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2004 Summer Reading List
This is ridiculous. I just sorted through the piles of books
at home, I’m getting ready to do the same at work, and a huge box arrives from
a publisher who regularly sends me new releases. It is, of course, filled with
books. Almost twenty. Yikes! Is it possible to drown in paper?
Okay, this is a test:
- How many books are stacked on your night table or next to
your reading chair?
- How many of these books have you read?
- How many of these are borrowed from the library?
- How many did you buy?
- Do you spend more money on books than on doctor visits,
vacations and presents for friends
and family…combined?
If you answered the first four questions with a number
higher than ten, and the last question with a “yes,” you have, well, what we
used to call a “jones”—a serious book habit. Which is fine with me...makes my
own book addiction seem normal—like a Hollywood star in rehab, pretty run of
the mill when everyone you know has either just checked out or in.
Thanks to you, to station staff, to friends and to a few
sources from around the country, we’ve compiled the following reading list.
Something for everyone. Keep those titles coming…there’s always another list in
progress…there’s always room for a new stack of books…
Ellen Rocco, July 2004
Station Manager/Co-host, Readers
& Writers on the Air
North Country Public Radio, Canton, NY 13617
ellen@ncpr.org
877-388-6277
Once again, we’ve borrowed entries from a Washington Post Style Invitational
contest to intersperse through the list. In this case, entrants were asked to
find a sentence in any Post article
that appeared during the last week of June and to supply a question that the
sentence could answer. Here are a couple of “honorable mentions” to start us
off:
It
is not only the way she lived that people remember.
What
is the greatest understatement ever about Isadora Duncan?
All
my friends from high school have children.
What
did your teenage daughter say just before you transferred her to the military academy?
More elsewhere in this list…read on…
Ellen Rocco,
Station Manager NCPR
Here are a
few suggestions, in no particular order, from my reading in recent months. If
there’s a theme, albeit a loose one, it’s “war.”
- War
is a Force That Gives Us Meaning, Chris Hedges. Fifteen years as a war
correspondent in Eastern Europe, the Middle East and Central America gives
Hedges substantial life experience to draw on as he explores man’s (and it is
mostly a guy thing) addiction to war, including his own. This book was
published in the months between the September 11, 2001 attack and the U.S.
invasion of Iraq. Hedges writes for The
New York Times and frequently files stories with NPR. I consider this a
“must read”—while I wish Hedges had pushed his analysis of our obsession with
war even deeper, his perspective is clear, honest and rooted in his years as a
student of the classics.
- The Stone Carvers, Jane Urquhart. This
novel, from a fine Canadian fiction writer, is centered in the years preceding,
during and just after WWI. A great story. Perfect for summer—some heartache,
magic and surprises.
- The Kite Runner, Khaled Hosseini. This
Afghan-American’s first novel tells two stories: one a personal narrative about
the protagonist’s privileged Kabul childhood; the other a painful overview of
Afghanistan’s recent history. The interior conversation is lucid and honest,
very honest. It made me want to do right, and be courageous…always.
Three
novels on my to-read list:
- The Known World, Edward P. Jones. A
different perspective on the American slavery experience—well-received by
critics around the country.
- Beneath a Marble Sky, John Shors. Set in
17th century India, this is a story about the Taj Mahal and the
civil war that followed its construction. From McPherson & Company, a fine,
small publishing house in NYS, and highly recommended by Kathleen Masterson,
the director of the literature program at the NYS Council on the Arts: “It’s my
favorite book of the past year.” Wow! When we spoke to John Shors during the
show, I asked him what he recommends for this list: Bangkok 8, John Burdette, and Bel
Canto, Ann Patchett.
- Before You Know Kindness, Chris
Bohjalian. Chris, who lives in Vermont, was a guest on Readers & Writers on the Air last year. A wonderful,
irresistible storyteller, whose career really took off with his novel, Midwives. Chris just emailed my co-host,
Chris Robinson, to tell him this new book hits the stores in October. There’s
an on-line trailer for it (oh you’re slick, Mr. Bohjalian, very slick) which
you can check out at www.chrisbohjalian.com/before_kindness.htm
-- be sure to turn on the audio.
Chris Robinson,
Co-Host of Readers and Writers/Clarkson University
Because of
time constraints I broke a summer tradition of concentrating on one author’s
works. Had I the time, Zora Neale
Hurston would have been this summer’s choice.
Alas. Here is the list of books I have read and can recommend:
- Poetry: For the first time since
I have been putting together lists for Readers
& Writers, my top choice is a book of poetry. Paul Muldoon’s Moy Sand and
Gravel is just great. He’s funny,
sad, and playful. I savored each poem and wept over a few. There is also
Muldoon’s Collected Poems, 1968-1998. Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, put out The Poetry of Pablo Neruda this past
spring. A Neruda poem a day keeps the
ugliness at bay. Muldoon is a closer.
- Fiction: This list is woefully light.
