, creating more jobs, and keeping the economy growing. Money Sucks: A Memoir on Why Too Much or Too Little Can Ruin You by Michael Baughman ($16.95, Skyhorse Publishing) The author has enjoyed and experienced both wealth and poverty. His book offers words of advice for his college bound grandson as he tries to instill an informed attitude about money and, specifically, the value of money and the way Americans pursue it with vigor. He asks the question, how much is enough?  Happily, it is not filled with boring graphs. Instead it is, as its title says, a memoir in which the author draws on his life and time spent with his grandson to share what he has learned about the pursuit and, ultimately, the value of money as we make our way through our lives. As such, it is a good read for anyone at any stage of life.

Did the Government Write Your Will? By Eric Gullotta ($14.99, Gullotta Law Group, softcover) addresses a surprising situation. Half of all Americans with children do not have wills indicating where their money and possessions should go after they die. This allows the government to come in and control it by tying it up in years of legal red tape, and determine what it goes to the point where the deceased’s family might never get what is rightfully theirs. As the author, and attorney and CPA, notes, “When you die without a will or trust, that’s called dying intestate” and that puts the state in which you die in charge of your assets—not you. A California attorney, he focuses on that state’s laws, but the advice put forth in his book applies elsewhere as well. He has written a short book whose advice will ensure that your loved ones and others will receive what you have worked hard to accumulate, not the state in which you die.

Coping, Coping, Coping

We spend most of our lives coping with changes, some good, some not.

Jennifer K. Crittenden, the author of “The Discreet Guide for Executive Women”, which I reviewed and liked, has written You, Not I: Exceptional Presence—Through the Eyes of Others, ($12.95, Whistling Rabbit Press, San Diego, CA, softcover). This book is written for women as well and it asks if you’re feeling stuck at work, if you suspect you don’t come across well, but don’t know why, and need to modify your behavior to manage others’ perceptions. Once you gain insight to who you are, how others perceive you, how to successfully fit into various situations, and how to stand out to further your career, you will discover how true the advice the author provides. Best of all, she does not just hand out broad generalizations, getting down to specifics in topics like “Some Really Good Ways to Irritate People”  and “The Magic of Common Courtesy.” What Ms. Crittenden knows is that many grow up and go out in the work world without having acquired the most basic skills for successful interaction with others. Her book provides what you may have missed along the way. I rate this one as excellent.

According to The Cancer Journal, the divorce rate for cancer-stricken wives is approximately 21% as compared to 3% when husbands get ill. When Fiona Finn was five months into her long battle with stage III colon cancer, her husband left her on Father’s Day; leaving her and her three children penniless. What ever happened to the “in sickness and in health” part of the marital vows, eh? She tells her story in Raw: One Woman’s Journey Through Love, Loss, and Cancer ($15.00, Mind Trip Productions, softcover). She is blessed, not only with a strong character, but also a strong sense of humor, and her aim is to save others from the sense of hopelessness that she endured and conquered. She does not hide the fact that she made some bad decisions along the way, including two failed marriages, but hers is the story of a survivor and one that will help others who encounter cancer. A very helpful book and a challenging one as well.

Potpourri

Some books don’t fit into neat categories, so here are a few that deserve attention for just that reason.

If you are a lawyer or just enjoy reading about the legal system, you will surely enjoy Law and Disorder: Absurdly Funny Moments from the Courts by Charles M. Sevilla ($14.95, W.W. Norton, softcover). While courtrooms are generally places where all manner of unhappy events or disagreements get sorted out in a serious fashion, they are, as this delightful book relates, places where there are humorous moments. Sevilla is, as you might have guessed, a lawyer and one who is perennially named to the “Best Lawyers in America” list. His friends helped with the book by sending transcripts of those unexpected moments. This book would make a great gift for any lawyer in your life or just to keep handy for a quick laugh.

Wild Connection: What Animal Courtship and Mating Tell Us about Human Relationships by Jennifer L. Verdolin ($18.95/$11.99, Prometheus Books, softcover and ebook) is a reminder that we too are animals like a lot of other species. The author takes a look at a variety of species and provides some interesting connections between the way ours selects mates and the fact that others often demonstrate similar characteristics. Or is it the other way around? Verdolin is an expert in animal behavior and currently a research scientist affiliated with the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center at Duke University. In ten chapters she covers topics such as first impressions and the role they play for us and other species. She writes about the role that size and strength has for the selection of mates in other species as well as our own. Indeed from beginning to end, you will find yourself being both entertained and surprised by the many ways we display behavior that resembles many of the other species with whom we share this planet. From the same publisher comes William E. Burrows’ book about The Asteroid Threat: Defending Our Planet from Deadly Near-Earth Objects ($19.95, Prometheus Books). This kind of thing is often the theme of science fiction, but the threat is very real and the explosion of a large meteor over Chelybinsk, Siberia, in February 2013 is just the latest reminder of the Earth’s vulnerability in a galaxy that is filled with asteroids and other objects flying around with us. Burrows, a veteran aerospace writer, explains what we can do in the future to avoid serious impact from “near-Earth objects” as they are called in the planetary defense community. The good news is that a powerful space surveillance system is capable of spotting a threat at least 25 years in advance and, if they existed, a space craft “nudge” could throw an asteroid off course.

If history is an interest of yours, you will likely enjoy Andrew Young’s The Lost Book of Alexander The Great ($26.00, Westholme Publishing). “Alexander the Great is well known as one of the first great empire builders of the ancient world. Among those fellow Macedonian officers who accompanied Alexander in his epic conquests from Greece to India was Ptolemy Lagides. Ptolemy served alongside Alexander from the Persian defeat at the Battle of Issus in modern-day Turkey and the journey to find the oracle that proclaimed Alexander to be Zeus incarnate, to the Battle of the Hydaspes River in 326 BC that opened India to the West. Following Alexander's death, Ptolemy gained control of Egypt where he founded the dynasty in his name, created the great library of Alexandria, and was patron of the mathematician Euclid. Sometime during his rule in Egypt, Ptolemy wrote a history of Alexander's conquests. Although it is probable that Ptolemy enhanced his own importance, sources indicate that it was regarded as an accurate and even-handed account of the campaigns of Alexander. However, Ptolemy's book was lost—perhaps with the destruction of the library he founded—and not even an original fragment has survived. His book, however, was acknowledged as a primary source of information for later Roman historians.” The Roman Search for Wisdom by Michael K. Kellogg ($28.95, Prometheus Books) provides a look at the Roman Empire that is not the usual accounts of its wars, conquests, and decline. Kellogg disputes the notion that it the Romans were just a weak comparison with the Greeks. There were in fact many Roman poets, historians, and philosophers that included Virgil, Horace, Ovid, Tacitus, Plutarch and others. I read and enjoyed Kellogg’s previous “The Greek Search for Wisdom” and this book is a worthy sequel.

Did your mom tell you to eat your vegetables? Sure she did and now you can enjoy them by reading Salad Samurai by Terry Hope Romero ($19.99, Da Capo Press, softcover), a collection of 100 “cutting edge, ultra-hearty, easy-to-make salads.”  From the classic Caesar salad to exotic ones like avocado amaranth bhel puri chaat, this book will have you eager to sample a world of salads you never knew existed, but which look very delicious. People have all manner of hobbies and crafts provide a lot of fun for them. Sticky Fingers: DIY Duct Tape Projects by Sophie Maletsky ($16.99, Zest Books, softcover) is devoted to making items from duct tape. It offers detailed instructions and, happily, lots of photos so anyone can develop their skills with more than 70 projects from cell phone holders to room dividers, backpacks, jewelry, bags, wallets and lots more. How popular is this? It’s the rare prom that does not feature a couple wearing clothes made entirely from duct tape. What has made this possible are the many new colors and designs in which duct tape is available these days. This book will appeal to the young, age 12 and up, but once into it, it’s a craft that is likely to be pursued for a long time.

Novels, Novels, Novels

Summer is traditionally a time for enjoying a good book while at the beach or anywhere else we choose to relax and escape into the worlds of fiction. This summer is no exception, given a large number of novels whose various themes will provide hours of diversion for everyone.

Brad Thor’s name dominates the cover of his newest novel, Act of War, ($27.99, Atria Books) because it is his thirteenth thriller featuring Navy SEAL turned covert counterterrorism operati8ve, Scot Harvath. The first dozen were bestsellers and this one will be too. Thor is known for his trademark “faction” in which he blends both fact and fiction in action-packed thrillers and this new novel will keep readers turning the pages as it looks at an enemy of America who knows it cannot be defeated on the battlefield, but, using unconventional devious attacks, could be. I guarantee you will be hooked within the first five pages. When a CIA agent mysteriously dies overseas, his top asset surfaces with a startling claim, but no one knows if she can be trusted. Then a succession of events occur that suggest something more than chance is at work. Six exchange students go missing, two airplane passengers trade places, and a political-asylum seeker is arrested. Facing an imminent and devastating attack, the nation’s new president turns to Harvath to undertake two top secret operations, either of which, if discovered would be an act of war, but are vital to thwarting the covert war being waged against America.

From Seventh Street Books, an imprint of Prometheus Books, comes two novels for those who love a good mystery. In Lori Rader-Day’s The Black Hour ($15.95, softcover) a Chicago sociology professor, Amelia Emmet, is a researcher whose topic is violence. It gets very real when a student she’d never met shows up and shoots her and then shoots himself. After surgery, she returns to campus with a growing problem with painkillers and the question, why? She wants to return to a normal life, but now hobbles with a cane. Enter Nathaniel Barber, a graduate student obsessed with Chicago’s violent history. Assigned as Amelia’s teaching assistant, he takes on the investigative legwork Amelia cannot. Together and occasionally at cross-purposes, they stumble toward a truth about the attack and which takes them both through the darkest hours of their lives.


In No Stone Unturned ($15.95, softcover), James W. Ziskin introduces Ellie Stone, a 24-year-old journalist for a small local daily in upstate New York. On Thanksgiving 1990, a girl is found dead in the woods. There are three oil spots on the dirt road and a Dr. Pepper bottle cap in the shallow grave found by a local hunter. Ellie is the first reporter on the scene and the story may rescue her drowning career. All leads though lead nowhere until she takes a daring change that unleashes unintended chaos as she strives to unravel a dangle of small town secrets.





Two books from Quirk Books offer a serving, one of suspense and second a bit of fun. I enjoyed Ben H. Winters’ 2012 novel, “The Last Policeman”, a pre-apocalyptic story set six months before a massive asteroid is expected to collide with Earth. It is the first of a trilogy and part two was “Countdown City.” The third is World of Trouble: The Last Policeman Book III out this monthly ($14.95, softcover). Suffice to say that the first received an Edgar Award and was translated into six languages and the second has been nominated for a Philip K. Dick Award and named an NPR Best Book of 2013, so you can be sure this one will prove as enjoyable. It is just 14 days before the asteroid is expected to make contact and America is in chaos. Detective Hank Palace has found a peaceful farm to live out his last days, but there is one last case for him to solve and this time it is personal. He goes in search of his sister, Nico, and finds himself at a deserted police station in Ohio where he uncovers evidence of a brutal crime. He is determined to solve the puzzle before times runs out for everyone.
 
A very different change of pace is offered in Ian Doescher’s parody of Star Wars in William Shakespeare’s The Jedi Doth Return ($14.95, softcover) the third in a trilogy in which Luke Skywalker and his rebel band must seek fresh allies in their quest to thwart construction of a new Imperial Death Star. This is a hilarious way to enjoy the original story as told by a very funny parodist.

 
Confessions of a Self-Help Writer: A Journal of Michael Enzo by Benjamin W. Dehaven ($22.95, Lagniappe Publishing), is strictly for grownups, as much a comedy as a tragedy, as it tells the story of Enzo, a ghostwriter for the rich and famous, and the author of successful self-help books in his own right who faces having to write another to pay his debts. He may be able to tell others how to cope, but his own life has been filled with all manner of misdeeds that include depravity, substance abuse, and emotional complexity. This is a difficult book to describe because it seems so real, but it is never boring.  A very different story is told by Rich Marcello in The Big Wide Calm ($15.99, Langdon Street Press, softcover). Paige Plant has dreams of being becoming a rock star, saving the world and inspire revolutions with her songs. She sets out to do this with a perfect album. She has talent, ambition, and mega-musical skills. All she needs is a big break. Enter John Bustin, a mysterious former singer/songwriter who offers Paige one year of free room and board at his recording studio. With her help, he confronts the dark secrets of his past that rock the foundation of their relationship. It is a story of trust and the complexities of love seen through the eyes of the young and old. For anyone who is looking for a good romantic story, this is one to read.

Historical fiction is well served in Amy Belding Brown’s Flight of the Sparrow ($15.00, New American Library, softcover). It is, in fact, based on the amazing true story of Mary Rowlandson’s capture in 1675 and depicts a monumental moment in our nation’s history. After a long-feared Native American attack, Mary is sold to a female tribal leader who puts her to work but allows her a generous and surprising amount of freedom. She becomes conflicted as she develops an uncomfortable attraction toward an English-speaking Native American, James Printer who seemingly straddles both worlds, becoming her friend and protector. When she is eventually ransomed and returns to her surviving family, she finds re-entry into the restrictive Puritan culture a challenge. The author’s knowledge of this lesser known time in our history makes for interesting reading. In Cynthia Lang’s novel, Preservation ($14.95, Mill City Press, softcover) the year is 1987 and, after the sudden disappearance of her husband, Lee Baldwin resolves to escape Manhattan by moving to Limmington Mills, a town described as one where no one goes and nothing ever happens. She wants solitude but soon discovers that life has other plans for her. Narrated by Lee, the novel tells the story of the lost past she cherishes and the changes that happen for her and the town as she finds herself caught up in the dramas of others around her. For those who recall simpler times before the instant communications of our times, this story will prove especially interesting.
 
Lauren Grodstein, the author of The Explanation of Everything ($14.95, Algonquin Books, softcover), bases her novel on the premise that most of us want an explanation for life on earth and a clear account of our role in the grand scheme of things. It is a story, said Family Circle of “wayward souls search for forgiveness, healing, and personal truth.” It is a deeply felt story of love, loss, hope, and the healing powers of forgiveness that takes on the contentious debate over the origins of life as biologist Andy Waite struggles to make sense of his life. He’s about to make tenure, beginning to understand his daughters, and finally overcome the loss of his wife. When a young, tenacious student shows up at his office, he gradually loses sight of his personal and professional boundaries, as well as his moral grounding, but there is also the possibility of faith. This is a complex, demanding story that will draw the reader in as it explores the salvation that love can offer.

Lastly, there’s a novella by Jerome O. Brown, Calves in the Mud Room ($6.74, available from Amazon.com, softcover). Colorado teenager Wade Summers wants nothing more than to go on his date tonight with high school hottie Glory Schoonover, but a fierce February blizzard has blown in and a couple of first-time heifers and calving early. He’s never delivered a calf on his own but has been shown how to do it by his grandfather. He is a very conflicted teenager who must confront the abuse of his shady stepfather and a betrayal by his somewhat disengaged mother. The novella captures the pains and pleasures of teen romance and escaping his dysfunctional parents while growing up in an agricultural community. Well worth reading.

That’s it for July! Tell your book-loving friends, family and co-workers about Bookviews.com where new fiction and non-fiction that may not get the attention they deserve can be found every month.

Bookviews - August 2014

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By Alan Caruba

My Picks of the Month

One of the most interesting new books is Patrick J. Buchanan’s The Greatest Comeback: How Richard Nixon Rose from Defeat to Create the New Majority ($28.00, Crown Forum). A large part of the population today was born after Nixon’s era and, if he is remembered or known for anything by them it is the Watergate scandal that forced his resignation in his second term. Even though I lived through the Nixon years, I knew relatively little about the man and Buchanan who was one of his political team, now a respected commentator and author, provides a fascinating history of a President who was a canny politician, a pragmatic conservative, and a very popular leader in his time. He served from 1969 to 1972, finally bringing the unpopular Vietnam War to an end and opening diplomacy with China. After suffering stinging defeats in the 1960 presidential election against John F. Kennedy and in the 1962 California gubernatorial election, the Washington press and politicians declared his political career over. Yet on January 20, 1969 he took the oath as the 37th President. Buchanan’s book tells how he resurrected his reputation and reunited a shattered and fractured Republican Party. The book begins in January 1966 as a firsthand account of Nixon’s remarkable return during a decade marked by civil rights protests, the assassinations of JFK, his brother Robert, and Martin Luther King. I recall the riots, campus anarchy, and the rise of the New Left. Anyone interested in U.S. history will want to read this book.

 
Fans of Jay Leno will enjoy Dave Berg’s Behind the Curtain: An Insider’s View of Jay Leno’s Tonight Show ($24.95, Pelican Publishing). Berg was one of the show’s producers, active in booking many of its guests from the world of show business, sports, and politics. For Berg, what was not seen by the viewing audience, the reality of dealing with guests from former presidents, candidates for the job, and even Barack Obama whom he spotted years before he as a national figure, was just as exciting and interesting as how well they performed on air. He makes it clear that he and other producers looked at the “numbers” of how many viewed the night before and how well the guest segments did, play an important role in producing the show. It was in competition with the David Letterman Show and they all wanted to be number one. Leno would in time achieve that goal and hold onto it. Berg provides an entertaining, but generally serious look at a wide range of guests from Jerry Seinfeld to John F. Kennedy, Jr. If you are into celebrities, the book is filled with them.  Readers will also discover a different Jay Leno than appeared on camera all those years. The show, other than his marriage and passion for classic cars, was his life from when he woke until he went to bed. He was totally absorbed and devoted to it. His monologues were always entertaining. His comedic talent and his devotion to the show made it a hit. That was quite an achievement considering he was following in the footsteps of Johnny Carson. Despite rubbing elbows by the biggest names of the day, he remained the guy who could have lived next door. In many ways, he was.

Pelican Publishing is based in Gretna, Louisiana and publishes many books that celebrate the state, its cuisine and comparable topics. People who have visited New Orleans are often so taken with its unique architecture, restaurants and other pleasures they return again and again. For them, I recommend Let’s Walk the French Quarter: A Visual Tour by Kerri McCaffety ($19.95, Pelican, softcover) a photographer and writer who has authored several books about the city. If you have been there, it is a reminder of favorite places and an invitation to visit those you missed. If you have always just wondered what this famed section of the city looks like, you will find it celebrated from Rampart Street to Jackson Square. Little wonder she has received a Gold Lowell Thomas Award from the Society of American Travel Writers. It’s a wonderful book.

If you are a fan of weirdness, you will love Ripley’s Believe it or Not! Reality Shock! ($28.95, Ripley Publishing), a large format collection of items that are a mix of can’t bear to look and can’t look away, jammed packed with images and stories of people such as the wolf-man, Werner Freund, who lives with a pack of wolves or the grandma that has 18-inch long fingernails; they haven’t been cut in 20 years. There are women with scarily tiny waists and a guy who owns 2,000 Barbie and Ken dolls. Every page has something to make you wonder, gasp, or just feast your eyes on the antics and creations of people. This kind of books makes a great gift for the person who “has everything.”

To Your Health

I have always enjoyed good health; as my doctor succinctly put it, “Good genes.”  That and eating moderately, but well, plus a daily batch of vitamins and minerals to start the day, and getting a good night’s sleep, have served me well over the years. One thing is for sure, there is no end of books on health topics.
 
One unusual book that arrived is Losing Patience: The Problems, Alarms and Psychological Issues of Shaken Baby Syndrome by James Peinkofer ($15.95, New Horizon Press, softcover), a child abuse consultant with more than 18 years of experience in medical and mental health clinical social work. It only takes two or three violent shakes in as little as five seconds, by an angry parent or caregiver to punish or quiet a crying child to inflict a lot of harm. The author says that it is the leading cause of abuse-related deaths among infants with as high as 80% of survivors suffering permanent brain damage. If there are expectant parents in your family in which one or both have anger management problems—a bad temper—this would be a good book to give them. It also offers good advice as to what to look for in a perspective caregiver and what a family should do if they suspect shaken baby syndrome. Consider the harm that can be done to an infant this is a book that should receive wider media coverage. It’s due off the press in October.

