brooklyn book store

these just in … 27 February, 2008

41g9Ixx7KML._AA240_.jpgSix Frigates: The Epic History of the Founding of the U.S. Navy
by Ian W. Toll

Paperback $16.95

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From Publishers Weekly
It’s hard to imagine a better place for listening to this shrewdly abridged, excitingly read audio version of Toll’s impressive history of the founding of the United States Navy than aboard some sort of seagoing vessel. One of Patrick O’Brian’s warships would be perfect, but anything from a smaller sailboat to the Staten Island Ferry would be almost as auspicious. Veteran actor Lang, his voice instantly recognizable from films and television, never lets that familiarity take over. He trusts instead to Toll’s virtuoso combination of details large and small (everything from the uniquely horrible ways men died during sea battles to the greed of shipbuilders and their representatives in government) to keep listeners intrigued—changing his voice in subtle ways when he brings to life the real words of American and British naval heroes from Lord Nelson to the officers who won the war of 1812. Lang is a lucid guide through the stormy seas of politics and commercial intrigue surrounding the birth of the U.S. naval fleet, which would soon surprise the world—especially the British navy, which thought of itself as invincible.

Worldchanging: A User’s Guide for the 21st Century (Paperback)
by Alex Steffen, forward by Al Gore
Paperback $19.95

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From Publishers Weekly
This 600-page companion to the eco-friendly website of the same name (www.worldchanging.com) is chock-a-block with information about what is going on right now to create an environmentally and economically sustainable future-and what stands in opposition. Along the way, editor Steffen and his team make the stakes perfectly clear: “Oil company experts debate whether we will effectively run out of oil in twenty years or fifty, but the essential point remains: if you’re under thirty, you can expect to see a post-oil civilization in your lifetime.” The organization of the hefty volume mimics that of the website, divided into sections on Stuff, Shelter, Cities, Community, Business, Politics and Planet. Typical readers will be introduced to new concepts such as harvesting rainwater, zero-energy houses, South-South science and the use of flowers to detect land mines in entries on everything from “Knowing What’s Green” to “Demanding Human Rights.” Each entry is brief but comprehensive; for example, the passage on “Better Food Everywhere” focuses on “Where it Matters Most,” “Better Restaurants,” “Community Gardens,” and “Urban Farming.” All entries wrap up with reviews of pertinent resources-including books, websites and moves-where readers can get more detailed information. With color photos on nearly every page, and written by a small army of contributors living and working around the world (with biographies almost as fascinating as their contributions), it’s hard to imagine a more complete resource for those hoping to live in a future that is, as editor Steffen puts it, “bright, green, free and tough.”

Twinkie, Deconstructed: My Journey to Discover How the Ingredients Found in Processed Foods Are Grown, Mined (Yes, Mined), and Manipulated into What America Eats
by Steve Ettlinger

Paperback $15.00

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Like most Americans, Steve Ettlinger eats processed foods. And, like most consumers, he didn’t have a clue as to what most of the ingredients on the labels mean. So when his young daughter asked, “Daddy, what’s polysorbate 60?” he was at a loss—and determined to find out.

From the phosphate mines in Idaho to the oil fields in China, Twinkie, Deconstructed demystifies some of the most common processed food ingredients— where they come from, how they are made, how they are used—and why. Beginning at the source (hint: they’re often more closely linked to rock and petroleum than any of the four food groups), we follow each Twinkie ingredient through the process of being crushed, baked, fermented, refined, and/or reacted into a totally unrecognizable goo or powder—all for the sake of creating a simple snack cake.

An insightful exploration of the modern food industry, if you’ve ever wondered what you’re eating when you consume foods containing mono- and diglycerides or calcium sulfate (the latter a food-grade equivalent of plaster of paris), this book is for you.

Alice Waters and Chez Panisse
by Thomas McNamee

Paperback $15.00

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You can’t tell the story of Chez Panisse, Berkeley’s famed restaurant, without relating that of its diminutive founder, proprietor, and sometime chef, Alice Waters. This is what Thomas McNamee does most handily in his Alice Waters and Chez Panisse, a chronicle that begins with the seat-of-the-pants opening night of the “counterculture” venture in 1971, and ends 35 years later with Waters’s restaurant an American institution–one credited with birthing California Cuisine, a style devoted to simplicity, freshness and seasonality. The book also limns, with tasty gossip, the ever-evolving Chez Panisse family, including the cook-artisans uniquely responsible for dish creation; follows the attempts, mostly failed, to put the restaurant on sound financial footing; shows how dishes and menus get made; and of course pursues Waters as she broadens her commitment to “virtuous agriculture” by establishing ventures like The Edible Schoolyard and The Yale Sustainable Food Project. The success of Chez Panisse–Gourmet magazine named it the best American restaurant in 2002–has everything to do with Waters, yet she remains an elusive protagonist. Sophisticated yet naive, professional and amateur, hard-driving but emotionally blurry, she invites reader interest but doesn’t always satisfy it, as least as presented here. If McNamee cannot quite bring her to life, and if his tale lacks an insider’s full conversance with his subject, he still engages readers in the considerable drama of people finding their way–blunderingly, with talented intent–to something new. With menus, narrated recipes, and photographs throughout, the book is vital reading for anyone interested in food, period.

The Solitary Vice: Against Reading
by Mikita Brottman

Paperback $14.95

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Mikita Brottman wonders, just why is reading so great? It’s a solitary practice, one that takes away from time that could be spent developing important social networking skills. Reading’s not required for health, happiness, or a loving family. And, if reading is so important, why are catchy slogans like “Reading Changes Lives” and “Champions Read” needed to hammer the point home? Fearlessly tackling the notion that nonreaders are doomed to lives of despair and mental decay, Brottman makes the case that the value of reading lies not in its ability to ward off Alzheimer’s or that it’s a pleasant hobby. Rather, she argues that like that other well-known, solitary vice, masturbation, reading is ultimately not an act of pleasure but a tool for self-exploration, one that allows people to see the world through the eyes of others and lets them travel deep into the darkness of the human condition.

A Perfect Mess: The Hidden Benefits of Disorder–How Crammed Closets, Cluttered Offices, and On-the-Fly Planning Make the World a Better Place (Paperback)
by Eric Abrahamson & David H. Freedman

Paperback $14.99

A Perfect Mess combines counterintuitive thinking with stories from everyday life to provide a striking new view of how our world works. Ever since Einstein’s study of Brownian Motion, scientists have understood that a little disorder actually makes systems more effective. But most people still shun disorder–or suffer guilt over the mess they can’t avoid. No longer! With a spectacular array of anecdotes and case studies of the useful role mess can play, here is an antidote to the accepted wisdom that tight schedules, neatness, and consistency are the keys to success. Drawing on wide range of colorful examples from the home, business, parenting, cooking, the war on terrorism, retail, and even celebrity mess, A Perfect Mess takes the reader on a tour of the front lines of beneficial mess and its enemies, including a conference of professional organizers, a pointless home neatening, a gloriously and profitably messy hardware store, cutting-edge scientists using disorder in medical breakthroughs, a look at messiness around the world, and a visit with the most freewheeling and talented musical improviser who ever lived. Along the way, coauthors Abrahamson and Freedman demonstrate that moderately messy systems use resources more efficiently, yield better solutions, and are harder to break than neat ones. A Perfect Mess will help readers assess what the right amount of disorder is for a given system, and how to apply these ideas onto a large scale–government, society– and on a small scale–in your attic, kitchen, or office. A Perfect Mess will forever change the way we think about those unruly heaps of paper on our desks.

A Curious Earth: A Novel
by Gerard Woodward

Paperback $14.95

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Left with an empty house after the death of his wife, Aldous Jones is tempted to spend the whole day sitting in his chair in the kitchen. But with admirable determination he resumes old pastimes until, one day, wandering London, he is surprised to find a painting that holds him completely in its spell. Rembrandt’s portrait of his housekeeper-turned-mistress, Hendrijcke Stoffels, awakens Jones’s desire for a new life, a new woman, sex, and companionship. It leads him to Belgium to stay with his bohemian son, to evening language classes, and through a series of slightly misguided relationships until eventually he meets his Hendrijcke. As The Guardian writes, this work is “brave, funny, and beautifully written, as perceptive about Rembrandt and Shakespeare as it is about evening classes, potato tubers sprouting in neglected cupboards and the accumulated detritus of family life.”

The Testament of Gideon Mack
by James Robertson

Paperback $15.00

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For Gideon Mack, faithless minister, unfaithful husband and troubled soul,the existence of God, let alone the Devil, is no more credible than that of ghosts or fairies. Until the day he falls into a gorge and is rescued by someone who might just be Satan himself.

Mack’s testament - a compelling blend of memoir, legend, history and quite probably, madness - recounts one man’s emotional crisis, disappearance, resurrection and death. It also transports you into an utterly mesmerising exploration of the very nature of belief.

Serve the People!: A Novel
by Yan Lianke, translated by Julia Lovell

Paperback $14.00

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Set in 1967, at the peak of the Mao cult, Serve the People! is a beautifully told, wickedly daring story about the forbidden love affair between Liu Lian, the young, pretty wife of a powerful Division Commander in Communist China, and her household’s lowly servant, Wu Dawang. When Liu Lian establishes a rule for her orderly that he is to attend to her needs whenever the household’s wooden Serve the People! sign is removed from its usual place, the orderly vows to obey. What follows is a remarkable love story and a profound and deliciously comic satire on Mao’s famous slogan and the political and sexual taboos of his regime. As life is breathed into the illicit sexual affair, Yan Lianke brilliantly captures how the Model Soldier Wu Dawang becomes an eager collaborator with the restless and demanding Liu Lian, their actions inspired by primitive passions that they are only just discovering. Originally banned in China, and the first work from Yan Lianke to be translated into English, Serve the People! brings us the debut of one of the most important authors writing from inside China today.