Barry Silesky wrote a very fine biography, John Gardner: Literary Outlaw. If
you like John Gardner (and I do), then the biography will leave you wanting to
read all his stuff over again. I am a
late-comer to Richard Russo and I know Empire
Falls won a Pulitzer Prize, but it deserves a recommendation here because I
could not put it down. Don DeLillo’s The Body Artist is brief, but memorable as a study on grief.
- Philosophy: This is always a tricky
category. Most philosophical works are
written for teeny academic audiences and will bore the pants off you. Two that might appeal to larger, trousered
reading audiences are Stanley Cavell’s Cities
of Words: Pedagogical Letters on a Register of Moral Life, and Edward
Said’s Humanism and Democratic Criticism. Cavell is not an easy writer, but his
subject matter here – films about remarriage and how the moral life is a
process of self-correction, compromise, and adjustment – will remind you of why
you loved your philosophy classes.
Said’s book was published posthumously and contains the material he was
to deliver at St. Lawrence University last fall had his health not
deteriorated.
- Politics: We have been busily preparing
next season’s Readers & Writers
series devoted to “War and Peace,” and my list here reflects this. Mike Marqusee’s Chimes of Freedom: The
Politics of Bob Dylan’s Art is a lot of fun and manages to be profound at
the same time. David Goodstein’s Out of Gas is a sobering, scientific
account of the depletion of the world’s oil and its consequences. Goodstein will be speaking at Clarkson
University this coming fall. David Orr,
The Last Refuge: Patriotism, Politics and
the Environment in an Age of Terror is a lucid polemic against the Bush
Administration’s (anti-)environmental policies. David Cole, Enemy Aliens:
Double Standards and Constitutional Freedoms in the War on Terrorism is a
brilliant critical encounter with the racism that resides in the administration
of the Patriot Act. Benjamin R. Barber’s Fear’s
Empire: War, Terrorism, and Democracy completes my trilogy of studies on
anti-democratic responses to 9/11. Paul Starr, The Creation of the Media: Political Origins of Modern Communication
is an absorbing historical study of mass media. Gore Vidal’s Inventing a
Nation: Washington, Adams, and Jefferson is a learned, cranking, and
entertaining examination of why the founders chose a Republic over a more
democratic form of government for this nation.
- Memoir: Tony Hendra’s Father Joe lives up to the great reviews
it received upon publication. We all
need a peaceful center and anchor to our fast-paced, erratic, and corrupt
lives. This is a must read for fallen
Catholics and agnostics everywhere.
- If I Had Time: These books deserve some
attention. Brian Greene, The Fabric of the Cosmos, because what I don’t know about super strings could fill a
book. Gene Santoro, Highway 61 Revisited: The Shared Roots of
American Jazz, Blues, Rock & Country Music, because the only category
for music we need is Ellington’s “if it swings…” Susan Neiman, Evil in Modern Thought, because Bill
Moyers told me I should read it and I do what I am told. And J.M. Coetzee’s Elizabeth Costello to remind myself of what beautiful sentences
look like.
Another
honorable mention from the Washington
Post Style Invitational:
If
it looks like it hasn’t been used in 10 years, it probably hasn’t.
Have
any tips for dating older men?
Rick Hunter,
Co-host of summer reading call in/Malone
Three books
about Afghanistan:
- The Book Seller of Kabul, Asne Seierstad. An
illuminating view of contemporary Afghanistan, just after the Taliban’s fall.
In this book, translated from the Norwegian, Seierstad tells of her time in the
family of Sultan Khan, who has made his living for many years selling books,
both legally and illegally.
- The Swallows of Kabul, Yasmina Khadra, translated from the French. A chilling fictional portrayal of
Kabul, Afghanistan, under the Taliban, and the horrors that punctuate daily
life in a nation so contemptible its official language is the whip.
- The Mulberry Empire, Philip Hensher. Set before
the United States invaded Afghanistan, the perspectiv that this literate,
engaging historical novel brings from the 1839 British invasion of Afghanistan
and capture of Kabul is therefore singularly prescient.
My favorite
non-fiction book of the year:
- The Piano Shop on the Left Bank: Discovering
a Forgotten Passion in a Paris Atelier, Tad Carhart . Carhart’s charming book does three
things extremely well. First, Carhart admits the reader to a world of
instruments, odd personalities, and passion for music. Second, Carhart
takes the reader through the piano as a technical marvel, explaining its
construction, historical development, tuning, and other esoterica. Carhart
notes that "a musical historian I once met commented that the mechanism [of
a piano] was as complicated as a clock. ‘But the big difference,’ he pointed
out, ‘is that you don’t pound on a clock.’ This combination of delicacy and
sturdiness, of finesse and vigor, makes the piano unique, and the skills to
build or repair it are not often found in one person." I never knew the
piece of furniture sitting in my living room was so remarkable. Finally,
Carhart describes with great humility and humor his own rebirth as a musician.