A strong, healthy heart should surely be a priority and Joe Petreycik, RN, an ASCM certified clinical exercise specialist, has spent the last six years writing a book that helps those who have had a heart attack and those trying to avoid it. Pump It Up! Exercising Your Heart to Health ($19.95, Take Exercise to Heart, LCC, Stratford, CT, softcover) According to the World Health Organization, 17.3 million people die from heart attacks and strokes every year. Illustrated with dozens of photographs to illustrate the exercises that Petreycik recommends, anyone with concerns in this area will surely benefit from reading this book. If you come from a family with a history of heart attacks and strokes, order it today!

Useful Advice

Got a problem? There are many books filled with advice on how to solve it. Here are four new ones.

Parenting on the Go: Birth to Six, A to Z by Dr. David Elkind, PhD ($14.99, Da Capo Press, softcover) covers a wide range of subjects and offers solutions to run-of-the-mill concerns as well as the more multifaceted issues, like the right amount of computer times, that are pertinent to today’s information-age parents. Drawing on his extensive experience in child psychology and development, as well as the most up-to-date research on parenting, Dr. Elkind gives 500-word answers to more than a hundred of the most common questions parents ask.

Getting a Life with Asperger’s: Lessons Learned on the Bumpy Road to Adulthood by Jesse A. Saperstein ($15.00, Perigee, softcover) is a useful book even if you or someone you know has been diagnosed with Asperger’s, a disorder that interferes with being able to pick up the clues that other people’s behavior that most of us easily read. It is an aspect of autism. “Growing up and becoming a reasonably functioning adult is difficult in the best of circumstances,” says Saperstein, but those with Asperger’s encounter greater problems. Studies show that between 80% and 90% are chronically unemployed because they miss the social clues and sometimes exhibit inappropriate behavior. The book is a self-help guide filled with good advice on dealing with family, romance, college, job interviews, and the crippling baggage of being bullied. Filled with wit and self-deprecating humor, it will help anyone live a “normal” life.

Put More Time on Your Side: How to Manage Your Life in a Digital World by Jan Yager, Ph.D, ($20.95, Hannacroix Creek Press, softcover) is her fifth book about productivity, among her 39 to date. This one is for anyone who wants to get more done in less time. It is full of good advice on topics such as coping with time wasters like over-scheduling, procrastination or perfectionism. There’s advice on how to master office relationships and politics to save time, and lots more. Time is our most valuable resource and knowing how to get the most out of it in business and at home is why this book is worth reading.

Master Your Money in 7 Days by Dale Gibbons ($11.69, softcover) will be a big help to anyone encountering money problems these days and that’s just about everyone. It is an easy to read book that reveals the secrets of simply money management that you can learn more about at www.masteryourmoneybook.com. Do you run out of money before the end of the month? Worry how to afford the important things for your family? Have an overdrawn account? This is about getting the control you need to put your financial life on a smooth path.

Books for Kids and Teens

One of the best things you can do for your kids this summer is to provide them with interesting and entertaining books to read. Good reading skills and habits are essential to their success later in life.

For the very young, early readers, there are books from the We Do Listen Foundation featuring Howard B. Wigglesworth, a rabbit character, and the 14thin its series is Howard B. Wigglebottom Learns We Can All Get Along ($15.00) aimed at those aged 4 to 8 with a message on how to live in harmony with everyone around them. Howard begins to learn why always wanting his own way is a sure fire way to not make friends. The text is an easy read and the illustrations are delightful. The series has many such books to help learning good attitudes.
 
Another book that addresses this is Stewie Boomstein Starts School by Christine Bronstein and illustrated by Karen Young ($28.99/$9.99, hard and softcover, @ www.NothingButTheTruth.com) for kids aged 3 to 6. Stewie has a very bad first day at school because he doesn’t like following rules and wants to do what he wants, not what the teachers does. Another problem kids encounter in school is bullying and Laura S. Fox’s Stan the Timid Turtle: Helping Children Cope with Fears About School Violence ($9.95, New Horizon Press, softcover) for those in the early school grades. Many children have many fears about a world the TV demonstrates is filled with violence. This book will help them deal with those fears and Stan the turtle becomes fearful when a violent event happens at a nearby school and several young turtles are hurt. With help, he learns it is okay to be afraid, but not to let fear rule his life. Another new book from this publisher is Siggy’s Parade: Helping Kids with Disabilities Find Their Strength by Blanche R. Duddly, EdD ($9.95, softcover) about Siggy, a mockingbird who only has one wing and who rallies his friend to celebrate and appreciate their unique disabilities. Written for those in the early school grades, it is upbeat and delightful. Using the alphabet, Keeping Fit from A to Z by Stephanie Maze ($15.95, Moonstone Press) is due out next month and is unique in that it provides its text for the very young reader, age 3 and up, in both English and Spanish. Extensively illustrated with many color photos, it will teach them the importance of getting out and engaging in sports and other activities. This is an early encouragement to not sit in from of the television or just play video games. It’s a very good investment in one’s child’s health.

One of the best publishers in Time for Kids which has two wonderful new books out. For ages 7 and up, there’s Snakeopedia($19.95) that is filled with 180 full color pages with 400 photos, images and facts from Discovery experts and a herpetologist that combines fun for young readers, many of whom find snakes fascinating. They can read about the twelve families of snakes as well as other members of the reptile family such as lizards, turtles, and crocodiles. In his youth my older brother was permitted to have a black snake as a pet and it was a great learning experience for both of us. Also just published is Time for Kids’ Robots ($14.95) that is filled with photos and a great text that teaches how robots are having an increasing role in the way we all live, from helpers to robo cops. From their early history to the robots we have sent to explore Mars, this one will keep any young reader turning the pages and returning to enjoy it again and again.

My Mother was not just a great cook, but she taught gourmet cooking for three decades in the adult schools of our hometown and others. Learning how to cook is a great skills to have and The Green Teen Cookbook: Recipes for all Seasons – Written by Teens, for Teens ($14.95, Zest Books, softcover) by Laurane Marchive and Pam McElroy is filled with advice on how to navigate the kitchen and other skills involved with cooking such as shopping on a budget and eating healthier. It has more than 70 recipes and cooking is something every young person should learn.

Getting pre-teens and teens to turn off the television and discover the pleasure of a good story is well served by several need books written for this age group. A young-adult fantasy novel, The Adventures of Horace, George and Ingle—The Rise of the Black knight by Hugh Cumming (FriesenPress.com) is available as a hardcover, softcover, and ebook. Three brothers aged 15-17 are growing up in relative calm in a land once dominated by great battles in a kingdom that stretches as far as the eye can see. When a raging storm causes fires in their village, King Reynold makes the unusual choice to appoint his son, Ingle, to assit in the investigate the scene of the fires. It addresses the bond of siblings, the challenges of coming of age and dealing with unforeseen complexities of the adult world, and the age-old battle between good and evil. Another novel also uses fantasy and science fiction. Flight of the Akero: The Book of Milo (Bablefish Press, softcover) is by Douglas Lieblein, a writer and producer for Universal, Columbia Pictures, Warner Brothers, The Disney Channel, and Nickelodean. It is book one in a series, a fiction tale that is comic, action-packet, and quirky. Milo Wolfe is the tallest third grader at his school but his problem is that he has been put in sixth grade where he is the shortest, weakest, wimpiest and by far the least popular student. Looking forward to no school, Milo wants to do as little as possible, but he is forced to embark on an unexpected journal to find a father he’s never met. It is filled with surprises.

Another new fantasy-adventure story for young adults is found in The Age of Amy: The Thumper Amendment by Bruce Edwards ($9.95, Lambert Hill, softcover) as 16-year-old Amy wants to avenge the sixth grade boy who mistreated her in third grade. She gets her change when she encounters him seven years later during a U.S. presidential campaign for a candidate she supports. But there’s a problem. He has grown into a kindhearted (and cute) young adult and her feelings turn to those of affection. Is she falling in love with her grade school nemesis? This is an intriguing story that is well worth reading. Lastly, for those 12 and up there’s Billy Christmas by Mark A. Pritchard ($16.95, Alan Squire Publishing, softcover) that begins when Billy’s father mysteriously disappears. Then, just twelve days before Christmas, Billy acquires a magical Christmas tree with a dozen ornaments, each of which supposedly holds a clue to finding his father. In order to do so, however, Billy must solve one puzzle a day. This is a young adult fantasy with rich, compelling characters and delightful twists and turns that will keep readers guessing until the end, as he and his best friend—and secret crush—Katherine are thrust into a dark, magical world, that has placed them both in grave danger.

Novels, Novels, Novels
 
As Israel defends itself against the terrorist organization, Hamas, attention has been fixed on its invasion of Gaza, an area that Israel gave the Palestinians in 2005 after evicting 8,000 of its own citizens that lived there. Torn Blood by David J. Bain ($17,99, Bo Iti Press, Wyoming) is the result of seven years research and depicts the mortal battle to destroy Jerusalem’s Jewish residents and the right of Jews to their ancient homeland. It does so in a fashion that fans of Tom Clancy’s novels will enjoy because it is an action-packed adventure filled with suspense. This is an ideal summer reading experience as he draws the reader into a story that captures the reader’s minds and hearts as the ultimate fate of Jerusalem and her people reveals itself in an apocalyptic conflagration. This is Bain’s debut novel and I heartily recommend it.

Political corruption is the theme of William Lashner’s Bagman ($14.95, Thomas & Mercer, softcover). Lashner is primarily known for his series of legal thrillers featuring Philadelphia attorney Victor Carl and in this compelling story Carl finds himself working as a bagman for an ambitious congressman. It seems like he might finally be on a trajectory to the top as he traverses the streets of Philadelphia and finds himself associating with the city’s elite, filing his coffers with new-client retainers, and involved with the congressman’s sexy and highly unstable sister. Things become complicated when he becomes the fall guy for murder. With the police, reporters, and a couple of thugs on his trail, Carl turns to a shadowy group of old-time bagmen to find answers and, with their help, he follows the truth—and the money—to a final confrontation with the ultimate symbol of wealth, power, and entitlement known as the Big Butter. It’s a fast-paced, darkly humorous thriller, ideal for a day at the beach.

In Gideon’s Confession Joseph G. Peterson ($15.95, Switchgrass Books, softcover) enhances his reputation as a novelist as he addresses the themes of money, work, success, and the way a young man drifts through life, alienated from his father and two brothers who have gone into the family business. It is his good fortunate that he receives checks from his rich uncle every month and, in exchange, the uncle asks him to come up with a plan for his life, but Gideon Anderson puts that off, spending the money on alcohol, horserace gambling, and useless purchases. His luck continues when he meets a lovely, ambitious woman, Claire, who encourages him to do more with his life and asks him to come to New York with her where her father can set him up in his firm and bankroll a business venture. Gideon’s failure to commit to anything and anyone is at the heart of the novel, one that twenty-somethings in particular should read. At the other end of life, D.D. Lanz addresses what occurs when one dies in Going, Going, Gone ($15.95, Two Harbors, softcover) when John Janne is diagnosed with terminal lung cancer. He makes plans to end his life before the cancer does. The novel taps into humanity’s universal fear of death and the unknown that follows. Not wanting to have his family watch him die slowly and painfully, he plans a canoe trip in Minnesota’s Boundary Waters where a death by drowning will look like an accident. Before the trip, however, he spends countless hours reading about how different religions and cultures envision the afterlife, but it leaves him confused and uncertain as to whether God or an afterlife even exists. The trip opens his eyes and anyone interested in world religions will find this novel very interesting.

Heaven Sent Rain by Lauraine Snelling ($15.00, Faith Words, softcover) will appeal to women with its story of scientists Dinah Taylor, the CEO of a successful pharmaceutical company. She likes her orderly existence, enjoying her work and her luxury apartment, but one day she encounters Jonah Morgan, a seven-year-old, for whom she buys breakfast. Along with his dog, “Mutt”, they become part of her routine as she becomes the mysterious boy’s main source of refuge. When she gets a call from Jonah asking her to rush his badly injured pet to a clinic run by a handsome veterinarian, Garett Miller, their lives begin to collide and their relationship changes. Snelling is a bestselling author of more than sixty-five books and this latest one is an intriguing look at how people affect one another in ways they don’t anticipate.
 
Finding Flipper Frank by Patrick M. Gary ($9.95, Kendric Books, softcover) tells of Walt Honerman who has just about given up on life in Billings, Montana at age 38, but who embarks on a trip to fulfill a promise made to a dying uncle. Along for the trip is 76-year-old Izzy Dunleavy, a loquacious nursing home resident and Moira Kelly, a young woman who befriended Izzy during his hospitalization. Izzy entertains them with stories about a grand resort he once owned in Crawfish Bay, but when they arrive there, he is arrested on a decades-old embezzlement charge, I don’t want to give away too much about the unraveling of truth and fiction Walter and Moira encounter because it is the heart of this entertaining novel that has a lot to say about the human condition with its flaws and hopes. It is a very good read.

Last summer readers were treated to Stephanie Evanovich’s bestselling debut novel, “Big Girl Panties”, and she is back with The Sweet Spot ($26.99, William Morrow) featuring two of the characters from that novel, Chase Walker, the hunky professional baseball player and his beautiful and exceptionally sassy wife, Amanda. She is a successful levelheaded woman who built her restaurant from scratch. She was not looking for prince charming and when Chase begins to pursue her she pays little attention. She’s used to celebrities and politicians doing at her place, but she just can’t stop staring at Chase and the feeling is mutual. For Amanda their romance is too good to be true, but he has a little kink to his personality. He likes to indulge in a little passionate spanking from time to time. When a tabloid reveals their relationship she must decide whether to give up her single-girl freedom or will Chase’s stardom spell doom for this sexy couple? You will have to read this novel to find out!

For those of a classical turn of mind, there’s Medeaby Richard Matturo ($32.00, Livingston Press, University of West Alabama) which is set in Bronze Age Greece. The myth is told in the form of a modern novel, eliminating none of the passion or violence as Medeo, an awkward, introverted daughter of a royal family, growing up in a remote backwater of the Greek world encounters the dashing and feckless Jason, offering an escape from her stifling life. She bears him twin sons and then watches as he falls out of love with her. His announcement that she will be exiled, minus her two boys, so that he can marry the king’s daughter brings on the final catastrophe. Matturo holds a doctorate in English with a specialization in Shakespeare and Greek Mythology. This is his sixth novel. Strong emotional ties is the theme of Jerry Pinto’s Em and the Big Hoom ($16.00, Penguin Original, softcover), originally published by a small press in India, Pinto’s debut novel is suffused with compassion, humor, and hard-won wisdom as he introduces us to Imelda and Augustine whose young narrator calls “Em” and the “Big Hoom.” Most of the time Em smokes “breedis” and sings her way through life, inspiring the love of her husband and children, the narrator and his older sister. However, Em suffers bipolar disorder and when it seizes her she becomes monstrous. The novel charts the ten-year courtship of his parents in the 1960s in Bombay to their efforts to come to terms with the desolation she leaves in her wake.

That’s it for August. Come back next month to enjoy Bookviews’ blend of news about many new fiction and non-fiction books. Tell your book-loving friends, family and co-workers about this unique monthly report.

Bookviews - September 2014

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By Alan Caruba

My Picks of the Month

We are besieged with advice on what to eat and the government has long been involved in steering everyone toward certain choices. Much of the advice it has given out over the years has been erroneous and for anyone who has a serious interest in this, there’s Nina Teicholz’s new book, The Big Fat Surprise: Why Butter, Meat & Cheese Belong in a Health Diet ($28.00, Simon & Schuster) that debunks the dogma about the evils of disease-causing fats that are part of the official dietary guidelines and the advice of diet books gurus and other experts. They also are put forth by the multibillion dollar industry of low-fat foods. Teicholz researched this book for six years and her thick volume which includes more than a hundred pages of detailed notes details how a single flawed study by a scientist who devoted his life to convincing influential organizations like the American Heart Association to point to the eating of fat as the cause of strokes and heart attacks. Tons of literature has been written about cholesterol, but it is a vital component of everyone’s body. All this and more is established with the evidence in this book that exposes a hoax that still influences the choices we make. Dr. David Perlmutter, MD, hailed this book saying the author “reveals the disturbing underpinnings of the profoundly misguided dietary recommendations that have permeated modern society, culminating in our overall health decline.” Frankly, I cannot recommend this book highly enough.

If you want to understand how Obamacare has destroyed the best health system in the world, you should read Sandeep Jauhar’s Doctored: The Disillusionment of an American Physician ($26.00, Farrar, Straus and Giroux). In the wake of the passage of the Affordable Care Act, Dr. Jauhar reports on the deep loss of morale among physicians today who cannot practice medicine in the way they would prefer because they are forced to see many more patients for far less time than they want because they are paid far less than in the past. They have to practice a defensive, self-protective kind of medicine because of malpractice suits. A single patient might see fifteen specialists in a single hospital stay. The sharp downturn in payments to physicians and hospitals has forced them to devote less time to patients. “There is no more wasteful entity in medicine than a rushed doctor,” says the author of this profoundly revealing and disturbing book. It should be read by every member of Congress, but it is a message to all Americans that Obamacare should be repealed. Another book provides an insight to the problems encountered by those seeking treatment. Misdiagnosed: One Woman’s Tour of—and Escape from—Healthcareland by Jody Berger ($14.00, Sourcebooks, softcover) is her story of having doubted the advice offered by the physicians she consulted after being told she had multiple sclerosis when in fact she had a sensitivity to gluten. One question, “What are you eating?” unlocked the truth of minor tingling sensations she had in her hands and feet. Berger, a journalist and marathoner, was skeptical of her treatment options and the diagnosis and, after a year dealing with physicians, she found one who examined her entire medical history and provided a completely different conclusion. This book is well worth reading in an era in which physicians, thanks to Obamacare, are forced to see many more patients in order to make a living.

For anyone who is concerned about the role of money in politics, there is no doubt cause when a candidate for President must raise a billion dollars and a Senate candidate must raise at least ten million. Much of that money comes from corporations and the impact of it is addressed in Capitalism v. Democracy: Money in Politics and the Free Market Constitution by Timothy K. Kuhner ($90.00/$27.00, Stanford University Press). Yes, the book comes with a hefty price tag, but so does our government these days. Kuhner is an associate professor of law at Georgia State University College of Law who lectures here and abroad. “European audiences can’t believe that the U.S. Supreme Court has issued official state justifications for an unregulated open political market, the sovereignty of donors and spenders, and the demise of political equality.” The relationship of money and politics, along with the rights of corporations in our constitutional democracy is vigorously examined in this book. 

Advice

If you have a problem in any aspect of your life, I guarantee you that there’s a book out there to help you solve it. Here are a few that have recently arrived.

The Power of Positive Confrontation by Barbara Pachter with Susan Magee ($16.99, Da Capo Press, softcover) is subtitled “The skills you need to handle conflicts at work, at home, online, and in life.”  As the author points out, there’s always someone out there who is annoying you in some fashion, failing to show respect or courtesy. It’s tempting to respond by expressing your anger or just bottling up your frustration and ignoring the person, but as the author notes, that doesn’t solve anything. This book is being issued for its 15thanniversary which means it has been around a long time, successfully providing a practical guide to interpersonal problem-solving. It is filled with good advice, starting with how you handle yourself and what kind of confrontational style you employ or avoid. Being polite and powerful is the essence of this books message, but mostly how to avoid the common problem of dealing with others who think they don’t have to show you the respect you should receive.

Do you ever feel stuck in a monotonous life built around a routine? Many do and Jamie George was one of them. He was a reluctant pastor in a downward spiraling marriage and he was finding it difficult to look past his circumstances and really embrace life. If this describes you in some respect then the good news is that Love Well: Living Life Unrehearsed and Unstuck may just be the book for you ($14.99, David Cook, softcover). It will help if you are Christian and have a sense of the spiritual in your life, but the book shares many deeply personal stories on the author’s journey from being stuck to his new life based on forming meaningful, deep relationships, and living a life of purpose. Today George is the pastor of The Journey Church in Franklin, Tennessee which he founded in 2006 as a safe haven for artists and the “religiously wounded.” Stuck? Read this book!


Messy Beautiful Love by Darlene Schacht ($15.99, Thomas Nelson, softcover) addresses the problems that marriages face such as financial problems, sickness, aging parents, and a chronically unhappy spouse. In a world where divorce is a family word and marriage is simply tossed aside, many women are asking, “Is there hope for my marriage?”  The author, married for more than 25 years, understands the temptations and struggles many women face and, coming from a place of brokenness, grace, and redemption, she candidly shares her personal testimony of infidelity and a message of hope with a guide through Scripture. It helps to have a spiritual orientation to benefit from this book.


