Sunday, July 28, 2013

Bookviews - August 2013

By Alan Caruba

My Picks of the Month

David Horowitz, founder of FrontPageMag.com and the child of two members of the Communist Party, longtime progressive, had an epiphany when a friend of his was killed by the Black Panthers, masquerading as the New Left in the 1970s. Since then he has devoted his life to warning against the deadly agenda of communism and exposing the lies of the progressives whose agenda has always been the destruction of American values. His latest book, The Black Book of the American Left, ($27.99, Encounter Books) is a collection of his writings and speeches since then and provides alarming insights to the way communism in Russia and elsewhere has resulted in the murder of tens of millions. Its strength is in its revelations of how the Left has worked to undermine the nation to fulfill its utopian fantasies and its weakness is that it repeats itself over the course of nearly 400 pages. As a guide to the Left, it is invaluable, filled with many insights along with the facts he cites.

For those with a passion for the nation and its system of governance, there’s Donald J. Devine’s America’s Way Back: Reclaiming Freedom, Tradition, and Constitution ($29.95, ISI Books). Devine has spent most of his life as an academic, a professor at the University of Maryland and at Bellevue University, teaching governance and politics. In the 1980’s Ronald Reagan tapped him to be the Director of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management in his first term. He trimmed 100,000 jobs and saved more than $6 billion by reducing generous benefits. He has written eight books and this one examines the tensions between freedom and the need for a system that does not allow too much power to be acquired by any element of the U.S. government. He discusses the role of tradition including the influence of Judeo-Christian values in governance. The U.S. Constitution is the oldest active one and a remarkable instrument. The book is filled with lots of information and insights that apply to the nation’s present problems and challenges. An interesting corollary is Radley Balko’s Rise of the Warrior Cop: The Militarization of America’s Police Forces ($27.99, Public Affairs) which was on display in the wake of the Boston Marathon bombing when SWAT teams went house to house in one neighborhood to find the terrorist who was still at large. What is generally unknown, however, is that such teams “violently smash into private homes more than a hundred times per day” and police departments across the nation now have armored personnel carriers designed for use on the battlefield, while others have helicopters, tanks, and Humvees, as well as military-grade weapons. It is a different mindset from daily police work and is coming to dominate law enforcement. This is one of those books that raises important questions and, as you read it, some scary ones.

In this scary economy, many homeowners are facing foreclosure and if that is you or someone you know, The Foreclosure Phenomenon: How to Defend Your Home from an Impending Foreclosure ($24.99, Telemachus Press, softcover) by Joaquin F. Benitez who experienced losing his home. His is an inspiring story of an immigrant who subsequently earned a diploma in civil engineering and his book is intended to help anyone with a step-by-step guide to help save one’s home, strategies to deal with three different types of financial situation, how to calculate property value, and how to address the emotional, physical, and mental toll of a foreclosure proceeding. He counsels, too, that even a loss can free one from the burden that is no longer affordable and open a door to a new life.

Some books are just extraordinary works of art in addition to their texts. From the world of science comes Invisible Worlds: Exploring Microcosms by Julie Coquart ($49.95, H.F. Ullmann) which is a large format book filled with 99 extraordinary photos of the tiniest things on Earth. It is microphotography devoted to nature, biology, chemistry, medicine, mineralogy, and textiles, all in full color, and all revealing the astonishing way everything is designed to function from the dental enamel coating your teeth to the Penicillin that prevents the spread of certain bacteria or the Salmonella bacteria we call food poisoning. The simplest handful of sand takes on amazing shapes and colors. Clearly, this book is not everyone’s cup of tea, but for those who love science and see into the microscopic world around them, this book would make a great birthday or holiday gift.  

Learning Las Vegas: Portrait of a Northern New Mexican Place by Elizabeth Barlow Rogers ($39.95, Museum of New Mexico Press and Foundation of Landscape Studies) is devoted to “The other Las Vegas”, a town that is seven hundred miles from the one in Nevada, but they might as well be on different planets. It is a small town that the author, the founding president of the Central Park Conservancy and the Foundation for Landscape Studies, has chosen in order to examine “the meaning of place in human life.” You surely do not have to be from this town to appreciate its streetscape, its architecture, and public places, such as the plaza that is a venue for numerous events. Her text is enhanced by her many photos. The town’s location made it an important stop on the Santa Fe Trail and today it is on the National Register of Historic Places. Anyone with an interest in architecture, landscapes, and how location leaves its mark on those who live in a particular place will thoroughly enjoy “learning” that Las Vegas was a Wild West outlaw Mecca, a major trading center, a railroad hub and a film location that epitomizes a vanished America, but remains home to its residents to this day. Serendipitously, the University of Oklahoma Press is set to publish New Mexico: A History by three historians ($26.95) that traces it from the earliest days of Spanish exploration and settlement. Those interested in the West will find a treasure of new books at www.oupress.com. All manner of books on topics that reflect is history and culture can be found there.

Our Emotional Lives



Getting a handle on our emotions is often a lifelong effort. It is the reason there are so many books providing advice on how to deal with them. Over at New Horizon Press they make it a specialty. Just out this month is Smart Relationships: How Successful Women Can Find True Love by LeslieBeth Wish, ($14.95, softcover) is written for women who have achieved success in their careers but find that their romantic relationships do not endure. Many distrust their judgment about men or fear the toll of breakups. A psychologist with more than 35 years of experience, the author teaches women the structure of intimate relationships and how to break free of past failures. She explores self-sabotaging behavior and provides strategies to take charge of their love and workplace relationship decisions as she explores fundamental needs to feel safe and loved. I have no doubt this book will prove very helpful.
 
Ten Steps to Relieve Anxiety: Refocus, Relax and Enjoy Life by H. Michael Zal ($14.95, softcover) is not officially due out until October, but if you have problems with anxiety you might want to make a note to yourself to pick up a copy. I have been a lifelong worrier and I suspect I inherited the trait. It has never incapacitated me and has often protected me from making decisions that would likely not turned out well. There are those, estimated at 6.8 million Americans who suffer from Generalized Anxiety Disorder and Dr. Zal, a psychiatrist for the past forty years and a clinical professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, has all the credentials and experience to write about the subject. The good news, then, is that you are not alone and the better news is that this book provides ten easy-to-follow steps to achieve a less stressful, calmer life.



On a theme similar to “Smart Relationships”, Joyce M. Roche with Alexander Kopelman have written The Empress Has No Clothes: Conquering Self-Doubt to Embrace Success ($18.95, BK Berrett-Koehler Publishers, softcover) for women who, despite their success, feel like imposters. Ms. Roche rose from humble circumstances to earn an Ivy League MBA and serve in top executive positions including president of Carson Products Company, now a part of L’Oreal. She was the first female African-American vice president of Avon Products where she led global marketing and, in 2006, Black Enterprise Magazine hailed her smong “Women of Power.” Despite this, she writes that she couldn’t help feeling like a fraud even though she clearly was not. In this book she shares her struggle with what she calls the “imposter syndrome” and offers advice and coping strategies based on her experiences and those of other high-achieving leaders who also suffered from it. To know that others feel this way and to learn how to overcome it makes this a very valuable book.

Acrobaddict by Joe Putignano ($17.95, Central Recovery Press, softcover) is the autobiography of a gifted athlete who abandoned his Olympic dreams when he fell down the hole that heroin digs for those who fall under its grip. He loved both gymnastics and heroin. The latter took him from the U.S. Olympic Training Center to homeless shelters. It is a harrowing tale with a powerful narrative that tells how the same energy, obsession and dedication that can create an Olympic athlete can detour into being a drug addict. This is his story of recovery and like so many books is a cautionary tale that has a happy ending, but which almost ended his life. It makes its official debut in September. For a look into an even darker aspect of mental disorder, Mary Papenfuss has written Killer Dads: The Twisted Drives that Compel Fathers to Murder their Own Kids ($19.00, Prometheus Books, softcover). This is one of the most horrific of crimes and the veteran journalist explores five examples of “family annihilators” that reflects the dark trajectory of machismo in economically stressful times. It is based on some fifty in-depth interviews of victim’s friends and family, and the profiles by researchers of these “killer dads” driven to kill their children by a sense of failure and their distorted egos. There is much more in here and none of it makes for easy reading. For those who want to learn more about this crime, it is an excellent work of research.

My friend, Dr. Alma Bond, a psychiatrist, has authored a series of “On the Couch” books that examine the lives of the famous and the fictional, from opera singer Maria Callas to Lady MacBeth. She always brings a lifetime of knowledge and experience to her books. Coming in October is one that is sure to interest the fans of the movie icon, Marilyn Monroe. Many books have been written about her, but Marilyn Monroe on the Couch ($23.95, Bancroft Press) provides insights to the actress who had talent beyond her luminous beauty and yet remained so fragile despite her fame. Dr. Bond focuses on her fame from the 1950s and 60s, a time in which she sought the help of a Manhattan psychoanalyst to cope. It is an illuminating book in ways that others sought to achieve, but often missed.

Reading History

I love reading history and recommend it as the best way to understand the present. Having lived through the period of the civil rights movement, I found William P. Jones The March on Washington: Jobs, Freedom, and the Forgotten History of Civil Rights ($26.95, W.W. Norton) especially interesting, in part because I heard Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. speak at a nearby college and had the opportunity to go backstage and meet him for a short chat. On August 28, 1963, nearly a quarter million people were in Washington, D.C. to demand “Jobs and Freedom” at a rally is best remembered for his speech “I Have a Dream.” Few recall that his was the last of ten speeches devoted to ending racial segregation and discrimination in the South, but also to achieve equality nationwide and the opportunity to have quality education, affordable housing, and jobs with a living wage. Even less known was that the rally was the result of grassroots activism by organized labor and the Socialist Party. A professor of history at the University of Wisconsin, the author restores the march to its proper context as he relates the 25-year struggle that preceded it.  This book is an important contribution to the history of those times and the effort that began in the 1940s by men like A. Philip Randolph, the leader of the union, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. The civil rights movement in 1963 had been a long time coming. The 1960s were a turbulent time and they are captured here in a book that is well worth reading.