My favorite
novel so far this year:
- The Power of One, Bryce Courtenay. A
classic coming of age novel, set in South Africa during and after the
Second World War. Placing in context and conflict the English and Afrikaners,
blacks and whites, this marvelous novel tells of Pekay, a boy born to English
parents, nursed by a black woman, and physically abused by members of the
surrounding Afrikaans culture. Pekay is a survivor, and a series of successive
mentors, each drawn by Courtenay with great care and affection, sharpen both
his craft and intellect.
Two more
from the Style Invitational:
Most experts expect it in 10 to 20 years.
When is the next issue of Martha Stewart Living?
Don’t leave any big lumps.
What is Rule No. 1 when you interrogate a
suspect?
More
worthwhile reads:
- A Sunday at the Pool in Kigali, Gil Courtemanche. This first novel
both appalls and enchants. Set in the 1990s, Valcourt, the main character, is a
middle-aged French Canadian journalist in Kigali, Rwanda to escape a failed
life. "Valcourt had not left his country in order to live more or better.
All he had craved was the right to drowse in peace." Sunday at the Pool
appalls in its unblinkered description of the brutal genocide--as one character
remarks, Rwanda at that time was what Nazi Germany presented to the Jews, but
without the technology. Despite this horrifying theme and a literalness in
description which caused at least this reader to squirm and turn away,
Courtemanche’s novel, oddly enough, contains much of charm and joy.
- A Corner of the Veil, Laurence Cossel. What would happen if
God’s existence were clearly and persuasively shown by written proof? What
would this do to the Catholic Church? Would people still go to work? Would
governments function? Such are the questions raised by this humourous, slightly
subversive novel.
- Baltimore’s Mansion, Wayne Johnston. This Canadian is one
of my favorite writers, and his memoir only solidifies his stature in my mind.
Growing up in the Avalon Peninsula, the most isolated part of Newfoundland,
Johnston tells the story of three generations of men (grandfather, father, and
himself), in a time and place of both climactic and political hardship. The
central event in both Baltimore’s Mansion and Johnston’s magnificent
novel, The Colony of Unrequited
Dreams, is the 1949 vote in Canada on the issue of
Confederation, by which Newfoundland was (narrowly) made part of Canada. As his
father (who, after Confederation, took a job as a Canadian civil servant)
lamented to the author as a boy, "My God, Wayne, what a country we could
have been. What a country we were at one time." If you only have time to
read one Johnston book, read the novel.
- QBVII, Leon Uris. First published in 1970, this novel ably stands the test of time. In
broad outline, the novel begins after World War II when Jewish Poles seek to
have Polish physician Adam Kelno extradited from England on charges of being a
Nazi war criminal. Kelno defeats extradition through written testimonials to
his compassion and probity, then spends years in self-imposed exile in Fort
Bobang, Borneo, where his work as researcher and physician eventually win his
fame and a knighthood. A key question which Uris asks – but does not answer –
is whether, even if the charges are true, there comes a point where a man can
rehabilitate himself through good deeds such that atonement may be made for the
past? When, or for how long, is vengeance justified? A fine and still-troubling
work.
- The Huntsman, Whitney Terrell. Even if I had not
lived for a number of years in Kansas City, Missouri, I would still consider this
a fine story. Terrell’s gift in this fine first novel is his fine mix of
character, place, unsettling plot (after all, this is a murder mystery), and
the uniquely American questions of race and economic justice. Recommended.
I have read
several books dealing with medicine/medical issues/ and rescue workers, all of
which are well worthwhile.
- In Our Hands: A Hand Surgeon's Tales of the
Body's Most Exquisite Instrument Arnold Arem. An exquisitely written, compassionate
study of how the hand works, what goes wrong, and what the doctor (and patient)
can do to fix problems.
- A Map of the Child: A Pediatrician's Tour
of the Body, Darshak Sanghavi. This explores the bodies of
children, system by system, and shows both how healthy bodies work and the
unique issues in treating children. Sanghavi writes like a dream!
- Complications: A Surgeon's Notes on an Imperfect
Science, Atul Gawande. The author writes on
medicine for The New Yorker, and many of his fine articles are
collected in this
volume.
- Jerome Groopman's several books on
medicine, hope and the role of intuition are all excellent.
- Ambulance Girl, Jane Stern. The public radio food
commentator, in order to deal with her own depression, became an EMT. Her
memoir tells of her poignant, humorous and
life-changing journey.
- Population 485: Meeting Your Neighbors One Siren at
a Time, Michael
Perry. Experiences -- good, bad, and downright strange -- of
being a volunteer fireman in a little Wisconsin town.
- Saving
Milly: Love, Politics, and Parkinson’s Disease, Morton Kondrake. The well-known journalist has written
nothing less than a love letter to his wife. At age 47, Parkinson’s appeared in
Milly, leaving her angry at God, unable to walk, and barely able to speak. Any
married person, and any person facing disease or a loved one’s imminent death,
would do well to read this book.
Two more
honorable mentions from the Style Invitational:
They lead to a poorly lit back room in the
basement.
What have I found out about my degrees in
philosophy and humanistic studies?
I went to music school for almost a year.
Except for “Smoke on the Water,” what’s the
last thing you want to hear when
a guy pulls out an accordion on the bus?