The Savage Detectives: A Novel
by Roberto Bolano, translated by Natasha Wimmer

Paperback $15.00

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From Publishers Weekly
This novel—the major work from Chilean-born novelist Bolaño (1953–2003) here beautifully translated by Wimmer—will allow English speaking readers to discover a truly great writer. In early 1970s Mexico City, young poets Arturo Belano (Bolaño’s alter ego and a regular in his fiction) and Ulises Lima start a small, erratically militant literary movement, the Visceral Realists, named for another, semimythical group started in the 1920s by the nearly forgotten poet Cesárea Tinajero. The book opens with 17 year-old Juan García Madero’s precocious, deadpan notebook entries, dated 1975, chronicling his initiation into the movement. The long middle section—written, like George Plimpton’s Edie, as a set of anxiously vivid testimonies from friends, lovers, bystanders and a great many enemies—tracks Belano and Lima as they travel the globe from 1975 to the mid-1990s. There are copious, and acidly hilarious, references to the Latin American literary scene, and one needn’t be an insider to get the jokes: they’re all in Bolaño’s masterful shifts in tone, captured with precision by Wimmer. The book’s moving final section flashes back to 1976, as Belano, Lima and García Madero search for Cesárea Tinajero, with a young hooker named Lupe in tow. Bolaño fashions an engrossing lost world of youth and utopian ambition, as particular and vivid as it is sad and uncontainable.

Best Sellers … 25 February, 2008

BookCourt Best Sellers                                                                                                             

February 25, 2008                                         20% off list price

Hardcover Fiction
  1. BRIEF WONDROUS LIFE OF OSCAR WAO. Junot Diaz. Riverhead. $24.95. Our Price $19.96.
  2. THE COMMONER. John Burnham Schwartz. Doubleday.  $24.95. Our Price $19.96.
  3. BEAUTIFUL CHILDREN. Charles Bock. Random House. $25. Our Price $20.
  4. PERSON OF INTEREST. Susan Choi. Penguin. $24.95. Our Price $19.96.
  5. SHARP TEETH. Toby Barlow. HarperCollins. $22.95. Our Price $18.36.
  6. PEOPLE OF THE BOOK. Geraldine Brooks. Penguin. $25.95. Our Price $20.76.
  7. ON CHESIL BEACH. Ian McEwan. Doubleday. $22. Our Price $17.60.
  8. APPEAL. John Grisham. Doubleday. $27.95. Our Price $22.36.
  9. RESERVE. Russell Banks. HarperCollins. $24.95. Our Price $19.96.
  10. DIARY OF A BAD YEAR. J. Coetzee. Penguin. $24.95. Our Price $19.96.

Hardcover Nonfiction

  1. IN DEFENSE OF FOOD. Michael Pollan. Penguin. $21.95. Our Price $17.56.
  2. 101 THINGS I LEARNED IN ARCHITECTURE SCHOOL. Matthew Frederick. MIT Press. $12.95. Our Price $10.36.
  3. AGE OF AMERICAN UNREASON. Susan Jacoby. Random House. $26.                       Our Price $20.80.
  4. SECRET INGREDIENTS. David Remnick. Random House. $29.95.Our Price $23.96.
  5. HOW TO COOK EVERYTHIING VEGETARIAN. Mark Bittman. Wiley. $35. Our Price $28.
  6. ART OF SIMPLE FOOD. Alice Waters. Random House. $35. Our Price $28.
  7. MY FATHER’S HEART. Steve McKee. Perseus. $25. Our Price $20.
  8. ROAST CHICKEN & OTHER STORIES. Simon Hopkinson. Hyperion. $24.95. Our Price $19.96.
  9. BORN STANDING UP. Steve Martin. Simon & Schuster. $25. Our Price $20.
  10. NINE. Jeffery Toobin. Doubleday. $27.95. Our Price $22.36.

    Paperback Fiction

  1. THE GATHERING. Anne Enright. Grove Press. $14. Our Price $11.20.
  2. OIL. Upton Sinclair. Penguin. $15. Our Price $12.
  3. BEAUTIFUL THINGS THAT HEAVEN BEARS. Dinaw Mengestu. Riverhead.  $14. Our Price $11.20.
  4. WHAT IS THE WHAT? Dave Eggers. Random House. $15.95. Our Price $12.76.
  5. THE ROAD. Cormac McCarthy. Random House. $14.95. Our Price $11.96.
  6. NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN. Cormac McCarthy. Random House. $14.         Our Price $11.20.
  7. CURIOUS INCIDENT OF THE DOG IN THE NIGHT-TIME.               Mark Haddon. Random House. $13.95. Our Price 11.16.
  8. A TREE GROWS IN BROOKLYN. Betty Smith. HarperCollins. $16.95.                      Our Price $13.56.
  9. OTHER BOLEYN GIRL. Philippa Gregory. Simon & Schuster. $16. Our Price $12.80.
  10. EMPEROR’S CHILDREN. Claire Messud. Random House. $14.95. Our Price $11.96.

    Paperback Nonfiction

  1. DREAMS FROM MY FATHER. Barack Obama. Random House. $14.95.                      Our Price $11.96.
  2. BROOKLYN WAS MINE. Chris Knutsen & Valerie Steiker (editors). Riverhead. $15. Our Price $12.
  3. DIVING BELL & THE BUTTERFLY.  Jean-Dominique Bauby. Random House. $12.95. Our Price $10.36.
  4. EAT, PRAY, LOVE. Elizabeth Gilbert. Penguin. $15. Our Price $12.
  5. OMNIVORE’S DILEMMA. Michael Pollan. Penguin. $16. Our Price $12.80.
  6. NEW EARTH. Eckhart Tolle. Penguin. $14. Our Price $11.20.
  7. WORKS. Kate Ascher. Penguin. $20. Our Price $16.
  8. AUDACITY OF HOPE. Barack Obama. Random House $14.95. Our Price $11.96.
  9. BETTER. Atul Gawande. St. Martin’s Press. $15. Our Price $12.
  10. COMPLETE PERSEPOLIS. Marjane Satrapi. Random House. $24.95.                                 Our Price $19.96.

    Children’s Hardcover & Paperback

  1. GALLOP. Rufus Seder. Workman. $12.95. Our Price $10.36.
  2. PAT THE BUNNY. Edith Kunhardt. Random House. $9.99. Our Price $7.99.
  3. PINKALICIOUS. Elizabeth Kann. HarperCollins. $16.99. Our Price $13.59.
  4. FANCY NANCY BONJOUR BUTTERFLY. Jane O’Connor. HarperCollins. $16.99. Our Price $13.59.
  5. I LIVE IN BROOKLYN. Mari Takabayashi. Houghton Mifflin. $16. Our Price $12.80.
  6. CHICKEN SOUP WITH RICE. Maurice Sendak. HarperCollins. $5.95.                      Our Price $4.76.
  7. WHAT’S UP DUCK? Tad Hills. Random House. $6.99. Our Price $5.59.
  8. GOOD NIGHT NEW YORK CITY. A. Gamble. Our World of Books. $9.95.            Our Price $9.76..
  9. EVERYONE POOPS. Taro Gomi. Kane Miller. $7.95. Our Price $6.36.
  10. VERY HUNGRY CATERPILLAR Board Book. Eric Carle. Putnam. $10.99.              Our Price $8.79.

these just in … 24 February, 2007

Lost Men: A Novel
by Brian Leung

Paperback $13.00

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From Booklist
Soon after 12-year-old Westen Chan’s American mother dies in an accident, his Chinese father leaves the boy with his mother’s aunt and uncle and says he’ll be back. Two decades later, his father “returns” and suggests that father and son visit China together. Westen has grown to adulthood tormented by his abandonment, his failed relationships, his lack of familial and cultural roots. His father, who has spent his middle age tormented by abandoning his son and by childhood memories of his family’s flight from revolution in China, now also faces a terminal illness. Father and son are truly lost men, and the trip to China doesn’t provide the reconciliation and redemption both men desire. Lost Men is an accomplished first novel by the author of World Famous Love Acts (2004), an award-winning book of short stories. Written in the plainest of language, Lost Men is a powerful, universal story of inchoate fathers and sons.

The Jewish Writings    
by Hannah Arendt

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Although Hannah Arendt is not primarily known as a Jewish thinker, she probably wrote more about Jewish issues than any other topic. As a young adult in Germany, she wrote about German Jewish history. After moving to France in 1933, she helped Jewish youth immigrate to Palestine. During her years in Paris, her principle concern was the transformation of antinomianism from prejudice to policy, which would culminate in the Nazi “final solution.” After France fell, Arendt escaped from an internment camp and made her way to America. There she wrote articles calling for a Jewish army to fight the Nazis. After the war, she supported the creation of a Jewish homeland in a binational (Arab-Jewish) state of Israel.

Arendt’s original conception of political freedom cannot be fully grasped apart from her experience as a Jew. In 1961 she attended Adolf Eichmann’s trial in Jerusalem. Her report, Eichmann in Jerusalem, provoked an immense controversy, which culminated in her virtual excommunication from the worldwide Jewish community. Today that controversy is the subject of serious re-evaluation, especially among younger people in the United States, Europe, and Israel.

The publication of The Jewish Writings–much of which has never appeared before–traces Arendt’s life and thought as a Jew. It will put an end to any doubts about the centrality, from beginning to end, of Arendt’s Jewish experience.

The Mule
by Juan Eslava Galan, translated by Lisa Dillman

Paperback $12.00

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From Publishers Weekly
This light Spanish Civil War story follows the romantic and military misadventures of a perennially put-upon muleteer stuck fighting for a cause he doesn’t believe in. Juan Castro Pérez stumbles on a stray mule (he names her Valentina) and smuggles her into his army regiment; his plan is to bring her to his family once the war is over. Though Castro sympathizes with the nationalist forces, his region is solidly Communist and he’s forced to enlist on that side, where he, like many of his comrades, does his utmost to avoid combat and get back home; one of his more engaging exploits involves wooing a pensioner’s daughter. He eventually defects to the nationalists, and when Castro and Valentina inadvertently cross paths with a group of Communist soldiers, an unarmed Castro thinks he’s doomed until the soldiers order him at gunpoint to take them prisoner so they can survive the war. A journalist catches wind of the incident and twists the story into a morale-boosting puff piece that turns Castro into a poster boy for Franco’s cause. Castro’s dedication to Valentina provides the heartfelt through line to this winsome war story and adds a dose of heartbreak at the novel’s close.