A much earlier period in time is the subject of Fatal Rivaltry: Flodden, 1513—Henry VIII and James IV, and the Decisive Battle for Renaissance Britain by George Goodwin ($29.95, W.W. Norton). It was a time of great kings, colorful queens, conniving courtiers, and political popes; a time of extraordinary wealth in a period when the power of the Renaissance infused the lives of those in power. Set against each other was England’s Henry VII and Scotland’s James IV, suspected of having murdered his own father. His marriage to a Tudor princess brought a tenuous peace with England after five centuries of war, but his brother-in-law Henry VII had plans of his own which lead to a battle that established England’s political domination of Scotland for the next five hundred years.  The author ably captures the many aspects of those tumultuous years, marked by shifting alliances with kings, popes, and emperors, ultimately erupting into bloodshed that ushered in a new technological, economic and geopolitical era.

Music, Music, Music

My least favorite form of music is “heavy metal” perhaps because I grew up in a period that transitioned from the “crooners” to rock’n roll. I can still recall how an older generation thought Elvis Presley marked the end of western civilization. Even so, the music was more melodic than today’s. That said, there are several books that address the music with which many have grown up and enjoy.

Ministry: The Lost Gospels According to Al Jourgensen ($26.99, Da Capo Press), a musician who earned the praise of Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails, Corey Taylor of Slipnot, and others as their musical influence. Jourgensen, with Jon Wiederhorn, recounts his rise to infamy within the tumultuous ranks of the rock industry amidst the non-stop use of heroin, cocaine, crack and booze, along of course with the groupies. This is a cautionary autobiography in which he relates his Cuban roots, growing up in Chicago, and his friendships with Beat Generation icons William S. Burroughs and Timothy Leary. He created the band called Ministry, has been a producer, songwriter, vocalist and guitarist. Now much older and living in El Paso, Texas, his book is more about what not to do with one’s life than one misspent in so many ways.

Da Capo Press has two other music-related books out as well. Queens of Noise: The Real Story of the Runaways by Evelyn McDonnell ($25.99), an all-girl punk answer to Led Zeppelin, all teenagers that took is aggressive, libidinal rock music from Los Angeles to Japan over its four years of fame. Among its members, Joan Jett and Lita Ford would go on to have successful solo careers, but the band fizzled like a dud cherry bomb in an environment of drug abuse and clashing egos as its members quested after fame. This story of the group reveals that, for all their outward bravado, they were still just girls who got homesick while on tour and by the wizardry of their manager, Kim Fowley, were able to elbow their way into an industry dominated by men. For those who follow such things, the book will be full of insights, but it too is a cautionary tale. Detroit Rock City: The Uncensored History of Rock ‘n’ Roll in America’s Loudest City by Steve Miller ($16.99, softcover) takes the reader back to Detroit in 1966 when the lights of the Grande Ballroom stage went up every night on young rockers trying to make a name for themselves. Out of their numbers can performers such as Ted Nugent, Bob Seger, along with Iggy and the Stooges. Based on more than 200 interviews, this is an oral history that chronicles the manic and obsessive love affairs that Detroit had with its music and does to this day. As is the case with rock’n roll, it tells the story of a drug-fueled subculture playing hard and partying even harder. By the 1970s, America had lost interest in its punk music, but it was a catalyst for others who followed in its wake. Most of us are more likely to recall the great Motown period.

Younger Readers

A number of books that will appeal to younger readers have arrived. One that might also interest older ones is Sharkopedia: The Complete Guide to Everything Shark by Andy DeHart, a marine biologist ($19.95, Time Home Entertainment/Discovery Channel, softcover), a large format book with more than 400 photos that includes information on all 498 known shark species. Sharks hold a special fascination for all ages and this book will more than satisfy their interest as it discusses their feeding habits, behavior, anatomy and senses, and countless other information that is fairly astounding. Another natural phenomenon is the subject of Volcano Rising by Elizabeth Rusch ($17.95, Charlesbridge), aimed at ages 6 through 9. Along with its illustrations by Susan Swan, it is filled with information about real volcanos around the world and the role they play on planet Earth, creating new land, mountains and islands, and much more. It’s just out this month and a visit to www.charlesbridge.com will introduce you to this outstanding children’s book publisher’s latest books, such as Me and My Dragon: Scared of Halloween by David Biedrzyck ($17.95) for ages 4 through 7 about a boy whose pet dragon is scared silly on this spooky holiday. Even this grownup thought it was hilarious.

Thomas and Peter Weck have created a series of books for readers age 4 to 8 called the Lima Bear stories. They are illustrated by Len DiSalvo in a delightful fashion. I have seen and recommended a number of their books such as “The Megasourus” and “How Back-Back Got His Name.” The newest is Bully Bean ($8.95, www.Limabearpress,com, distributed by Small Press United) and it addresses a common problem children encounter, the bully.  In the kingdom of Beandom, Bully Bean is feared and Lima Bear is one of his favorite victims. When the bully gets trapped under a heavy rock, he calls out for help and sees Lima Bear walk away, but only to discover he has rounded up others to come back and get him out of his jam. He learns a good lesson and so will the youngsters who read this enjoyable story.

Football season will begin soon and for those youngsters who love the sport, there’s the Big Book of Who: Football ($17.95, Time Home Entertainment and Sports Illustrated Kids) that is a guide to 101 players filled with profiles, facts and stats that will provide lots of enjoyment to younger readers, along with his extensive photos of the sport’s champions, record breakers, super scorers, and yardage kinds. Grownups, too, will enjoy this one.

There are novels, too, for young adult readers and one that is sure to please is Jeff Yager’s Atom & Eve ($13,51/$4.99 Kindle, Hannacroix Creek Books, softcover) set several years into the future in which a powerful flu that causes many deaths and a dramatic slowdown of the economy. One of those affected is Ricky Romanello, a college freshman. A research scientist has developed an anti-aging drug that she believes could eradicate the flue and Ricky becomes one of the test subjects. The government approves the drug and the epidemic is soon over. He is cured, but soon he and others discover an unintended side effect that has catastrophic consequences for the entire population. Jeff comes from parents who are writers and, at age 23, his first novel demonstrates that talent can be inherited. Another futuristic novel for young adults is The Meme Plague by Angie Smibert, ($16.99/$9.99, Amazon Children’s Publishing, hardcover and Kindle), book 3 of the Memento Nora series at a time when everyone has microchips implanted in their brains that are designed to erase memories and add new ones. The two main characters, Micah and Nora are determined to take charge of their memories by building a new electronic frontier that cannot be controlled by local politicians and others. In an era when we now know the government is capable of knowing all our phone calls, emails, and other activities, this novel is a cautionary tale that is well worth reading.

Due in September is William Elliot Hazelgrove’s The Pitcher ($15.95, Koehlerbooks) about a Mexican-American boy with a golden arm who has no change to make the high school team until a broken-down World Series pitcher who coaches the team agrees to coach him and give him an opportunity to fulfill his dream. It has been nominated for the YALSA Printz Award and is the Junior Library Guild’s pick for a new autumn release as well. The award honors the best book written for teens and this story that includes the issues of immigration and the mythic dream of overcoming all odds will please its readers on many levels. I will happily join those who believe it is a great new story. For diehard Giants fans there’s The Years the Giants Won the Series: A Fan’s Journal of the 2012 and 2010 World Series Seasons by Joseph Sutton ($15.00, Mad Dog Publishing Company, softcover), a little book that chronicles the two games.

Novels, Novels, Novels

The deluge of novels continues, but it is mid-summer and a time for vacations and the leisure to read a story for entertainment and diversion.

One novel, however, runs 685 pages and you risk a hernia just picking it up. Worse, it is an astonishingly boring story that was widely rejected by publishers when it was first proffered in the 70s and 80s in Italy, the home of its author, Goliarda Sapienza, now deceased. The Art of Joy ($30.00, Farrar, Straus and Giroux) is described as “a sprawling, formally inventive, sexually explicit feminist epic” which is literally talk for a long, shapeless, self-indulgent mess. It was eventually published in France and Italy, but failed to attract much attention. It was initially published by the author’s lover, Angelo Pellegrino, and for reasons known only to its current American publisher, is offered now.

Anne Hendren has had far more success with her books and her latest is Project Runaway ($11.00, Ring of Fire Publishers, softcover) about fashion designer, Karin Ohisson, who has moved to New York to follow her dream only to have her work appropriated by a designer to takes credit for it. Disillusioned, she decides to return to her roots in Idaho where she links up with her ailing aunt Hannah and her sewing group that produces quilts. After Hannah passes away, she decides to return, but in the interim she has learned a lot about herself and with a renewed appreciation for family bonds. It has a happy ending, but you will have to read it to find out. A very different character in a previous era, Prohibition, is Jersey Leo, the quintessential outside, an albino of mixed race. Jersey is a bartender at a speakeasy in New York’s Hell’s Kitchen and has used his boss’s money to purchase what turns out to be counterfeit moonshine. The novel, Sugar Pop Moon, by John Florio takes its name from this stuff ($15.95, Seventh Street Books, softcover) and Jersey enlists his father’s help to track down the bootlegger. They encounter some very nasty characters as he tries to avoid retribution from the mobster who owns the speakeasy. It is an interesting story of his relationship with his father and moves along swiftly.