Dale Hobson, Web
Manager/E-Letter Editor/Resident Poet, NCPR
- Blue Light and Futureland, Walter Mosley. Two science fiction outings by the
author of the Easy Rawlins and Fearless Jones detective novels.
- The Earthsea Cycle (Trilogy): A wizard of
Earthsea, The Farthest Shore and The
Tombs of Atuan, and its newest additions Tehanu and The Other Wind, Ursula LeGuin.
- The Dispossessed: An Ambiguous Utopia,
Ursula LeGuin.
- Words for the Wind: The Collected Verse of
Theodore Roethke and The Far Field
(posthumous collection), Theodore Roethke.
- Buddhism Without Beliefs: A Contemporary
Guide to Awakening, Stephen Batchelor.
Connie Meng,
Theatre Critic/Announcer/Calendar Manager, NCPR
- Against All Enemies, Richard Clarke.
- The Sea Wolf, Jack London. A classic I’d
never read until recently.
Todd Moe, Morning
Host/Cultural Editor, NCPR
- Giants in the Earth: A Saga of the Prairie,
Ole Edvart Rolvaag.
- Maurice, E.M. Forster.
- The Da Vinci Code, Dan Brown.
Jackie Sauter,
Program Director/Host, Music for Monday, NCPR
- Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game,
Michael Lewis. The best seller about how the cash-poor Oakland As win so many
games by reinventing baseball statistics and thinking creatively with players
no one else wants. Even if you’re not a baseball fan, it’s a can’t-put-down
book about number theory, management strategies, and a bunch of fascinating
characters who outthink traditions. (And this from a fan of the big spending
Yankees!)
- Home Baking, Jeffrey Alford and Naomi
Duguid. A tribute to home baking from around the world, with fabulous color
photos, travel anecdotes, personal stories and recipes—it’s a cross between a
cookbook and National Geographic.
Great for cooks when it’s too hot to use the oven and you just want to sit on
the porch and read about baking.
- Last year’s
critically acclaimed biography of Franklin, and the new work about Hamilton,
both breathe life and substance into those guys on the bills:
- Benjamin Franklin: An American Life,
Walter Isaacson.
- Alexander Hamilton, Ron Chernow.
Joel Hurd,
Production Manager, NCPR
- Bush’s
Brain: How Karl Rove Made George W. Bush Presidential, James Moore.
From listeners and
friends from across the region, suggested via phone, email and post…a fabulous
potpourri…
Phil Brown,
Editor/ Adirondack Explorer, Saranac
Lake
- Morte d’Urban, J.F. Powers. Listening to
your book show last week when you and your guests got into a brief discussion
of Catholic writers, recommend this book for anyone who is interested in
Catholic writers. It’s a gentle satire about a bishop caught up in the worldly
chores of raising money and wooing rich parishioners. Powers also wrote three
collections of stories, all about the church. Although not prolific, he has
been described as a writer’s writer.
- A Fan’s Notes, Frederick Exley. I’m sure
this North Country writer has been discussed before on your show. For those who
may not have heard of the book, it’s a fictional memoir about the narrator’s
obsession with football and his battles with the bottle and mental illness.
Lots of dark humor. Much of it takes place in Watertown, where Exley grew up.
Style
Invitational Fifth Runner-Up:
In Virginia, Asian Americans also have been
wooed by both parties.
Is it true that even politicians insult
people now by poking fun at their ethnic names?
John Ernst, Elk
Lake
- The Everglades: River of Gras, Marjory
Stoneman Douglas. Pre-dates Rachel Carson’s work.
- The Hazards of Good Breeding: A Novel,
Jessica Shattuck.
- The works
of the three giants of 20th century American hard-boiled detective
writing: James Cain (e.g., The Postman
Always Rings Twice and Double
Indemnity), Dashiell Hammett (e.g., The
Maltese Falcon), and Raymond Chandler (e.g., The Big Sleep).
Sunhee Sohn-Robinson,
Hannawa Falls
- Aloft, Chang-rae Lee.
- Doctored Evidence, Donna Leon.
- The Da Vinci Code, Dan Brown.
Luz Castillo, Canton
- La Novia Oscura and Delirio, Laura Restrepo. Two by the Columbian author.
Chris Dunn,
Dedicated Reader, Potsdam
Maybe it’s
part of growing older, though I doubt it, but I care less and less about the
latest novel, about the latest problem of the latest minority group—or, for
that matter, about their latest triumph. Or, for that matter, the latest social
problem. More and more, I look back—well, I’ve always been a re-reader, since
the days when Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry
Finn and the Alice and Dr. Doolittle books were my usual fare.
And I’m more likely to re-read Tolkien or Eddison—or Asimov or Heinlein or even
Pratchett—than pick up whatever’s the latest. In that spirit, these
contributions…
- Monstrous Regiment, Terry Pratchett. The
latest…entertaining as always, but I don’t believe one of his best.