Walking on Eggshells: Navigating the Delicate Relationship Between Adult Children and Parents
by Jane Isay

Paperback $14.00

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From Publishers Weekly
As baby boomer parents age, they’re discovering the empty-nest syndrome is nothing compared to what happens when their kids graduate from college and start leading lives of their own. To a generation famous for being involved in every aspect of their children’s lives, it can be upsetting to find that those children no longer need or welcome your advice. How does one parent children who no longer need parenting? Publishing veteran Isay, an editor and mother of two grown sons, interviews scores of parents and adult children of all ages to see how they are doing it. The stories are heartwarming, and Isay recounts them with intelligence and compassion. What does she find? Nothing Ann Landers hasn’t already told us. Mainly: don’t give advice; make friends with your children’s significant others; and remember that love heals. The most compelling story is Isay’s own. One wishes it were the centerpiece of the book rather than tacked on as an epilogue. Her experience is an example of her most interesting discovery: children are quick to forgive and often the ones who take the initiative in forging a new brand of closeness between themselves and their parents—a closeness that is best described as adult.

Nim Chimpsky: The Chimp Who Would Be Human
by Elizabeth Hess

Hardcover $23.00 - 10%

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From Publishers Weekly
In what is surely one of the most memorable and intelligent recent books about animal-human interaction, Hess (Lost and Found: Dogs, Cats and Everyday Heroes at a Country Animal Shelter) tells the story of Nim Chimpsky, who in the 1970s was the subject of an experiment begun at the University of Oklahoma to find out whether a chimp could learn American Sign Language—and thus refute Noam Chomsky’s influential thesis that language is inherent only in humans. Nim was sent to live with a family in New York City and taught human language like any other child. Hess sympathetically yet unerringly details both the project’s successes and failures, its heroes and villains, as she recounts Nim’s odyssey from the Manhattan town house to a mansion in the Bronx and finally back to Oklahoma, where he was bounced among various facilities as financial, personal and scientific troubles plagued the study. The book expertly shows why the Nim experiment was a crucial event in animal studies, but more importantly, Hess captures Nim’s legendary charm, mischievous sense of humor, and keen understanding of human beings. This may well be the only book on linguistics and primatology that will leave its readers in tears over the life and times of its amazing subject.

Remember Me?
by Sophie Kinsella

Hardcover $25.00 - 10%

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From Publishers Weekly
Shopaholicpowerhouse Kinsella delights again with her latest, a winning if unoriginal tale of amnesia striking an ambitious shrew and changing her life for the better. After taking a nasty bump on the head, Lexi Smart awakens in a hospital convinced that it’s 2004 and that she’s just missed her father’s funeral. It’s actually three years later, and she no longer has crooked teeth, frizzy hair and a loser boyfriend. Initially wowed by what she’s become—a gorgeous, cut-throat businesswoman—Lexi soon finds herself attempting to figure out how it happened. As her personality change and lost memory threaten her job, Lexi tries to dredge up some chemistry with her handsome albeit priggish husband, Eric, though the effort is unnecessary with Eric’s colleague Jon, who tells Lexi that she was about to leave Eric for him. Amnesia tales may be old hat, but Kinsella keeps things fresh and frothy with workplace politicking, romantic intrigue and a vibrant (though sometimes caricatured) cast. Though the happy ending won’t come as a surprise, readers will be rooting for Lexi all along.

A Life at Work: The Joy of Discovering What You Were Born to Do
by Thomas Moore

Hardcover $24.95 - 10%

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From Publishers Weekly
In this slender volume, bestselling spiritual guru Moore (Care of the Soul) says that finding the right work, finding one’s vocation, is also part of the care of the soul. Often Moore proves astute; for instance, he urges people to think about having not just one but a variety of callings. His consideration of the pleasures and foibles of friendship in the workplace is especially insightful. Although confident that even the most mundane job can be enjoyable and life-giving, Moore sets the question of vocation in a broader frame, suggesting that it is best addressed as a part of fashioning lives that are organically whole and meaningful. Though still influenced by Jung, Moore draws inspiration from a delightful array of sources, including Yeats, Socrates, and Rapunzel. The book’s governing metaphor, alchemy, is often apt; Moore notes that both alchemy and finding a life’s work require patience through a long refining process, and both are about the process, not just the end result. Often the comparison works; at other times, it’s heavy-handed, and Moore also lapses into clichés (take the past and own it). Nonetheless, this will be of use to many people who seek joyful work and integrated lives.

American-Made: The Enduring Legacy of the WPA: When FDR Put the Nation to Work
by Nick Taylor

Hardcover $27.00 - 10%

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From Publishers Weekly
Launched in 1935, at the bottom of the Great Depression, the Works Progress Administration (WPA) served as a linchpin of FDR’s New Deal. Through the WPA, Roosevelt put millions of unemployed Americans to work on public construction projects, from dams and courthouses to parks and roads. The WPA’s Federal Writers Project employed a host of artists and writers (among them Jackson Pollock, Saul Bellow, Ralph Ellison, Zora Neale Hurston and Studs Terkel); theater and musical artists also received funding. Taylor (Ordinary Miracles: Life in a Small Church) vividly and painstakingly paints the full story of the WPA from its inception to its shutdown by Congress in 1943, at which point the war boom in manufacturing had made it unnecessary. In an eloquent and balanced appraisal, Taylor not only chronicles the WPA’s numerous triumphs (including New York’s LaGuardia Airport) but also its failures, most notably graft and other chicanery at the local level. Taylor details as well the dicey intramural politics in Congress over which states and districts would get the largest slice of the WPA pie. All told, Taylor’s volume makes for a splendid appreciation of the WPA with which to celebrate the upcoming 75th anniversary of the New Deal’s beginnings in 1933.

My Liar: A Novel
by Rachel Cline

Hardcover $23.00 - 10%
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Rachel Cline’s debut novel, What to Keep, was praised as “striking . . . lovely” (Entertainment Weekly), “tangibly real” (Los Angeles Times), and “eminently readable” (Salon). Set in 1990s Hollywood, My Liar portrays the complex connection between two talented women, each striving to realize her own vision of success in work and in love.

Annabeth Jensen, thirty-three, is a film editor. A native Minnesotan, she is most comfortable playing nice and working behind the scenes, even after ten years in Los Angeles. Then she crosses paths with up-and-coming director Laura Katz. Self-confident, assertive, and alluring, Laura seems to be the perfect mentor and the ideal best friend–especially after she hires Annabeth to edit her new film, Trouble Doll.

Yet as Annabeth cuts and recuts the film that both women hope will assure their futures, she finds herself wanting creative control almost as badly as she craves Laura’s approval. Meanwhile, Laura, who trusts almost no one (certainly not her slippery producer, her brittle screenwriter, or her wayward husband), finds herself increasingly reliant on Annabeth. And when Trouble Doll emerges from their collaboration, uncomfortable truths about both women’s lives are forced into the light.

Rachel Cline illuminates the world of moviemaking with keen insight and wry wit. But My Liar looks far beyond the HOLLYWOOD sign. Its real subject is self-deception–in friendship, art, and life–and the enmeshed nature of communication and competition between women.

The Post-Birthday World: A Novel
by Lionel Shriver

Paperback $14.95

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From Publishers Weekly
The smallest details of staid coupledom duel it out with a lusty alternate reality that begins when a woman passes up an opportunity to cheat on her longtime boyfriend in Shriver’s latest (after the Orange Prize–winning We Need to Talk About Kevin). Irina McGovern, a children’s book illustrator in London, lives in comfortable familiarity with husband-in-everything-but-marriage-certificate Lawrence Trainer, and every summer the two have dinner with their friend, the professional snooker player Ramsey Acton, to celebrate Ramsey’s birthday. One year, following Ramsey’s divorce and while terrorism specialist “think tank wonk” Lawrence is in Sarajevo on business, Irina and Ramsey have dinner, and after cocktails and a spot of hash, Irina is tempted to kiss Ramsey. From this near-smooch, Shriver leads readers on a two-pronged narrative: one consisting of what Irina imagines would have happened if she had given in to temptation, the other showing Irina staying with Lawrence while fantasizing about Ramsey. With Jamesian patience, Shriver explores snooker tournaments and terrorism conferences, passionate lovemaking and passionless sex, and teases out her themes of ambition, self-recrimination and longing. The result is an impressive if exhausting novel.

The Wages of Destruction: The Making and Breaking of the Nazi Economy
by Adam Tooze

Paperback $20.00

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From Booklist
Tooze’s economic history of the Third Reich is, in a word, monumental. Lately, social and ideological analyses of Hitler’s strategic choices have prevailed; in part because of the volume and complexity of available data, even the most economically savvy historians of World War II have generally provided only fragmentary glimpses of the myriad ways in which economics influenced German rearmament and aggression. As Tooze argues, however, the choices made by the Nazi war machine were as economically driven as they were Hitler driven. The author challenges a number of commonly held assumptions, among them the notion that successful rearmament was caused by the Nazi state’s job-creation efforts and the idea that Hitler did not intend to start a continental war in attacking Czechoslovakia. Tooze also addresses the relationship between economics and ideology at Auschwitz. The net result, emerging from more than 800 pages of genuinely readable macroeconomic analysis, is an original and comprehensive thesis that couches the strategic choices of the Third Reich firmly within an increasingly American twentieth century. Originally released to broad acclaim in the UK in 2006, Tooze’s tome sets a high bar for the historians of the twenty-first century.

Ireland Since 1939: The Persistence of Conflict
by Henry Patterson

Paperback $16.00

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The Ireland of today is a place poised between the divisiveness of deep-seated conflict and the modernizing pull of material prosperity. Though each state’s history is strikingly divergent, the mirroring ideologies that fuel them are remarkably symbiotic. With Ireland Since 1939, one of the most distinguished Irish historians working today casts a fresh and unpredictable eye to Ireland’s history from World War II up through the present to show how—by putting aside its North/South conflict—Ireland can look forward to a prosperous economic future.