For a change of pace, there’s The Serpent and the Pearl by Kate Quinn ($15.00, Berkley, softcover) set during the Italian Renaissance in a novel of the Borgias and their never-ending crises of marriage and murder. It is Rome in 1492 as the Borgias make their rise, looking to put one of their own as Pope. Vivacious Giulia Farnese seemingly has everything, beauty, wealth, and a handsome young husband, but she is stunned to discover that her marriage is a sham and she is to be given as a concubine to the ruthless Cardinal Borgia, a candidate for Pope. Suffice to say the bodies mount up as she and your friends must decide to flee the Borgia dream of power or even survive it. A more contemporary history is the background for Island of the White Rose by R. Ira Harris ($24.95, Bridge Works Publishing) and it makes for excellent reading. It is set in Cuba in the years that led up to the overthrow of one dictatorship, that of Fulgencio Batista, that only led to another, Fidel Castro’s. Father Pedro Villanueva, 34, is the son of an upper-middle-class Havana family and non-political, but when asked to try to free a parishioner’s son from La Cabana prison he enlists his brother, Alberto, to bribe the guards there. The prisoner is released, but Alberto is killed in the handover. Pedro joins the underground to support the Fidelistas. His involvement deepens, but as history demonstrates, he is betrayed by the Castro regime for which he smuggled arms on his family’s sloop, named the White Rose for a symbol of Cuba. This is a very compelling story that is well worth reading.

Thomas and Mercer, a publishing imprint of Amazon.com, has three novels out in August worth considering. One is by Aric Davis who has two previous novels to his credit and, in The Fort ($14.94, softcover) he takes the reader into the world of tattoo parlors, dive bars, pool halls, and police stations of the present-day Midwest for an action-packed story for a suspenseful coming-of-age story of innocence, evil, and the bonds of friendship. Beginning in the summer of 1987, Tim, Scott and Luke are enjoying life in the tree house fort they have built in the woods behind their homes. They spot a killer with his latest victim, Molly, and know they must do what they can to save her, but both their parents and the police doubt them. Told from the alternating viewpoints of the boys, the killer, and the detective on his trail, it is an electrifying story. Out of the Black by John Rector ($ 14.95, softcover) tells a harrowing story of former Marine Matt Caine who is widowed after a car crash that claims his wife. He struggles to support his daughter, but is broke from hospital and funeral bills. Desperate to pay his mortgage, he borrows money from some notorious local thugs and his in-laws are threatening a custody battle. Things go from bad to worse when he is lured into a kidnapping plot. This is a tightly plotted thriller and one that you will read to the last page. Unthinkable by Clyde Phillips ($14.95, softcover) is the fourth installment of Phillips’ bestselling Jane Candiotti series. She’s a hard-nosed San Francisco detective and this is her toughest case, a mass murder that has claimed the life of a member of her family, a teenaged nephew. On a blustery night, six strangers find shelter in a neighborhood restaurant—only to be shot dead minutes later. The carnage leaves the city on edge. Despite being pregnant with her first child, Lt. Candiotti is driven to solve the crime and you will be driven to read this story from beginning to end in one sitting.

In June of last year I reviewed “The Last Policeman” by Ben H. Winters and recommended it. Now he’s back with Countdown City: The Last Policeman Book II ($14.95, Quirk Books, softcover) and I am pleased to recommend it as well. It received an Edgar Award for Best paperback Original. The first book of the trilogy is set in a pre-apocalyptic period in which there is just six months before an asteroid is scheduled to impact the Earth, that deadly deadline, but Book II is down to 77 days for Detective Hank Palace no longer is out solving crimes until a woman from his past begs him for help in finding her missing husband who disappeared without a trace. As society is falling apart Palace pursues the few clues available that lead him to a college-campus-turned-anarchist-encampment and then onto a coastal landscape where anti-immigrant militia fend off “impact zone” refugees. Science fiction meets societal chaos in this compelling tale.

That’s it for August! September promises to kick off the fall publishing season with many new non-fiction and fiction books, so it’s a good idea to check back then. Meanwhile, tell your family, friends, and co-workers who love to read all about Bookviews.com where you will find news of books that may not be on the bestseller lists, but should be on your reading list.

Sunday, June 30, 2013

Bookviews - July 2013

By Alan Caruba

My Picks of the Month

I was a mere lad of twenty-two when Fidel Castro successfully overthrew the Cuban dictator, Flugencia Batista, and took control of that island nation. What followed were the abortive Bay of Pigs invasion, and the Cuban Missile Crisis. The story behind these events and the assassination of President Kennedy is revealed in William Weyland Turner’s latest book, The Cuban Connection: Nixon, Castro and the Mob ($25.00, Prometheus Books) and it is a real page-turner. Turner, a former FBI agent who became an investigative journalist, has authored a number of books on the subject, but this one pulls together his interviews with Mafia mobsters and with members of the Cuban revolution who became disenchanted with Castro. It demonstrates how little Americans knew about those events and, in particular, the many efforts to assassinate Castro. Fifty-four years later, the truth can be found in this book and I heartily recommend it, particularly in light of the scandals surround the Obama administration. What we did not know then and do not know now that hold the keys to the events since then and what is occurred today.

A group of Australian scientists have combined with a professional cartoonist John Spooner (The Age, Melbourne) to write a new easy-to-read and humorous book on global warming. Lead author Bob Carter is an Australian palaeontologist, marine geologists and an adjunt professionial research fellow in earth sciences at James Cook University, Queensland. For many years he has been on the front lines debunking global warming, based on the claim that carbon dioxide is causing the Earth to warm. Actually, the Earth has been cooling for the last sixteen years. He has written Taxing Air: Facts and Fallacies About Climate Change ($30.00, Kelpie Press, softcover) is filled with the best scientific information on the topic and for anyone who wants to learn the truth, I can highly recommend it. Readers will learn that the sea-level rise is natural and declining in rate; that global ocean temperature is cooling slightly as well; and that no scientist can tell you whether the world will be warmer or cooler than today in 2020 or beyond. More than a hundred basic questions are answered in the book which includes whimsical cartoons and humorous sketches throughout.. A carbon dioxide tax that was recently imposed on Australians has had the effect of raising their costs for energy thereby negatively affected its economy in many ways—which should serve as an object lesson for other nations to not follow suit.

If you are among the half of the population that is concerned with the breakdown of our national culture, the failure of our schools, and other societal problems, and you want to know why everything has changed for the worse, then you will will want to reach Vincent Ryan Ruggiero’s book, Corrupted Culture: Rediscovering America’s Enduring Principles, Values and Common Sense ($19.00, Prometheus Books, $11.99 ebook). A professor of humanities emeritus at the State University of New York, Delhi College, he has authored twenty-one previous books on critical thinking, ethics, education, and communication, among other topics. For a heavy thinker his text takes some effort to tackle, but is worth it as he provides an in-depth historical analysis of cultural trends and tracing their origins to the last century when intellectuals began to conclude that humans are irredeemably stupid and that it was government’s job to tell them how to live their lives. If you wonder why self-esteem replaced self-respect  and why rights and entitlements became more important than responsibilities, among a long list of problems facing the nation, this book explains it.

Just published this month is New Frontiers in Space: From Mars to the Edge of the Universe ($29.95, Time Home Entertainment), a large format, extensively illustrated book that will surely please anyone with an interest in our space program. It looks at the powerful new telescopes that have given scientists the ability to hunt for Earthlike planets in distant star systems and the entrepreneurs who are picking up where the space shuttle left off, developing plans for commercial space travel. It asks questions about the yet unanswered mysteries about the cosmos regarding galaxies such as what matter makes up the universe, and how black holes are formed. There is much more in this handsome coffee-table book that offers hours of reading pleasure.

I have been a business and science writer for some fifty years and had to learn by doing, but for anyone who is into science and wants to pursue it as a professional writer, I can certainly recommend The Science Writer’s Handbook: Everything You Need to Know to Pitch, Publish, and Prosper in the Digital Age, edited by Thomas Hayden and Michelle Nijhuis ($17.50, Da Capo Press, softcover). Science writing has become an increasingly popular field, but trying to make a living communicating science can be tough say the editors, especially in an industry that has changed so much in recent years (tell me about it!)  With a combined collective experience of many years, the Writers of Scilance, an online group of science writers, share their knowledge and it can help anyone new to the field or adjusting to the changes.

Reading History

If I had to chose just one category of literature, I would chose history. I find it entertaining in many ways, both for the people and events, and for an insight to past eras that inevitably provide insights to our present one.

Early American history focuses on Washington, Jefferson and Adams among other founders, but it is a quirk of history that others in their company, in the years leading up to and during the Revolution, the problems with the Articles of Confederation and the writing of the Constitution, have gotten short shrift. David Lefer has written The Founding Conservatives: How a Group of Unsung Heroes Saved the American Revolution ($29.95, Sentinel, an imprint of Penguin Publishing) and has saved them from the quasi-oblivion to which other historians have consigned them.  Among them was John Dickinson who drafted the Articles of Confederation to unite the former colonies into states composing the new nation. James Wilson was a staunch free-market capitalist and who was joined by like-minded men to fight off a mob demanding controls on the price of bread. Roger Morris created a stable money supply to finance the Revolution and founded the first national bank of the United States. In an age of monarchs the Americans had developed a very different view of themselves as citizens, not subjects, and their states as individual republics, self governed, and devoted to the welfare of the citizens, not just a class of nobles. As far back as the ancient world, republics were known to be the most prosperous. It is a revelation to read of these and other men who did, indeed, save the American Revolution.

It is a common belief that the Jews of Germany and Europe went passively to their deaths in the concentration camps and surely millions were duped by the Nazis that they were merely being “relocated.” Information about the camps was kept secret from Jew and non-Jew, and often not believed when it leaked out. How the Jews Defeated Hitler by Benjamin Ginsberg ($35.00, Roman & Littlefield Publishers) reveals that it was not whether Jews fought, though poorly armed, outnumbered, and without resourses, but the means they used as participants in the the anti-Nazi resistance units and as soldiers in both the U.S. and Soviet armies, the latter involving engineering skills that contributed to the famed T-34 tank and other weapons. In the U.S. Jewish organizations aided the Roosevelt administration in discrediting the prevailing feeling of isolationism that initially prevented support for Great Britain. Jews also provided the war effort with invaluable assistance with espionage and cryptoanalysis. Their greatest contribution was the development of the atomic bomb that ended the war with Japan and World War II. The author sums up the reaction of European Jews at the time; they could not believe Germans intended to kill them all! A professor of political science, Dr. Ginsberg concludes with a look at the way old enemies of the Jews have mutated into new ones, the most obvious being Muslims worldwide, but also those on the Left seeking an alliance with them. This is a fascinating story that has not been told in its full context until now.