- The Second World War, 6 vols., Sir
Winston Churchill. I have just been reading this for the first time. I like it,
not only because it is well-told or because those were great events, but
because of the way the values of civilization itself are implicit throughout the
work. More than that: it shows what a real wartime government in a time of
total war--as opposed to what I sometimes think is a playtime war on terror in
these days--looks like, feels like, almost, day-to-day, with the future unknown
and all plans as tentative as hope, but waged, against real evil, with unshaken
moral conviction. Moreover, it has the ring of a genuinely straightforward
account, so far as is possible to a man who was at the center of affairs:
straightforward and honest. It is certainly the best war memoir, from a command
level, since U.S. Grant’s. And it is strange to read Pratchett, who is nothing
if not skeptical, beside Churchill’s account.
(And
besides, who else in such massive memoirs would stop to write a footnote about
the words “depotable” and “depotabilize”? [“This was the wretched word used at
this time for ‘undrinkable.’ I am sorry.”] Vol II, pg. 431) Off and on, too,
observations more than a little relevant—for example (4 June 1944, to FDR):
Linda Cohen, Old
Forge Hardware (and bookstore), Old Forge
New
youngster’s books for this summer include:
- Spirit Wolf, Mark Holdren. The tale of a
blind boy’s Adirondack encounters with a phantom white wolf. Holdren lives in
Naples, NY.
- The Great Train Robbery, Justin Van
Riper and Gary Van Riper. This is the fourth book in the Adirondack Kids series
authored by Justin (now 14) and his Dad, Gary. The series began when Justin was
11 and having difficulty with his English writing class. It has been a popular
and critical success for the 6-10 year old readers from the first day. The
books detail summer experiences of youngsters on vacation in the Adirondacks.
- Knitlit: Sweaters and Their Stories…and
Other Writing About Knitting and
- Knitlit (too): Stories from Sheep to
Shawl…and More Writing About Knitting, Linda Roghaar and Molly Wolf,
editors. Good reads for non-knitters as well as knitters. Got into these
because we added a yarn shop in the Old Forge Hardware Store.
- The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency Series,
Alexander McCall Smith.
- Big Moose Lake in the Adirondacks: The Story
of the Lake, the Land, and the People, Jane Barlow, et al.
- The Forestport Breaks: A Nineteenth Century
Conspiracy Along the Black River Canal, Michael Doyle.
John H. Briant,
Author, Old Forge
Here are
the titles of my Adirondack Detective
Series, distributed by North Country Books, Utica:
- Adirondack Detective
- Adirondack Detective Returns
- Adirondack Detective III
Also, a biography I authored:
- One Cop’s Story: A Life Remembered
Style
Invitational Fourth Runner-Up:
In a good way.
What line never works after informing your
wife that her new outfit does indeed make her look fat?
Rosalie Smith,
Reading Service Volunteer, NCPR/Grandmother, Massena
I polled my
grandchildren, who are all good readers, and have come up with this children’s
reading list…
From Karen, 12 years old:
- My 13th Winter, Samantha
Abeel.
- Secret Life of Bees, Sue Monk Kidd.
- Ender’s Game, Orson Scott Card.
- Harry Potter (all of them), J.K.
Rowling.
- Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime
(parental guidance—language), Mark Haddon.
- Diary of Ann Frank, Ann Frank.
- The Thief Lord, Cornelia Funke.
- The Giver, Lois Lowry.
From Stephen, Jonas, Mia, all 10-year-olds:
- Muddle Earth, Paul Stewart and Chris
Riddell.
- Charlie Bone Series, Jenny Nimmo.
- Molly Moon’s Incredible Book of Hypnotism,
Georgia Byng.
- Series of Unfortunate Events, Lemony
Snicket.
- Redwall Series, Brian Jacques.
From Max, 6 years old:
- Mr. Putter & Tabby, Henry and Mudge, Poppleton…anything by Cynthia Rylant.
- Frog and Toad, Arnold Lobel.
- Chip Wants a Dog, Mark Wegman.
- The Lorax, Dr. Seuss.
Judy Cohen,
Saranac Lake
- Talking God, Tony Hillerman. If you are
someone who has never read any of the Tony Hillerman mysteries, please, please
start now! The danger is that you may become hooked and you will then be faced
with the wonderful job of reading all of the other dozen or so books about
crimes in or near Navajo country. The good news is that most of them are
carried in libraries, and are in paperback. Although you may want to begin with
the first book, and go in order, it doesn’t really matter. The author gives you
enough information about previous events for you to catch up. Talking God is one of the first in the
series, featuring tribal policemen Chee and Leaphorn. As I read, I enjoy the
cultural background, as well as the distinctly Indian approach to solving
criminal puzzles.
- Waiting for Snow in Havana, Carlos Eire.
On the NY Times bestseller list for
many weeks. A fascinating memoir of Mr. Eire’s Havana early years in Havana,
the child of wealthy, influential and eccentric parents. After Castro came to
power, the family emigrated to the U.S. I suspect a sequel covering the
author’s life in this country will be forthcoming.