Were you a fan of Gilligan’s Island, the TV show that debuted in 1964 and is still being seen in reruns by whole new generations? One of its characters was Mary Ann Summers, a sugar-and-spice-and-everything-nice Midwest girl played by Dawn Wells. She was the good girl stranded with the other characters on an island. In What Would Mary Ann Do? A Guide to Life Wells makes it clear that good girls can and do finish first ($16.95, Taylor Publishing, softcover) in a book written with Steve Stinson that is part memoir, part humor, and a dose of classic TV nostalgia. Its twelve chapters exploring everything from how Mary Ann would respond to changes in today’s culture to addressing issues confronting single women and mothers. Dawn found success in the 1960s, appearing in shows such as 77 Sunset Strip, Maverick, Bonanza, and Hawaiian Eye before being cast in Gilligan Island. Since then she has continued acting on the stage and screen, produced films, and been active in a number of charities. Women will find this book worth reading.


A major concern of parents is to ensure that their children do not fall into the trap of taking drugs. Joseph A. Califano, Jr., who served Presidents Johnson and Carter, the latter as the U.S. Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare, as written How To Raise A Drug-Free Kid: The Straight Dope for Parents ($15.99, Touchstone, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, softcover). It is a guide to keeping children substance-free through the formative pre-teen, teen, and college years. As the founder of The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse, this has been a long interest of Califano’s. The book addresses when and how to talk to a child about drugs and alcohol, what circumstances put a child most at risk, how binge drinking and marijuana use threaten the development of a teen’s brain, how to address the glamorization of drinking and drug use on social media, the Internet and in films and on television, including how to find the right program if one’s child needs treatment. Raising a child comes with many challenges and this book will make this one easier to deal with.

 Memoirs and Bios

There is no end to memoirs and biographies, many of which provide information and insight regarding those we admire and others which tell us the stories of people we have never heard of before.

In Tennessee Williams: Mad Pilgrimage of the Flesh ($37.95, W.W. Norton) one may be inclined to feel that John Lahr has told us more about the legendary playwright than we really want to know. There have been some forty biographies of Williams, but this one plumbs deeply into his sex life, his alcoholism, and the way his warring dysfunctional family and youth informed his greatest plays, “The Glass Menagerie”, “A Streetcar Named Desire” and “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof” that transformed the theatre of his day, all of which were made into films that made him famed to a vast audience. Lahr, a prolific author and a regular contributor to The New Yorker where, for two decades, he was the magazine’s senior drama critic, has penned over 750 pages with footnotes. It is enhanced with nearly one hundred photos. In person, Williams was a difficult person to be around in ways that only someone of his talent and personal traumas can be. I once met him and commented on how much I had enjoyed his book of poetry, In The Winter of Cities, and he was delighted someone had read it. The biography is a disturbing account of a disturbed and disturbing man. Only someone seeking to know the man behind the dramas will want to read this biography. Men of such talent are often seem more frail, more self-absorbed, and more troubled when their lives are examined in the depth this biography offers. This book is likely to be regarded as William’s most definitive biography and it well deserves to be.

I doubt there is anyone who has not heard of the Beatles and, for the U.S. their astounding fame began in the summer of 1964. The Beatles and Me on Tour by Ivor Davis ($15.99, Cockney Kid Publishing, softcover) who was the only British newspaper writer invited on the entire tour. Over the course of 34 days and 24 cities, Davis watched them make rock history while enjoying unrestricted access to the four lads from Liverpool, from hotel suites to backstage to their private jet. He waited fifty years to write the book because the years in between were filled with other events that he also witnessed, from the assassination of Robert Kennedy to the Los Angeles Watts riots. In the 1970s he was just as busy covering Angela Davis and Daniel Ellsberg, and other figures of the era. In this book he recounts in frank and amusing fashion the adventures of the now legendary band. Fans of the Beatles will surely enjoy it. Ain’t It Time We Said Goodbye: The Rolling Stones on the Road to Exile by Robert Greenfield ($25.99, Da Capo Press) Written by a former associate editor for Rolling Stone magazine’s London Bureau, who was a mere 25 years old when he followed the most iconic band of the British invasion during their farewell tour of their home country. Watching from the wings from Newcastle to Los Angeles, Greenfield chronicles the group during the ten days before their leave England in tax exile. The story is punctuated by Greenfield’s analysis of the seething tensions between Mick and Keith on the cusp of their heyday.

He wasn’t President for long before his assassination, but John F. Kennedy did have a many-layered relationship with a fellow mid-20th century leader, Prime Minister Harold Macmillan of Great Britain. Based on previously unquoted papers and private letters between them and their families, Christopher Sandford tells the story of that relationship in Harold and Jack: The Remarkable Friendship of Prime Minister Macmillan and President Kennedy ($25.95, Prometheus Books) which had to deal with Kennedy’s disastrous Bay of Pigs episode in Cuba, the Soviet act of building the Berlin Wall, and serious disagreements over the Skybolt nuclear deterrent, that cause a major rift in US-British relations. Anyone with an interest in history will enjoy this slice of it.

I frankly had never heard of or read the works of Earle Birney and Al Purdy, two Canadian poets, but their correspondence over forty years from 1947 to 1987 will surely appeal to anyone who enjoys a look at the creative process at work. We Go Far Back in Time ($39.95, Harbour Publishing, Madeira Park, British Columbia) are their letters, edited by Nicholas Bradley, an associate professor in the Department of English at the University of Victoria. Purdy is often considered Canada’s “unofficial poet laureate” and Birney was a celebrated poet and novelist who received the Governor General’s Award twice for his poetry. Canadians understandably will find this of greater interest, but these two literary figures also reflect their times in which they lives and the inherent issues of the creative process. Both, however, were incredibly prolific, producing many books. By contrast, no one would know of Susan Blumberg-Kason if she had not written a biographical account of her cross-cultural experience in Good Chinese Wife: A Love Affair with China Gone Wrong ($14.99, Sourcebooks, softcover). The author is an American who had a fascination with China and, while attending graduate school in Hong Kong fell for what she thought was the Chinese man of her dreams. They married and she believed her intercultural marriage would play out like an exotic fairy tale. It quickly turned into a nightmare as she examines the values of marriage and family in contemporary China and America. As her husband Cai Kason becomes increasingly controlling and abusive, the author is forced to forgo her own Midwestern values to save the relationship and protect her newborn son. When Cai threatens to take Jake back to China for good, she has to stand up for herself, her son and their future. I think women in particular will find this book of interest, but anyone interested in current Chinese culture will as well.

Math and Science

Prometheus Books is a highly prolific publisher. One of its specialties are books about math and science topics. For those who are interested in these topics, it has four recent books. It Started with Copernicus: Vital Questions about Science by Keith Parsons ($19.95) tackles questions such as can science meet the challenges of skeptics? Should science address questions traditionally reserved for philosophy and religion? The corruption of science is on the minds of many these days as, for example, we learn of how climatology has been used to advance the global warming/climate change agenda when, in fact, the Earth has been in a cooling cycle for seventeen years. This and other examples have troubled scientists. Parsons has written a jargon-free examination of areas such as evolutionary theory, paleontology, and astronomy, and others that have generated controversies.




Those interested in the history of science will enjoy The Chemistry of Alchemy: From Dragon’s Blood to Donkey Dung, How Chemistry was Forged ($24.95) by Cathy Cobb, Monty Fetterolf, and Harold Goldwhite.  These three veteran chemists show that the alchemist’s quest—often to turn ordinary metals into gold—involved real science and recounts the stories of the sages who performed strange experiments by separating and purifying materials by fire to reconstitute them. Despite their objectives, by trial, by design, and by persistence, the alchemists discovered acids, alkalis, alcohols, salts and other elements. It is a fascinating story.


Lovers of math will enjoy Mathematical Curiousities: A Treasure Trove of Unexpected Entertainments by Alfred S. Posamentier and Ingmar Lehmann ($19.95, softcover) who demonstrate that math can be enjoyable as well as an important skill on which much depends. Exploring our galaxy has been a quest that goes back to early scientists. Curiousity: An Inside Look at the Mars Rover Mission and the People Who Made It Happen by Rod Pyle (19.95, softcover) is a behind-the-scenes look at the recent mission of Curiousity, the unmanned rover whose journey of discovery is providing researchers with unprecedented information about Mars. The author provides stunning insights into how the enthusiastic team of diverse individuals uses a revolutionary onboard laboratory of chemistry, geology, and physics instruments to unravel the secrets of the red planet. The story of the most advanced machine ever sent to another planet makes for fascinating reading.

Kid Stuff

By far one of the most unique and entertaining books for young readers age four and up is Lori Scott Stewart’s Grandma, Aren’t You Glad the World’s Finally in Color Today! ($19.95, Palmar Press), but it is really for all the generations from grandparents, parents, and grandchildren. Told in rhyming verse, it is a tribute to those generations who came well before the technology today’s kids take for granted and tells the story, replete with black-and-white photos on pages facing those filled with color photos, of how those earlier generations lived through events that preceded and included the Great Depression and World War Two, before television, air conditioning, computers and all of the conveniences of our times. I had the pleasure of recommending Ms. Stewart’s debut book, “If I Had as Many Grandchildren as You” that went on to receive a 2013 Gelett Burgess Children’s Book Award and Family Choice Awards. This book is sure to win a lot of award as well. It is a delight to the eye, the ear, and the soul as it takes one from those early photos to those that capture the world in full color today.

As the school year begins many parents encounter a child who is afraid to go and Ylleya Fields has written a clever book, Princess Cupcake Won’t Go to School delightfully illustrated by Michael LaDuca ($15.95, Belle Publshing, Cleveland, OH). Young readers, age 5 to 7, will enjoy the many excuses Cupcake makes to avoid that first day of school and recognize them if they have tried them out. In the end, Cupcake does go and discovers that school is a place to make new friends.


It’s football season and a great way to combine encouraging one’s children to be active in some sport and to enjoy, in this case, football, is Sports Illustrated for Kids “Football—Then to Wow! ($19.95, Time Home Entertainment) which has the added benefit of encouraging them to read. Telling the history of the game that was born in 1869, it takes the younger readers, ages 10 and up, on a journey through time, explaining how the game developed—such as the way the shape of the ball came to be the one we recognize today, how protective shoulder pads were introduced as well as the history of helmets, the building of stadiums for the game, and tons of information about its legendary players in various positions. There’s much more and by the time the reader gets to the end of this book, they will be a football whiz, enjoying it on a level well above others. Also from Sports Illustrated for Kids is What Are the Chances? The Wildest Plays in Sports ($14.95, Time Home Entertainment). It will be a big hit with any younger reader who is into sports and, typical of the SI books, it is extensively illustrated and has a lively text devoted to the rare achievements by stars as they scored points to save a game, threw or caught a ball that decided the outcome, The sports highlighted are baseball, football, and basketball. Christmas is not that far off, so if you have a youngster that loves these sports, you might want to put this one on the gift list.

I’m of a mixed mind about Tomboy: A Graphic Memoir by Liz Prince ($15.99, Zest Books, softcover). Growing up, Liz Prince was a tomboy and she tells the story of her transition to recognizing what it meant to be female, doing so with humor, honesty, poignancy and a straight forward account of the physical and emotional changes that occurred as she matured. She goes from a girl who hated dresses, preferred boys clothes and being with them. Her teen years would change that and, being a graphic novel, each page is like a comic strip rather than just text. For young girls who share her early preferences, this will be a useful book as they too must make adjustments in adolescence. This is a “graphic” book as well in the language it employs and sensitive topics it addresses. Hence my concern.

Novels, Novels, Novels

Fans of the internationally bestselling novelist Ken Follett who have been waiting for the third book in his “century trilogy” will be pleased to know that Edge of Eternity ($36.00, Dutton) is now available. In 2010 he embarked on an ambitious project, a historical epic that spans the twentieth century. It began with “Fall of Giants” which was followed by “Winter of the World in 2012.”  The trilogy follows the fortunes of five intertwined families—American, German, Russian, English and Welsh—as they make their way through the upheavals of the twentieth century. Each book follows the next generation. The new novel covers the tumultuous era of the 1960s through to today, taking in civil rights, the Vietnam War, the Berlin Wall, the Cuban Missile Crisis, JFK’s assassination, presidential impeachment, revolution, and rock and roll. The copy I received was 1,098 pages! So prepare yourself for a lengthy, but fascinating reading experience. Follett’s trilogy is a real achievement, capturing the last century in a way that people can relate to through the lives of the characters.

An interesting novel by Bruce Holbert, The Hour of Lead, ($25.00, Counterpoint Press) follows his 2012 novel, “Lonesome Animals”, which was named the Best Book of the Year by both the Seattle Times and Slate. This one is set in the scabland farms and desert brush of Eastern Washington. The story follows Matt Lawson, a 14-year-old boy who is forced to take over his family’s ranch after losing both his twin brother and father in the great snowstorm of 1918. His mother disappears into grief and drinking the local moonshine and Matt realizes that he is on his own. The work gives him some relief from his feelings of loneliness, but when his relationship with Wendy, the daughter of a local grocer, goes sour, Matt sets out on a journey across the nation by way of finding himself. His mother opens her ranch home to Wendy, a local widowed teacher, and her bastard son, Lucky. It takes decades for Matt to return and his long journey will forever change the life of those around him. Stan Yocum always wanted to be a writer, but he took off 30 years to be a businessman. Now, though, he is establishing himself as a writer of indie-suspense novels and his latest is Unrelenting Nightmare ($20.95, iUniverse) that follows Stuart Garrison, a virtual reality software developer on the cusp of industry domination, as he navigates a deadly cat-and-mouse game with an international assassin hired by his fierce competitor. Garrison must outwit the killer at the same time he is releasing the new technology to the world. You will be hard pressed to put this novel down as it explores the prevalence of violence and the impact of virtual reality on youth.

In no particular order there are three novels that offer entertainment. The Legend of Sheba: Rise of a Queen by Tosca Lee ($23.00, Howard Books, a division of Simon & Schuster) retells a torrid love affair and the after-effects between two of the most famous monarchs in history. Based on extensive research into the life and times of Makeda, the Queen of Sheba and King Solomon, the novel reflects one of biblical history’s most unknown tales and brings the world of ancient Israel to life. In the 10th century BC, the Queen has inherited her father’s throne and all its riches at great personal cost. Her realm stretches west across the Red Sea, but it is new alliances to the north that threaten the trade routes which are the lifeblood of her nation. Solomon is the brash new king of Israel, already famed for his wealth and wisdom. The Queen must test and win his support, but neither rule has anticipated the clash of agendas and passion that threatens to ignore and ruin them both.




Fast forward to present times and The Wishing Tide by Barbara Davis ($15.00, NAL Accent, the Penguin Group, softcover). This is her second novel and the author lives in North Carolina, the setting for the story of Lane Kramer who moved to Starry Point, North Carolina, with the hopes that the quaint island village might be a perfect place to start fresh. She is now the owner of a charming seaside inn, having put aside her hopes of being a novelist and finding love again. When an English professor, Michael Forester appears on her doorstep in the middle of a storm, his familiarity with the island has her wondering if he is quite what he appears. Meanwhile, she has developed a friendship with an older woman who possesses a special brand of wisdom, but a fragile mind with a tenuous grip on reality. Put the three together and a decades-old secret, stir vigorously, and you have an interesting story.


Seventh Street Books has four softcover novels to offer, all available as ebooks as well. The Sun is God by Adrian McKinty ($15.99) involves a small group of mostly German nudists living an extreme back-to-nature existence, worshipping the sun on the remote island of Kabakon. When one of their members, Max Lutzow, dies it is assumed to be from malaria, but an autopsy in the nearby capital of Herbertshohe raises suspicions of foul play. Retired British military police officer Will Prior is recruited to investigate the circumstance of the death and, while the group seems friendly and willing to cooperate, Prior is convinced they are hiding something. The tension grows steadily and the climax is worth waiting for. Cat on a Cold Tin Roof—An Eli Paxton Mystery by Mike Resnick ($15.95) begins as hard luck private investigator, Eli Paxton, is hired to find a missing cat. It is a very important one because its collar is studded with diamonds worth a small fortune. What starts as a routine search of animal shelters soon becomes a perilous journey through a murky underworld. Turns out that the woman who hired Paxton is the wealthy widow of a recently murdered financial adviser with an alias and mobster ties. Eli finds the cat by not the collar. Suffice to say an intricate plot unfolds into a treacherous maze that Eli hopes to survive.


Blind Moon Alley—A Jersey Leo Novel by John Florio ($15.95) takes the reader back to the days of Prohibition. It’s Philadelphia and Jersey Leo doesn’t fit in. He tends bar at a speakeasy the locals call the Ink Well. When his old grade school buddy calls from death row and asks one last favor, all hell breaks loose for Jersey who finds himself running from a band of crooked cops, hiding an escaped convict in the Ink Well, and reuniting with his grammar school crush, the sultry Myra Banks. Intrigued? You will be when you read this delightful novel filled with some great characters. And lastly there’s The Button Man—A Hugo Marston Novel by Mark Pryor ($15.95) in which a former FBI profiler, Hugo Marston, has just become head of security at the U.S. embassy in London. He’s asked to protect a famous movie-star couple, Dayton Harper and Ginny Ferro who, while filming a movie in rural England, have killed a local man in a hit and run. It is a disaster from the beginning because, before he even meets them, he discovers that Ferro has disappeared and her body has been found hanging from an oak tree in a London cemetery. Hours later, a distraught Harper gives Hugo the slip. Putting the connections together with the help of a cast of characters, he must elude a serial killer after more bodies show up. Yes, it is another suspenseful, well told gripping tale.


That’s It for September

Lots of good books, fiction and non-fiction, this month as you can see. With the advent of autumn, the publishing world kicks into a high gear, producing many more. Come back in October and don’t forget to tell your book loving friends, family and coworkers about Bookviews.com where you will find the work of authors who deserve attention.

Bookviews - December 2013

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By Alan Caruba

My Picks of the Month

One book you must read if you are feeling unhappy with the nation’s present and future is Josef Joffe’s The Myth of America’s Decline: Politics, Economics, and a Half Century of False Prophecies ($26.95, Liveright Publishing). A Fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution and the publisher of Die Zeit, as well as a frequent contributor to Foreign Affairs and Foreign Policy, Joffe was educated at Swarthmore College and Harvard University. He is not only comfortable with real facts, but also has the talent to present them in an entertaining fashion that makes for easy and compelling reading. He points out the many times predictions have been made that America is in decline over the past half century and explores why they have been proven wrong by both our free market capitalist system and our national culture that continues to attract people seeking real freedom. In my lifetime and his, pundits have claimed that the U.S. would lose ground to Russia, Japan, and, of late, China. He dubs this “declinism” and describes how and why such claims were and are wrong. The good news just keeps coming on every page, along with insights to the rise and fall of empires and nations in the past. One can read these predictions all the time, but to give you optimism for America’s future, I recommend you read this excellent book.

Americans look at Israel and wonder why it has not been able to achieve peace with the Palestinians or why the Palestinians have not been able to form a state of their own. The answer can be found in Jonathan Schanzer’s new book, State of Failure, ($27.00, Palgrave Macmillan) an excellent review of the history of the two entities since Israel’s declaration of statehood in 1947. From the present day in which the Palestinian people must contend with two separate organizations, the older Palestinian Authority and the newer Hamas, claiming to represent them while being in a virtual state of war with one another, united only in their desire to destroy Israel. It is Schanzer’s view that the older group, formerly the Palestinian Liberation Organization led by Yassir Arafat, never demonstrated the ability or even an interest in creating a formal government structure. In addition, Arafat controlled the millions that flowed to the PLO from donor nations, stealing much of it for his own use. Hamas, designated a terrorist organization by the U.S., has at least made an effort to create social services in the Gaza area it occupies. What becomes obvious is that the so-called leaders of the Palestinians have never been interested in statehood, preferring cronyism and corruption to that responsibility. The current PA president has not called for an election since 2005 when his term in elected office ended. Why does the world tolerate such behavior? You need to read the book to learn that.