Historian Ian Mortimer loves to time-travel and did so with a previous book, The Time Traveler’s Guide to Medieval England which I read and enjoyed. Lives were short, illness almost always risked death, and it was a brutal and dangerous place. Now he is back with The Time Traveler’s Guide to Elizabethan England ($27.95, Viking). It was an exciting time to be alive and, of course, the period in which Shakespeare wrote his plays. The British were discovering and settling new worlds beyond their island and some would circumnavigate the globe. Where people in the medieval era saw the sea as a barrier, in Elizabethan times it was recognized as one of its great resources. Using the diaries, letters, books and other writings of the day, Mortimer offers a detailed portrait of daily life, recreating the sights, sounds, and the smells of the streets and homes of 16th century England. He informs us of Elizabethan attitudes towards violance, class, sex, and religion. London was home to 200,000 people at the time and Oxford and Cambridge, home now to famed universities, had about 5,000 each. In the course of Elizabeth’s reign society evolved a new conception of itself, but remained “still violent and charitable, corrupt and courageous, racist and proud.”

Every so often a book comes along that deals with a topic that will intrigue a few readers, but may not attract a wider audience. Strange Medicine: A Shocking History of Real Medical Practices Through the Ages ($16.00. Perigee, an imprint of Penguin Publishing Group, softcover) by Nathan Belofsky is not for the squeamish as it recounts in a very entertaining fashion the appalling things that physicians from ancient times, through the Middle Ages and right up to the twentieth century believed and did in the name of “curing” the patient. As often as not they inflicted more pain than the ailment. Until relatively modern times they had no idea what germs were or did. In general they preferred to avoid any physical contact with the patient short of taking their pulse. The real bloodwork was left to those ordinary folk who pulled teeth or set bones. Aneshesia was completely unknown. Presidents from Washington to Garfield to Harrison all died more from the treatments than the ailments, although Garfield had taken a bullet. If stories involving medicine interest you, this is definetely the book to read.

The Best Planned City in the World by Francis R. Kowsky ($29.95, University of Massachusetts Press) offers a view of history we tend to overlook. It is hard to imagine any of the world’s major cities without their public parks. Examples include Central Park in New York, London’s Hyde Park, and the Tuileries Garden in Paris, but as the author notes, until the 1850s the concept of a “pastoral environment in the heart of the city available to all classes of society” simply did not exist. The movement for open spaces for the enjoyment of nature required visionary men. In 1868 two of them, Fredrick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux set their sights on Buffalo, New York and, in doing so, set in motion the concept of park systems. Published in association with the Library of American Landscape History, this book examines that careful planning that went into parks. The Buffalo park system was to be the first of its kind, a revolutionary urban experiment in what was then one of the busiest ports. Olmstead and Vaux had already made their name with New York’s Central and Prospect Parks, but Buffalo was to have three parks, distinct from one another and linked throughout the city by majestic, tree-canopies boulevards. Extensively illustrated, it is an excellent book on urban history.

On a lighter side, there’s Behind the Burly Q: The Story of Burlesque in America by Leslie Zemeckis ($24.95, Skyhorse Publishing). Given unprecedented access to the performers diaries, letters, albums, and memorabilia, the author has gathered their stories that brings this pre-and-early TV era of entertainment to life, a time when it was the training ground for many entertainers who migrated to Hollywood and television, but it is the strippers that burlesque is most remembered for. Many years ago, when she had written an autobiography, I met Blaze Starr and then reviewed her book. Blaze was famous by then for her affairs with Louisiana’s Governer Earl Long and others. Her contemporaries included Lily St. Cyr, Kitty West, Tempest Storm, and Sally Rand. They made an artform of stripping, providing a bit of sexual fantasy for a generator for whom this adult entertainment was considered a bit racy but acceptable. That is until New York Mayor shut down the city’s burlesque clubs. Other cities would follow suit, but burlesque lives on in places like Las Vegas with its extraordinary shows. This is a piece of show business history that is itself entertaining.

The Handy Art History Answer Book by Madelynn Dickerson ($21.95, Visible Ink Press) joins The Handy History Answer Book and The Handy Science Answer Book as an excellent compendium of information that takes the reader on a walk through history and the world of art. From prehistoric to modern and various cultures, this book puts a world of information between its covers as it traces art history from cave paintings to contemporary works, guiding the reader smoothly through the major art movements, the artists, and the important art pieces from 35,000 B.C.E. to today. While we tend to associate art with the West, this book also demonstrates how other cultures influenced modern artists. Anyone who loves art will want to have this book in their personal library.

Real People in Memoirs, Biographies

Rocket Girl: The Story of Mary Sherman Morgan—America’s First Female Rocket Scientist by George D. Morgan ($18.00, Prometheus Books, softcover) is an interesting biography on several levels. For one, it was a search for answers by the author about his mother. For another, it is about a moment in history that transformed the space race to create rockets as Mary Sherman, a chemist working for North American Aviation, was given the challenge of developing a fuel that would get a rocket successfully into space. This was in the wake of World War II when a woman chemist was still a rarity. The author tells of how in 1938, his mother, a North Dakota farm girl dreamed of a career in chemistry. The effort would team her with Werner von Braun, but the entire program was so cloaked in secrecy that it took the passage of many years for the author to get at the facts of her life during that time. Life is, indeed, stranger than fiction and this book is proof  again of that.

We often ask how a successful person, someone of achievement, can become addicted to alcohol, illegal or prescription drugs, but it happens all too often. The story by Dr. Sylvester ‘Skip’ Sviokla IIl, From Harvard to Hell…and Back: A Doctor’s Journey through Addiction to Recovery ($16.96, Central Recovery Press, softcover) is not uncommon as many physicians have also become addicted, but the author has so many reasons to avoid it that his story is a cautionary tale. He had wealth and an enviable life until the addiction brought his life crashing down. What makes this story carry more weight is the fact that it is written by this “doctor to the stars” who risked losing everything. It is also worth reading to know one can overcome the addiction. He is now medical director of several methadone clinics and co-owner of a substance abuse clinic.

From time to time we hear of some person who decides to take a close-up look at America and what fun it is to learn what they discovered. Paul Stutzman previous wrote Hiking Through, the story of how, following the death of his wife, left his career as a restaurant manager, to hike the Appalachion Trail in search of peace, healing and freedom. I reviewed it and still recommend it, but I can also recommend his latest book, Biking Across America ($12.99, Revell, softcover) in which he took on another challenge, putting aside his hiking boots for a bike and starting at Neah Bay, Washington to end finally in Key West, Florida. These are the two farthest points in the contiguous United States. Along the way he met hundreds of people, some of whose stories he tells. Through good weather and bad, he peddled on and discovered what so many others have, that America is filled with some very good people. This is a delightful, inspiring story.

To Your Health

Americans are obsessed with their health so, naturally, there are lots of books on the subject. Here are a few new ones that have arrived at Chez Caruba.

Why Can’t My Child Stop Eating? A Guide to Helping Your Child Overcome Emotional Overeating by Debbie Danowsky, PhD ($14.95, Contral Recovery Press, softcover). That’s the kind of title that says it all. Michelle Obama has made every parent of every overweight or obese child give this topic serious thought and this book provides real-world solutions to the social, emotional, and physical problems these children encounter. It is an emotional recovery plan crafted by an author whose own food addiction recovery program produced results. Skinny Smoothies: 101 Delicious Drinks that Help You Detox and Lose Weight by Shell Harris and Elizabeth Johnson ($16.00, Da Capo Press, softcover) provides recipes for low-calorie, nutrient-packed drinks, plus lots of tips to jumpstart and maintain a healthy lifestyle. The authors say that smoothies are a wholesome way to lose weight without feeling like you’re dieting. I have never had a smoothy, but I am willing to take their word for it.

The Sugar Detox by Brooke Alpert, RD, CDN and Patricia Farris, MD, FAAD ($24.99, Da Capo Press) addresses my “problem” and that of many others, a love of sweets. I have never met a cookie or ice cream I did not like. The authors say that the average American consumes more than seventy pounds of sugar each year and that a high-sugar diet can be detrimental to nearly all areas of health and beauty. The side affairs aren’t just weight gain, but include premature aging and increased risk of diabetes, atherosclerosis, heart disease, and even cataracts. This is a serious book that offers a one-month plan to wean readers of their sugar cravings with a four-week schedule of menu plans and fifty recipes.

Blood Pressure Down: The 10-Step Plan to Lower Your Blood Pressure in 4 Weeks Without Prescription Drugs by Janet Bond Brill ($15.00, Three Rivers Press, softcover) is written by a natinally recognized expert in cardiovascular disease prevention, a nutritionist in private practice for many years. Nearly a third of adult Americans, an estimated 78 million people, have been diagnosed with hypertension, and millions more are on their way to this condition. The good news, says the author, is that hypertension is easily treatable and preventable. You can, she says, bring your blood pressure down in just four weeks and you can do it without resorting to prescription medications. I like the sound of that and you will, too.

The New Testosterone Treatment: How You and Your Doctor Can Fight Breast Cancer, Prostate Cancer, and Alzheimer’s ($20.00, Prometheus Books, softcover) is by Dr. Edward Friedman, a leading authority on hormone receptors and prostate cancer. As the title says, it deals with prevention and its focus is on the use of testasterone. It notes that we experience our highest hormone levels during our teen years and it is a time of life when the cancers and, of course, Alzheimer’s are not a threat.  Could bringing hormones back to teen levels be the key to vibrant good health? The book says that the answer is a resounding yes. This book will be of particular interest to medical professionals, but also to anyone concerned with their health.