Nancy Herrington,
Indian Lake
- Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero
Tolerance Approach to Punctuation, Lynne Truss. As a librarian and as an
editor this is really a field trip. Now that grammar and punctuation are an
endangered species, attention must be paid. It is great fun, too!
Lynn Pisaniello, Lowville
- The Case for Marriage: Why Married People
Are Happier, Healthier and Better Off Financially, Linda Waite and Maggie
Gallagher. I am a bibliophile who gets to listen to the radio during my daily
commute, sometimes even in the evening. I love fiction but, so often,
non-fiction gets shortchanged. One of the best books I’ve read lately is this
one. There is so much myth and hype about the topic of marriage lately, it was
nice to have a summary of a mountain of research, whether you agree with the
conclusions of the authors or not.
Heather
Sullivan-Catlin, SUNY Potsdam, Department of Sociology
- My Year of Meats, Ruth Ozeki. Highly
recommended.
Philip Terrie,
Long Lake
- Coal: A Human History, Barbara Freese. Literate,
insightful popular history—intellectually engaging but with no academic jargon.
I wish I had written it! I was born and grew up in West Virginia, so coal is
particularly interesting to me, but the topic is important to everyone: it
touches on social, cultural, and environmental history, and it looks at climate
change, which is probably the most important issue of the next century.
[Editor’s Note: Phil Terrie is the author of more than one
book himself, including the recent absolute must-read, Contested Terrain: A New History of Nature and People in the
Adirondacks. –ER]
Style
Invitational Third Runner-Up:
Don’t run, don’t make any loud noises.
What advice from his mother does Howard
Dean regret not taking?
Kim Wilson, Lake
Placid
- Rise of the Vulcans: The History of Bush’s
War Cabinet, James Mann. This is one for the most hard-core Conspiracy
Theorists among us! It’s great summer reading—a compelling “page-turner” for
anyone who really wants to “get the goods” on the folks who (like it or not)
run our country.
Fred Goss,
Ogdensburg
- Alexander Hamilton, Ron Chernow. It’s
just the perfect summer read for folks like me who enjoy a big, thorough,
well-written biography. And if you missed Titan,
his previous book on John D. Rockefeller Sr, it’s a lot more interesting than
you might have thought. JDR had quite a life before he was a superannuated
geezer handing out dimes.
Rooney Poole,
Blue Mountain Lake
- Waiting for Snow in Havana: Confessions of a
Cuban Boy, Carlos Eire. A National Book Award-winner. Terrific read and
hard to put down.
John Boyle, Portland,
ON
- The Big Year, Mark Obmascik. An
interesting read about three birders in their chase to record the most North
American sightings in a calendar year. The book is more about the men and their
passion than it is about birds and should have wide appeal.
- A Good Year, Peter Mayle. Mayle writes
with a light pen and much insight. I’ve read all of his books and each new one
is a real treat. (Fiction.)
Tony Malikowski,
North River
- Summerland, Michael Chabon. Masterfully
written. A young clutzy boy with a quirky inventor father and a tomboy girl
from the wrong side of the tracks travel with their friend who thinks he’s a
robot to alternate realities next door to play baseball with fairies and giants
and wolves and demons and save the universe. Great fun for younger readers, but
I loved it too.
- Ender’s Game series, Tales of Alvin Maker series, or anything
else by Orson Scott Card. One of the best sci-fi fantasy authors. His books are
usually chock full of moral dilemmas and deeper things, but the action and
world creation is top notch.
- Wizard’s First Rule, Terry Goodkind. The
best fantasy book I’ve ever read. First book of a massive series, each of which
is good.
- Otherland series, Tad Williams. Also
massive in scope, but well worth the read. Blends fantasy genres with science
and virtual reality into a wonderful multiple plot tapestry which ties together
into a very neat package at the end.
Pat Nelson,
Potsdam
Tudor
History and Fiction
- This Sceptered Isle, Mercedes Lackey
& Roberta Gellis. Alternative history, probably the first of a trilogy, set
in Tudor England. Begins shortly before Henry meets Anne Boleyn and ends
shortly after her death.
- The Six Wives of Henry VIII, The Children of
Henry VIII, The Life of Elizabeth I, Alison Wier. Straight history but not
political or economic history, more an attempt to look at the people
themselves, their lives and how they interacted. I started re-reading Six Wives to see how close the
alternative was to the actual, then got caught up in the story and kept on going.
The aternative is quite close where it comes to humans—there is no historical
documentation of elves, goblins, air spirits and the like…that I know of.
Ancient
Mediterranean History and Fiction
- Joust and Alta, Mercedes Lackey. The beginning of a new series, roughly
modeled on Ancient Egypt in the same way her Valdermar series is roughly
modeled on Medieval Europe. I can’t wait for the next volume in this series.
- Unearthing Atlantis, Charles Pellegrino.
History and archeology pointing toward Atlantis having been what is now a large
and deep volcanic crater in the Mediterranean.
- Voyage to Atlantis, James W. Mavor, Jr.
Mysteries
- Ghost Riders, Sharyn McCrumb. I have
just started this, but I like her books and settings.