Remember how the nation was fixated on the trial of George Zimmerman who shot and killed Trayvon Martin in February 2012? When police arrived at the scene, it was obvious that it had been act of self- defense and, moreover, Florida’s Stand Your Ground law to protect people under attack rendered any further action unnecessary. Zimmerman was not initially charged, but then the politicians and race-hustlers got involved. The full story is told in If I Had a Son by Jack Cashill ($25.95, WND Books). Cashill is one of the best investigative writers I know, His book sweeps away all the media-generated stereotypes, particular those of Martin who was portrayed as the victim of a racially-motivated crime. Indeed, in addition to the prosecution who brought charges against Zimmerman despite the judgment of the local police, the media saw the trial as a way to advocate opposition to the Second Amendment and aggravate race relations in the nation. Even the President weighed in saying, “If I had a son, he would look like Trayvon.” A lawyer himself, Obama surely should have known better than to insert himself in that fashion. It took a jury to put an end to the travesty that unfolded, finding Zimmerman innocent. Cashill’s account of the events and the trial is well worth reading, particularly for the information he provides about Martin who approached, threatened, and then assaulted Zimmerman while he waited for the police to arrive. He had already amassed a record for involvement with drugs and petty crime, as well as having been suspended from school three times in the 2011-2012 year. In the wake of the trial, though, it would appear that Zimmerman has become unhinged.

One book I always recommend at this time of year is The World Almanac® and Book of Facts ($13.99) for the year ahead and the 2014 edition is a great compendium of facts that one can reach for at any time for information about the world, the nation, and data about the events that marked 2013, the U.S. economy, the States, science and technology, world history and culture, the U.S. government and so much more. The 2014 edition has new features that include “Marriage in America: A Changing Picture”, “Memorable Winter Olympics Moments”, and a “Voter Guide” you can consult for the forthcoming midterm elections. For a professional writer like myself, it is invaluable and for anyone else it will prove a useful tool to consult.

Dave Berg was a popular contributor to MAD Magazine and anyone who grew up enjoying the magazine will welcome news that his large body of hilarious cartoons from the 1950s to the 2000s has been gathered together in Dave Berg: Five Decades of “The Lighter Side of…” ($34.50, Running Press), a large format book that, it goes without saying, would make a great Christmas gift. It is part of a series “MAD’s Greatest Artists” and includes a rare 1970 interview and an essay by his daughter Nancy Berg. Organized by decade, the book starts with early cartoons that will be memorable to those who remained fans of the magazine. It’s like sitting down with an old, very funny, friend. Making people laugh for that long is truly an achievement.

Christmas is a time for gift-giving and receiving. For those who love books, there is a special attraction in classics that are beautifully  leather-bound, illustrated, slipcased and produced with an eye to they’re becoming treasures that can be passed on from generation to generation. With this in mind, I will direct you to The Folio Society whose leather-bound, often slip-cased, selections will please the connoisseur and the beginner alike. Among its latest titles are The Great Gatsby with illustrations by Sam Wolfe Connelly that make it a special treat. Indeed, Folio Society books feature the work of great, contemporary illustrators. There’s Pride and Prejudice, and for the young and young at heart, The Princess and The Goblin. A gorgeous children’s book is Oscar Wilde’s The Selfish Giant and Other Stories.

Reading History

George Washington has become a mythic figure in American history. We know he led the Revolution to victory and then served two terms as our first President. Beyond that, however, Washington is largely unknown as a living, breathing person or as the astonishing leader, a man of often astonishing integrity, and most certainly qualities of leadership that took him through eight years of war with the greatest power of his time, Great Britain, and then as the man who shaped the presidency into the one we have to this day. We owe Harlow Giles Unger, a prodigious historian, a debt of gratitude for the latest of his more than twenty books, Mr. President: George Washington and the Making of the Nation’s Highest Office ($25.99, Da Capo Press). When he assumed the office, it has virtually no defined powers and an almost complete lack of power to influence events. By the time he left the office, he had established the seven pillars of presidential power that we take for granted today and that often remain subject to controversy when misused or abused. It was Washington that established the presidency’s powers to control foreign policy, military affairs, government finances, and federal law enforcement as well as “executive privilege.”  Along the way as he recounts those years, we come to know Washington as a man who is aging, suffering from arthritis and other physical ills. We learn that he accepted public service even though he longed to return to his life as a successful farmer at Mount Vernon. Don’t miss out the pleasure and knowledge this book imparts. Another book inspired by the first President is George Washington’s Secret Six by Brian Kilmeade and Dan Yaeger ($27.95, Sentinel, an imprint of Penguin Press). Most histories of the revolution have overlooked the full story of how Washington put together a remarkable network of spies, knowing he would be leading a long war of attrition against the British and would need the best information possible on their maneuvers. Best known as being on “Fox and Friends”, Kilmeade and his co-author have put together a fascinating story on the way his network gathered intelligence and spread false information. In particular it is the story of the Culper Ring led by Robert Townsend. Together they had achievements that uncovered all manner of schemes and, in particular, prevented Benedict Arnold from surrendering West Point to the enemy. The outcome of the revolution often hung on the work of these patriots. Anyone who loves American history will want to read this book.

Ever since 9/11 Americans have had to get up to speed on Islam as a virulent form of Islamo-fascism has forced them to address the terrorism that accompanies it. Another iconic figure, Thomas Jefferson, is famed for having an English translation of the Quran, the Islamic bible, which he purchased in 1765, eleven years before he wrote the Declaration of Independence. He was no fan of Islam, nor were other Americans who had any knowledge of it. Historian Denise A. Spellberg has authored Thomas Jefferson’s Qur’an: Islam and the Founders ($27.95, Alfred A. Knopf) which The Daily Beast has described as “essential reading in these troubled times.” Like the other Founders, Jefferson was an avid reader and that informed many decisions he would make in the years in which he rose to fame. As President, Jefferson had to deal with Barbary pirates that were raiding American merchant ships and taken sailors hostage. That led to the creation of the U.S. Marine Corps and a mission to Tripoli to put an end to the raids. What we learn in this intriguing book is the hostility to Islam that was widely shared among early Americans. “Europeans and Americans after them, tended to be quite hostile to Islam,” writes Spellberg as we discover that the feelings modern Americans may feel were held by those who preceded them. The Constitution’s abolition of a religious test to hold public office is the reason a Muslim was sworn into office as a U.S. Senator in recent years. In Jefferson’s times, they were outsiders whose inclusion represented the furthest reach of toleration and rights in the new nation.

For anyone seeking to learn more about Islam, Koranic Allusions: The Biblical, Qumranian, and Pre-Islamic Background to the Koran, edited by Ibn Warraq, ($32.00, Prometheus Books) explores the evidence of the many influences from religious sources outside of Islam, incorporating stories in the Koran about Abraham, Moses, Jesus, and other characters from the Bible that were drawn from the Jewish Torah and the Christian Gospels. Ibn Warraq is a scholar who has authored “Why I Am Not a Muslim”, “Defending the West”, and “Virgins, What Virgins? And Other Essays.” He is also the editor of “Leaving Islam, What the Koran Really Says” and other books that represent a great body of knowledge that anyone interested in Islam should most certainly read. Most Americans have not read the Qur’an (Koran) and would be astonished to discover its hostility to all other faiths can Islam. There is a reason for the turmoil in the world today that we trace to Islam and it is the call to jihad or holy war until all submit to Islam.

Honor and Betrayal: The Untold Story of the Navy SEALS Who Captured the “Butcher of Fallujah”—and the Shameful Ordeal They Later Endured by Patrick Robinson ($26.99, Da Capo Press) is a case history of why morale in our armed forces today has been savaged by the “political correctness” that has been imposed on all the services. It is the story of a daring nighttime raid in September 2009 in which the SEALs grabbed the notorious terrorist, Ahmad Hashim Abd Al-Isawi, the mastermind behind the 2004 murder and mutilation of four American contractors. Instead of being hailed for their bravery and a successful mission, those in the chain of command gave greater weight to the claims of Al-Israwi that he had been abused, claiming he had been punched and given a bloody lip. What followed was pressure on the SEALs to sign confessions to “lesser charges”, but instead they each demanded a court martial to prove their innocence. When Americans became aware of this outrage, more the 350,000 signed petitions demanding that they be exonerated. Even U.S. congressmen petitioned the Pentagon to drop the charges. This is a story worth reading as a lesson of how far our military have strayed from its values under the pressure of an administration that gives greater credence to the word of a terrorist than to its own heroes.

Many Americans are unaware of the millions who have died under communist regimes. One instance of this was the great Chinese famine from 1958 to 1962 and it is told in Yang Jisheng’s book, Tombstone, ($17.00, Farrar Straus Giroux, softcover). An estimated thirty million lives were needlessly and intentionally destroyed as the result of the megalomania of China’s leaders at the time. This is not easy reading because Jisheng has selected 121 internal reports from local officials to their bosses. They are frank, grisly, and specific portraits of the horrors. We need books like this to remind us that communism has no heart and never did. The astonishing thing about this book is that that author, a long-time journalist who worked for the Xinhua News Agency until his retirement in 2001, still lives in Beijing with his wife and two children. The fact that this book has been allowed publication suggests some greater flexibility by the current Chinese leadership.

A curious aspect of history is the fifty members of the 27 Club, famed musicians who died at age twenty-seven. The story of six is told in 27 by Howard Sounes ($26.00, Da Capo Press) who focuses on Brian Jones, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison, Kurt Cobain, and Amy Winehouse. For anyone with an interest in the music scene, this has to be ‘must’ reading as Sounes examines first their lives and, second, their deaths. All six had troubled childhoods, fast-paced lifestyles, and mental issues that led to depression and substance abuse, though Sounes argues that the most recent member, Winehouse, was different from the others because she had a stable, supportive family. Even someone like myself who did not follow their careers nor pay much attention to their music found this a fascinating book.

One of the best series of books filled with information about all manner of topics is Visible Ink Press’s “Handy Answer” series, particularly as regards history. Just out this month is the latest addition, The Handy African American History Answer Book by Jessie Carney Smith, PhD ($21.95, Visible Ink Press, softcover). It is an extraordinary collection of data that highlights the history of black life in America, from those renowned to the lesser-known who made barrier-breakthroughs in the arts, entertainment, business, civil rights, education, government, military, journalism, religion, science, sports, music and so much more. It is filled with fascinating things such as who was Ringling Brothers’ first black woman clown? What is the oldest, non-church, published black newspaper? What was the first national Catholic black fraternal order? It is perfect for browsing and history buffs will love it.

Memoirs

Reading memoirs and biographies is a great way to learn life’s lessons through the experiences of others. We only get to live our own lives and must do so day by day. A memoir takes one to other places and can be read at one or more sittings.

I had expected Life Inside the Bubble: Why a Top-Ranked Secret Service Agent Walked Away From it All by Dan Bongino ($00.00, WND Books) to provide some insights to what it was like to be in close proximity to President Obama. If that would be your reason to purchase it, save your money. Bongino gives away no secrets (no pun intended). Instead, it is a fairly prosaic recounting of his life from his days as cop with the New York City Police and his ambition to climb a career ladder that led to twelve years within the Secret Service and ultimately the elite unit that protects the presidents. Bongino has the set of values that we admire and there is nothing here to criticize in that regard. The book does not tell you much about what life for any President is like beyond what you might imagine on your own. The President’s days are tightly scripted and he is the most scrupulously protected person on the face of the Earth, but you already knew that, didn’t you? Indeed, there is very little in this slim memoir that will surprise you. Bongino who is running for public office is making headlines these days decrying the Obama administration, but you will not find that in his book.

Perhaps only two percent of the U.S. population is composed of farmers and most Americans have little or no idea what it means to be one. I had never stepped foot on a farm until I began to travel widely in the 1980s as a photo-journalist. It is a very different lifestyle from the rest of us and One Woman Farm: My Life Shared with Sheep, Pigs, Chickens, Goats, and a Fine Fiddle by Jenna Woginrich ($16.95, Storey Publishing) is a delightful introduction and insight to what it means to be a farmer. It is a finely crafted memoir of the author’s immersion into a life she had yearned for and how it differs from those in cities and suburbs. It is, as one might imagine, determined by the work of a farmer; one marked by seasons and the life cycles tending her plants and animals. There are days for gathering applies, for shearing, and for harvest as she chronicles a year running from October to October. It is hard work, but she enjoys it and you will enjoy this engaging memoir. Graced With Orange by Jamie C. Amelio ($24.95, Meadow Lane Publishing, Austin, TX) begins with a chance encounter in Cambodia with a little girl asking for a dollar so she can attend school. When Amelio visited the school she discovered a very different world from the one in which she had grown up. The visit to Cambodia turned into a mission to provide more schools and the creation of an organization, Caring for Cambodia.” CFC changed her life, made her marriage stronger, brought two Cambodian girls into her family, saved her son’s life, and is in every respect an inspiring memoir. At this point, the non-profit CFC has since 2003 helped change the lives of more than 6,400 Cambodian children. In our comfortable lives here in America, we are often blissfully ignorant of the challenges that those in other nations face.

Denis Healey, a former Silicon Valley entrepreneur, decided to take a year off and travel the world without any responsibilities. He wrote about that in Breaking Free and followed up with The Traveler ($12.95 each, Vingdinger Publishing, softcovers), He retired at 48 and is married with one son, Sean. They live in Warsaw, Poland these days. These two books chronicle the experiences, both exterior and interior, of a man in search of his own identity, facing his past and contemplating his future options. He relates some great encounters as he crossed Turkey, traveled throughout India, Thailand, Vietnam, Bali, and Australia. He learns about spirituality and religion, love, poverty, and even met with Mother Theresa at one point. An interesting man in his own right, his two books are entertaining and thought-provoking. Good reading for the sake of good reading.

Songs of Three Islands: A Memoir by Millicent Monks ($18.95, Prospecta Press, Westport, CT, softcover) is subtitled “A personal tale of motherhood and mental illness in an iconic American family.” The family is the Carnegie’s, one associated with great wealth, but as the author notes, it also had a history of mental illness the affected four generations of women. It affected the author as well who searched for answers that led her to Jungian analysis, meditation, and sutras that enabled her to find a delicate peace which, having reached her sixth decade, she recounts. “If I can do something worthwhile to help people with children who are mentally ill,” says Monks, “I would think that was something worth accomplishing in my life.” Her daughter fell victim to it. Reading about mental illness can be disturbing, but the author puts it into a perspective that will help those who have encountered or are living through similar experiences and of the three women of the Carnegie family who endured it.

Books for Kids & Young Adults

Somewhere under the Christmas tree there should be a book or two. There is a vast selection of books for kids from the very youngest to the older teens.

A Tree’s Christmas: A talking tree’s story of its Christmas adventures by James Andrew Bowen ($9.95, Clearview Communications, Tampa, FL) is now in its fifth season of establishing itself as a story that will be indelibly associated with the holiday. Bowen has been a lifelong journalist. He grew up in the rural south and had many memorable Christmas’s to recall. The story draws on one of them in which the ritual of taking the decorations off the tree and removing it to the garden to become mulch for the next year’s vegetables. Laying there in the cold, the little tree draws the attention of other trees and begins to share its story as told by Anne, a 13 year old who wonders if it might have occurred in a dream. It is a touching, tender story and one I would heartily recommend.

Another tale is sure to become a favorite among the young set is The Christmas Tree Elf ($19.95, hardcover, $9.95 ebook, Valentine Sheldon Co.)by Valentine D’Arcy Sheldon and beautifully illustrated by Jeremiah Humphries. It tells a story about Mrs. Claus who always wanted a Christmas tree to decorate and Santa brings one home. They love the tree but become so busy preparing for Christmas that it is not until Christmas Eve that they realize they have not watered it. A Mysterious elf shows up to save the tree and teach them that all living things need care and attention. This book has garnered many excellent reviews and recommendations. You can add mine.

For any boy or girl who loves sports, I would definitely ensure they receive Sports Illustrated Kids – The Top Ten of Everything in Sports ($19.95, Time Home Entertainment) that ranks athletes, playing fields, rivalries, games, controversial calls, memorable moments and more. A large format book, it is extensively illustrated with photographs. The texts are short and crisp. It is amazing how much they packed into this book. It incorporate sports history and is filled with the kind of information that brings a wide range of sports to life, providing hours of reading that can be enjoyed in short bites. Some young adult fiction (age 12+) is served up in The Field by Tracy Richardson ($15.95 hardcover, $11.95 softcover, Luminis Books). Eric Horton is a standout player on his high school soccer team, but he has been having terrible dreams that wake him up at night. He also has eyes for Renee, the hot new student from France. Could his prowess on the field, his feelings for Renee, and some strange experiments Renee’s dad is cooking up in the physic lab at the university be connected? This is a combination of the real world of soccer and the mystical world of the Universal Energy Field. This is a very imaginative novel.

For all children, there is the question of what they want to be when they grow up and Wigu Publishing, Laguna Beach, CA,  is developing a series, starting with When I Grow Up I Want to Be…in the U.S. Army ($12.95) which will be joined by books on being a teacher, a firefighter, and in the U.S. Navy. They are written by Mark Shyres and illustrated by Debbie Hefke who uses a combination of artwork and photos. I would imagine they are aimed at ages 7 to 10. Having served in the Army, I can confirm that the text provides a realistic depiction of what life in the service is like and, for example, points out the many different occupations that exist from doctors and lawyers, to military police and firefighters, as well, of course, as combat units. “No matter what the job or rank, each soldier’s duty is to protect our country against anyone who wants to hurt us or our country’s friends, or allies.”  Couldn’t have said it better myself.

Eric Shanower is an award-winning comic book artist with a love for the era of the Trojans and Athenians. His series The Age of Bronze is now into Book Two, “The Story of the Trojan War—Betrayal” ($28.99 hardcover, $18.99 softcover, Image Comics, Inc., Berkeley, CA) As the Greek and Trojan armies clash, the action begins immediately where the previous volume left off. It’s the first battle in a war that will last for ten long years. Achilles fights Hektor while the beautiful Helen watches the battle from high on the walls of Troy. Shanower’s artistry depicts the story with elegant pen-and-ink drawings that make the action seem to spring off the page. One usually associates graphic novels with the young set, but an older reader will enjoy this series with equal pleasure. History, its myths and legends come alive in this series.

Novels, Novels, Novels

In no particular order let’s look at just some of the usual monthly deluge of softcover books that have arrived.

Felix F. Giordano has created a great character in Sheriff Jim Buchanan who is patterned after his real-life uncle, Carl “Buck” Buchanan, who had a twenty-year career with the Maine State Police. Even fiction needs to be grounded in reality and you can enjoy three novels by Giordano, the latest of which is Montana Harvest ($14.00, softcover, available from Amazon.com for $12.52) that joins “Mystery at Little Bitteroot” and “The Killing Zone” in this series. Set in the fictional Cedar Country, Montana, Buchanan is approached by the FBI concerning a missing persons investigation, it turns out that not only his own life, but also the life of the person dearest to his heart is at risk as well. Told mostly with excellent dialogue, it’s one of the stories whose characters immediately intrigue the reader and you will be pleased when you read this and his other novels.

Making her adult fiction debut with The Sister Season, ($15.00, NAL softcover) Jennifer Scott is an award-winning young adult author under another name. This novel is generally called women’s fiction because it will have a strong appeal for women readers. It features three sisters who discover that coming home for the holidays isn’t as easy as it seems. Growing up, the holidays were joyous times with laughter all around, but the years have taken their toll on the family bonds as they went their separate ways. This time they have returned home to bury their father. As you might imagine, old conflicts surface and new secrets are revealed against the background of what should have been a happier Christmas. Readers will enjoy getting to know Claire, the youngest, Julia the eldest, and Maya the middle child. All have gone on to different lives, but ultimately, they have to answer the question, when you are a sister, aren’t you a sister for life?

Love is on the mind of Edith M. Cortese, the author of A Thousand Years of Johnny Von ($19.25, Trumpet Boy Press, Los Angeles) as she tells the story of Estella, a single, 33-year-old woman who happens to live on the same street as a rising movie star, Johnny Von, and would very much like to get to know him as she pursues her job as a Hollywood Hills dog-walker. She has her own dog, Moochie, and, despite being a bit shy, he is gorgeous enough for her to overcome her doubts and get to meet him and make him fall in love with her. She is filled with “what if” fantasies that draw on classic love stories that will surely entertain you as she seeks to turn fantasy into reality as her Cinderella figures out to capture the heart of Prince Charming.