Reading Judas: The Gospel of Judas and the Shaping of Christianity
by Elaine Pagels & Karen L. King

Paperback $15.00

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From Publishers Weekly
The Gospel of Judas represents the most baffling in a series of recently unearthed noncanonical manuscripts that bring to light divergent accounts of Christ’s life and ministry. Robertson Dean reads King’s translation of the ancient text with frequent pauses to note gaps of missing or untranslatable words and sentences. The main section of Pagels and King’s book, narrated by Justine Eyre with occasional support from Dean who gives voice to individual historical figures, offers compelling insights about why the Gospel of Judas threatened the burgeoning religious hierarchy of the second century A.D. and how this often unsettling narrative ultimately manages to provide a surprising vision of heavenly grace amid the ravages of flawed earthly spiritual leadership. Drawing from their extensive expertise regarding contemporary understandings of the Gnostic gospels, the analysis the authors present will no doubt generate valuable theological dialogue. Yet the enigmatic nature of the source material may remain a stumbling block for listeners, and general audiences hoping for Gnosticism 101 may need to search elsewhere.

Kindness Goes Unpunished
by Craig Johnson

Paperback $14.00

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Craig Johnson ’s mystery series —starring Walt Longmire, the straight-shooting sheriff of Absaroka County, Wyoming—is attracting more and more fans with its distinctive blend of humor and action. In Kindness Goes Unpunished, Walt’s pleasure trip to Philadelphia to visit his daughter, Cady, turns into a nightmare when she is the victim of a vicious attack that leaves her near death. Walt is forced to unpack his saddlebag of tricks to mete out some Western-style justice, and the result is another action-packed thriller from this up-and-coming star of crime fiction.

The Geography of Wine: How Landscapes, Cultures, Terroir, and the Weather Make a Good Drop
by Brian J. Sommers

Paperback $16.00

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A fun and fascinating examination of a vineyards geography, this book takes connoisseurs–and would-be connoisseurs–on a tour of wine regions and explains the principles geographers use to understand the critical factors that make up the wine character of a place.

Metamorphosis and Other Stories     *Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition
by Franz Kafka, translated by Michael Hofmann

Paperback $14.00

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For all his fame, Franz Kafka published only a small number of stories in his lifetime. This new translation of those stories, by Michael Hofmann, one of the most respected German-to-English translators at work today, makes Kafka’s best-known works available to a new generation of readers. Metamorphosis gives full expression to the breadth of Kafka’s literary vision and the extraordinary depth of his imagination.

Burning Bright
by Tracy Chevalier

Paperback $14.00

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Tracy Chevalier, author of the international bestseller Girl With a Pearl Earring, returns with another brilliantly rendered historical tale set in the waning days of eighteenth-century London. Poet, artist, and printer William Blake works in obscurity as England is rocked by the shock waves of the French Revolution. Next door, the Kellaway family has just moved in, and country boy Jem Kellaway strikes up a tentative friendship with street�“savvy Maggie Butterfield. As their stories intertwine with Blake’s, the two children navigate the confusing and exhilarating path to adolescence, and inspire the poet to create the work that enshrined his genius.

Brother One Cell
by Cullen Thomas

Paperback $15.00

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From Booklist
In 1994, Thomas was a bright young man just out of college, looking to satisfy his wanderlust by teaching English in South Korea. His taste for adventure was formed in early childhood when he and his brother invented an imaginary character named the “Jolly Marauder,” a pirate-nobleman with a fearless heart and a take-no-prisoners attitude. Thomas claimed the Jolly Marauder as his life model, which influenced his decisions to accept the teaching job in Seoul, work there illegally without a contract, and buy a cheap kilo of hashish in the Philippines to sell back in Seoul for a cool 10 grand. The fantasy ended, however, when Thomas was caught by the police and sentenced to three and a half years in a South Korean prison. In his memoir, Thomas explains how that time of incarceration represented his real education. Surprisingly, he found little brutality (no rape) in Korea’s penal institutions, but there were language barriers, unfamiliar foreign customs, extreme codes of social hierarchy, and almost no individual freedoms. He had to overcome all of this, as well as his own personal demons, to get to a place of higher understanding–something that, amazingly, he seemed to accomplish. His account of that journey is gripping.

Grace (Eventually): Thoughts on Faith
by Anne Lamott

Paperback $14.00

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The world, community, the family, the human heart: these are the beautiful and complicated arenas in which our lives unfold. Wherever you look, there’s trouble and wonder, pain and beauty, restoration and darkness — sometimes all at once.

Yet amid the confusion, if you look carefully, in nature or in the kitchen, in ordinariness or in mystery, beyond the emotion muck we all slog through, you’ll find it eventually: a path, some light to see by, moments of insight, courage, or buoyancy. In other words, grace.

Anne Lamott knows and lives by this belief, most of the time. In Grace (Eventually), her brilliant new collection, she recounts the missteps, detours, and roadblocks in her walk of faith.

It’s been and erratic journey, and some days go better than others. “I wish grace and healing were more abracadabra kinds of things,” she writes. “Also, that delicate silver bells would ring to announce grace’s arrival. But no, it’s clog and slog and scotch, on the floor, in the silence, in the dark.”

In Grace (Eventually), Lamott describes how she copes. The challenges seem alternately inconsequential and insurmountable — the anger engendered by an obstinate carpet salesman or president; the engulfing envy at friend’s professional success; the bewilderment at discovering that a child has grown up or that a friend wants to die on his own terms — and they are also universal.

Wise and irreverent, poignant and funny, Grace (Eventually) is a primer in faith, as we come to discover what it means to be fully human and alive.

these just in … 19 February, 2008

Binu and The Great Wall: The Myth of Meng
by Su Tong, translated by Howard Goldblatt

Hardcover $24.00 - 10%

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From the author of the international hit Raise the Red Lantern comes a gorgeous reimagining of the myth of the girl whose tears collapsed the Great Wall—the seminal myth in Chinese culture. Su Tong is China’s most provocative young writer. Binu and the Great Wall is spellbinding and shocking—a tour de force from an artist called “a writer to watch” by Kirkus Reviews and “a true literary talent” by Anchee Min. In Peach village, crying is forbidden. But as a child, Binu never learned to hide her tears. Shunned by the villagers, she faced a bleak future until she met Qiliang, an orphan who offered her his hand in marriage. Then, one day, Qiliang disappears. Binu learns that he has been transported hundreds of miles and forced to labor on a project of terrifying ambition and scale—the building of the Great Wall. Binu is determined to find and save her husband. Inspired by her love, she sets out on an extraordinary journey toward Great Swallow Mountain with only a blind frog for company. What follows is an unforgettable story of passion, hardship, and magical adventure.

World Made by Hand: A Novel
by James Howard Kunstler

Hardcover $24.00 - 10%

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In the best-seller The Long Emergency, James Howard Kunstler explored how the terminal decline of oil production had the potential to put industrial civilization out of business. With World Made By Hand Kunstler makes an imaginative leap into the future, a few decades hence, and shows us what life may be like after these coming catastrophes—the end of oil, climate change, global pandemics, and resource wars—converge. For the townspeople of Union Grove, New York, the future is not what they thought it would be.  Transportation is slow and dangerous, so food is grown locally at great expense of time and energy. And the outside world is largely unknown. There may be a president and he may be in Minneapolis now, but people aren’t sure. As the heat of summer intensifies, the residents struggle with the new way of life in a world of abandoned highways and empty houses, horses working the fields and rivers replenished with fish. A captivating, utterly realistic novel, World Made by Hand takes speculative fiction beyond the apocalypse and shows what happens when life gets extremely local.

Beautiful Boy: A Father’s Journey Through His Son’s Meth Addiction
by David Sheff

Hardcover $24.00 - 10%

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From Publishers Weekly
Expanding on his New York Times Magazine article, Sheff chronicles his son’s downward spiral into addiction and the impact on him and his family. A bright, capable teenager, Nic began trying mind- and mood-altering substances when he was 17. In months, use became abuse, then abuse became addiction. By the time Sheff knew of his son’s condition, Nic was strung out on meth, the highly potent stimulant. While his son struggles to get clean, his second wife and two younger children are pulled helplessly into the drama. Sheff, as the parent of an addict, cycles through denial and acceptance and resistance. The author was already a journalist of considerable standing when this painful story began to unfold, and his impulse for detail serves him personally as well as professionally: there are hard, solid facts about meth and the kinds of havoc it wreaks on individuals, families and communities both urban and rural. His journey is long and harrowing, but Sheff does not spare himself or anyone else from keen professional scrutiny any more than he was himself spared the pains—and joys—of watching a loved one struggling with addiction and recovery. Real recovery creates—and can itself be—its own reward; this is an honest, hopeful book, coming at a propitious moment in the meth epidemic.

The Reason for God: Belief in an Age of Skepticism
by Timothy Keller

Hardcover $24.95 - 10%

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Although a vocal minority continues to attack the Christian faith, for most Americans, faith is a large part of their lives: 86 percent of Americans refer to themselves as religious, and 75 percent of all Americans consider themselves Christians. So how should they respond to these passionate, learned, and persuasive books that promote science and secularism over religion and faith? For years, Tim Keller has compiled a list of the most frequently voiced “doubts” skeptics bring to his Manhattan church. And in The Reason for God, he single-handedly dismantles each of them. Written with atheists, agnostics, and skeptics in mind, Keller also provides an intelligent platform on which true believers can stand their ground when bombarded by the backlash. The Reason for God challenges such ideology at its core and points to the true path and purpose of Christianity.

Why is there suffering in the world? How could a loving God send people to Hell? Why isn’t Christianity more inclusive? Shouldn’t the Christian God be a god of love? How can one religion be “right” and the rest “wrong”? Why have so many wars been fought in the name of God? These are just a few of the questions even ardent believers wrestle with today. In this book, Tim Keller uses literature, philosophy, real-life conversations and reasoning, and even pop culture to explain how faith in a Christian God is a soundly rational belief, held by thoughtful people of intellectual integrity with a deep compassion for those who truly want to know the truth.

Tattooing the World: Pacific Designs in Print and Skin
by Juniper Ellis

Paperback $27.50

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In the 1830s an Irishman named James F. O’Connell acquired a full-body tattoo while living as a castaway in the Pacific. The tattoo featured traditional patterns that, to native Pohnpeians, defined O’Connell’s life; they made him wholly human. Yet upon traveling to New York, these markings singled him out as a freak. His tattoos frightened women and children, and ministers warned their congregations that viewing O’Connell’s markings would cause the ink to transfer to the skin of their unborn children. In many ways, O’Connell’s story exemplifies the unique history of the modern tattoo, which began in the Pacific and then spread throughout the world. No matter what form it has taken, the tattoo has always embodied social standing, aesthetics, ethics, culture, gender, and sexuality. Tattoos are personal and corporate, private and public. They mark the profane and the sacred, the extravagant and the essential, the playful and the political. From the Pacific islands to the world at large, tattoos are a symbolic and often provocative form of expression and communication.