- Now May You Weep, Deborah Crombie. The
latest in her series featuring Scotland yard dectectives, Duncan Kincaid and
Gemma James. Set in Scotland.
- Bell, Book and Murder, Rosemary Edghill.
Actually a set of three short novels featuring the same character.
Biography
- Founding Mothers: The Women Who Raised Our
Nation, Cokie Roberts. While the founding fathers pondered the large
issues, so did their wives while also keeping the family businesses and farms
running, raising the children, organizing support for the troops and generally
staying on top of things so there would be a country to found. Sound familiar?
- The Real James Herriot, Jim Wight. Jim
Wight is the son of Alf Wight, the real James Herriot and this is his biography
of his father.
- James Herriot’s Yorkshire, James
Herriot. Pictures of many of the places mentioned in the books.
Miscellaneous
- Guns, Germs and Steel: The Fates of Human
Societies, Jared Diamond. A brief history of the last 30,000 years looking
at why people moved where they did, why some groups developed one way and
others another way. Fascinating.
- Time Travel in Einstein’s Universe,
Richard Gott. Do Einstein’s theories predict time travel? And if so, why
haven’t we met anyone from the future?
- Kangaroos in the Kitchen, Lorraine
D’Essen. I read this book when it first came out in the 50s and was delighted
to find it again. It’s the story of the woman who introduced trained animals
into television. No, not Lassie, but kangaroos, penguins, borzois, llamas,
wombats and other such fascinating animals that lived in her house and
performed bits on early TV. The wombat learned to raid the refrigerator carrot
drawer, the llama ate a check from CBS, and they all generally lived together
in harmony.
Style
Invitational Second Runner-Up:
We look forward to completing the proposed
merger after all conditions have been satisfied.
How did Al announce his engagement to
Tipper?
Ellen Darabaner,
Antwerp
- When the Music Stopped, Thomas Cottle.
An NPR story introduced me to this very interesting book about the author’s
mother, the pianist Gitta Gradova, one of the greatest pianists of the century,
and the emotional impact of her withdrawal from concert performance.
- War is a Force That Gives Us Meaning,
Chris Hedges.
- A Problem From Hell: America and the Age of
Genocide, Samantha Power.
Thomas Corcoran,
from somewhere in the internet ether
- St. Ursula’s Girls Against the Atomic Bomb,
Valerie Hurley. Anyone who hasn’t read this is missing a literary treat. Raine
Rassaby is one of the most engaging young characters in modern literature.
Afflicted—or blessed—with scrupulosity, an extreme sensitivity to horror and
violence in the world, she must decide nothing less than whether to participate
in life. Ms. Hurley tells her story with humor, insight, and empathy, using
language that is both quick and lush, a delight to the eye as well as the ear.
Rich Loeber,
Saranac Lake
- The Keeper’s Son, Homer Hickam. I just
did not want this one to end.
- The Last of the Mohicans, James Fenimore
Cooper. A classic that should be read by everyone living in the north country.
- The Exraordinary Adirondack Journey of
Clarence Petty, Christopher Angus. A must for Adirondackers.
- Lightning and The Face, Dean Koontz.
- The Americanization of Edward Bok,
Edward Bok.
- Just About Everything in the Adirondacks,
William Chapman White. A great collection of essays that were originally
printed in the New York Times.
- The Last Juror, John Grisham.
- Healing Tuberculosis in the Woods: Medicine
and Science at the End of the Nineteenth Century, David L. Ellison.
- Touching the Void, Joe Simpson.
- Wish I Might, Isabel Smith. A wonderful
autobiography from a patient during the TB era in Saranac Lake.
- Adventures in the Wilderness, William
H.H. Murray.
- The Sky and the Forest and Plain Murder and Payment Deferred, C.S. Forester.
- The Adirondacks: A History of America’s
First Wilderness, Paul Schneider. This is the first Adirondack history that
explained the logging business in a way I could comprehend.
- The Devil in the City, Erik Larson. A
great non-fiction about the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair and a serial killer on
the loose during the fair.
- Northwest Passage, Kenneth Roberts.
Charlotte
Miller-Greenizen, Clayton
- The Dive From Clausen’s Pier, Ann
Packer. With great writing and emotional suspense, the author pulls the reader
in several directions. It wasn’t one of those books with a plot-thickener
planted here and there, but rather picks up on day to day occurrences that ask
the reader, “How much do we owe those who love us, and those we love?”
Ellen Beberman,
Vermontville
- Sailing Alone Around the World, Joshua
Slocum. First published in 1895. I found an anniversary edition that reproduced
the original, and it’s the best version. A Yankee sea-captain found himself
without a command and decided to build himself a boat (well, technically,
rebuild a rotten one) and sail around the world. Because he had spent his life
at sea the dramatic storms, etc. are downplayed, giving a matter-of-fact feel
to the story. A different time and world. Very engrossing to those who know a
little of the lingo—a fun armchair traveler’s read. Slight caution: it’s a bit
dated in race relations, though his attitude is surprisingly open.