Another romance is found in The Color of Homeby Rich Marcello ($15.99, Langdon Street Press, softcover). Nick and Sassa are guarded, skeptical survivors who have skillfully buried the effects of tragic pasts. They are two New Yorkers who have a series of intimate conversations that cause they to fall in love and begin a remarkable journey toward their true selves, toward the healing that makes they whole again, toward finding home. This is a thoroughly modern love story about being willing to be vulnerable, to rise above loss, and to create and nourish a unique love for one another. You will enjoy the journey that Nick, a successful music entrepreneur, and Sassa, a free-spirited chef discover together.

For those who enjoy a good mystery, there’s the gripping Killer Weed by Michael Castleman ($14.95, MP Publishing, Petaluma, CA), a tour through a marriage under duress, forty years of pot dealing in America, and two murders, one contemporary, the other a cold case from 1968. The reader gets an interesting history of how marijuana was introduced, starting with importation from Mexico, then progressed to Colombian freighters, and was followed by growing in remove national forests, until it was grown indoors under solar-powered lights. Cannabis prohibition in the present day is also a theme of the book. You will go from San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury in the late 1960’s and two murders that join the neighborhood to its Golden Gate Park. It is the fourth Ed Rosenberg Mystery set in that city. This is an emotionally complex, character-driven story that begins when Ed and his wife Julie are fired from their jobs at the San Francisco Foghorn (a fictionalized Chronicle) and, with two kids and a huge mortgage, turn to using drugs to cope.
 
There are thrills to be had in Harry Hunsicker’s The Contractors ($14.95, Thomas and Mercer, softcover). He is a seasoned novelist of three previous novels and is the former executive vice president of the Mystery Writers of America. A fourth generation native of Dallas, he knows how to draw you in and keep you turning the pages. In this novel, he takes the reader into the shadowy world of private military contractors and the hypocrisies of the “War on Drugs”, featuring a disgraced former Dallas PD officer, John Cantrell. He and his partner/lover, Piper, make their living busting drug shipments along the U.S.-Mexico border for commissions. One such seizure puts them in possession of a star witness in an upcoming cartel trial. The cartel has other ideas and they soon find themselves in the crosshairs of the cartel, a group of competing contractors, and a corrupt Dallas police officer with nothing to lose.

That’s it for December and the year 2013 that was filled with some remarkable fiction and non-fiction that Bookviews.com has reported upon over the past months. Tell your book-loving friends, family and co-workers about Bookviews.com, the most eclectic look at the current literary scene. And get ready to come back in January 2014 for more!

 

Bookviews - October 2014

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My Picks of the Month

The Obama administration’s foreign relations policies have significantly weakened America and The Russia-China Axis: The New Cold War and America’s Crisis of Leadership ($27.99, Encounter books) by Douglas E. Schoen and Melik Kaylan reveals how these two nations, in league with Iran, North Korea and other nations, have drawn closer together as they have initiated massive military buildups of conventional and nuclear forces. The Obama “reset” with Russia has proven to be just one of many failures to realize how its policies are endangering America’s role as a superpower to which other nations have looked for protection. Russia’s and China’s trade and economic policies, along with their support for Iran’s ability to create its own nuclear weapons and their aggressive actions to expand territorial claims are in violation of UN norms. The annexation of Crimea by Russia is just the tip of the iceberg, as are China’s actions in international waters reveal their true intentions, but the U.S. response has not just been weak, but its reduction of the U.S. military to levels that existed before WWII are a danger to national security. Both nations have been facilitating rogue regimes like North Korea, Iran, and Syria, as well as militant Islamic groups. Both are engaged in massive cyber theft and espionage directed against the U.S. It is significant that Schoen, one of the most influential Democratic campaign consultants for more than thirty years, is so critical of the Obama regime. Kaylan is a leading authority on international politics. Together they have written a book that anyone and everyone concerned about current events and their future potential that should be “must” reading. They have documented a very scary future for America.

As Americans continue to try to understand what is occurring in the Middle East, Donald Liebich has provided some answers in his excellent look at the region and America’s involvement there. Fault Lines: The Layman’s Guide to Understanding America’s Role in the Ever-Changing Middle East ($16.99, Elevate, Boise Idaho, softcover) is both filled with history and other facts about the region and its importance to our lives. The author is not a career diplomat or a think tank expert, but instead has been in the U.S. Navy, followed by a career with a corporation and as a consultant to business enterprises. It included many trips to the Middle East over the past ten years that included meeting many of the key players as well as the common people. His extensive knowledge is shared with the reader in ways you may not read in newspapers or other U.S. media. Liebich explores why the U.S. got involved—ensuring the oil we needed as a rising power in the wake of both world wars—and why President’s 41 and 43 felt the need to force Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait, then to invade Afghanistan in response to 9/11 and later to rid Iraq of Saddam Hussein. He explains why the “Arab Spring” failed and why the U.S. has lost much of the influence it once had. This book is “must” reading for anyone trying to make sense of the headlines and reports.

As Americans face the likelihood of having to return to the Middle East to attack and destroy the Islamic State, many questions about the waging of war will arise and the perfect book to respond to them is Prof. Benjamin Ginsberg’s The Worth of War ($24.00, Prometheus Books) in which the historian and scholar lays out how and why war over the centuries has produced the modern world thanks to the development of the bureaucracies to wage them, the financial developments to fund them, and the emergence of the concept of the citizen soldier to fight them. While war is terrible and brutal, it has also advanced the world in many ways as nations realized they needed strong economies to wage and win wars, developed the propaganda techniques to justify them, and have seen the spread of knowledge to both the winners and losers from the days of the Greek and Roman Empires to the present era. This is an interesting, thought-provoking book for anyone interested in history and the role that war has played throughout. Throughout our history, policies have been introduced in Congress that their supporters thought would benefit Americans only to discover that they created problems that had to be corrected or modified at some point. That’s the subject of Thomas E. Hall’s new book, Aftermath: The Unintended Consequences of Public Policies ($15.95, Cato Institute). I would recommend it to anyone studying political science at the university level or who is interested in U.S. history in general. A professor of economics at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, he has written a number of books that demonstrate his capacity to do a lot of research and explain the complexity of events like the Great Depression or the causes of economic fluctuations. This book is particularly timely insofar as the debacle of Obamacare has demonstrated once again that government interference with the marketplace often results in a disaster. The book demonstrates that when the government imposes new taxes, rules, or regulations, the outcome can produce consequences so severe they render the intent a failure. Prohibition is one example he examines, alone with cigarette taxes, both of which created crime empires. The concept of a minimum wages can leave a younger generation jobless. And the income tax has led to a giant federal government, the exact opposite of what the Founders laid out in the Constitution. 

Not everything is or should be taken as seriously as war and thank goodness for that! Some books are written just to entertain and can be read for that reason. A perfect example of that is 1,399 Quite Interesting Facts to Make Your Jaw Drop by John Lloyd, John Mitchinson, James Harkin, and the QI Elves ($15.95, W.W. Norton). The authors are the brains behind the award-winning BBC quiz show, QI. The book lives up to its name. For example, the human nose can distinguish between over 10,000 smells and humpback whales can sing non-stop for 20 hours. Your brains makes a million new connections every second and Chopin only performed 30 concerts in his entire life. Suffice to say, every page has four facts that will manage to inform and entertain you at the same time. I loved it. For sheer fun if you are the parent of a new baby or know someone who is, pick up a copy of How to Make Your Baby an Internet Celebrity: Guiding Your Child to Success and Fulfillment by Rick Chillot with photography by Dustin Fenstermacher ($12.95, Quirk Books, softcover). Suffice to say this is satire, a pure tongue in cheek “guide” for all those parents who love posting the latest photo or video of their child on their blog or some site like YouTube where fame is instant.

For anyone who loves animals, Daisy to the Rescue: True Stories of Daring Dogs, Paramedic Parrots, and other Animal Heroes by Jeff Campbell ($17.99, Zest Books, softcover) is sure to please. As his book demonstrates, animals are not only our companions, but become in many cases, true lifesavers as well. The book is enhanced by original illustrations by Ramsey Beyer that illuminate more than 50 amazing stories of how animals can not only make our lives better, but even save them on occasion. You will enjoy stories of bottlenose dolphins rescuing surfers from a great white shark, lions protecting a kidnapped girl, and a pig stopping traffic to get help for a heart attack victim. Great fun to read. Judy: The Unforgettable Story of a Dog Who Went to War and Became a True Hero by Damien Lewis ($24.99, Quercus, softcover) will cheer and inspire any lover of dogs with its story of an English pointer, born in Shanghai, China in 1936 who became the mascot for the English gunboat, HMS Gnat.  When war broke out , the crew was redeployed to Singapore and Judy had a keen sense of when an attack would occur. She and her shipmates were taken prisoner by the Japanese where they endured horrible conditions. The camp commandant gave her recognition as a POW, protecting her from harm. She helped maintain her fellow POW’s morale.

Reading History

I love reading history. It never fails to provide an understanding of what is occurring in the present times or provide a glimpse into the lives of those who helped shape it in some fashion.

It would surprise most people to learn that Walt Whitman, one of America’s great poets, was living in the basement of his mother’s home at age 40 or so, having published two editions of “Leaves of Grass” to virtually no sales and few reviews, most of which were unfavorable. This and the story of one of America’s first gathering place for writers, poets, artists, actors, and other free spirits on the eve of the Civil War is told in Rebel Souls: Walt Whitman and America’s First Bohemians ($27.99, Da Capo Press) by Justin Martin. The book focuses on a New York saloon, Pfaff’s, in a Broadway area that was filled with restaurants, art galleries, bookstores, and other places that made it a favorite place for the city dwellers. Pfaff’s, was overseen by Henry Clapp, Jr. who had returned from several years living in Paris with the aim of recreating the atmosphere he enjoyed in nightspots that catered to creative folk. It would attract a group of people, most of whom did not achieve Whitman’s later fame, but were widely published and known in their own time. Though we may think of the 1850s, lacking electric lights and other modern conveniences, as a bit ancient, intellectually and artistically, it represented much of what we regard as modern culture. Indeed, politically it reflects our present times. “Congress was simply nonfunctional. The Presidents of the era were generally bunglers until Lincoln was elected. By the late 1850s, there didn’t exist a single official U.S. institution that wasn’t in crisis,” notes Martin, who writes that “A common stance among Clapp’s set was a kind of sly cynicism. Every aspect of American society seemed so eroded, so diminished; drinking, carousing, and trading witty barbs in a subterranean bar—what else even made sense?”  For anyone who loves history and wishes to understand Whitman’s times, his life and work, this book is a real treat! Whitman lived long after the Civil War was over, but many of his contemporaries at Pfaff’s did not, burning out before they reached much beyond age 30. In all this is a book that is a fascinating look at the era in which the most famed of American poets found his unique voice.

For those who enjoy a hefty volume, you will not be disappointed by Donald L. Miller’s Supreme City: How Jazz Age Manhattan Gave Birth to Modern America ($37.50, Simon and Schuster) which, at just over 750 pages, cover the topic extensively and entertainingly. The central figure of the Roaring Twenties era was Jimmy Walker, New York’s dashing Mayor. It was during this time that midtown Manhattan was the center of a construction boom that changed the character of the city as the area around Grand Central Terminal became home to the tallest skyscrapers on earth as well as the fabled residences of the wealthy along Park Avenue. Times Square was America’s movie mecca and home to bustling theatres. New York became the headquarters for national radio and the site of influential magazines like The New Yorker.  The city was becoming the center for a whole new universe of culture and enterprise that included now legendary names like Florenz Ziegfeld, David Sarnoff, William Paley, Duke Ellington, and others like the speakeasy owner, Texas Guinan. Jack Dempsey and Babe Ruth were sporting giants of the decade. Everything about the city and the times was about size and excess. The Crash of 1929 brought an end to the era captured lovingly in Miller’s book, one well worth reading.

In our fast-paced world, one can be forgiven for having forgotten the uproar in 2005 when a Danish newspaper, Jyllands-Posten, published a number of cartoons about Islam, including one drawn by artist Kurt Westergaard that depicted Muhammad with a bomb wrapped in his turban. In The Tyranny of Silence ($24.95, Cato Institute, softcover) Fleming tells the story of the “cartoon crisis” that followed as Muslims in Europe and around the world erupted in protest. Danish embassies were attacked and more than 200 deaths were attributed to the protests. Rose came to symbolize one of the defining issues of our era; the tension between respect for cultural diversity and the protection of freedom—particularly freedom of the press and of free expression. Fleming tells of what he had to confront in the aftermath of the outcry. This is his personal account of an event that has shaped the debate about what it means to be a citizen in a democracy at the same time that more than a billion Muslims take offense at any criticism of their religion.
 
Another Cato Institute book worth reading is Bootleggers & Baptists: How Economic Forces and Moral Persuasion Interact to Shape Regulatory Politics ($24.95) by Adam Smith and Bruce Yandle. It reflects our era of “crony capitalism” in which businesses engage the government to enhance their bottom lines. Throughout our history, the government has been a good place to sell one’s goods and to manipulate the marketplace to one’s benefit. Yandle’s theory asserts that regulatory “bootleggers” are parties taking political action in pursuit of economic gain. His book examines major regulatory activities such as Obamacare, the recent financial bailouts, climate change regulation, and rules governing “sinful” substances. The burden of regulations, some of which are deemed “significant” because their effect on the economy is estimated at $100 million or more each year they are in force, is being felt in all areas of the nation’s economy.

With Islam in the news as a threat to everything including secular Muslims, It’s All About Muhammad: A Biography of the World’s Most Notorious Prophet by F.W. ($16.95, Zenga Books, softcover) is very timely and very scary. What emerges from F.W. Burleigh’s intensively researched book is the portrait of a deeply disturbed, extremely violent individual and one whose life is venerated by over a billion Muslims as a guide to how they should live theirs. It is a religion Muhammad put together, thinking his epileptic seizures were a communication with God whom he called Allah. He cobbled together the faith he created, borrowing from Judaism and Christianity, but ultimately rejecting them and all others as he dictated the Koran. Muhammad literally declared war on all other faiths. Fleeing those who saw him as a danger, he built Islam through a history of assassinations, banditry, kidnappings, and beheadings that made Islam feared in his own time. Fourteen centuries later, Islam is still feared and it should be. This book will answer all your questions, but will not be available for sale until October 15 when you can purchase it via Amazon.com.

Those who enjoy reading about the Civil War will surely enjoy S.C. Gwynne’s excellent biography of Stonewall Jackson, Rebel Yell: The Violence, Passion, and Redemption of Stonewall Jackson ($35.00, Scribner) that brings to life the story of one of the Confederacy’s greatest generals. Like Gen. Robert E. Lee, Jackson, while he had won plaudits and promotion during an earlier war with Mexico, had led a generally undistinguished life, not much filled with success or the portents of their close cooperation during the Civil War that held off a far larger Union army and defeated it in several major battles. Jackson virtually invented the concept of swiftly moving large numbers of troops while keeping the Union unaware of their movement. He was a taciturn man and paid little heed to his attire. Far more than just an account of battles, Gwynne delves into his personal life that included the loss of his beloved first wife. During the course of the war he emerged as a man of legend, dying of a wartime wound in May 1863, uttering as his last words, “Let us cross the river and rest under the shade of the trees.”

Bill O’Reilly of Fox News has made a separate reputation as the author of books about the killing of noted figures, the latest being “Killing Jesus” which has been on the bestseller list for weeks. Robert M. Price, a New Testament scholar has authored several books on Christian matters and his latest is Killing History: Jesus in the No-Spin Zone ($18.00, Prometheus Books, softcover). O’Reilly claims that his book is a purely historical account of the events in the life of Jesus leading up to his crucifixion, but Price regards it as the number one source of misinformation on Jesus today that ignores the past century’s New Testament scholarship, interpretations, and findings. He makes his case that O’Reilly’s books is little more than historic fiction.

To Your Health

I miss seeing more cookbooks that offer a range of tempting and tasty items to eat. So many are “health” oriented and that’s okay, but my Mother was a cookbook author and taught gourmet cooking for several decades. Dinner at our house was always a treat and, frankly, we ate everything…with gusto!

Tasting the Seasons: Inspired, In-Season Cuisine That’s Easy, Healthy, Fresh and Fun by Kerry Dunnington ($19.95, Artichoke Publishers, softcover) is happily filled with some 250 recipes that reflect the season’s bounty with a section on meat and chicken dishes, but if you prefer vegetables than you will find many more dishes that featured plums, mangos, tomatoes, and others such items. The author is a culinary consultant and caterer who specializes in “healthy” eating and entertaining. You will learn a lot from this book which offers some surprising ways to turn ordinary dishes likes pancakes and waffles into a health-related event using salba, teff, millet and flax seeds! I come from the old school of ordinary pancakes with butter melting on top of a stack and plenty of maple syrup. Even so, there is no doubt that anyone with health in mind will greatly enjoy this book and its wide range of recipes. In a similar fashion, The Forks Over Knives Plan: A 4-week Meal-by-Meal Makeover ($24.99, Touchstone, an imprint of Simon and Schuster) by Alona Puide, MD, and Methew Lederman, MD, with Marah Stets and Brian Wendel, and recipes by Darshana Thacker and Del Srouga offers itself as a guide on “how to transition to the life-saving, whole-food, plant-based diet.”  It asserts that various diseases can be reversed by leaving meat, dairy, and highly refined foods off the plate. This is a serious effort to help people who may be experiencing health problems due to their current diet of foods that most of us enjoy without having to give any thought to them. The back cover is filled with endorsements by physicians and others, but the bottom line is whether you want or need to switch to a diet that may not challenge your taste buds as you dine on navy bean hummus and mixed vegetable pita pockets.

Apparently I have a sugar addiction because a day without chocolate or ice cream is unthinkable to me. That said, the issue for many people is one of moderation. And a lot of them are fat because of eating too many sweets. The Sugar Savvy Solution ($24.99. Reader’s Digest) will teach you how to “kick your sugar addition for life and get healthy.” Written by "High Voltage" with a foreword by Katie Couric it offers a eating plan that, over a six-week period promises to “rewire” your brain chemistry and retain your taste buds to break your addition to sugar, as well as “excess salt, bad fats, and enriched white flour.” It is more than just a diet, but it has helped readers to lose weight over the weeks you engage it, using its recipes and advice.

For the three million Americans with celiac disease, avoiding gluten can be the difference between life and death. If you add in those with nonceliac gluten sensitivity, the number of people experiencing gluten issues triples in number. They are the people who should pick up a copy of The Complete Guide to Living Well Gluten Free by Beth Hillson ($17.99, Da Capo Press, softcover.)  The author is the food editor of the magazine, Gluten Free & More, and she knows this topic from A-t0-Z. As she points out, gluten hides in everything from food to commonplace household items. For those sensitive to it, it can cause gastrointestinal distress, rashes, anemia, depression, and in the long term, cancer, infertility, and organ failure. That’s reason enough to read her book if you or someone you know are incurring these symptoms. The book is filled with practical, comprehensive advice on all the aspects of living from a child who is allergic to Play-Doh to gluten-free dining. The author is the president of the American Celiac Disease Alliance and her book could be life-saving for anyone with the disease or troubled by gluten-related health problems.

Among the recommendations in Prescription for Life: Three Simple Strategies to Live Younger Longer ($19.99, Revell) by Dr. Richard Furman are “six foods you should never eat again” and “why lack of exercise is killing you.”  The author is a vascular surgeon who says that while aging is inevitable, a variety of diseases associated with it are not. The preface to his book says you should consider it as a letter from a friend who is a doctor “explaining in straightforward terms what is happening to you as you count the days to another birthday.” Among the foods he recommends you avoid are a juicy steak, cheese, and a variety of other things we all commonly eat. The fact is, however, we all need meat in our diet for its protein and other benefits, so the author may be overstating his case in this area. My feeling is that this is a book for people overly concerned about aging. The medically-oriented advice the author offers is worth considering, but the rest is just widely known common sense.