Tattooing the World is the first book on tattoo literature and culture. Juniper Ellis traces the origins and significance of modern tattoo in the works of nineteenth- and twentieth-century artists, travelers, missionaries, scientists, and such writers as Herman Melville, Margaret Mead, Albert Wendt, and Sia Figiel. Traditional Pacific tattoo patterns are formed using an array of well-defined motifs. They place the individual in a particular community and often convey genealogy and ideas of the sacred. However, outside of the Pacific, those who wear and view tattoos determine their meaning and interpret their design differently. Reading indigenous historiography alongside Western travelogue and other writings, Ellis paints a surprising portrait of how culture has been etched both on the human form and on a body of literature.

The Welsh Girl
by Peter Ho Davies

Paperback $13.95

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From Publishers Weekly
Esther, a WWII-era Welsh barmaid, finds her father—a fiercely nationalistic, anti-English shepherd—provincial; she daydreams that she’ll elope to London with her secret sweetheart, an English soldier. In short order, Esther is raped by her boyfriend, and her Welsh village is turned into a dumping ground for German prisoners. Meanwhile, Karsten, a German POW who is mortified that he’d ordered his men to surrender, believes that only by escaping can he find redemption. Davies (Equal Love) uses the familiar tensions of WWII Britain to nice ensemble effect: among the more nuanced secondary characters is a British captain who is the son of a German-Jewish WWI hero—the man’s father had always considered himself a Lutheran until the Nazi ascension forced him to flee Germany. As Esther begins to question her own allegiances, Karsten comes into her orbit. What makes this first novel by an award-winning short-storyteller an intriguing read isn’t the plot—which doesn’t quite go anywhere—but the beautifully realized characters, who learn that life is a jumble of difficult compromises best confronted with eyes wide open.

Storms Can’t Hurt the Sky: A Buddhist Path Through Divorce
by Gabriel Cohen

Paperback $14.95

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About a million people get divorced in the U.S. every year; an estimated three million people practice Buddhism in the U.S., with interest in the topic widely growing. The first book to focus explicitly on both subjects, Gabriel Cohen’s Storms Can’t Hurt the Sky: A Buddhist Path through Divorce (Da Capo Lifelong Books; March 1st, 2008) shows how to use Buddhist insights to heal the stress and heartbreak of romantic breakups.

In Storms Can’t Hurt the Sky, Cohen delves into his personal experience—along with parables, humor, social science studies, insights from Buddhist masters, and interviews with other divorcés—to provide a practical guide to surviving the pain of divorce. The book combines a deeply personal journey with a broad survey of expert insights on the subject. Cohen’s story of breakup and ultimate renewal will appeal to those of any faith looking for a way to recover from their own losses and move forward with better future relationships.

Designed to be easily accessible for those new to Buddhism, but also instructive for those with some prior experience of Buddhist thought, Storms Can’t Hurt the Sky is for anyone undergoing painful changes and losses. It’s also for those who would like to learn how to improve their romantic relationships in general.

Gabriel Cohen has written for the New York Times and Time Out New York and has taught writing at NYU. The author of three novels, he lives in Brooklyn, New York.

Bryan Adams
by Bryan Adams

Paperback $22.95

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At first, Bryan Adams’ photography was closely linked to his life as a music icon. As a Canadian rock star who has sold more than 60 million records since the early eighties, this multi-talented artist also photographed the backstage scene, and later for his own album covers. However, before long he was also shooting advertising campaigns for British designer John Richmond. Next, came highly acclaimed photographs in such prestigious magazines as Vogue and Vanity Fair. Several successful projects followed, including a tribute to his native land entitled Made in Canada, Haven which chronicled the upper echelons of British society, and American Women for fashion designer Calvin Klein. His work combines the vital energy of rock with the eclectic sophistication of his international upbringing. He has received extensive acclaim for his portraits of luminaries such as Pink, Hillary Clinton, and Pamela Anderson. In 2006, Adams received the German Lead Award for his series of portraits of Mickey Rourke.

Zen Ties
written & illustrated by Jon J Muth

Hardcover $17.99

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From Publishers Weekly
Stillwater, the giant panda who taught Zen parables to siblings Karl, Addy and Michael in Zen Shorts, continues to combine his slow-moving grace with genuine spiritual tranquility. This time, Michael faces a daunting spelling bee, and Stillwater, first seen wearing a necktie, introduces the three to Miss Whitaker, an elderly neighbor whose crabby outbursts have frightened them. Stillwater’s inward eye sees through her anger to her fear and loneliness. She turns out to be a marvelous spelling coach (Just like plants, words have roots, she tells Michael. Roots of words can teach you to spell), and when Michael wins a red ribbon, the pictures show the whole group sharing his victory with their own red ribbons—the Zen ties of the title. (Zentai is Japanese for the whole or the entire, as in all of us together.) A subplot featuring Koo, Stillwater’s nephew, drifts a bit; he’s a cute little panda who punctuates the action with Zen-influenced haiku (and allows Muth another pun: Hi, Koo!). Muth’s brush is as sure as ever; Stillwater’s big, blunt paws and hunched-over listening posture are irresistible, and Miss Whitaker’s delicate face and snow-white hair beautifully counterpoint the vignettes of youthful play. From a religious tradition that makes no theological demands and that will be unfamiliar to most readers, Stillwater offers a model of pure saintliness, and children will instantly respond to him. All ages.

No End in Sight: Iraq’s Descent into Chaos
by Charles Ferguson

Paperback $17.95

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The Fish Can Sing     *NEW EDITION
by Halldor Laxness, introduction by Jane Smiley

Paperback $14.00

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From Publishers Weekly
Laxness, Iceland’s best-known fiction writer and winner of the 1955 Nobel Prize for literature, authored well over 60 novels and other books before his death in 1998 at the age of 90. This lyrical novel, first published in English in 1966 (nine years after its original publication in Iceland), concerns a boy named Alfgr¡mur Hannson of Brekkukot, the humble fishing cottage where he is raised by adoptive grandparents. The novel’s plot–if so formal a term may be used to describe the tale’s slow and meandering progress through Alfgr¡mur’s uneventful youth–involves an Icelandic singing star known as Gardar H¢lm. All Iceland, except for H¢lm’s own mother and the folks at Brekkukot, dote on H¢lm because of his international reputation for performing lieder. Yet few have ever heard him sing–the beloved H¢lm is growing old and he is mysteriously elusive. Young Alfgr¡mur may also be a gifted singer, and he tracks H¢lm down assiduously. Once he finds him, however, he learns that singing is only one way of seeking “the one true note”–and he who has heard that note never sings again. Laxness portrays the backwardness of turn-of-the-century Iceland with gentle humor and irony. Tiny Iceland needs its “singing fish”–celebrities like Gardar H¢lm, and perhaps Alfgr¡mur Hannson–but the moral of Laxness’s lovely fable references a simpler sentiment: glory may just as well be sought in the humblest walks of life.

Civilization: A New History of the Western World
by Roger Osborne

Paperback $16.95

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From Publishers Weekly
This stimulating survey steers a middle course between triumphal pageant of progress and postmodern bricolage of clashing perspectives to attempt a coherent narrative of Western history. Historian Osborne (The Floating Egg: Episodes in the Making of Geology) traces a lucid, thoughtful overview of European and American history from Stonehenge and the Greco-Roman era to the present. Tying together his account are a few broad themes, most prominently the development of rationalism—the use of abstract reasoning to uncover universal laws governing nature and society—from its Platonic origins to its apotheosis in Western science and its malevolent influence on Soviet communism. This often sinister rationalism works in counterpoint, and sometimes opposition, to what he sees as the redeeming organicity of Western culture, its rootedness in human adaptation to changing environments and practical needs in a multitude of contexts, from the growth of medieval towns to the rise of Hollywood and rock ‘n’ roll. Some pronouncements, like Osborne’s insistence on the unique ferocity of Western warfare, aren’t persuasive, and the paragraph he accords the Rolling Stones’ 1969 Altamont concert is one too many. But one judges such a book less by its historiographical synthesis than by the wealth of provocative insights it throws up, and by that measure Osborne succeeds admirably.

Leni: The Life and Work of Leni Riefenstahl
by Steven Bach

Paperback $16.95

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From Booklist
Riefenstahl revered “what was beautiful, strong, and healthy,” but her greatest achievements, the paradigmatic films Triumph of the Will and Olympia were made to glorify Hitler and the Third Reich. In his penetrating and superbly well-written biography, Bach ponders the difficult questions raised by Riefenstahl’s many-chaptered life (she was 101 when she died in 2003). Is there a moral dimension to art? Is devotion to making art an excuse for moral failings? As Bach expertly elucidates the opportunistic Riefenstahl’s exploits as a dancer, actress, filmmaker, Nazi insider, African adventurer, photographer, and deep-sea diver, he takes measure, as no one else has, of her ruthless ambition, idealized aesthetics, and extreme egocentricity. Dexterously fitting together newly recovered puzzle pieces, Bach presents evidence suggesting that Riefenstahl was part Jewish; explicates her close relationships with Hitler, Goebbels, and Albert Speer; documents her use of “film slaves” borrowed from “holding pens for the Holocaust”; and analyzes her “self-righteous entitlement” and personal revisionist history. Possessed of phenomenal vitality and physical courage, if lacking in compassion and integrity, Riefenstahl loved fairy tales, and, as Bach so perceptively and artistically reveals, she succeeded in living one, however insidious.