I confess I have never been much into exercise. When I was in the Army fifty years ago I was required to so a lot of exercise and have not been famous for doing as much since. One form of it has been popular in the orient for centuries and you can read about it in Tai Chi—The Perfect Exercise: Finding Health, Happiness, Balance, and Strength by Arthur Rosenfeld ($19.99, Da Capo Press, softcover) and he makes it look like a lot of fun. Many of us lead fast-paced, often stressful lives and our physical and mental wellbeing often takes a backseat to juggling work and family responsibilies. Like yoga, the art of tai chi provides a refuge as a low-impact exercise among all age groups. If this interests you, this book will open the door for you.

Kid Stuff

A delightful story for those of pre-and-early school age, there is Princess Cupcake Jones and the Missing Tutu by Ylleya Fields and illustrated by Michael LaDuca ($15.95, Belle Publishing). Parents know that children’s rooms are often a colorful managerie of toys here, clothes there, and stuff everywhere. When something is lost, it may take all day to find it. In this entertaining story, Princess Cupcake learns why she should keep her room clean if she wants to easily find her favorite things, among which is a favorite tutu. Her search for it is hilarious—particularly if you are very young.


For those ages 8 to 12, Call Me Amy by Marcia Strykowski will resonate with familiar themes of growing up. The year is 1973 and for Amy Henderson, it has been a lonely one with too many awkward moments to count. When she finds an injured seal pup, she rescues him to rehabilitate him. In the process she forms an unlikely alliance with Craig, a boy around her age, and an older woman in town. With their help she discovers that people aren’t always what they seem despite what others may think of them. This is a story filled with many elements that will appeal to younger readers and I highly recommend it.
The New Horizon Press has two new books for kids with special needs, A Treasure Hunt for Mama and Me: Helping Children Cope with Parental Illness ($9.95) by Renee Le Varrier and Samuel Frank, MD, and Owen Has Burgers and Drum: Helping to Understand and Befriend Kids with Asperger’s Syndrome ($9.95) by Christine M. Shells with Frank R. Pane, MAE, BCBA. When a parent is suffering from a serious disabling or terminal condition, a child is subject to confusion, worry, and grief. The former book helps them to understand that, despite the physical limitations that come with illness, the love of a parent is forever. The latter book addresses the fact that between two and six kids out of every thousand in the world have Asperger’s Syndrome, an autism spectrum disorder, one that is a part of the popular TV show, Parenthood. The book notes that they learn differently from others, but their friends can learn to understand it and respond appropriately to it. Asperger’s makes it difficult for both youngster’s and grownups to recognize the signals people send regarding their moods and feelings.

Novels, Novels, Novels

Summer is associated with reading a good novel on the beach or patio and this summer those who enjoy fiction—if the stacks of new novels I have received—will have a bounty from which to select. Here are just a few.

A good mystery is always worth reading and Lori Roy’s new novel, Until She Comes Home. ($26.95, Dutton) set in Detroit in the 1950s. It’s a thriller that examines the transformation of a neighborhood. Alder Avenue is a respectable place where the neighbors care for one another, but that changes when two seemingly unrelated events occur; the disappearance of childlike Elizabeth Symanski and the murder of a local African-American woman. As the neighbors search for her, they fear that their world will be changed forever if she is not found. It will leave you reading until the end. The novel has been called “extraordinary”, “compelling”, and “beautifuly, quietly disturbing.” It is all that and more. Jeffrey Deaver delivers again with his series featuring forensic expert Lincoln Rhyme in The Kill Room ($28.00, Grand Central Publishing). A U.S. citizen in the Bahamas is shot by a killer per excellence—a man capable of delivering “a million-dollar bullet” from a mile or more away. As the investigation gets going it is learned that the fiction, Robert Moreno, was known to have strong anti-American sympathies and was assassinated by the U.S. government. A New York assistant district attorney, Nance Laurel, is unwilling to let the rule of law be ignored and brings a criminal case against both the director of the National Intelligence and Operations Service (NIOS) who ordered the killing. Rhymes is assigned to investigate the killing, but the NIOS is not going to permit to succeed. This is a psychological thriller with an intricate plot and arrives just as a succession of scandals involving the government’s surveillance programs have raised some very real fears. Deaver has won sevem Edgar nominations by the Mystery Writers of America, a Nero Award, and other accolades.
 
A host of softcover novels offer all manner of summer reading fun. The world of show business is featured in two of them. The Star Attraction by Alison Sweeney ($14.99, Hyperion) introduces the reader to Sophie Atwater, a CrackBerry-addicted, coffee-guzzling, sleep-deprived publicist extraordinaire on the rise at Los Angeles’ elite boutique firm, Bennett/Peters. She has an attentive, somewhat conventional boyfriend and she’s just landed the client of a lifetime, Billy Fox, Hollywood’s new ‘golden boy.’ Fox has the brains and brawn that put him in competition with George Clooney and Ryan Gosling. Put in close quarters with Fox, sparks begin to fly and Sophie learns what it is like to be on the arm of a rising movie star. This is a kind of Bridget Jones meets Hollywood Boulevard story, full of fun and is a debut novel for Sweeney who is a host on the NBC series, “The Biggest Loser”, and a role in “Days of Our lives.” How she found time between that, plus being a wife and mother, to write this novel is anyone’s guess, but we’re glad she did. In Primetime Princess, ($14.95, Amazon Publishing) another novelist makes her debut. Former NBC Executive Vice President, Lindy DeKoven, taps into her real-life network television career to write a deliciously scandalous story in the tradition of “The Devil Wears Proda.”  At the center of the novel is Alexa Ross, vice president of comedy development at Hawkeye Broadcasting System who has fought her way passed the boy’s club and after firing Jerry Keller her sleezy ex-boss, Alexis thinks she’s really at the top. Then she learns Keller has been re-hired and is her newest employee. All-out war ensues and Alexa has to wonder if all her efforts have been worth it. You will have to read this entertaining novel to find out.

A most unusual novel, Lady Macbeth On the Couch, ($14.95, Bancroft Press) could only have been written by a psychoanalyst and, indeed, was. Dr. Alma Bond has written twenty books, some about famous folks such as Jackie O and Maria Callas. The character of Lady MacBeth has intrigued many others including Sigmund Freud. In Shakespeare’s play she pushes her husband to commit regicide to acquire the throne and in Dr. Bond’s historical fiction, Lady MacBeth tells her own story of the events of the enduring drama about ambition and dirty deeds. Just as the play takes one on a roller-coaster ride of intrigue, this novelization takes one into the mind and heart of one of theatre’s most compelling characters. William Shakepeare’s Star Wars by Ian Doescher ($14.95, Quirk Books, hardcover) is an officially licensed retelling of George Lucas’s epic Star Wars in the style of the immortal Bard of Avon. Doescher knows his way around iambic pentameter and the story has soliloquies and the clever wordplay one would expect of Shakespeare if he wrote of the wise Jedi knight and the evil Sith lord, of a beautiful princess held captive, and a young hero coming of age. From MacBeth to Star Wars…you cannot make up stuff like this though there are authors who will take on the challenge.

The emerging science of psychiatry plays a role in The Lost Prince by Selden Edwards ($16.00, Plume). It is a follow-up to “The Little Book” and begins in fin de siecle Vienna where Weezie Putnam met and tragically lost the love of her life, Wheeler Burden. She returns to Boston as Eleanor, a newly confident woman armed with the belief that she holds advance knowledge of nearly every major historical event to come during her lifetime. She marrieds, starts a family, hires a physicist to manage her finances, and begins to build relationships with some of the most influential thinkers of the twentieth century, including Sigmund Freuds, Carl Jung, and William James. She reconnects with Arnauld Eeterhazy, a young Viennese scholar. When he is sent off to war in 1914, she must decide to allow history to unfold come what may or use her extraordinary gifts to bend it to deliver the life she is meant to have.  

The Last Camelia by Sarah Jio ($15.00, Plume) combines mystery, history, and romance as it follows two American women, Flora and Addison, who are separated by more than fifty years, but connected by the enigmatic Livingston Manor in whose countless rooms the long history of its inhabitant’s sins are kept, upstairs and down. On the eve of the Second World War, the last surviving specimen of a camellia plant known as the Middlebury Pink lies secreted away on the English country estate, an amateur American botanist, is blackmailed by an international ring of flower thieves to infiltrate the household and acquire the covered bloom. To protect her family she travels an ocean away to work as a nanny to the children of the manor. More than half a century later, Manhattan garden designer, Addison, is threatened by a dark figure from her past and takes up residence in Livingston Manor, now owned by the family of her husband, to escape exposure. Does the last camelia bring with it danger? You will have to read the novel!

A very different story is told in Innocence by Louis B. Jones ($14.95, Counterpoint Press). Set in Marin County, it follows John Gregenuber, a former Episcopal priest who has given up his parish for a career in real estate. Born with a cleft palate, he has his life behind the minor disfigurement of a “hare lip” but following corrective plastic surgery, he has been invited to go on a romantic rip to a secluded country estate with Thalia, a young woman who has also undergone the same surgery. It is a story of two intelligent, shy people, both of whom felt unqualified for love, and a weekend that promises happy beginnings, but which includes Thalia’s seven special-needs clients! It is improbable, somewhat absurd, and occasionally harrowing, but never boring!

Throughout his career, Anthony C. Winkler, widely recognized as Jamaica’s great humorist, has been compared to Mark Twain, P.G. Wodehouse, and Kurt Vonnegut. When you read The Family Mansion ($15.95, Akashic Books) you would understand why. It is a wildly funny, satirical, and poignant portrait of a young English gentleman whose best-laid plans derail against the backdrop of 19th century British culture and Jamaica’s luch, but harsh land, a time when English society was based upon the strictist subordination and stratification of the classes. Harley Fudges’ charmed life is marred only by the existance of his brother who stands to inherit everything, leaving him to his own devices. Arranging for his assassination seems the easiest soluion to the problem, but it goes terribly wrong and Hartley heads to Jamaica to start a new life. After a few months falls hopelessly in love with a slave girl named Phibba. It is a clash of cultures that Winkler turns into a romp.  CNN calls Bridget Siegal’s Domestic Affairs ($15.99, Weinstein Books) “The Fifty Shades of Gray of political novels.” Ms. Siegal has worked on many political campaigns and is a political consultant, writer and actor, residing in New York. When a twenty-something political fund-raiser, Olivia Greenley, gets tapped to work on the presidential campaign of George governor Landon Taylor, it’s her dream job. Her best friend is the campaign manager and Taylor is a decent, charismatic idealist. What happens when Campaign Lesson #1, No Kissing the Boss and Lesson #2, Loyalty Above All, go down in flames before the first primary? Is the candidate a true romantic or a political hypocrite? How far can she go to justify her happiness? Told with inside-the-Beltway detail, this novel will entertain anyone with an interest in politics and even if you don’t.