Un-Agoraphobic: Overcome Anxiety, Panic Attacks, and Agoraphobia for Good by Hal Mathew ($18.95, Conari Press, softcover) is one of those titles that pretty much tells you everything you need to know about the book. The author, a journalist, was plagued by panic disorder and agoraphobia, the fear of open, public places, but overcame his disorders twenty years ago and has since become an expert on the topic. If you or someone you know experiences these problems, I would surely recommend you read his book. He recommends putting a structure in your daily life so you know what you intend to do and do it each day. He gives tips on choosing a therapist to help. His style is easy to read and I have no doubt that this book will help anyone seeking to overcome these disorders.

A Caregiver’s Guide to Dementia by Laura N. Gitlin, Ph.D. and Catherine Verrier Piersol, Ph.D., ($22.00, Camino Books, softcover) addresses the common challenges encountered by individuals and families caring for someone with dementia. This is an easy-to-read guide designed to help at-home caregivers navigate the daily challenges with clear and proven strategies that can enhance the quality of life for those with dementia—a condition for which there is no medical cure.

Advice about Your Life

At various points in our lives we all need and can benefit from good advice. We seek it from family and friends, but there are books that provide it as well and have the advantage of being non-judgmental.

Have a Happy Family by Friday by Dr. Kevin Leman ($17.99, Revell) is the latest of some forty books this internationally known psychologist and media personality has written. It is part of a series of series using “Have…by Friday”, advising how to have a new you, a new teenagers, a new husband, etc. Suffice to say he is extremely prolific, but he has a world of knowledge about marriage and family issues that have benefited many readers. He stresses good communications with family members and then provides tips on navigating the problems that occur with toddlers, teenagers, and all ages. What he wants is for Mom to be Mom and Dad to be Dad. They are different each in their own way. And it applies to single parents as well. I must confess I was intrigued by the title of Seth Adam Smith’s book, Your Life Isn’t For You: A Selfish Person’s Guide to Being Selfless ($12.95, Berrett-Koehler Publishers, softcover). Turns out that Smith is writing from experience as someone who was seriously self-obsessed and the harm it inflicted on his life and his marriage, one that included addiction and depression. The book is distinguished by his candor and by the lessons he drew from the hard-earned lessons he learned. He tells you that your life is about being of service to others in countless ways and thus the title becomes clear. If you feel you’re encountering problems because of your own selfish attitudes or behavior, I strongly recommend you read his book.

In our present times, many people are inclined to dismiss any religion in their lives, but I have noticed that those who do embrace faith seem to have an easier, happier life. Sarah Jakes is the daughter of Bishop T. D. Jakes and she oversees the woman’s ministry at The Potter’s House of Dallas, a church led by her parents. She is the author of “Lost and Found” and now a new book for women that shares the hope-filled legacy of Ruth, Colliding with Destiny, ($24.99, Bethany House). The life of Ruth, as told in the Old Testament, is one in which she went from being a widow to a wife with a secure, protected future, one that paved the way from the birth of King David. Ruth never let her past define here and the message for any woman that reads this inspiring book is full of good things.

For those who like to delve deep into the philosophical questions about life, Edward O. Wilson, biologist and naturalist, author of more than twenty books, winner of two Pulitzer Prizes, and a professor emeritus at Harvard University, is back in his 85th year with The Meaning of Human Existence ($26.95, Liveright Publishing, a division of W.W. Norton). The book consists of fifteen tightly interlinked essays broken into five parts—the meaning of meaning, science and the humanities, other life forms, the developed mind, and our collective future. Essentially, he believes that the human species is at its best when it functions as a team and, of course, we see many expressions of this in sports and industry, among other ways we come together, For those who ascribe to beliefs regarding the environment and what we are allegedly doing to it, this book will confirm them and is thus not for everyone. 

Getting Down to Business (Books)

Thinking of investing? Wall Street seems to be saying we’re out of the Great Recession and the troubles occurring around the world will not affect profits here at home. The Handy Investing Answer Book by Paul A. Tucci ($21.95, Visible Ink, softcover) is ideal for the investing novice or whether you think you have spotted a trend. Tucci covers the whole investment marketplace from stocks, bonds, mutual funds, real estate, tax strategies, to retirement planning.  In plain English he explains the basics while giving tips on how to avoid poor returns and unnecessary risk. In 2011 he authored The Handy Personal Finance Answer Book and been an investor for more than three decades, a former global information and publishing manager, a business owner and partner in an innovative IT services and software development firm. His book pretty much answers all the questions you would ask a financial advisor and much more.

Street Smart Selling: How to Be a Sales Superstar is the kind of title you would expect from Daniel Milstein ($17.05, Gold Star Publishing, softcover) and, for anyone starting out in sales it is a treasure of various guidelines to use for the ambitious beginner as well as established professionals who want to improve to a higher level of success. Much of the book has a message of self-improvement for motivated individuals. Milstein comes from a background in which his family in the Ukraine narrowly escaped the Soviet Union and made their journey to America. His is the classic American story of success, from sweeping restrooms in a fast food restaurant to becoming the CEO of one of the nation’s most successful mortgage brokerage firms. Happily for the reader, Milstein shares what he has learned about making sales and this could just be the only book you will need to read for your own successful sales career.

Kid Stuff

The Best Part of the Day by Sarah Ban Breathnach and beautifully illustrated by Wendy Edelson ($16.99, Regnery Kids) is a wonderful way to create a daily tradition of focusing on the small pleasures of daily life that often get lost in our busy, disconnected lives. It teaches young children aged 4 to 10, how to enjoy the little things that make life sweet. As the author says, “Gratitude is often thought of as an intellectual concept, when gratitude is really a small seed planted in the heart that is nourished through acknowledging all the good that surrounds us. Good that can be discovered through the reassuring comfort of family customs, rituals, and traditions, and restoring a sense of rhythm in our daily round and through the changing seasons.” It celebrates the changing seasons and the joy of simple pleasures such as feeding birds or tending a garden. Parents and their children will rediscover and learn why common experiences are to be valued and enjoyed to the fullest. I loved it and you and your young children will too.

Teaching children ages 4 to 8 how to value money is the theme of Alex’s Ten-Dollar Adventure ($15.95, Three Bean Press) by Wendy Bailey and wonderfully illustrated by Ernie D’Elia. It begins with a birthday gift for Alex from his grandparents, five dollars. Alex is very excited but his mom leads him to understand that many things he wants cost more and Alex checks out his bank to discover he has enough for ten dollars. He wants to spend it all and finds ways to do it, learning along the way how swiftly the ten becomes less with every purchase. In the end, mom encourages him to put back five dollars to save for what he wants, a new toy. As the son of a CPA, I can celebrate this delightful way to teach fundamental lessons about spending and saving.

A young adult novel that is sure to please is Bonnie S. Calhoun’s Thunder ($16.99, Revell) that begins in a post-apocalyptic world and society where the landscape is littered with the hopes and ruins of past generations. Every is struggling to survive and one of them is Salah Chavez whose family of bounty hunters, live off the reward they earn with each capture of the Landers, a mysterious people from a land across the big water. As she turns 18 with nothing to look forward to then being traded as a bride to a neighboring clan, she discovers secrets that will tear her world apart. What follows will keep the pages turning. They will do the same with Unmarked by Kami Garcia ($18.00, Little Brown Books for Young Readers), her eagerly anticipated sequel to “Unbreakable”, a novel leading off her “Beautiful Creatures” serials that was published in fifty countries and translated into 36 languages! In the sequal, Kennedy Waters lives in a world where vengeance spirits kill, ghosts keep secrets, and a demon walks among us—one she accidently set free.  Now she and the other Legion members have to hunt him down. They are on the run, outcasts who each possess a unique skill. This one is a powerful fantasy like the first.

Novels, Novels, Novels

Jay Brandon has written a novel that taps into the belief that the U.S. is actually run by a secretive group and the result is a lot of fun to read. In Shadow Knight’s Mate ($16.95, Wings Press, softcover). After all, he’s written fifteen previous novels! In this one, Jack Driscoll is a member of a shadowy group known as The Circle. Its members have stealthily shaped America’s foreign and domestic policies for more than two centuries even though they do not hope office, nor are famed corporate leaders. They operate through suggestion and subtle influence, but now the Circle has been broken as the nation comes under a bizarre nanotech attack and the question is from whom? And what will be the outcome? 

By the Breath of the People, Gil Bean makes his debut with part one of “The Last River series” ($19.99, Langdon Street Press, softcover). It is a meticulously research work of fiction that intertwines the stories of two men living on the same land three centuries apart. One is a young Lenape Indian coming of age as his people are being driven from their native lands by European settles. The other is a father and grandfather building a retreat for his family on a bluff high above the river. Though they come from very different backgrounds and times, the two men are connected by the land of the Delaware River Valley. This is deeply felt history as lived by the people who call the land home. I have lived in the area where the Leni Lenape Indians lived and some of the major roads of my home were formerly trails they blazed, so I felt a special attachment to the novel.

Lawyers seem to have a particular knack for writing fiction. In the case of Larry S. Kaplan, a practicing trial attorney since 1975 and author of When the Past Came Calling ($10.56, available from Amazon.com and as an ebook) his novel begins in 1989 and a key government scientists has gone missing. He has made a genetic discovery that turns Darwinism on its ear and could pose a threat to world security should it land in the wrong hands. Personal injury lawer, David Miller, is the FBI’s unlikely recruit to help solve the disappearance. When he was just 16, he had falling in love with a girl whose father is the FBI’s prime suspect, a cult leader named Philip Montgomery, but his trail has gone cold. The FBI wants to know what David can recall of the girl and his bizarre father. As he delves into old memories, revising people and places left behind long ago, a new riddle confronts him and it involves the assassination of JFK and his girlfriend’s conviction that Lee Harvey Oswald wasn’t acting alone. Ah, circles within circles and sure to please.

Lee Kronert is a chiropractor and a math teacher as well as an advocate for divorced men’s rights. When he isn’t tend to those other things, he writes and his two latest—yes, two—novels published by WestBow Press, a division of Thomas Nelson, are Don’t Blame the Messenger ($13.95, softcover) and Mental Cruelty ($19.95, softover). In his fictional narratives, he merges fact and fiction to paint a realistic picture of the controversial educational and judicial systems with which we all must cope. In the former novel, he taps his experiences as a teacher to take on school policies, state Department of Education leadership, bullying, and his view that a teacher’s tenure should be maintained. If these issues ring a bell with you, this might be a novel to read. In the latter, Kronert uses his characters to relay the turmoil he experienced as his marriage dissolved into a painful divorce. Through the life of his main character, he speaks out on behalf of all fathers in opposition to the legal system. I tend to take a pass on novels that have an agenda, but I admire the author’s hard work in the writing of these two novels.

The Life We Bury by Allen Eskens ($15.95, Seventh Street Books, softcover) is a very creative idea involving Joe Talbert who has been given a writing assignment for an English class. He is to interview and write a brief biography of a stranger and, with deadlines looming, he visits a nearby nursing home to find a willing subject. There he meets Carl Iverson, a dying Vietnam veteran—and a convicted murderer! With only a few months to live, he has been medically paroled to the nursing home after spending thirty years in prison for the crimes of rape and murder. As Joe writers about Carl’s life, especially his valor in Vietnam, he cannot reconcile the heroism with the despicable acts that followed. And Joe has his own problems at home as he unravels the story of Carl’s conviction, but by the time he discovers the truth, it is too late to escape the fallout. This is a very compelling novel and I recommend it.

That’s it for October! You’ve got November and December to pick out some great books to give as gifts. Tell your family, friends and coworkers about Bookviews.com so they can find the perfect book for someone special or for themselves! And come back in November.

Bookviews - November 2014

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By Alan Caruba

My Picks of the Month

If you have been having problems figuring out what is going on in Syria, then I recommend you read Inside Syria: The Backstory of Their Civil War and What the World Can Expect by Reese Erlich ($25.00, Prometheus Books).  What began as a civil war to remove Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian dictator and son of the previous one, turned into conflict that pitted a number of different groups against one another and against ISIS, an offshoot of al Qaeda that has since seized a swath of northern Syria and Iraq, declaring itself the Islamic State. Erlich has reported from the Middle East for many years and knows all those involved. He provides a useful history of events that began with the collapse of the Ottoman Empire after World War I and the subsequent creation of Syria, Iraq and Lebanon as England and France divided up the area as colonial possession only nominally ruled by local sheiks. The Syrian people, largely secular, have been caught in between the Assad forces that those seeking to oust him. The result has been a bloodbath in which some 900,000 have died and two million or more have fled Syria to neighboring nations. Naturally, powers like Russia and Iran have wanted to play a role, supporting Assad, while the U.S. lined up with the free Syrian forces. While Erlich brings politically liberal point of view to the text, he does so while also providing a useful explanation of what is occurring and why.

November is a political month thanks to the midterm elections, so I am happy to report that there’s a book for conservatives—women in particular—by Miriam Weaver and Amy Jo Clark, Right for a Reason: Life, Liberty, and a Crapload of Common Sense ($26.95, Sentinel, an imprint of the Penguin Group) that puts aside the usual ultra-serious examination of the differences between conservatives and liberals and defends conservatism with a heaping of humor and straight talk. In that regard it is very refreshing. The authors started a website, ChicksontheRight.com in 2009 and it became a very popular site for all the issues that conservatives grapple with. The authors are unapologetic about believing that America is an exceptional nation, unhappy with the way schools and universities preach a liberal doctrine replete with political correctness. They don’t look at people in terms of their race or gender and have a problem with those who do. It’s a relatively short book, but a breath of fresh air and a reminder of the values that conservatives hold despite the lies told about them as bigots, waging “a war on women”, and other inanities that are repeated endlessly in the media.

We tend to take for granted the fiction that has transformed America by their impact on the generations that have read them. In The Republic of Imagination: America in Three Books Azar Nafisi examines her favorites, Mark Twain’s “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn”, Sinclair Lewis’s “Babbitt”, Carson McCuller’s “The Heart is a Lonely Hunter”, plus—despite the book’s title—James Baldwin’s “Another Country.”  Nafisi became famous a decade ago when her book, “Reading Lolita in Tehran” was published. She told how, despite Iranian morality squads and even executions, she taught American literature to her sometimes skeptical students in iran. The book became a bestseller with a million copies in print. She became an American citizen in 2008 and is now a fellow at Johns Hopkins University of Advanced International Studies. This is a woman who has deeply pondered what it means to be an America? Why are the values of American art, music, and literature so evidently at odds with the nation’s politics? Is America founded as much on heartbreak as on hope? Blending memoir and polemic with close readings of the books she has selected, she seeks answers to those any a host of other questions. In doing so she has written a book that invites the reader into the “Republic of the Imagination”, a country that has no borders, one in which the real villain is conformity, and the only passport to entry is a free mind and a willingness to dream.

I have seen many cookbooks over the years and have wondered why few. If any, were written exclusively for men who like to cook or want to learn how. Tastosterone: The Best Cookbook for Men by Debra Levy Picard ($39.95/$14.99, hardcover and Kindle, DLP Enterprises) is not only filled with lots of delicious recipes, but also the kind of instructions that cookbook authors tend to assume the reader already knows. I can’t say this is “the best”, but I can say, given its specific audience of readers—men—it surely fulfills its mission. It does not assume that the recipes are super simple to prepare or that men would not be interested in a wide variety of dishes to tempt the palate. Each one comes with a shopping list of elements needed to prepare dishes ranging from lasagna to veal Milanese. Each recipe comes with estimated time of preparation and how many servings it provides; good, useful information. This would make a great Christmas gift for the man who wants to enjoy cooking and baking.

Throughout the year Bookviews receives books that don’t fit into any category and most surely Jane Austen Cover to Cover: 200 Years of Classic Covers ($24.95, Quirk Books) fits that description. Margaret C. Sullivan loves everything Austen and is the founder of AustenBlog.com and has authored “The Jane Austen Handbook.” This book is filled with the cover art of her books from the years, 1811 to 1818 when she was published. When she died suddenly in 1817 her work almost slipped into obscurity, but publisher Richard Brankley recognized that there was still an audience for it. Since then publishers have worked overtime to produce editions of her novels and film adaptations have introduced it to new generations. If you are one of those fans or know someone who is, this book would make an idea Christmas gift.

Memoirs and Autobiographies


Those of us who grew up enjoying “Happy Days” on television, will especially enjoy Anson Williams delightful autobiography, Singing to a Bulldog ($14.99, Reader’s Digest). I have read many autobiographies, but rarely with the enjoyment of Williams’. Throughout the book he tells us of the advice he received as a young boy from an older African-American worker, Willie, in a department store where they both swept the floors. His parents were an unhappy argumentative couple who he left behind at an early age, harboring a dream of becoming an actor and singer. Along the way to the fame he would achieve, it was Willie’s advice that was a constant guide to his behavior, advising him to pursue his dreams, remain humble, and to give back to others as his success would permit over the years. In addition to his years on “Happy Days” he would become a successful director, writer, producer and entrepreneur. He would also meet some of the most famous people in show business and others like Ronald Reagan. Every page is filled with the events and personalities that helped him and his appreciation for them, as well as the friendships he enjoyed with his fellow “Happy Days” performers. Married with five daughters, this is a life well lived and an inspiration to the readers of his autobiography.

As this is written, a Missouri police officer who killed a young, black man in self-defense has endured a firestorm of attacks that have also generated riots in Ferguson. In time the facts will exonerate him and Michael Cover’s memoir Behind the Badge: A Policeman’s Legacy ($18.99, self-published, softcover) of his 24 years as a police officer in Southern California provides an excellent insight to the reality of being a police officer, one who must constantly operate in the midst of uncertainty, deal with gangs, the mentally deranged, and the drug crazed. They face knives, chemicals, and betrayal on the job as they daily fight criminals, bureaucracy, and, as we have seen, negative stereotypes. I have known a number of police officers and to a man (or woman) they go into the profession with a desire to help people. His book is well worth reading, particularly in a time when police officers now find themselves under attack by Islamic fanatics in addition to the others that would harm them.

The criminal world is one which we all live, fearful of becoming its victims, and Katarina Rosenblatt, Ph.D., tells of her horrendous youth and survival of having been lured into child prostitution as part of a sex trade that exists in the shadows of society. Recruited while staying with her family at a hotel in Miami Beach, she was already a lonely and abused young girl who simply yearned to be loved. For years afterward, she endured a cycle of false friendships, threats, drugs, and violence. As she points out, this could happen to any child. She tells her story in Stolen ($14.95, Revell, softcover) and was saved after she heard Billy Graham preach that God would never forsake her. She escaped her fate and went on to earn a Ph.D. in conflict analysis and resolutions, and a law degree in intercultural human rights. Today she works with law enforcement agencies that include the FBI and Homeland Security as she focuses on the prevention and rescuing of the victims of the sexual slave trade. This memoir is well worth reading.

Reading History

I love reading history and, in particular, American history. While we are all familiar with the names of the Founding Fathers, Washington, Jefferson, Hamilton, Monroe and Madison, one man who played an extraordinary role in defending the Constitution is finally given his rightful honors in Harlow Giles Unger’s book, John Marshall: The Chief Justice Who Save the Nation ($27.99, Da Capo Press). Rarely mentioned in the history books that are used in our schools, Marshall’s life is a reflection of the turmoil that accompanied the Revolution in which he fought with distinction, followed by the his biggest battle, to protect and assert the role of the federal government and the Constitution that defined its powers and limits. He begins with the death of George Washington in 1800, the man who had led the fledgling nation through the long Revolution and then with two terms as its first President. As Unger says of the young Union, “they lost their way.” Indeed, “Chaos engulfed the land as surviving Founding Fathers…turned on each other as they clawed at Washington’s fallen mantle.” That’s the dramatic beginning of a book that will give you a very different view of the men we hold in such great honor because with the exception of those who clung closely to the Constitution, others like Jefferson were so power-hungry, they would have tossed it overboard if Marshall had not been appointed Chief Justice by John Adams who followed Washington as President. The Supreme Court rendered decisions in the nation’s earliest years that defined the powers of the federal government and those of the states. It protected contracts. And, what Marshall feared came true; the southern states declared secession and a brutal Civil War threatened the republic. Thanks in great part to Marshall and his Court, the Constitution sustains the oldest system of self-government in the history of man. This is a great book that I heartily recommend to everyone.