The Battle for New York: The City at the Heart of the American Revolution
by Barnet Schecter

Paperback $16.00

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From Publishers Weekly
Schecter here presents in sometimes overwhelming detail the story of New York from the beginning of the American Revolution in the spring of 1775 to the city’s evacuation by the British late in 1783. The military operations of 1776 are the central focus, as the British occupied the city in order to advance up the Hudson River and unite with another force coming down from Canada. British Gen. William Howe landed troops on Long Island and routed the colonial army on August 27. In despair but persevering, Gen. George Washington listened to subordinates and managed to evacuate his troops from Long Island that night, even as the British navy awaited nearby. And Washington kept running, evacuating New York City in mid-September (with some minor fighting at Harlem Heights, Throg’s Neck and White Plains) and withdrawing into New Jersey after losing more than 2,600 captured at Fort Washington. The British navy held New York City under martial law for the rest of the war, forced to maintain its presence there after the army moved to the South. Schecter details the lives of area loyalists, more than 29,000 of whom went to Canada after the war. Although many readers will find some of the abundant operational material hard going, Schecter’s research is impeccable, and his battlefield tour of today’s New York brings immediacy to the story. 8 maps and 65 illus.

Julius Shulman: Palm Springs
compiled and edited by Michael Stern, Alan Hess

Hardcover $55.00 - 10%

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Through Julius Shulman’s lens, the architecture of Southern California became iconic images of modernism. His photographs heralded the glamor and casual elegance of a lifestyle and architecture that has become revered worldwide. Focusing on the desert paradise of Palm Springs, which was his seminal crucible, this book presents his masterpieces. Images range from Richard Neutra’s Kaufmann House and Albert Frey’s Raymond Loewy House, to Paul R. Williams’ house for Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz, Frank Sinatra’s house, John Lautner’s house for Bob Hope, as well as other famous landmarks. The book features more than sixty buildings by fifteen of the most notable mid-twentieth-century architects. With new photography and images culled from his personal collection as well as the Getty Center, this book includes many images never before seen.

The Wind in the Willows
by Kenneth Grahame, illus. by Robert Ingpen

Hardcover $19.95

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Mole, Water Rat, Badger, and the mischievous Toad live a quiet life on banks of the River Thames with the rest of their animal friends. But Toad tends to get into trouble, and his passion for cars eventually results in his being caught and kept a helpless prisoner in the remotest dungeon of the best-guarded castle in all the land. Dressed as a washerwoman—and with some help from his friends—Toad manages to escape the castle and begins his journey home to Toad Hall. Originally published in 1908, this magnificent new edition of Kenneth Grahame’s charming tale brings the animals’ adventures to life and is accompanied by more than 70 new illustrations from award-winning artist Robert Ingpen. Fans of all ages will enjoy reliving—or reading for the first time—this heartwarming story of friendship.

Kenneth Grahame (1859–1932) worked primarily as a banker during his life. His masterpiece The Wind in the Willows grew out of the stories he told his young son. Robert Ingpen has designed, illustrated, and written more than 100 published works of fiction and nonfiction, among them Around the World in 80 Days, The Jungle Book, and the centenary edition of Peter Pan and Wendy. In 1986 he was awarded the Hans Christian Andersen Medal for his contribution to children’s literature.

Lee Friedlander: Photographs - Frederick Law Olmsted Landscapes
by Lee Friedlander

Hardcover $85.00 - 10%

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A natural chronicler of all things uniquely American, photographer Lee Friedlander here puts his lens to the work of Frederick Law Olmsted (1822-1903), designer of many of this country’s most iconic public landscapes and the father of North American landscape architecture. Olmsted was responsible for a staggering number of America’s greatest parks, including the Niagara reservation (North America’s oldest state park), Washington Park, the Biltmore Estate, the U.S. Capitol building landscape and entire parkway systems in Buffalo and Louisville. His most famous work remains New York City’s Central Park, a pioneering egalitarian gesture that was very unusual at the time for its ready accessibility. This book, published to coincide with The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s 2008 exhibition, compiles 89 photographs made by Friedlander in Olmsted’s public parks and private estates.
This stunning collection of rich tritones celebrates the complex, idiosyncratic picture-making of one of the country’s greatest living photographers, and also arrives upon the 150 year anniversary of Olmsted’s 1858 design for Central Park. Rambling across bridges and through open meadows and dense undergrowth, Friedlander locates a pure pleasure in Olmsted’s designs–in the meticulous stonework, the balance of exposure to shade, and in the mature, weather-beaten trees that attest to the durability of Olmsted’s vision.

Best Sellers List … 17 February, 2007

BookCourt Best Sellers                                                                                                             

February 18, 2008                                         20% off list price

Hardcover Fiction
  1. MY MISTRESS’S SPARROW IS DEAD. Jeffrey Eugenides. HarperCollins. $24.95. Our Price $19.96.
  2. BRIEF WONDROUS LIFE OF OSCAR WAO. Junot Diaz. Riverhead.  $24.95.                   Our Price $19.96.
  3. DIARY OF A BAD YEAR. J. Coetzee. Penguin. $24.95. Our Price $19.96.
  4. OUT STEALING HORSES. Per Petterson. Gray Wolf. $22. Our Price $17.60.
  5. THEN WE CAME TO THE END. Joshua Ferris. Little, Brown. $23.99.                       Our Price $19.19.
  6. BEAUTIFUL CHILDREN. Charles Bock. Random House. $25. Our Price $20.
  7. ON CHESIL BEACH. Ian McEwan. Doubleday. $22. Our Price $17.60.
  8. THE SENATOR’S WIFE. Sue Miller. Random House. $24. Our Price $19.20.
  9. THOUSAND SPLENDID SUNS. Khaled Hosseini. Riverhead. $25.95.                  Our Price $20.76.
  10. PEOPLE OF THE BOOK. Geraldine Brooks. Penguin. $25.95. Our Price $20.76.

Hardcover Nonfiction

  1. IN DEFENSE OF FOOD. Michael Pollan. Penguin. $21.95. Our Price $17.56.
  2. ART OF SIMPLE FOOD. Alice Waters. Random House. $35.. Our Price $28.
  3. MUSICOPHILIA. Oliver Sacks. Random House. $26. Our Price $20.80.
  4. SECRET INGREDIENTS. David Remnick. Random House. $29.95.Our Price $23.96.
  5. 101 THINGS I LEARNED IN ARCHITECTURE SCHOOL. Matthew Frederick. MIT Press. $12.95.Our Price $10.36.
  6. THIS REPUBLIC OF SUFFERING. Drew Faust. Random House. $27.95.                  Our Price $22.36.
  7. PHYSICS FOR ENTERTAINMENT. Yakov Perelman. Hyperion. $18.95.                 Our Price $15.16.
  8. ROAST CHICKEN & OTHER STORIES. Simon Hopkinson. Hyperion. $24.95. Our Price $19.96.
  9. WHEN A CROCODILE EATS THE SUN. Peter Godwin. Little, Brown. $24.99. Our Price $19.99.
  10. NINE. Jeffery Toobin. Doubleday. $27.95. Our Price $22.36.

    Paperback Fiction

  1. THE GATHERING. Anne Enright. Grove Press. $14. Our Price $11.20.
  2. MOTHERLESS BROOKLYN. Jonathan Lethem. Random House. $13.95.                         Our Price $11.16.
  3. MOTHERS & SONS. Colin Toibin. Simon & Schuster. $14. Our Price $11.20.
  4. CURIOUS INCIDENT OF THE DOG IN THE NIGHT-TIME.                 Mark Haddon. Random House. $13.95. Our Price $11.16.
  5. THE ROAD. Cormac McCarthy. Random House. $14.95. Our Price $11.96.
  6. HOUSE OF MEETINGS. Martin Amis. Random House. $14. Our Price $11.20.
  7. WHAT IS THE WHAT? Dave Eggers. Random House. $15.95. Our Price 12.76.
  8. NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN. Cormac McCarthy. Random House. $14.                      Our Price $11.20.
  9. ABSURDISTAN. Gary Shteyngart. Random House. $14.95. Our Price $11.96.
  10. WATER FOR ELEPHANTS. Sara Gruen. Algonquin. $13.95. Our Price $11.16.

    Paperback Nonfiction

  1. DREAMS FROM MY FATHER. Barack Obama. Random House. $14.95.                      Our Price $11.96.
  2. BROOKLYN WAS MINE. Chris Knutsen & Valerie Steiker (editors). Riverhead. $15. Our Price $12.
  3. EAT, PRAY, LOVE.  Elizabeth Gilbert. Penguin. $15. Our Price $12.
  4. DIVING BELL & THE BUTTERFLY. Jean-Dominique Bauby. Random House. $12.95. Our Price $10.36.
  5. NEW EARTH. Eckhart Tolle. Penguin. $14. Our Price $11.20.
  6. SPEAKING OF FAITH. Krista Tippett. Penguin. $14. Our Price $11.20.
  7. OMNIVORE’S DILEMMA. Michael Pollan. Penguin. $16. Our Price $12.80.
  8. WORKS. Kate Ascher. Penguin. $20. Our Price $16.
  9. AUDACITY OF HOPE. Barack Obama. Random House. $14.95. Our Price $11.96.
  10. LOVE IS A MIX TAPE. Rob Sheffield. Random House. $13. Our Price $10.40.

    Children’s Hardcover & Paperback

  1. FANCY NANCY BONJOUR BUTTERFLY. Jane O’Connor. HarperCollins. $16.99. Our Price $13.59.
  2. PINKALICIOUS. Elizabeth Kann. HarperCollins. $16.99. Our Price $13.59.
  3. BARACK OBAMA. Roberta Edwards. Putnam. $3.99. Our Price $3.19.
  4. AMOS & BORIS. William Steig. Farrar, Straus & Giroux. $6.95. Our Price $5.56.
  5. KNUFFLE BUNNY. Mo Willems. Hyperion. $15.99. Our Price $12.79.
  6. GALLOP. Rufus Seder. Workman. $12.95. Our Price $10.36.
  7. I LIVE IN BROOKLYN. Mari Takabayashi. Houghton Mifflin. $16. Our Price $12.80
  8. DIARY OF A WIMPY KID. Jeff Kinney. Abrams. $12.95. Our Price $10.36.
  9. SQUIGGLES. Taro Gomi. Chronicle. $18.95. Our Price $15.16.
  10. GOOD DOG. Maya Gottfried. Random House. $6.99. Our Price $5.59.

these just in … 16 February, 2008

Bambi vs. Godzilla: On the Nature, Purpose, and Practice of the Movie Business
by David Mamet

Paperback $13.95

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Mamet’s a veteran screenwriter and director (currently producing The Unit for CBS), but that doesn’t mean he has any great love for the industry—his Hollywood is the stereotypically corrupt and cutthroat world where screenwriters willingly change their stories to accommodate every stupid suggestion from producers, who are blatantly lining their own pockets, while stars bicker over who has the bigger trailer. But his stories are entertaining even when they’re unsurprising, and though loosely organized, a few broad themes emerge. He expounds at length, for example, upon his well-known penchant for straightforward storytelling, where drama boils down to “the creation and deferment of hope,” and every scene should be able to answer three questions: “Who wants what from whom? What happens if they don’t get it? Why now?” At other times, he’s happy simply to explain why he thinks Laurence Olivier was a terrible film actor or to test out a theory that the early film industry owes its development to Eastern European Jews with Asperger’s syndrome. As usual with Mamet, each word is precisely chosen for maximum effect, and nearly all hit their mark.