For younger readers, ages 13 and up, I recommend Miss Peregine’s Home for Peculiar Children ($10.99, Quirk Books) now in softcover after its debut in June 2011 by Ransom Riggs took the publishing industry by storm as a #1 New York Times Bestseller. Film rights have been sold to Twentieth Century Fox and foreign rights in more than 35 nations. A mysterious island. An abandoned orphanage. And a strange collection of very curious photographs (which appear in the book) come together in a story in which a horrific family tragedy sets 16-year-old Jacob journying to a remove island off the coast of Wales where he discovers the crumbling ruins. It becomes clear that the children who once lived there—one of whom was his own grandfather—were more than just peculiar. They may have been dangerous. They may have been guarantined on the island for a good reason and some may still be alive. For any age, this makes for some great reading.

 
That’s it for July! Come back in August when there will be many new fiction and non-fiction books well worth reading. Tell your friends, coworkers and family about Bookviews.com so they too can enjoy the many new books arriving to inform and entertain.

Friday, May 31, 2013

Bookviews - June 2013

By Alan Caruba

My Picks of the Month

It is said that you cannot understand the present unless you understand history and Charles Emmerson has made an excellent contribution to history with his new book, 1913: In Search of the World Before the Great World ($30.00, Public Affairs). In 1913, few if any anticipated that World War I would break out the next year and Americans resisted being drawn into it until 1917. Structured by taking the reader to the world’s great cities in 1913, what emerges from its pages how much that year resembles our own today. It was a year when globalization was occurring with the ease of worldwide travel and communication with much commerce between nations; a world in which the peoples of Europe traveled easily among its nations and one in which all manner of change and innovation was occurring in the arts, sciences, and politics. Royalty in Germany and Russia still played a major role in their nation’s lives, but in America the nation’s economy was booming thanks to immigration from the Old World to the new. Emmerson lets the reader visit Europe’s capitals, to Bombay, Tokyo, St. Petersburg, Peking, and of course, America’s great cities from New York to Los Angeles. It is a big book, exceeding 500 pages, but learning of the world in that world is an exhilarating reading experience and one that will transform your view of that year.

Though it is early in the year, I am inclined to believe that one of the best new books about U.S. history will be Thomas Fleming’s A Disease in the Public Mind: A New Understanding of Why We Fought the Civil War ($26.99, Da Capo Press). Fleming has already established himself as one of the nation’s leading historians. His new book provides an insight that few others about the Civil War have done. Fleming examines how the Founders in writing the Constitution had to compromise with the southern slave-holding states and thus established a republic that declared that all men were equal, but in fact created a nation that accepted slavery as a compromise to secure its ratification. Though the Founders owned slaves, they understood that the issue slavery could eventually tear the nation apart. At the heart of his book is the fact that “Few people criticized or objected to slavery; it was one of the world’s oldest social institutions…” From its earliest days, prior to the Revolution, slavery was a part of life in America both in the north and the south. “By 1750, there were a half million slaves in the American colonies.” By 1790, there were only six slave states, but the great wealth generated by growing cotton created a new for greater numbers of slaves. Moreover, the states before and after the Revolution were hardly “united” as most regarded themselves as sovereign entities and cooperated in a fitful fashion. As the black population grew, vastly outnumbered white southerners grew fearful of them and events such as Nat Turner’s rebellion that slaughtered whites and the bloodshed in Haiti only deepened those fears. By the time of the Civil War there were four million slaves, most in the south. The rise of the abolition movement created discord and hatred between the north and south until in 1860 the election of Lincoln led to secession. I heartily recommend reading this book to understand what led to the Civil War—a long process—and the failed compromises that could not deter it.

The History of the Renaissance World by Susan Bauer ($35.00, W.W. Norton) represents two factors I favor, one is history and the second is a big, fat book filled with all manner of information that continues to surprise me. At 768 pages, this book, beginning in the days just before the First Crusade, is a chronicle of the many changes occurring around the world at that time. A Christian empire was stopped short at the walls of Constantinople, the wisdom of the Greeks was revived, the claims of monarchy were challenged, the early signs of an Islamic threat to Europe emerged, along with that of Mongols. It was a time in which the mini-ice age occurred, a great famine killed millions, and the Black Death still more. We tend to think we are living in dangerous times, but this book demonstrates the history of civilization is always about dangerous times, as well as innovation, discoveries, and progress.

Trying to figure out what is happening in the world and why is a constant challenge. That’s why books like Deepak Lal’s are so helpful. Poverty and Progress: Realities and Myths about Global Poverty ($24.95, hardcover, $11.95 softcover, and $9.99 digital, Cato Institute) informs us that the greatest reduction of mass poverty in human history has occurred during the current era of globalization. The number of the world’s poor is shrinking and their lives—health, education, and life spans—are improving. Lal is an economist who brings fifty years of experience around the globe to this book that describes developing-nation realities and corrects mistaken notions about economic progress. He says that the rapid spread of economic progress over the last three decades is “one of mankind’s most amazing achievements.” It’s nice to read some good news for a change and to discover, as the author documents, that much of what we’ve been told is not true. You will come away with a new and better understanding of what is occurring in the worldwide economy, especially as it affects its poor.

Anyone who has to fly regularly on business, to visit relatives, or take a vacation knows that flying these days can be an unpleasant experience. Mark Gerchick explains why in Full Upright and Locked Position ($24.95, W.W. Norton). Gerchick is a former FAA chief counsel and an aviation consultant with twenty years’ experience to draw upon as he guides readers through what it means to board a plane today. His book is not a diatribe, but rather an entertaining explanation thanks to his sense of humor as he explains why travelers are nickel-and-dimed by the airlines, why bags are mishandled, why the fares keep rising, and all the other factors that too often make flying a stressful experience. It is a portrait of as multi-billion-dollar business that has undergone profound changes over the past decade and he explains why the constant demand for efficiency, cost-cutting, and new sources of revenue have brought the industry and its passengers to the present state of affairs. This is also a history of air travel from the 1970s deregulation as well as the challenges currently affecting the industry. It is a fact-filled look at the industry and one that is full of surprises. For those for whom flying is a regular or occasional part of their lives, this book is well worth reading.

One might think that a book devoted to a history of the Harvard Lampoon from the 1960s would be very entertaining. One might be wrong. Ellin Stein has written a book that extends to 445 pages. That’s Not Funny, That’s Sick ($27.95, W.W. Norton) is filled with the names of the generation of funny men and women who reshaped humor in America, many of whom got their start writing for the Harvard Lampoon. In time, two of them would begin to publish The National Lampoon to great success. Stein has laboriously reported about the key players and that is the main problem of the book. In real life, many were simply not that interesting. Many seemed to be engaged in adolescent rebellion not uncommon to that age cohort, but around them the 1960s was exploding in actual rebellion on college campuses and in the streets of the nation. There is no question they and others created an irreverent brand of comedy that includes Saturday Night Live, The Onion, the Daily Show, South Park, and others, but the book’s dissection of the people and factors that led to this is too labored to hold one’s attention.

Books By and About Real People

It is the strangest thing to read a memoir by someone who you’ve known a very long time, only to discover they had this whole life about which you were oblivious. In the 1970s when we were both members of the Society of Magazine Writers (later to become the Society of Authors and Journalists), I met Tania Grossinger who was already a very successful public relations professional as well as freelance travel writer. One of her PR clients was the famed feminist, Betty Friedan, the author of “The Feminine Mystique.” Tania would help launch the book that would eventually selling four million copies. Betty had mellowed by the time I met her, but I recall I instantly liking Tania who was blessed with one of those personalities that is welcoming and warm. So, when I sat down to read Memoir of an Independent Woman: An Unconventional Life Well Lived ($24.95, Skyhorse Publishing) I did not put it down until the last page. Tania’s PR career was at its peak in the one of the most exciting times in our recent history. She knew all the major personalities in radio and television who hosted talk shows. She did PR for the Playboy Clubs, handled some the most famous authors of that era such as Ayn Rand. She either knew or dealt with iconic names, Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Hugh Hefner, and others she names. If her name has a familiar ring, she was a member of the family that operated the famed Grossinger’s resort in the Catskills and, even at a very early age, she came to know “celebrities” as real people. She was especially blessed to have the friendship of Jackie Robinson of baseball fame. Though her life sounds glamorous (and it was), there were elements of sadness she unsparingly shares as well. I am delighted to call her a friend and astonished to have read her moving, entertaining memoir. She did, indeed, live an unconventional life and she did it very well! I want to keep her around for many more years.

Learning to Listen: A Life Caring for Children ($24.99, Da Capo Press) is a memoir by Dr. T. Berry Brazelton, M.D., covering eight decades that has led him to be respected as “America’s pediatrician.” His books on child-rearing in the earliest years of life have helped thousands of parents understand what they need to know to be better parents. His Brazelton Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale is used in hospitals worldwide as a way for doctors and parents to interpret the behavior of babies. He began his medical career in the late 1940s, a time when physicians were beginning to shed old practices and develop medicine as it exists today. His observations revolutionized the way pediatricians practice infant care and how parents parent. He is the author of more than thirty books on child development and is a professor emeritus of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School. This is a most interesting memoir to read.