Thomas Jefferson is one of the nation’s iconic founders and while there have been many books about his life, M. Andrew Holowchak has written Thomas Jefferson: Uncovering His Unique Philosophy and Vision ($26.00/$12.99, Prometheus Books, hardcover and Ebook), delving deeply into Jefferson’s writings to reveal an intensely curious Enlightenment thinker with a well-constructed, people-sympathetic, and consistent philosophy. Holowchak has written a number of other books about Jefferson and his knowledge of the man is amply on display as he examines Jefferson who was himself greatly influenced by Francis Bacon, Isaac Newton, and John Locke. This book looks at Jefferson’s views on human nature, morality, education, and the liberalism he brought to bear in his service to the nation. Jefferson was most surely a man of letters and his gifted writings helped shape the new nation.

I particularly enjoy reading about people who changed history because of a dream they had and most certainly that describes Golda Meir, one of the pioneers of the state of Israel and one of its prime ministers. Ann Atkins has written a very readable biography, Golda Meir--True Grit, ($14.95, Flash History Press, softcover) of this remarkable woman who, from very early in her life, concluded that the Zionist dream of a nation where Jews could be free of the prejudice and oppression they faced in the world, could be made a reality. She was a woman of remarkable capabilities who earned the respect of all who heard her speak or dealt with her. Not only did she help bring about the creation of Israel in 1947, she was instrumental in securing the funds needed to defend it and for years after she held a number of key roles. She is an inspiration and I would surely recommend this autobiography to anyone who wants to learn about her and Israel.

For those of the era in which Playboy magazine, which debuted in 1953, became an empire of Playboy clubs around the U.S. and the world, Playboy on Stage: A History of the World’s Sexiest Nightclubs by Patty Farmer with contributions by Will Friedwald ($24.95, Beaufort Books) is a special treat, especially like myself, who can recall visiting the clubs and being entertained by some of the greatest musical and comedic talent of those days. At the height of their popularity in the mid-1960s and early 1970s, the clubs were collectively the largest employers of talent in the nation. To his credit, Hugh Hefner and his staff were colorblind welcoming African American starts and furthering both civil rights and gender equality. The original club was in Chicago, but it was soon joined by venues in Miami, New Orleans and New York, and other global cities. Who could ever forget the lovely “bunnies” that served food and drinks? Not me. The book tells the story of clubs in the words of many of the artists, musicians, singers, and comedians, as well as those behind the scene. This is history that is, dare I say, very entertaining.

Food for the Mind and Body

My Mother taught gourmet cooking for three decades and wrote a number of cookbooks, so food was always a topic in our home where dinner was always an adventure. For others who enjoy the topic, I can recommend Best Food Writing 2014, edited by Holly Hughes who has edited this series ($15.00, Da Capo Press, softcover) since 2000. Some of its articles discuss the latest food trends, minus the hype, such as the trend toward spicy foods and the heightened popularity of bacon. Fifty writers have their say in this edition and there’s plenty to enjoy in it.

Like a lot of Americans, I had no idea what gluten was or that it caused thousands of children and adults the distress of health-related problems. Dr. Alessio Fasano is one of the world‘s leading authorities on gluten and celiac disease and he has written Gluten Freedom ($24.95, Wiley) that presents the facts about what gluten does, whom it affects, and what can be done for the millions of Americans, most of them undiagnosed, with celiac disease. Dr. Fasano is the founder and director of the Center for Celiac Research at Massachusetts General Hospital and a visiting professor of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School. He notes that gluten intolerance hadn't even identified as little as twenty years ago, nor recognized by either the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services or the National Institute of Health. “We’ve made a lot of progress in the last ten years,” writes Dr. Fasano.  His book provides a clear, concise roadmap for understanding why gluten does what it does and what can be done about it. Celiac disease is a genetic disorder affecting children and adults; even the slightest bit of gluten can set off an autoimmune reaction; one that can eventually lead to the complete destruction of part of the small intestine. If you suspect you or someone you know might have Celiac disease, this is definitely the book to read.

Sex, Love and DNA: What Molecular Biology Teaches Us About Being Human($17.77, softcover/$9.99 Kindle, Olingo Press, Foster City, CA)  is one of those titles that is hard to resist even it may sound a bit intimidating. Written by Peter Schattner, a member of the Biomolecular Engineering Department at the University of California, Santa Cruz, it is written for non-scientists. Its chapters focus on age-old questions such as “What is Love?”, “What is Sex?”, and “What Makes Some People So Smart?”  This is what is often called popular science and we are fortunate that this particular science, as provided by Schattner, will astound and entertain you far more than any science fiction might. It is a fascinating journey into the biology of our cells as the author explains how proteins and DNA affect our lives. He should know. He is a scientist, educator and writer with thirty years’ experience in molecular biology, biomedical instrumentation, and physics. This book explores the mysteries of being human and I heartily recommend it.

Science Stuff

Richard Grossinger first published The Night Sky: Soul and Cosmos in 1981, updating it in 1988 and again this year ($29.95, North Atlantic Books, Berkeley, CA, softcover) and if you have an interest in astronomy, this massive 800-plus page volume will pretty much tell you everything you ever wanted to know. Where he found the time is a mystery given the fact that he has written more than twenty other books and edited eight others. Grossinger believes that “science is telling us half or less of what it is doing.”  He has devoted his life to investigating four main topics, medicine, cosmology, embryology, and consciousness. I would have been exhausted just investigating one of them! “The universe that science can’t get out is the university of our being, e.g., our basis as cosmic witnesses…”  So, if you have ever looked up at the night sky with its countless stars and wondered what was out there and how you relate to it this book will surely provide some profound answers.

Getting Down to Business

What is often forgotten about America and what makes it truly exceptional is the world of opportunity it offers to those willing to work hard to make their dreams come true. That is the message of Bill McDermott’s Winners Dream: A Journey from Corner Store to Corner Office, written with Joanne Gordon ($28.00. Simon and Schuster). These days McDermott is the CEO of SAP, the largest business software company in the world. It’s a long way from working-class Long Island where he had traded three hourly-wage jobs to work at a corner deli. When its owner decided to sell the story, McDermott was still in high school, but he bought it with a $7,000 loan, learning how to serve customers, outshine competitors, and growing his small business. Using the deli’s profits to pay for college, he moved on to selling copiers door-to-door in New York City for Xerox in the 1980s. Not surprisingly he became a top salesman and Xerox’s youngest ever corporate officer. SAP was a languishing unit and he was named its president. He would lead it to nearly triple software revenues, outpace the company’s overall growth, and achieve market leadership. Inspiring? You bet! Worth reading? You bet!  

The world of business is filled with fascinating personalities and their stories. One of them was Albert Champion, the founder of AC Delco and Champion Spark Plug. He would become a tycoon investing in what was there the new and revolutionary auto industry when Chevrolet and General Motors, among others, were just beginning. Peter Joffre Nye has captured his life in The Fast Times of Albert Champion: From Record-Setting Racer to Dashing Tycoon, an Untold Story of Speed, Success, and Betrayal ($26.00 Prometheus Books).  Champion rose from poverty in Paris to great wealth and fame in both his native France and the United States. As a bicycle racer, he set more than a hundred world records. He used his prize money to invest in an industry that would make the U.S. a world leader in automobile manufacturing. He also famous for many dalliances and his final love triangle resulted in his death under mysterious circumstances. This one is fun to read from start to finish.

No More Business as Usual by Chutisa and Steven Bowman ($24.99, Access Consciousness Publishing, softcover), a husband and wife team who currently advise more than 440 organizations a year, along with a thousand CEOs and board chairs at international companies, is definitely unusual because it departs from the usual books on the subject of business success. They describe it as a “paradigm-changing book that presents a system and tools for consciously generating different possibilities” to grow a business. They believe they have found the underlying reasons why leaders succeed and fail. In short, they believe that being able to see different possibilities instead of concentrating on what the competition is doing opens doors to success. I have seen comparable books on this topic, but this one has merit too.

Books About Christmas

This is the time of year when new editions and versions of Christmas-related books arrive. For a younger generation they provide their first introduction and for older generations they can be gifts to the younger that will be long remembered.

Penguin Books offers “classics” and this year they have five, all priced $16.00, that are a little library of Christmas classics. They are A Merry Christmas & Other Christmas Stories by Louisa May Alcott, The Night Before Christmas by Nikolai Gogol, The Nutcracker by E.T.A. Hoffman, Christmas at Thompson Hall & Other Christmas Stories by Anthony Trollope, and A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens. At 5 inches wide and seven-and-a-half long, they would be easy for a youngster to hold while reading and easy to stuff into a Christmas stocking. For anyone who loves this holiday, they are a small treasure.

A Christmas Carol has also been published by Running Press, a member of the Perseus Group under its “Steampunk” imprint ($18.95). It also includes “A Christmas Tree” and “The Story of the Goblins Who Stole a Sexton.” This edition is beautifully illustrated by Zdenko Basic. It would make an excellent gift for anyone of any age, but the younger reader in particular will enjoy it. From Carlo Devito comes Inventing Scrooge: The Incredible True Story Behind Dicken’s Legendary A Christmas Carol ($22.99, Cider Mill Press). Devito has delved into the story of the classic from when it was conceived by Dickens on a train ride to Manchester in October 1843. He would write to his wife, “I can never write with effect…until I have become so excited with my subject that I cannot leave off.”  That’s a good description of the way this now classic Christmas tale grips a new reader of it. The literary story behind it is explored and Devito says he has uncovered the true identity of Ebenezer Scrooge. Indeed, the Carol is highly autobiographical, utilizing his youth and his family’s earliest travails.

A parent’s crazed efforts to prove to his 4-year-old that Santa is real is the crux of a curious story, Real Santa by William Hazelgrove ($29.95, hardcover; $16.95 softcover, $7.99 Ebook,  Koehlerbooks) George Kronenfelt is an unemployed engineer who is intent on keeping his daughter’s belief in Santa intact. When she tells him that the only way she will believe in Santa is if she can videotape him and post it to YouTube. George realizes he must become the real Santa and from then on we are entertained by his efforts to find reindeer, hire a broken down movie director, and fulfill his promise becomes a funny, heartwarming story of parenthood gone awry as keeping a child happy dominates everything else for a while.

Our Furry Friends

Over the years Lissa Warren has sent me many books as the director of publicity at Da Capo Books, a member of the Perseus Books Group. We’ve never met, but I most surely recognized her name as the author of The Good Luck Cat: How a Cat Saved a Family and a Family Saved a Cat ($21.95, Globe Pequot Press). She writes of Ting, a seven-pound Korat who was brought into the family as a companion for her father while his wife and daughter were at work. Ting quickly endeared herself. In late 2008 Lissa’s father died of a heart attack and less than a year later Ting was diagnosed with a potentially fatal heart condition. They made the decision to have a human pacemaker implanted, a rare procedure to be sure but they were determined not to lose their beloved gray cat. If the memoir ended with that, relating the grief and hope that they had all shared, it would be a testament to the close relationships we share with our pets, but Lissa received her own diagnosis, multiple sclerosis, There is no cure, but Lissa thinks Ting has taught her how to cope and has a remarkable, positive attitude. MS has taught her how others love her, including Ting. Anyone who shares their life with a family cat will absolutely love this book and be inspired by it.

Ask Anna: Advice for the Furry and Forlorn by Dean Koontz and his dog Anna ($20.00, Center Street) is a pure delight. Koontz is one of the most successful novelists of our time with more than 450 million copies in print, in 36 languages, 14 of which have been number one on the New York Times hardcover bestseller list. Anna is identified as an advice columnist for dogs. This is her first book. It is a marvelously funny, entertaining book that is further enhanced by the wonderful photos by Vincent Remini. Koontz introduces the book saying he had noticed that other dogs in the neighborhood seemed to consult with Anna, a Golden Retriever. Then he noticed she appeared to be having conversations as well with all sorts of people they encountered in their daily life. Then, if you can believe this, he discovered she had “secretly acquired her own computer and was engaged in the dispensing if advice online to all manner of species.” Suffice to say that the advice is worth a good nod of its worth on every page and more than a few laughs. A great gift for sure.

Novels, Novels, Novels

I like when a novelist can turn history into romance or drama and Renee Rosen does both in What the Lady Wants ($15.00, New American Library, softcover) with a story that begins with the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 which left the city in a state of destruction and depression. With typical American vigor, men of wealth saw a greater future for the city and began building department stores and other enterprises that led to the city hosting the World’s Fair in 1893. On the night of the fire, 17-year-old Delia Spencer watched as the flames consumed her beloved hometown and on that same night she met a man named Marshall Field. He built one of the department stores with the motto “Give the lady what she wants” and Delia fell in love with him. Behind the success and the opulent life style of his fellow entrepreneurs, Potter Palmer and George Pullman, their private lives were riddled with scandal and heartbreak. Delia and Marshall first turn to each other out of loneliness in their separately ruined marriages, but their love deepens and they stand together despite ostracism in an age of devastation and opportunity. Moving forward to modern times, the city is Dubai and it is the setting for Kay Tejani’s debut novel, Power and Passion, ($9.90, Global Impact Publishers, softcover). The novel encompasses three women living in a world of extreme wealth, filled with seven star hotels, man-made islands, and even glass-enclosed ski slopes. Sara Shariff had come to Dubai with her Muslim parents from Canada three years earlier and is working as the events coordinator for the Middle East section of the Special Olympics. Her fiancé, a non-Muslim real estate executive from the United Kingdom suggests she run a gala on a grand scale to raise money. She is joined by Joan Harrison who has been running successful charity events for years and by her best friend, Maryam. All is going well under a devastating lie changes the course of Sara’s life, putting everything she is doing in jeopardy. The author knows the city well, having lived there for many years. She brings an authenticity to the story that women readers in particular will enjoy.

Mysteries and suspense novels just keep coming. Here are some of the latest softcovers.

Dead Broke in Jarrett Creek—A Samuel Craddock Mystery by Terry Shames ($15.95, Seventh Street Books) After Jarrett Creek went bankrupt and Gary Dellmore, heir apparent to the main bank is dead, The retired Craddock is asked to return as police chief. Dellmore was known to have a roving eye despite his marriage and Craddock wonders whether a husband or father of those women thought he should be eliminated? What he discovers is that Dellmore had a record of bad business investments including the loan he took that brought about the bankruptcy. The more he digs, the uglier the story becomes. Also from Seventh Street Books, Black Karma: A White Ginger Novel by Thatcher Robinson ($15.95) in which Bai Jiang, San Francisco’s best known souxun—people finder—is hired to track down the mysterious Daniel Chen. Police inspector Kelly suspects Chen of being involved in a botched drug heist that resulted in the death of an officer. Bai has her own suspicions. She thinks the police just want to see Chen dead. In the course of the investigation, she finds herself caught between international intelligence agencies and merchants of war, who deal in death, drugs, and high-jacked information. There’s intrigue aplenty here.

My Sister’s Grave by Robert Dugoni ($15.95, Thomas & Mercer) will add to his fame as the author of bestselling legal thrillers. In this novel Dugoni returns with a powerful and poignant story of a homicide detective determined to avenge the murder of his beloved younger sister. Seattle cop Tracy Crosswhite was a high school chemistry teacher when her teenaged sister Sarah disappeared one night on her way home to their small town of Cedar Grove. A young ex-con, Edmund House, was quickly tried and convicted. Twenty years later and a career change later, Tracy has dedicated her life to questioning whether the right man went to jail. When Sarah’s remains are uncovered from a newly-exposed lake bed, new evidence seems to support Tracy’s theory. Somewhere in Cedar Grove is a killer. Blame: A Casey Portman Novel by Linda Rocker ($14.95, Wheatmark) is enhanced by the fact that Ms. Rocker worked more than 35 years as a trial lawyer and judge in Ohio’s highest trial court. Lawers turned novelists is becoming a trend, but it helps if they’re good at it and Ms. Rocker is as she tells the story of a young man who dies of a drug overdose and his mother is looking for someone to blame. She embarks on an obsessive crusade to destroy the pain doctor who gave her only son the pills the killed him. The Palm Beach Courthouse and an ambitious prosecutor become the tools of her revenge. Casey Portman, the judge’s bailiff, is dealing with her love for a handsome sheriff, but the ripple effects of the young man’s death and a trial of a respected neurosurgeon fills this story with plenty of twists and turns, that will keep you reading it. Lastly, Unrelenting Nightmare by Stan Yocum ($20.95, iUniverse) follows a virtual reality software developer on the cusp of industry domination as he navigates a deadly cat-and-mouse game with an international assassin hired by his fierce competitor. The author brings both his theatre background and extensive background in the business world in the writing of this novel as he tackles the prevalence of violence and the impact of virtual reality on youth.

That’s it for November! Come back next month as we look at some ideal books for Christmas gifts and just good reading. Tell your book-loving friends, family, and co-workers about Bookviews.com. Happy Thanksgiving!

Bookviews - December 2014

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By Alan Caruba

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

My Picks of the Month

Not long ago I read a book that predicted the decline of America as a world power. The author, a historian, made his case, but I was not convinced and, after reading Peter Zeihan’s new book, The Accidental Superpower: The Next Generation of American Preeminence and the Coming Global Disorder ($28.00, Twelve) I am encouraged to believe his hypothesis that America, by virtue of its geographic location and its tradition of welcoming and assimilating people who want freedom and liberty, will emerge safely from a period of disorder he sees ahead for the world. The entire book depends on his prediction of global disorder that will occur between 2015 and 2030. It seems to me that the world is always in some stage of disorder, but I agree that America’s unique location with two great oceans on its coasts and two allies, Canada and Mexico, north and south of us, plus our maritime and military superiority, bodes well for its future. Thanks to “fracking” we are going to be energy independent and we are the nation others send their money to keep it safe. Our agricultural sector is powerful as well. Zeihan writes of a future in which the world order in which the U.S. has provided since the end of WWII will be withdrawn. I find it hard to believe it will cease to ensure protection of the sea lanes vital to trade thanks to energy independence and the cost of ensuring world order—the absence of wars. The best that can be said is that reading his book provides a valuable insight to the way geography, location, determines in great part the history and the future of nations with whom we share this planet.

Another book takes a look at America in terms of its superpower status with a particular emphasis between it and Russia, the former Soviet Union with whom the U.S. had a long Cold War. By Marin Katusa, it is titled The Colder War: How the Global Energy Trade Slipped from America’s Grasp ($29.95, Wiley and Casey Research).  It would strongly recommend this book to anyone interested in and concerned about the future as we watch our influence and power drain away under the leadership of a President who has steadily worked to isolate the nation and withdraw from playing a role in international affairs. Katusa spells out why Russia’s Vladimir Putin has demonstrated a far greater grasp of geopolitical affairs than our President and what they means for ours and the world’s future. Russia has a wealth of energy reserves, coal, oil, and natural gas, much as the U.S. has, but the U.S. government has, for decades, suppressed its growth while the new Russian Federation under Putin’s leadership is expanding it. This book is so full of facts and insights regarding what is going on in the world’s energy sector that it is virtually essential to read it in order to understand what is happening and what may happen.

Alex Epstein makes The Moral Case for Fossil Fuels as the author of his book of the same name ($27.95, Penguin Random House), providing a world of facts about coal, oil and natural gas that destroys all the blather about “renewable” energy, wind and solar. The latter are unreliable and expensive. Nations that have spent a lot of money on them have also discovered that their electric bills soared while, at the same time, they had to maintain plants fueled by fossil fuels to back up the “Green” energy “farms.” Despite all the criticism fossil fuels have received, their emissions represent no threat to the environment because carbon dioxide plays virtually no role to influence the weather or climate. While it has increased in the atmosphere, the Earth has been in a cooling cycle for the past 19 years! Moreover, fossil fuels exist in abundance around the world despite claims we will run out of them. The current fracking boom in natural gas and oil will make the U.S. energy independent with no need to depend on expensive imported fossil fuels. The point Epstein makes is that fossil fuels have transformed our human life, freeing humanity from its dependence on muscle power while transforming agriculture and bringing about an industrial revolution that has extended human life while enhancing it with the power to live in comfort and travel with ease.