Oil on the Brain: Petroleum’s Long, Strange Trip to Your Tank
by Lisa Margonelli

Paperback $14.95

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Oil on the Brain is a smart, surprisingly funny account of the oil industry—the people, economies, and pipelines that bring us petroleum, brilliantly illuminating a world we encounter every day.

Americans buy ten thousand gallons of gasoline a second, without giving it much of a thought. Where does all this gas come from? Lisa Margonelli’s desire to learn took her on a one-hundred thousand mile journey from her local gas station to oil fields half a world away. In search of the truth behind the myths, she wriggled her way into some of the most off-limits places on earth: the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, the New York Mercantile Exchange’s crude oil market, oil fields from Venezuela, to Texas, to Chad, and even an Iranian oil platform where the United States fought a forgotten one-day battle.

In a story by turns surreal and alarming, Margonelli meets lonely workers on a Texas drilling rig, an oil analyst who almost gave birth on the NYMEX trading floor, Chadian villagers who are said to wander the oil fields in the guise of lions, a Nigerian warlord who changed the world price of oil with a single cell phone call, and Shanghai bureaucrats who dream of creating a new Detroit.

Deftly piecing together the mammoth economy of oil, Margonelli finds a series of stark warning signs for American drivers.

The Double Bind
by Chris Bohjalian

Paperback $14.95

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Best known for the provocative and powerful novel Midwives, Chris Bohjalian writes beautiful and riveting fiction featuring what the San Francisco Chronicle dubbed “ordinary people in heartbreaking circumstances behaving with grace and dignity.” In his new novel, The Double Bind, a literary thriller with references to (and including characters from) The Great Gatsby, Bohjalian takes readers on a haunting journey through one woman’s obsession with uncovering a dark secret.

The New Penguin History of the World
by J. M. Roberts, edited by Odd Arne Westad

Paperback $22.00

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“A stupendous achievement . . . Unrivalled world history for our day . . . it is unbelievable in its facts and almost incontestable in its judgements.”
—A. J. P. Taylor, The Observer

Ultimate Blogs: Masterworks from the Wild Web
by Sarah Boxer

Paperback $14.95

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With this collection of 27 blogs culled from disparate corners of the Internet, Boxer, who writes for the New York Times, attempts to impose some kind of fixed order on a form that generally relies on the satisfaction of timely updates. For many blog-savvy readers, this collection would appear to have all the appeal of a new MP3 converted into 8-track format, but much of the writing contained in the book is well worth browsing for even the most hardened Web aficionado. The highlights in book format, predictably, are the blogs that maintain relatively tight spelling and grammar standards and focus on subjects beyond the writer’s petty complaints. Benjamin Zimmer’s Language Log reads like a wonderfully expansive and more self-aware William Safire column, while Sean Carroll’s Cosmic Variance manages to be wryly humorous even while discussing theoretical physics at the Ph.D. level. Ringers like Alex Ross of the New Yorker and Matthew Yglesias of the Atlantic Monthly hardly seem like fair choices to demonstrate the democratization of the Web, but their blogs, on music and classical politics, respectively, are must-reads. Other, less conventional highlights include the neocon-spoofing comic Get Your War On, the ruminative expat diary How to Learn Swedish in 1000 Difficult Lessons and the cheerfully hyperactive idea stockpile Ironic Sans.

Blubberland: The Dangers of Happiness
by Elizabeth Farrelly

Paperback $19.95

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Welcome to Blubberland–a world of quadruple-garaged mansions, vast malls, gated communities, stretch limos, and posh resorts. Blubberland is a place, but it is also a state of mind: we expect to be happy (trophy house, SUV in the driveway, home entertainment system, pension fund, cosmetic surgery), but in fact we’ve grown increasingly bloated, bored, and miserable. In Blubberland, award-winning critic Elizabeth Farrelly looks at our “superfluous superfluity,” our huge eco-footprint, and asks why we find it so hard to abandon habits we know to be destructive. Why can’t we build human-scale cities, design meaningful public spaces, eat reasonable meals, and stop assaulting nature?

Farrelly, trained as an architect, begins this story with architecture, urban sprawl, and housing, but she does not end there. She also looks at “affluenza,” childhood asthma, diabetes, addiction, beauty, ugliness, narcissism, climate change, mega-churches, big box retailers, sustainability, depression, anorexia, and the links that collect all of these issues under the same roof–the roof, as it were, of the McMansion. As “big” becomes more and more pervasive, and success is seen in increasingly measurable and material terms, the goal of happiness jeopardizes our survival. Blubberland is a smart, thoughtful, and stylish argument for turning things around.

Angelica: A Novel
by Arthur Phillips

Paperback $14.00

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From the bestselling author of The Egyptologist and Prague comes an even more accomplished and entirely surprising new novel. Angelica is a spellbinding Victorian ghost story, an intriguing literary and psychological puzzle, and a meditation on marriage, childhood, memory, and fear.

The novel opens in London, in the 1880s, with the Barton household on the brink of collapse. Mother, father, and daughter provoke one another, consciously and unconsciously, and a horrifying crisis is triggered. As the family’s tragedy is told several times from different perspectives, events are recast and sympathies shift.
In the dark of night, a chilling sexual spectre is making its way through the house, hovering over the sleeping girl and terrorizing her fragile mother. Are these visions real, or is there something more sinister, and more human, to fear? A spiritualist is summoned to cleanse the place of its terrors, but with her arrival the complexities of motive and desire only multiply. The mother’s failing health and the father’s many secrets fuel the growing conflicts, while the daughter flirts dangerously with truth and fantasy.

While Angelica is reminiscent of such classic horror tales as The Turn of the Screw and The Haunting of Hill House, it is also a thoroughly modern exploration of identity, reality, and love. Set at the dawn of psychoanalysis and the peak of spiritualism’s acceptance, Angelica is also an evocative historical novel that explores the timeless human hunger for certainty.

Mellon: An American Life
by David Cannadine

Paperback $19.95

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In this volume, the first published “full-scale life” of financial pioneer Andrew Mellon-who would help propel the country to economic domination, serve as servant and scapegoat for powerful White House administrations, and establish the National Gallery of Art-biographer Cannadine (In Churchill’s Shadow) tackles every aspect of a towering American figure who was nevertheless “shy in life and secretive in business.” Beginning with the boyhood immigration to Pittsburgh of Mellon’s domineering father, Cannadine chronicles the busy buildup of Mellon’s early career, as he involves himself with his father’s successful real estate projects and enters the world of Pittsburgh’s wealthy industrial elite. His largely obstacle-free ascension, however, packs the book’s first third with humdrum lists of business transactions. Tellingly, the chapter titled “The First Scandal” provides the book’s first meaty narrative: the disastrous collapse of Mellon’s mid-life marriage to the young Englishwoman Nora McMullen. Following this, Mellon becomes a more dynamic character and his money takes a more secondary role. Mellon’s contentious stint as Secretary of the Treasury under Presidents Harding, Coolidge and Hoover provides interesting insight into the clash of democracy (which Mellon was never such a fan of) and high finance; it also provides Mellon a telling conflict between his responsibility to the country’s failing post-war economy and his desire to re-engage his estranged daughter Ailsa. Cannadine does not shy from pointing out the hypocrisy and insensitivity in his subject-especially in his devastating behavior toward his unfaithful wife-but remains sympathetic throughout, providing a balanced look at a supremely principled businessman who made some startlingly unprincipled choices. Though a scholarly work with limited popular appeal, this is a valuable, comprehensive look at an important American life.

The Spaces of the Modern City: Imaginaries, Politics, and Everyday Life
Edited by Gyan Prakash, Kevin M. Kruse

Paperback $24.95

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By United Nations estimates, 60 percent of the world’s population will be urban by 2030. With the increasing speed of urbanization, especially in the developing world, scholars are now rethinking standard concepts and histories of modern cities. The Spaces of the Modern City historicizes the contemporary discussion of urbanism, highlighting the local and global breadth of the city landscape.

This interdisciplinary collection examines how the city develops in the interactions of space and imagination. The essays focus on issues such as street design in Vienna, the motion picture industry in Los Angeles, architecture in Marseilles and Algiers, and the kaleidoscopic paradox of post-apartheid Johannesburg. They explore the nature of spatial politics, examining the disparate worlds of eighteenth-century Baghdad, nineteenth-century Morelia, Cold War-era West Berlin, and postwar Los Angeles. They also show the meaning of everyday spaces to urban life, illuminating issues such as crime in metropolitan London, youth culture in Dakar, “memory projects” in Tokyo, and Bombay cinema. Informed by a range of theoretical writings, this collection offers a fresh and truly global perspective on the nature of the modern city.

The contributors are Sheila Crane, Belinda Davis, Mamadou Diouf, Philip J. Ethington, David Frisby, Christina M. Jiménez, Dina Rizk Khoury, Ranjani Mazumdar, Frank Mort, Martin Murray, Jordan Sand, and Sarah Schrank.

Reconciliation: Islam, Democracy, and the West (Hardcover)
by Benazir Bhutto

Hardcover $27.95 - 10%

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Benazir Bhutto returned to Pakistan in October 2007, after eight years of exile, hopeful that she could be a catalyst for change. Upon a tumultuous reception, she survived a suicide-bomb attack that killed nearly two hundred of her countrymen. But she continued to forge ahead, with more courage and conviction than ever, since she knew that time was running out—for the future of her nation, and for her life.