My late father was born in 1901, was two young for World War I and deemed too old to serve in WWII. Although I served in the U.S. Army, I was fortunate to do so in one of those rare periods of peace that did not require my being in combat. I have read much about wars, but still cannot imagine what it must have been like until I read Stories in Uniform: A Look at the Heroics, Sacrifices, and Triumphs of Our Soldiers ($15.00, Readers Digest), a splendid collection in which the realities of war leap off the page as told by some excellent writers. How such heroism and sacrifice can exist in our present times is testimony to the same grit and determination of George Washington’s soldiers, often unpaid, lacking even shoes, and enduring terrible conditions, but following him into battle after battle until we had an independent United States of America. A whole new generation of warriors will earn your admiration when you read this book.

May This Be the Best Year of Your Life: A Memoir by Sandra Bornstein ($12.99, Create Space, softcover) is the story of “a 50-something-year-old woman who faced a decision to teach English and social studies to fifth graders at a prestigious international boarding school in Bangalore, India. It would mean leaving her husband and soul mate, and three of her four sons behind, and traveling well out of her comfort zone, She would be on her own  The opportunity, however, was intriguing Her memoir tells of the many sights, sounds and discoveries she made during her year; learning about the extensive poverty, the squalor that many children lived in, and the lack of safety in Bangalore. The principal of the school said, “This is going to be the best year of your life” and you can read this memoir to see if that was true or not.

Sometimes dealing with a personal tragedy involves setting it down on paper. This is part of the memoir, Swimming with Maya: A Mother’s Story by Eleanor Vincent ($14.95, Dream of Things, softcover) that begins when 19-year-old Maya does in a fatal horseback accident. She was celebrating with friends here scholarship to the UCLA Theatre Arts program. Her mother shares the intimate details of her tragedy and the healing process which included the decision to donate Maya’s organs to help others. In 2011, only one-fourth of the people in the nation on an organ waiting list received the life-giving transplant. On average eighteen die each day. After her decision, Eleanor Vincent could hear her daughter’s heart beating in its recipient’s chest and she corresponds with the person who received Maya’s liver.  This is a powerful memoir and a please for the donation of organs to save live.

Some people just know how to get the most out of life and do so with gusto and the kind of courage most of us to not possess. One of them is Sonya Klein, the author of “Honk If You Married Sonja” and now her latest book, Roundtrip from Texas ($15.95, Ambush Publishing, Barksdale, Texas, softcover) continues with more accounts from a life spent as a fifth generation rancher in between going off to all parts of the world. She married four men—hence the title of her first book—but it is her attitude and knowledge, especially of food, that will capture your interest and admiration. Musician Lyle Lovett is a cousin and recalls that “When I was a boy, Sonja was one of the first grown-ups in my life to show me it was okay to have fun. She was pretty, wore cool clothes, drove fast cars, and raced motorcycles.” They spirit infuses the book, along with a keen eye and enjoyment of food as she describes meals in exotic places in loving detail, from sea bass in Halifax, Nova Scotia, to Peking duck in Beijing. You may never visit these places, but you will feel like you have when you read this delightful book.
 
When I was growing up the music of Gary U.S. Bonds could be heard, from “New Orleans” and “School is Out” in the 1960s to “This Little Girl in 1981 and many more hits still being played these days. He will be celebrating his 74th birthday as a published author with an autobiography, By U.S. Bonds—That’s My Story ($30.00, Wheatley Press, L.L.C.) written with Stephen Cooper. Suffice to say his life spans the early days of R&B and rock music to the present. He was an influence on Bruce Springsteen and a member of the E Street Band, Steven Van Zandt, has written a forward to it. Bonds shares memories of traveling with B.B. King and Sam Cooke, his big break on the Dick Clark show, and a raft of stories that will entertain anyone who enjoyed his music and that of his illustrious contemporaries. Bonds did not fall prey to many of the temptations of the music industry, remaining true to his beloved wife and daughter. There are life lessons about perseverance and the support derived from friends and family.

There are people who love the outdoors and I am not one of them. That said, I can still recommend Majestic and Wild: True Stories of Faith and Adventure in the Great Outdoors by Murray Pura ($13.99, Baker Books, softcover and ebook). An award-winning novelist, Pura has long been an avid outdoorsman who has loved hiking, hunting, and more. Amidst the stories he tells of his experiences, he shares his belief in the value of getting out of the pew and into the outdoors to be closer to God. This is, as you might imagine, a book intended to be enjoyed by Christians. Pura is an ordained minister, has served five churches, and has written fifteen books. You can find him these days living in the Rocky Mountains near Calgary, Alberta.

Getting Down to Business Books

With fewer jobs available, many have had to improve their interview and other skills to secure one. Martin Yates has just added to his list of excellent books on how to write resumes and other secrets of success in a job search and career management. This time he addresses the beginner in Knock’em Dead Secrets & Strategies for First-Time Job Seekers ($15.95, Adams Media, softcover) that provides a wealth of information and insight regarding how to make one’s resume discoverable in databases, how to build and leverage social networks, and how to turn job interviews into job offers, among other related topics. This would make a great gift for any young person graduating from college this month.

An interesting book by a retired U.S. Navy Captain, L. David Marquet, Turn the Ship Around: A True Story of Turning Followers into Leaders ($25.95, Portfolio, an imprint of Penguin) is the story of how he challenged the U.S. Navy’s traditional leader-follower approach as captain of the USS Santa Fe, a nuclear-powered submarine. Turning the old paradigm on its head, Capt. Maquet took his ship from worst to first in its fleet by pushing for leadership at every level. Instead of issuing orders, he delegated control to officers and men in the ship’s various departments, building a crew that was fully engaged in what they did. The Santa Fe began to winning awards and promoting a large number of offices to submarine command. Fortune magazine calls this book “The best how-to- manual anywhere for managers on delegating, training and driving flawless execution.”   A U.S. Naval Academy graduate, the author currently teaches graduate level leadership at Columbia University.

There used to be and probably still is something called “the old boy’s network”, but Pamela Ryckman has put the world on notice about the Stiletto Network: Inside the Women’s Power Circles that are Changing the Face of Business ($22.95, Amacom). Rather ironically, she dedicated the book “about girls to my boys” whom she names and thanks for their love, patience, and support. The author has written for the leading financial publications and comes to this book with excellent story-telling skills as she sheds light on how women in the world of business and finance are banding together to help one another. This was, perhaps, inevitable as more and more women sought success on terms formerly reserved for men. The book chronicles the stories of a number of women who have achieved extraordinary success and the groups, formal and informal, that aided them along the way. These are new networks that are reshaping the business world and one suspects that men, as well as women, will read this book to learn about them. Getting It Done: How to Achieve Results and Accomplish Fulfillment in Work & Life ($16.95, Mill City Press, softcover) by Iris Dorreboom and Rudi de Graaf is a fairly slim book that represents their thirty years of experience as personal and organizational development consults, coaches, and boardroom confidants. Co-founders of Beyond, they live alternately in France and the Netherlands. Their book is a personal and professional guide in two parts. The first pulls the reader into a leading role in a fictional adventure where they discover how attitude and interaction affect every result. The second part gives pointed direction on how to mindfully create the best possible personal experience and professional outcome. You are very likely to find yourself in its pages.

From Smart to Wise: Acting and Leading with Wisdom by Prasad Kaipa and Navi Radjou ($27.95, Jossey-Bass, a Wiley imprint), is by two men who have been studying the concept of wise leadership since 1989 as a CEO coach and a strategy consultant. They have worked with hundreds of executives in global Fortune 500 companies, as well as entrepreneurial ventures. Their book is unique in that they believe that just intelligence (being smart) alone won’t be sufficient to deal effectively with the increasing complexity of the 21st century. They argue persuasively that what leaders need is “practical wisdom” that includes qualities like prudence, humility, ethics, and a desire to serve the common good. There is “functional smart” and “business smart” in which the former excel in one field or function while the latter are “big picture thinkers, visionaries, and risk takers with a competitive drive.” Both styles have great strengths and serious limitations. Suffice to say this book will get you thinking about your own strengths and weaknesses, how to improve them, and how to apply them to achieve success.

Fabricated: The New World of 3D Printing: The Promise and Peril of a Machine that Can Make (Almost) Anything ($27.95, John Wiley and Sons, softcover) by Hod Lipson and Melba Kurman explores a technology that is so far above my pay grade that I won’t even pretend to understand it. For those in the business world, however, it provides an informative and comprehensive exploration of the world of 3D printing. According to the authors he promise of this technology is that businesses will be liberated from the tyrannies of economics of scale, factories and global supply chains will shrink, putting them closer to their customers. The whole process reminds me of the science fiction shows like Star Trek where a machine materializes anything one wanted to eat or drink in the ship’s cafeteria. Suffice to say, it is likely the next wave of the future, so you may want to pick up a copy!

Thinking About Thinking

Blind Spot: Why We Fail to See the Solution Right in Front of Us ($27.99, Harper One) by Gordon Rugg with Joseph D’Agnese answers the question that we tend to ask in retrospect. If the answer was so obvious, why didn’t we see it? In 2004 Gordon Rugg made international news by deciphering a 16th century text called the Voynich Manuscript that had a worldwide cult following. It had defied code-crackers for almost a century. Rugg declared it a hoax and his book demonstrates the surprising ways in which all people tend to make the same sorts of mistakes, no matter their level of intelligence. With often much dependent on those decisions, this book provides insight into what motivates us and why we fail to ask the questions that will provide the answers we’re seeking. His approach is based on the 7-step Verifier Method that can be applied to any situation. This book will help you avoid logical errors, false conclusions, and selective perception to arrive at good answers based on actual facts.

In Time Reborn: From the Crisis in Physics to the Future of the Universe by Lee Smolin ($28.00, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt), the theoretical physicist, a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, named one of the world’s top hundred public intellectuals by Foreign Policy and Prospect magazines, take the reader on a journey that will set your intellectual synapses ablaze. Smolin believes that thinkers from Plato to Newton, to Einstein, defined the concept of time incorrectly. The nature of time, he says, has broader implications beyond physics in the realms of religion, ethics, economics and law. If the laws of physics could change the future, what does that imply about why they exist and why they currently allow for a human-friendly universe? Good question and one which the author asks and seeks to answer. A warning, however. Smolin has fallen into the “climate change” trap and wonders into economics and the social sciences. This reader concluded that Smolin should stick to physics.