I would also recommend reading Anthony Bright-Paul’s excellent Climate for the Layman ($19.50, available via Amazon.com, softcover) which provides understanding and insights regarding the Earth’s climate in a way that a reader, with or without any knowledge of the science, can easily comprehend and enjoy. At a time when the UN has created a “Climate Fund” to redistribute billions from industrialized nations to those who have failed to take the steps to develop (often due to corrupt leaders) everyone needs to know what really constitutes the Earth’s climate and to grasp that it is the result of vast, powerful forces beyond anything humanity does. Our use of fossil fuels, for example, does not cause “global warming” and, indeed, the Earth is in a 19-year cooling cycle that reflects the Sun’s reduction in the amount of radiation it is producing, itself a natural cycle. The science is virtually self-evident. As the author says, “Once we accept that the Sun warms the Earth—that is to say the surfaces of this Planet—and that the surfaces warm the atmosphere by 'thermal contact' (1st law of thermodynamics) then we can see that all the arguments about carbon dioxide 'causing' warming of the atmosphere—trumpeted in so many of the Warmist websites—are irrelevant.” This book is distinguished by the author’s clarity and easy comprehension. I guarantee it will make you the smartest person in the room with the topic of climate comes up!

One of the greatest economists of our time was Dr. Milton Friedman, a 1976 Nobel Prize winner who taught at the University of Chicago for more than three decades. He was an advocate of the free market and known for his research on consumption analysis and monetary history and theory. Friedman died in 2006. My friend, Ben A. Cerruti, has worked in several aspects of our economy and has been active for two decades addressing various ballot issues in San Francisco. His website, www.arationaladvocate.com is always worth visiting. “It did not enter my mind at the time that writing my first letter to Milton Friedman in March 1992 would lead to continuing correspondence for over a decade.” Though Cerruti had been a registered representative for a major New York Stock Exchange firm and had received a BSEE degree from the University of California at Berkeley, he “had never attended a single class on the key subject of economics either in college or high school.” He had questions about the Federal Reserve and other related issues so he wrote to Dr. Friedman and he generously responded to Cerruti’s questions and thoughts. The happy result is Dear Milton Friedman: A Decade of Lessons from an Economics Master ($14.94, softcover, available from Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble and LULU), a collection of their exchange of letters. If economics is a mystery to you, I recommend reading this book. Friedman’s responses are an education in themselves. If you have wondered what makes capitalism different from socialism and why it has proven itself better at creating wealth anywhere it has been adopted, pick up What Adam Smith Knew: Moral Lessons on Capitalism from its Greatest Champions and Fiercest Opponents ($16.95, Encounter Books, softcover), edited and introduced by James R. Otteson.) We live in times in which even Communist China retains its political system, but has adopted capitalism and has, in three decades, risen to become a global economic power, For former Soviet Union failed because of its Communist economic system, but now competes as a major power in the energy marketplace. This book contains essays and excerpts by some of the top thinker on this important subject.

For anyone eho is concerned about identity theft  resulting from the vast hacking operations that acquire all manner of information about people, then I strong recommend you read Spam Nation: The Inside Story of Organized Cybercrime—From Global Epidemic to Your Front Door by cybersecurity expert, Brian Krebs ($24.99, Sourcebooks). You will learn about the criminal masterminds behnd some of the largest spam and hacker operations who are targeting you and your bank account. I am frankly surprised this book has not generated more coverage in the mainstream press and on TV news channels and other programs. Spam costs the U.S. an estimated $40 billion a year and 85% of products purchased through span are bought by your fellow Americans. These are operations that can take control of your computer to blast out spam and viruses to your contacts, can infiltrate your inbox through malware embedded in emails and can harvest usernames, passwords, online banking credentials, and other personal information. It can lock you out of Facebook, Twitter, and other social media. It can sell your account information on the digital black market. This may be the most important book you read this month.

As you might imagine, I think books make great gifts and some are ideally suited to become personal heirlooms that remains a part of the lives of those receiving them. I could not help but think this when I saw two of the latest books from the Folio Society, London. This publisher offers fiction and non-fiction classics with special attention to producing a handsome looking, beautifully illustrated book. For boys this year, a new edition of Treasure Island by Robert Lewis Stevenson ($84.95) is available and for girls there’s Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women ($74.99). A visit to Folio Society’s website will excite anyone who has a deep love of books and wants to pass it on to a child or friend, or add to one’s personal library. For nearly seventy years the Folio Society has been devoted to publishing books that are individual works of art; the kind that are passed on from generation to generation. There’s even a Folio 2015 Diary at $24.95 to keep track of important dates and events in the year ahead.

 
Every year for as long as I can recall, this is the month I recommend the latest annual edition of the World Almanac® and Book of Facts and 2015 is no exception ($13.99, softcover). Now available, it features the top ten news topics of 2014 as well as offbeat news stories that are entertaining. The editors chose the most controversial franchise sports team owners for the new edition and have included some useful health care statistics among its encyclopedic collection of data. The results of the 2014 midterm elections are also included. You are sure to enjoy sections such as “The World at a Glance” and “Time Capsule” which make their return. I know we’re all inclined to Google answers these days, but the World Almanac® and Book of Facts is a treasure of information at your fingertips that is always a good idea to keep handy.

Islam Examined

In September 2005, Fleming Rose, the editor of the Danish newspaper, Jyl-lands-Posten, commissioned and published a number of cartoons about Islam, prompted by his perceptions of self-censorship by the European media. One of the cartoons, by the artist Kurt Westergaard, depicted Mohammad wearing a bomb in his turban. Muslims are forbidden to depict their prophet in any fashion and the cartoon set off a violent international uproar in which Danish embassies were attack and 200 deaths were attributed to the protests. The story of that event is told by Rose in The Tyranny of Silence: How One Cartoon Ignited a Global Debate on the Future of Free Speech ($24.95, Cato Institute). “My personal view is that Americans are right,” he says in the first chapter. “Freedom and tolerance are, to me, two sides of the same coin, and both are under pressure.” Rose, who had worked in the former Soviet Union, understood how numbing the suppression of criticism and the squelching of free speech can be. “Taking offense has never been easier” says Rose and he believes it has become excessive. As a working journalist, he sees threats to free speech and the intimidation of reporters on the rise in Europe. Cato Institute is a libertarian think tank and its books are always stimulating on often on the cutting edge of events and issues.

Your Fatwa Does Not Apply Here: Untold Stories from the Fight Against Muslim Fundamentalism by Karima Bennoune ($16.95, W.W. Norton, softcover) demonstrates that, within Islam, there are many who find the Islamists as great an enemy as non-Muslims who feel threatened. The author is an international human rights lawyer, professor and activist who recalls the night that, during the Algerian “dark decade” of fundamentalist violence in the 1990s, banged on the door of her family’s home when she was a young girl. Her father was a professor who was an outspoken critic of both the Algerian government and the fundamentalists who opposed it. She grabbed a knife to protect him, but those banging on the door went away. For their safety they would leave their Algeria. Her book chronicles the lives of those who resisted the extremism despite direct threats at home and Western indifference from abroad. She interviewed 286 people of Muslim heritage from 26 nations. Their tales from the battle for tolerance, equality, and freedom are stunning and inspiring.  These are people whose homes and workplaces were hit by bombs, who lost friends, family and coworkers to the extremists. It is well worth reading.
 
There are 1.3 billion Muslims worldwide and many are decent, good people, but their silence encourages a faction of fanatical Islamism that is killing people with the intention of imposing Islam by terror on the world. James E. Horn is a retired U.S. diplomat who spent a decade in the Middle East and saw Islam up close. He has written Moslem Men Fear Women: Islam is Toxic for Females ($15.19, softcover, available from Amazon.com) that spells out how Islam confirms a virtual slave status on women, citing the Koran and other sources. You will learn about “honor killings” and other practices that will likely cause you to ask why this aspect of Islam is not better known. He wrote it as a warning to non-Muslim women who are considering marrying into the faith. It is quite stark and quite accurate.

Reading History

If I had to recommend a single book on the history of the United States I would unhesitatingly recommend A Patriot’s History of the United States by Larry Schweikart and Michael Allen. Its 10thanniversary edition has been published by Sentinel, an imprint of the Penguin Group of books ($25.00) and is 981 pages long. A softcover, it is a thick volume, but that just means it is filled with the kind of information you may not find in other histories that bring biases to bear on their interpretation of the nation’s great figures and the principles that created and sustained it. There is no question that America is truly exceptional, starting with the fact that we have the longest operative constitution of any other nation. The book does not shy from aspects of our history such as slavery, but puts it in the context of its times and reveals that many of the Founding Fathers wanted to abolish it, but could not because they needed the southern colonies to sign on to the creation of the nation. All the high spots of our history are there to be enjoyed. One can only express wonder, astonishment, and pride in the men who put their lives on the line for the idea of freedom, liberty, and a nation of laws.

A Christmas Far from Home: An Epic Tale of Courage and Survival During the Korean War is told by Stanley Weintraub ($26.95, Da Capo Press), a noted historian who has authored more than fifty books of history and biography, including Pearl Harbor Christmas. Anyone who enjoys reading history will find this a timely Christmas gift. He takes the reader back to just before Thanksgiving in 1950, five months into the Korean War, often called the forgotten war. Weintraub was an Army officer in the Korean War so he brings a personal knowledge of the daily challenges the U.S. servicemen faced. Indeed, what they faced in addition to the frigid winter was a numerically overwhelming and determined enemy. General MacArthur believed he could bring the war to a quick end but his strategy nearly resulted in disaster. The U.S. troops had pushed swiftly to the Yalu River with what seemed little resistance. On the other side of the river, however, were the forces of Red China and when they began to pour into North Korea that forced a long march to the coast in an escape led by Marines. It did not end until the last American servicemen were able to board a ship and weigh anchor on Christmas Eve. Ultimately the war would be a stalemate for an America that had won World War Two not long before. A ceasefire exists to this day. That 1950 December was filled with drama and great courage that makes for great reading.

One of the lesser known figures in the history of World War II was Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Secretary of the Treasury as well as a longtime personal friend of his. Peter Moreira has written a book about Morgenthau’s extraordinary contribution to the war effort by raising the billions needed to arm our military to fight the Nazis as well as the Japanese Empire. In The Jew Who Defeated Hitler: Henry Morgenthau Jr., FDR, and How We Won the War ($25.00, Prometheus Books) Moreira has written a biography that tells the story of his achievement during that challenge to freedom and the Nazi’s accompanying campaign of genocide. At a time when there was considerable anti-Semitism in America, Morgenthau, a Jew, was in a position to do what he could to respond to the Nazi challenge and that posed by the Japanese. What he did was mastermind a savings bond program that raised the millions needed to arm the American military, building the aircraft, tanks, and all other elements of battle. The author admits the title of the book is an over-statement, but it does point to the fact that Morgenthau was the right man in the right place at the right time. Ironically, he was a college dropout who gave little indication initially of his skills and his accomplishments, but he was widely recognized as a man of integrity who ensured the Department of Treasury was run with the highest standards of ethics and integrity. Anyone who is interested in this dramatic era of our history will find this book fills in a largely overlooked aspect of it, the way Americans bankrolled our military and aided our allies to resist the Nazis. In the wake of the Holocaust, the anti-Semitism did not entirely cease, but it did fade considerably from American life.

Parenthood

Adopting a child is a good option, but Mary Ostyn thinks the better prepared a woman is can make the process easier. That’s why she wrote Forever Mom: What to Expect When You’re Adopting ($16.99, Thomas Nelson, softcover). She married her high school sweetheart at age 19 and together they had four children by their eighth anniversary. Three years later they became aware of the needs of orphans all over the world and, in time, they adopted two boys from Korea and four girls from Ethiopia. In addition to her accounts of the experience she offers a range of advice that make adoption easier for everyone involved, citing the best reason to adopt—because you want to parent a child—to all the adjustments you should anticipate. The book has a religious orientation; Thomas Nelson is a Christian publisher, but the experiences she shares are well worth learning about. Coming in January is Adopting Older Children: A Practical Guide to Adopting and Parenting Children Over Age Four ($15.95, New Horizon Press, softcover) by Stephanie Bosco-Ruggiero, MA, a communications and research assistant for the National Center for Social Work, Gloria Russo-Wassell LMHC, a certified counselor and doctoral candidate in educational and development psychology, and Victor Gorza, Ph.D., LISW-S, a professor of Social Work at the Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences. With all those degrees between them they have collaborated to help anyone thinking about adopting one of the 200,000 children in the U.S. and more worldwide hoping to become part of a family. The book highlights the most significant challenges facing an older child including mental health, behavioral, and educational issues. The older adopted child may be coping with grief and a range of problems. The guide begins with advice on initiating the adoption process, explains the difference between infant and older child adoption, some of the obstacles one might encounter, and a full range of other advice to facilitate and respond to the entire process.

Just Be A Dad: Things My Father Never Told Me by George Cave, Ph.D. ($28.00, Tignor Publishing) is one of those books any man who is on the brink of being a first time father should read as well as one to help any man who is already experiencing fatherhood. It is filled with a richness of wisdom and reality. Dr. Cave begins with the view that it is impossible to be a good father if he is not a good husband. Thus, the model the father sets and his relationship with the mother is what their children learn is appropriate. A longtime psychologist, the author has great faith in the profession to help those who turn to psychotherapy to solve problems. It helped him mend his relationship with a former wife and to have a good relationship with their children and those she had in her new marriage. “Being a good father can be the most challenging thing a man will ever do,” says Dr. Cave and he believes it is critical to the kind of person his children will become. His book is filled with advice a new father might not get from others and all in one place between a front and back cover.

Our Furry Friends

For the cat lover in your life, there’s the classic The Fur Person by May Sarton ($13.95, W.W. Norton, softcover), an acclaimed poet, novelist, and memoirist who passed away in 1995. She tells the enchanting story of Tom Jones, a fearless independent Cat Around Town who, growing tired of his vagabond lifestyle decided that he should move in with Sarton and her companion in Cambridge, Massachusetts. There’s a reason this book continues to be published. It’s just so much fun to read!

For dog lovers, there’s Judy: The Unforgettable Story of a Dog Who Went to War and Became a True Hero by Danien Lewis ($24.99, Quercus). Judy gained fame as the only animal POW of World War II. An English Pointer, she was fearless and loyal, dragging men from the wreakage of a torpedoed ship, scavenging food to help feed the starving inmates of a hellish Japanese POW camp, or just by bringing hope to men living through the war’s darkest days. She was adored by the British, Australian, American and other Allied servicemen who fought alongside her. Boring in Shanghai, China, she soon became the mascot for a gunboat called the HMS Gnat. When the war brought out the ship was transferred to Singapore. She was invaluable for her ability to warn of Japanese air attacks long before the warplanes became visible or audible to the British crew. Based on interviews with the few living veterans who knew her and extensive archival research, her story will inspire any reader who loves our canine friends.

People Books

The Navy SEALS have been in the news of late, but little has been known of its beginning until Patrick K. O’Donnell wrote First SEALS: The Untold Story of the Forging of America’s Most Elite Unit ($25.99, Da Capo Press). Credited with some of the most perilous missions in the history of the Armed Forces, SEALS are the stuff of Hollywood films and now you can read about the real-life heroes who composed the group’s origins/ They include Jack Taylor, now a California dentist, Sterling Hayden who became a Hollywood star, and others. The SEAL acronym stands for Sea, Air, and Land , known as a maritime unit, the first swimmer commandos and warrior spies who were decades ahead of their time when they created the tactics, technology and philosophy that inspires today’s generation of SEALs. You will be inspired as well when you read this book.

A very different story is told  in Into the Black: The Inside Story of Metallica (1991-2014) by Paul Brannigan and Ian Winwood ($26.99, Da Capo Press). For the band, 1991 was a big milestone, its ten-year anniversary. In the years that followed, the group would battle criticism from the media, hits on its image as the leading “pop metal” band, and shaky rapport with the public that had brought it to fame. Last year Da Capo Press published volume one of the author’s two-part Metallica biography, “Birth School Metallica Death”, that chronicled the first decade. This volume delves deeper into the groups dealings with fans, fame, and competing banks.

Halfway Home, the story of her trip to Japan by Christine Mari Inzer, a 17 year old senior at Connecticut’s Darien High School, is described as “a graphic novel” for younger readers, ages 12 and up. It features not only her drawings but photos of her taken during the trip, so it is more a memoir or a story by someone who has lived every minute of it ($11.95, Naruhodo Press, softcover). Indeed, the introduction says it is the story of her summer in 2013 when she spent eight weeks in Japan visiting her grandparents and getting reacquainted with her birthplace. Her Japanese mother is married to an American. Suffice to say it will prove very entertaining to a young reader and particularly to Asian-American youth.

Novels, Novels, Novels

The Drum Tower by Farnoosh Moshiri ($25.95, Black Heron Press) is his fourth work of fiction and it has already won an award as well as being nominated for a PEN/Faulkner Award. It is a story narrated by a 16-year-old girl, depicting the fall of Drum Tower, the house of a family descended from generations of War Ministers to the rules of Iran. Peopled by interesting characters, it chronicles the early days of the Islamic Revolution that occurred in 1979 and overthrew the shah. We become witnesses to the competition of the competing factions and the rise of the Revolutionary Guard, along with chaos and murder in the streets of Tehran, as well as the arrests and executions of members of her family. In many ways, this provides a far more graphic look at what occurred than just a straight history as you join the narrator trapped in a labyrinth of family history and the turmoil of the revolution that affects current events. Superbly written, I am happy to recommend it.

Livingston Press is part of the University of West Alabama and over the years I have received some interesting fiction from them. The latest is A Light Like Ida Lupino by W.C. Bamberger ($30.00 hardcover, $17.95 softcover). The main character, Lincoln Heath, has done something unforgiveable and as the novel begins he has returned to the northern Michigan peninsula where the event occurred in order to live near his grandmother and help her struggle to keep her financially-troubled cherry orchard survive being gobbled up by upscale vintners or condo builders. It is not a pleasant place made moreso by the fact that many still living there recall what happened and despise Lincoln. He’s not looking for forgiveness, but to find a way to restore the emotional spectrum he has lost. Suffice to say this is not your usual story that has any predictability to it. As such readers will find themselves wanting to see how it unwinds. The same publisher has another novel, Dark Road, Dead End ($31.00 hardcover, $17.95 softcover) by Philip Ciofarri that looks at the trade in exotic and endangered species, a multi-billion dollar industry. Reportedly it is the world’s third largest organized crime after narcotics and arms running. The story is told through the eyes of Walter Morrison who works undercover for the U.S. Customs Service. It’s not long after he arrives in town that he sees evidence of wildlife smuggling. The wildlife is supplied to pet stores, private hunt clubs, wildlife safari parks and even “respectable” zoos. As he delves into it, someone at his own agency has put out the word about him, putting his life at risk. Here again, a novel provides considerable insight within the fictional context.

Those who enjoy historical novels will enjoy The Oblate’s Confession by William Peak ($25.99, Secant Publishing) that takes them back to the dark ages in England. A warrior gives his son to a monastery that rides the border between two rival Anglo-Saxon kingdoms and, growing up in a land wracked by war and plague, the boy learns of the oath that binds him to the church and which forces a cruel choice on him. To love one father, the one of his birth or the bishop for whom he prays daily, he must betray another, he is forced to make a decision that shatters his world and haunts him. History provides us with Little Miss Sure Shot: Annie Oakley’s World by Jeffrey Marshall ($8.95, available from Amazon.com, softcover and ebook edition). Famed as a star of Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show, she was catapulted to international fame in the late 1880s by virtue of her firearms skills. While Hollywood has portrayed her as a young woman in “Annie Get Your Gun”, she actually was a rather prim and religious woman with a 50-year marriage to Frank Butler. Her legend lives on to today and the reality portrayed in this novel will have you admiring her in this breezy, easy read.

For those who enjoy a traditional mystery, there’s E. Michael Helm’s Deadly Ruse: A Mac McClellan Mystery ($15.95, Seventh Street Books, softcover) that begins when Mac’s girlfriend, Kate Bell, thinks she has seen a ghost. Wes Harrison, Kate’s former boyfriend, supposedly perished twelve years earlier in a boating accident, but she is sure that the man she spotted in a crowded theatre lobby is Wes. Being a private investigator, Mac begins to look into what happened and what emerges is a story of drug deals and, when Mac and Kate barely escape a murder attempt, he knows he’s on the right track. It is a very entertaining, tightly written story.

That’s it for December. As we bid 2014 goodbye, we can look forward to a new year filled with great fiction and non-fiction. Bookviews.com is the place to visit each month to learn about them. Tell your book loving friends, family and coworkers. And come back in January!
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