Wendy Scott,
Enosburg Falls, VT
- Burning Marguerite, Elizabeth
Innes-Brown.
Style
Invitational First Runner-Up:
Bill Murray, hands down.
What did Jane Curtin often have to say
during costume changes at “Saturday Night Live”?
Sheryl, through
the internet ether
- The Worried Child, Paul Foxman. A book
about helping children heal from anxiety. There is a chapter especially for
children. Excellent book for parents, teachers, and anyone else who cares about
our children.
John Kern,
Charlotte, VT
- St. Ursula’s Girls Against the Atomic Bomb,
Valerie Hurley. The author is a north country writer who happens to be my wife.
For reviews and more about the book, visit the author’s website: www.valeriehurley.com
Doug Welch,
Northern Lights Bookstore, Pierrepoint
- Journey to the East, Hermann Hesse.
- The Unfolding Self: Varieties of Transformative
Experiences, Ralph Metzner.
- Man and His Symbols, C.G. Jung. A
re-read.
- Meanwhile, Next Door to the Good Life,
Jean Hay Bright. An expose of Helen and Scott Nearing—they lived off trusts,
inheritances, and annuities.
- Nickled and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in
America, Barbara Ehrenreich. Section on Walmart is apropos to our situation
here.
- The Congruent Life: Following the Inward
Path to Fulfilling Work and Inspired Leadership, C. Michael Thompson.
Steve Langdon,
Saranac Lake
- The Adirondack Atlas, Jerry Jenkins and
Andy Keal. This is an entirely amazing collection of maps and information on
the social, historical and ecological aspects of the Adirondacks and the North
Country. It just came out a couple of weeks ago and I’ve been glued to it. It’s
the kind of book that you can leave on the coffee table and just open up to any
page and learn something new. From cougar sightings to forest cover type to
missile silo locations to the best ice cream stands. Great stuff.
Monique Freshman,
Lake Placid
- Paranoia: A Novel, Joseph Finder. A
fast-paced well-written read about corporate espionage.
- The Last Juror and The Partner, John Grisham. After a Grisham reading hiatus (became
bored with repetitious plots/devices), I’ve returned with a vengeance and enjoyed
both of these.
- Alexander Hamilton, Ron Chernow. Reading
this and loving it. It has the same sweep to it as did David McCullough’s John Adams.
- A Great Deliverance, Elizabeth George.
She has a number of books, with wonderful character development and a marvelous
English sensibility. This one was made into a public TV program a few years
ago.
Carol Grzywinski,
Canton
- Alaska, James Michener. Always a cool
book to read on a hot summer day or night.
Noel de la Motte,
Canton
- The Da Vinci Code, Angels and Demons and
Deception Point, Dan Brown. Really
liked them all.
Bernadette Boyer,
Malone
- The Beatrix
Potter books.
Katie, age 9,
Madrid
- Matilda and The BFG and James and the
Giant Peach, Roahl Dahl. Anything by Dahl.
Hannah, age 14,
Saranac Lake
- Angus, Thongs and Full-Frontal Snogging:
Confessions of Georgia Nicolson, Louise Rennison.
Ellie, Russell
- New & Selected Poems, Mary Oliver.
- Eyes at the Window, Evie Yoder Miller.
- Lives of a Cell, Lewis Thomas.
Ray, Wilmington
- Adirondack Atlas, Jerry Jenkins and Andy
Keal.
David, Schuyler
Falls
- Nickel Mountain, John Gardner.
- The Farm on the River of Emeralds,
Moritz Thomsen
- Milagro Bean Fields Trilogy, John
Nichols.
Cecil, Keene
Valley
- Out of the Deep I Cry and In the Bleak Midwinter and A Fountain Filled With Blood, Julia
Spencer-Fleming. The three Rev. Clare Ferguson mysteries, set in the
Adirondacks.
- The Future of Freedom, Fareed Zacharia.
Anne, Newcomb
- Dylan’s Vision of Sin, Christopher Ricks
First
Place Winner of the Washington Post Style
Invitational:
I know I have to get up in the morning and
put my underwear on first and my pants on next.
After receiving some helpful advice on the
subway today, how will I change my dressing regimen
tomorrow?
Finally, a couple of interesting book links to share with
you…
- Visit our friends at the Corner Bookstore on Madison and 93
Street in New York City, at cornerbook@aol.com.
Lenny Golay and Dan Lettieri put together a terrific recommended reading review
on a regular basis. Lenny has been a guest on our reading call in shows in past
years.
- NPR has a wonderful collection of reading lists, ranging
from political titles to celebrity suggestions, classic re-reads to vacation
reading. Go to www.npr.org and click on
“books” in the left hand menu.
Let us know you’re
listening, send in a book title, ask a question, submit a calendar event, contribute
ideas and money:
North Country Public Radio
St. Lawrence University
Canton, NY 13617
1-877-388-6277
www.ncpr.org
ellen@ncpr.org (Ellen Rocco)
radio@ncpr.org (general email)
calendar@ncpr.org (events for calendar)
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