In Reconciliation, Bhutto recounts in gripping detail her final months in Pakistan and offers a bold new agenda for how to stem the tide of Islamic radicalism and to rediscover the values of tolerance and justice that lie at the heart of her religion. With extremist Islam on the rise throughout the world, the peaceful, pluralistic message of Islam has been exploited and manipulated by fanatics. Bhutto persuasively argues that America and Britain are fueling this turn toward radicalization by supporting groups that serve only short-term interests. She believed that by enabling dictators, the West was actually contributing to the frustration and extremism that lead to terrorism. With her experience governing Pakistan and living and studying in the West, Benazir Bhutto was versed in the complexities of the conflict from both sides. She was a renaissance woman who offered a way out.

In this riveting and deeply insightful book, Bhutto explores the complicated history between the Middle East and the West. She traces the roots of international terrorism across the world, including American support for Pakistani general Zia-ul-Haq, who destroyed political parties, eliminated an independent judiciary, marginalized NGOs, suspended the protection of human rights, and aligned Pakistani intelligence agencies with the most radical elements of the Afghan mujahideen. She speaks out not just to the West, but to the Muslims across the globe who are at a crossroads between the past and the future, between education and ignorance, between peace and terrorism, and between dictatorship and democracy. Democracy and Islam are not incompatible, and the clash between Islam and the West is not inevitable. Bhutto presents an image of modern Islam that defies the negative caricatures often seen in the West. After reading this book, it will become even clearer what the world has lost by her assassination.

The Quest for Kaitiakitanga: The Ancient Maori Secret from New Zealand that Could Save the Earth
by Richard Bangs

Hardcover $16.95 - 10%

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Kaitiakitanga, an ancient Maori concept meaning “guardianship of the land,” has undergone a revival in New Zealand and is fueling an increasingly popular eco-movement. Structured by Richard Bangs as a grand adventure, this book looks at how the Maori way is becoming the modern way. Bangs’ expedition includes heli-hiking, ice-climbing, kayaking, and more as he travels through New Zealand’s stunning landscapes. Along the way, the author encounters threatened wildlife, massive trees that predate Christ, monumental glaciers, and the kinds of advances fostered by kaitiakitanga, from radically designed eco-lodges to paradigm-shifting native ventures.

Mega Picture Puzzles: Challenge Yourself to Spot the Differences (Paperback)
by Steven Schwartz

Paperback $11.95

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Glance at the two photos and they look identical. But a careful search through the intricate details of these carefully composed photos will turn up small differences. A watch missing from a man’s arm. The price tag for apples at a fruit stand. The shape of the taillights on a passing car. Subtle at first, then embarrassingly obvious once spotted. Hugely popular in newspapers and magazines across the country, spot-the-difference puzzles are frequently tiny, black-and-white images. But Mega Picture Puzzles makes spotting the difference a fun feast for the eyes — all the puzzles in this book are full-page photographs in intense detail and exquisite color. Scan through a crowded Miami beach, a bustling Asian market, a collection of famous baseball cards, and much more. Readers can expect hours of challenges and entertainment as they uncover the tiny differences, all the while improving their mental focus and observation skills.

Vegan with a Vengeance : Over 150 Delicious, Cheap, Animal-Free Recipes That Rock (Paperback)
by Isa Chandra Moskowitz

Paperback $17.95

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In Vegan with a Vengeance, Isa Chandra Moskowitz, host of the community access vegan cooking show The Post Punk Kitchen, brings the do-it-yourself, community-driven ethos of punk rock into the kitchen. Her cooking philosophy embraces being kind to animals (all recipes are completely animal-product free) and your wallet—while being creative and having fun in the process. She emphasizes staying clear of corporate brand-name foods, and says that cooking should be an innovative, experimental, and completely real experience. This one-of-a-kind cookbook offers 125 recipes for all meals of the day, from stuffed mushrooms to tofu pizza, gingerbread cupcakes to pasta with “alfreda sauce,” and is full of tips and tricks on how to keep your diet vegan, inexpensive, and liberated.

Have You Found Her: A Memoir
by Janice Erlbaum

Paperback $14.00

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Twenty years after she lived at a homeless shelter for teens, Janice Erlbaum went back to volunteer. Now thirty-four years old and a successful writer, she’d changed her life for the better; now she wanted to help someone else–someone like the girl she’d once been.

Then she met Sam. A brilliant nineteen-year-old junkie savant, the product of a horrifically abusive home, Sam had been surviving alone on the streets since she was twelve and was now struggling for sobriety against the adverse health effects of long-term drug abuse.

Soon Janice found herself caring deeply for Sam, following her through detoxes and psych wards, halfway houses and hospitals, becoming ever more manically driven to save her from the sickness and sadness leftover from Sam’s terrible past. But just as Janice was on the verge of becoming the girl’s legal guardian, she made a shocking discovery: Sam was sicker than anyone knew, in ways nobody could have imagined.

Written with startling candor and immediacy, Have You Found Her is the story of one woman’s quest to save a girl’s life–and the hard truths she learns about herself along the way.

these just in … 11 February, 2008

The Essential Chomsky
by Noam Chomsky, edited by Anthony Arnove

Paperback $16.95

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For the past forty years Noam Chomsky’s writings on politics and language have established him as a preeminent public intellectual and as one of the most original and wide-ranging political and social critics of our time. Among the seminal figures in linguistic theory over the past century, since the 1960s Chomsky has also secured a place as perhaps the leading dissident voice in the United States.

Chomsky’s many bestselling works—including Manufacturing Consent, Hegemony or Survival, Understanding Power, and Failed States—have served as essential touchstones for dissidents, activists, scholars, and concerned citizens on subjects ranging from the media to human rights to intellectual freedom. In particular, Chomsky’s scathing critiques of the U.S. wars in Vietnam, Central America, and the Middle East have furnished a widely accepted intellectual inspiration for antiwar movements over nearly four decades.

The Essential Chomsky assembles the core of his most important writings, including excerpts from his most influential texts over the past forty years. Here is an unprecedented, comprehensive overview of Chomsky’s thought.

Oulipo: A Primer of Potential Literature (Paperback)
edited by Warren F. Motte Jr.

Paperback $19.95

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A remarkable collection of writings by members of the group known as Oulipo, this anthology includes, among others, Italo Calvino, Harry Mathews, Georges Perec, Jacques Roubad, and Raymond Queneau. Founded in Paris in 1960, Oulipo approaches writing in a way that has yet to make its impact in the United States and its creative writing programs. Rather than inspiration, rather than experience, rather than self-expression, the Oulipans view imaginative writing as an exercise dominated by the method of “constraints.” While a major contribution to literary theory, Oulipo is perhaps most distinguished as an indispensable guide to writers.

The Good Rat: A True Story
by Jimmy Breslin

Hardcover $24.95 - 10%

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Of course Pulitzer Prize winner Jimmy Breslin recognized Burton Kaplan right away as the Mafia witness of the ages. Breslin comes from the same Queens streets as mob bosses John Gotti and Vito Genovese. But even they couldn’t match Kaplan in crime—and neither could anybody else.

In his inimitable New York voice, Breslin, “the city’s steadiest and most accurate chronicler” (Tom Robbins, Village Voice), gives us a look through the keyhole at the people and places that define the mafia—characters like Sammy “The Bull” Gravano, Gaspipe Casso (named for his weapon of choice), Thomas “Three-Finger Brown” Lucchese, and Jimmy “The Clam” Eppolito, interwoven with the good rat himself, Burt Kaplan of Bensonhurst, the star witness in the recent trial of two New York City detectives indicted for acting as hit men in eight gangland executions.

Breslin takes us to the old-time hangouts like Pep McGuire’s, the legendary watering hole where reporters and gangsters (all hailing from the same working-class neighborhoods) rubbed elbows and traded stories; the dog-fight circles and body dumps at Ozone Park; and the back room at Midnight Rose’s candy store, where Murder, Inc., hired and fired.

Most compelling of all, Breslin captures the moments in which the Mafia was made and broken—Breslin was there the night John Gotti celebrated his acquittal at his Ravenite Social Club on Mulberry, having bribed his way to inno­cence only to incite the wrath of the FBI, who would later crush Gotti and others with the full force of the RICO laws.

As in his unforgettable novel The Gang That Couldn’t Shoot Straight, Breslin brings together these real-life and long-forgotten Mafia stories to brilliantly create a sharp-eyed portrait of the mob as it lived and breathed, as it sounded and survived.

The Museum of Modern Art Book of Cartoons
compiled by The New Yorker

Hardcover $14.95 - 10%

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When The Museum of Modern Art first opened its doors on November 8, 1929–in less than 5,000 square feet of rented office space in midtown Manhattan–it was considered a radical experiment. Who would have thought that a museum devoted entirely to “outrageous” Modern art could be successful? But succeed it did, weathering both the stock market crash of 1929 just a week later and a storm of controversy that did not dissuade the crowds from going to see what all the fuss was about. Today, MoMA is one of the leading institutions of its kind in the world, with an unrivaled collection of Modern and Contemporary art. Spanning the Museum’s entire history, this delightful book of 87 cartoons culled from the pages of The New Yorker magazine, is an enjoyable and witty celebration of the Museum and the lively public debate it has often inspired.

Hubbub: Filth, Noise, and Stench in England, 1600-1770
by Emily Cockayne

Paperback $18.00

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Modern city-dwellers suffer their share of unpleasant experiences—traffic jams, noisy neighbors, pollution, food scares—but urban nuisances of the past existed on a different scale entirely, this book explains in vivid detail. Focusing on offenses to the eyes, ears, noses, taste buds, and skin of inhabitants of England’s pre-Industrial Revolution cities, Hubbub transports us to a world in which residents were scarred by smallpox, refuse rotted in the streets, pigs and dogs roamed free, and food hygiene consisted of little more than spit and polish. Through the stories of a large cast of characters from varied walks of life, the book compares what daily life was like in different cities across England from 1600 to 1770.

Using a vast array of sources, from novels to records of urban administration to diaries, Emily Cockayne populate