Prometheus Books has carved out a niche for itself, publishing many books about atheism, humanism, and similar “enlightened” topics that toss out belief in God (or gods) and rely instead on science—almost as a new religion in itself. I am a great fan of science, but I also believe that humans are hardwired spiritually to find a larger reason for their existence and that of the universe. A number of the newest books from Prometheus include The Enlightenment Vision: Science, Reason, and the Promise of a Better Future by Stuart Jordan ($26.00); The Science of Miracles: Investigating the Incredible by Joe Nickell ($18.00, softcover); God and the Atom: From Democritus to the Higgs Boson—the Story of a Triumphant Idea by Victor J. Stenger ($25.00); and The Turbulent Universe by the late Paul Kurtz ($20.00, softcover).

The common theme in these books is a reliance on reason and science to the exclusion of any spiritual explanation of how the universe works. For anyone who is comfortable with this, any of these books will prove quite informative, but I personally suspect that religion does more good than harm (with the exception of the death-obsessed Islam), providing direction to leading a moral life and comfort when one must face its challenges.

There’s a lot of “big thinking” going on in these books. There are views that believe in the potential of humanity to accept universal human rights and recognize our similarities over our differences. History, however, tends to argue against that. The Stenger book reminds us that as far back as ancient Greek philosophers, the concept of the atom as the building block of everything was already being advanced. He concludes that between atoms and the void  that is all that exists. Nickell has devoted his time to debunking such things as the Shroud of Turin, “weeping” icons, and miracle healings, among other spiritually-based claims. These things matter if you want to disprove the role of belief, spirituality, in our lives, but why bother? Jordan, a physicist, looks at the progress humanity has made since the Enlightenment, but notes too that we have inherited some problems such as the persistence of widespread ignorance, the disparity between prosperous and impoverished nations, and the existence of weapons of mass destruction. He is concerned about over-population, nuclear proliferation, and climate change. Since the Earth currently sustains a population of seven billion and we can do nothing about the 5.4 billion years of natural climate change, we’d best pay attention to things we can actually do something about

Novels, Novels, Novels

The novels keep flooding in so here’s a look at some of the latest to arrive.

Karen White already has a huge fan base of women based on her softcover novels and The Time Between is her first as a hardcover ($25.95, New American Library) just out this month. Set in South Carolina low country, it is a beautifully written, compelling story about the complicated bond between sisters, the enduring legacy of family, and the power of forgiveness. The main character, 34-year-old Eleanor Murray is consumed with guilt for causing the accident that paralyzed her sister and for falling in love with her sister’s husband. When she is offered a part-time job caring for an elderly woman, Helena, she accepts in the hope that this good deed will atone for her mistakes in life. The two bond over their mutual love of music and, as she learns of Helena’s past, she learns the key to healing her relationship with her sister. This hardly does justice to the depth of the characters and their lives as revealed in this novel, but it surely advances the author’s career as an excellent novelist. Another new hardcover is Elizabeth Kelly’s The Last Summer of the Camper-Towns ($25.95, Liveright Publishing, a division of W.W. Norton & Company). Filled with dark plot twists and the author’s talent for authentic dialogue, the novel  is set in Cape Cod and the year is 1972 as a twelve-year-old girl named in honor of Jimmy Hoffa (!), Riddle James Camperdown, is the daughter of a labor organizer and a retired starlet. She just wants to enjoy a quiet summer amidst the dunes and the horse farms out of earshot of her bickering parents. This is a coming of age novel filled with questions for Riddle and, after she witnesses something potentially criminal, she decides to keep it to herself despite its being crucial evidence in the disappearance of a local boy. It will, however, unveil carefully constructed secrets within her family and their extended relationships. It’s one of those novels that are impossible to put down once you begin.

The bulk of the novels I receive are softcover (and thus affordable), so let’s wade through the stacks, many of which debut this month.

There’s a new erotic thriller, Vengeance is Now, by Scott D. Roberts ($17.95, 3L Publishing, Sacramento, CA) that is an action-packed story about a disgraced former police detective and private investigator, Tate Holloway, who has taken to drowning his sorrows in Tequila, smoking weed, and turning tricks with wealthy women to make a living; a secret he keeps from his girlfriend. His life really takes a turn for the sores when he’s set up, framed, and forced to go on the run for unspeakable crimes. He has to find the real killer and each revelation uncovers departmental and political corruption that leaders to a heart-pounding final showdown. The author is a writer, producer, and co-director with a career that spans twenty years. There are plenty of plot twists in Patrick M. Garry’s novel, Saving Faith, ($14.00, Kenrik Books), not to be confused with David Baldacci’s novel of the same name. It raises a whole number of philosophical questions as its narrator, a 20-year-old Jack Fenian, finds himself drawn into the life of a former journalist, Ev Sorin, whose car he has had mistakenly repossessed for a car dealership. While in court they watch a hearing on whether to keep alive a comatose patient whose identity is unknown and who Clare, a party to the case, is trying to save. Suffice to say this is a very complex story of people seeking to find meaning in their lives and grapple with the big questions of life. The novel follows four characters and their various motivations as they come together to save the patient. This is Garry’s eighth novel, many of which have won awards over the years. It is not light reading, but it is a story that will draw you in and keep you engrossed.

The Replacement Son ($16.95, Two Harbors Press) by W.S. Culpepper is a psychological drama framed within an epic adventure story that begins in Depression-era New Orleans, moves on to World War Two, and then to the devastation following Hurricane Katrina. Harry McChesney was seven years old when he learned of his brother who had died young and left his family in misery. He becomes the replacement son of the title and a man who seeks to rescue his family from the aftermath of his brother’s death, requiring a lifetime of labors. Along the way he gets help from a trusted family servant, a powerful talisman, and a bizarre set of twins. Harry is an unlikely hero and this novel has the feel of a classic tale that stretches over a long period of time. Another character seeking redemption is at the center of Wake the Dawn by Lauraine Snelling ($15.00, Faith Words, a Hachette Book Group imprint). For those of a spiritual nature, this book delivers the goods as the main character, Esther, runs a clinic in a small Minnesota town bordering Canada, an act of atonement following a hit and run accident years before. When a storm ravages the town she must deal with the reality of her past and learn to forgive herself. She is joined in this quest by a border patrol agent who lost the love of his life in a tragedy and never finished grieving. When Ben finds a young child along in the woods as the storm rolls in, Ben and Esther are brought together by this opportunity to change, redeem their lives, and grow. Another novel with a Christian core is Billy Coffey’s When Mockingbirds Sing ($15.95, Thomas Nelson). It is about childlike faith, a mysterious Rainbow Man, and a sleepy town divided between those who see a small child’s visions as prophetic and those who are afraid of that they perceive as the danger she represents. The story is based on his own daughter’s conversations with God. Coffey is a gifted writer and the book will please believers.

Set in World War Two, I’ll Be Seeing You by Suzanne Hayes and Loretta Nyhan ($15.95, Harlequin) is about two women who have never met strike up an inspiring correspondence and forge an extraordinary friendship that sustains each of them while their loved ones are risking their lives on the front lines. Neither of the co-authors has ever met in person, giving the novel a unique sense of authenticity. The year is January 1943 and Glory Whitehall has randomly pulled Rita Vincenzo’s name out of a hat at her 4H meeting and begins to write to a perfect stranger. It is an unconventional friendship that carries them through the uncertainties, dreadful loneliness, and temptations of tending to home fires while the men they love are fighting a world away.

A very different story is told in Hazardous Material by Kurt Kamm ($14.95, MCM Publishing) that explores the life of a firefighter with the Los Angeles County Fire Department, Bucky Dawson, who is awakened at 1:45 AM and it is a real page-turner that tells of the gritty world of outlaw motorcycle gangs and the meth labs in the heart of the Mojave Desert. When his task force is called out to support a sheriff’s raid on a meth lab, Bucky witnesses his estranged sister standing at the door of a double-wide trailer just before it explodes. Divorced, lonely, and struggling with a painkiller addiction, his life plunges into chaos after her death. There is plenty of drama and danger in this story. I reviewed Mike Resnick’s previous novel, “Dog in the Manger” his first Eli Paxton mystery. He’s back with The Trojan Colt ($15.95, Seventh Street Books, an imprint of Prometheus Books) when the down-on-his-luck private eye is on a routine security assignment to guard the high-priced yearlings of “Trojan”, a recently retired classic winner in Lexington, Kentucky. He is no sooner on the job when he must respond to a fracas in the horse born where he arrived just in time to thwart a vicious attack on a young groom. The assailants get away. When he doesn’t show up the next day, Paxton is assigned to investigate his disappearance and it turns out that two other staff members have disappeared in the past couple of months. Paxton has stumbled upon a multi-million-dollar plot that the perpetrator will kill to keep secret. Resnick knows how to plot a face-paced, intriguing mystery and you will enjoy this one.

If you enjoy short stories, you will enjoy Alana Cash’s How You Leave Texas ($8.00, Hacienda Press) that is comprised of three short stories and a novella by a native Texan, who tells the stories of four young women who leave Midland, Austin, Fort Worth and Mayville, Texas, for lives in New York, California, Jakarta, and, in one instance, jail. They are seeking to escape boredom and sorrow and find that you can leave Texas, but one’s life follows you around wherever you go. These are stories that women will relate to from their own lives and the fourth, “Frying Your Burger” is autobiographical, based on the author’s experiences in a year at Universal Studios and the people she met there. All four stories are very entertaining.

That’s it for June! Come back next month and, in the meantime, tell your friends, family, and coworkers who love to read about Bookviews.com. There’s a whole lot of summer reading ahead and you won’t want to miss out on the great new fiction and non-fiction that is waiting for you.