miércoles, 1 de junio de 2011

Book Review


Book News and Reviews
John Donohue
Gus Powell
John Donohue
BOOKS OF THE TIMES

‘Man With a Pan’

John Donohue has assembled a collection of essays and recipes by men who love cooking.

In Novel by Mayor’s Daughter, Hints of Family Life

Georgina Bloomberg’s new book, “The A Circuit,” is about a family headed by a blunt-talking Wall Street billionaire who lives in a Manhattan town house and “owns half of New York.”
A cinnamon sugar cake doughnut, to rival a traditional one.

Gluten-Free: Flavor-Free No More

A slew of cookbooks have been published to help bakers navigate a gluten-free kitchen.
BOOKS OF THE TIMES
Haley Tanner

‘Vaclav & Lena’

Haley Tanner’s “Vaclav & Lena” is a story of two Russian immigrants who first meet at age 6 in an English as a Second Language class at their Brooklyn school.
BOOKS

Broad Brushstrokes Obscure a View of Brain Trauma

In this tripartite story of brain, art and family life, the author aces the first part but comes up surprisingly short in the other two.

Five Poets Seasoned by Life

New poetry by Dean Young, Dorianne Laux , Jim Moore, Tom Sexton and Laura Kasischke.

Novelist and His Hero Wonder, Will It Last?

The Texas novelist Stephen Harrigan has been successful, but never in fashion among the New York literary set.
CRITIC’S NOTEBOOK

Books to Bury Yourself In

The beach book this summer is likely to have new names and new twists, even when it comes to Scandinavian mysteries.
BOOKS OF THE TIMES
The critic Alfred Kazin, the author of “On Native Grounds” and “A Walker in the City,” in 1995.

‘Alfred Kazin’s Journals’

One of the many revelations in Alfred Kazin’s journals, published now for the first time, is the sense they impart of how ill at ease, how easily wounded, he was behind his bluff cosmopolitan mien.

E-Business Is the Buzz at Book Fair

This year’s BookExpo America, an annual publishing business trade show, is full of talk of e-reading and other shifts in the industry.
BOOKS OF THE TIMES
Chester Brown

‘Paying for It’

In “Paying for It,” Chester Brown, a Toronto cartoonist, delivers a comic-strip memoir of his life with prostitutes.
CHILDREN’S BOOKS

Princess Books

Two new picture books — “Rapunzel,” by Sarah Gibb and “Twelve Dancing Princesses,” by Brigette Barrager — offer highly sweetened variations on classic Grimm’s fairy tales.
BOOKS OF THE TIMES

‘The Fear: Robert Mugabe and the Martyrdom of Zimbabwe’

In “The Fear: Robert Mugabe and the Martyrdom of Zimbabwe,” Peter Godwin details many of the brutal actions employed by the Mugabe government to maintain control.
BOOKS OF THE TIMES
David McCullough

‘The Greater Journey’

The historian David McCullough’s latest volume begins in the 1830s and follows waves of young Americans who would become important in the arts, education and technological innovation.
Sunday Book Review

‘The Greater Journey: Americans in Paris’

Illustration by Misprinted Type, photographs from Getty Images
David McCullough explores the intellectual legacy that France settled on its 19th-century visitors.
Solomon Schechter examining manuscripts from the Cairo geniza.

‘Sacred Trash: The Lost and Found World of the Cairo Geniza’

Tattered documents, dating back centuries, endure in a synagogue.

‘Toward You’

The narrator of Jim Krusoe’s novel tries to find a way for the living to get through to the dead.

‘The London Train’

Tessa Hadley’s novel is divided between two characters who once intersected for an affair.
Arvind Krishna Mehrotra

‘Songs of Kabir’

A new translation brings a revered body of Indian verse into sharper relief.

‘Bullfighting’

In Roddy Doyle’s stories, characters struggle with the funk brought on by middle age.
James A. Johnson, chief executive of Fannie Mae from 1991 to 1998.

‘Reckless Endangerment’

An account of the financial crisis highlights individuals who played crucial roles of responsibility.

‘Boredom: A Lively History’

Admitting he’s been bored for large tracts of his life, a classicist offers a history of his affliction.

‘Convicting The Innocent: Where Criminal Prosecutions Go Wrong’

Since the ’80s, Brandon L. Garrett writes, DNA testing has exonerated over 250 people convicted of crimes they didn’t commit.
Engraving of Noah Webster from Yale University Library.

‘The Forgotten Founding Father: Noah Webster’s Obsession and the Creation of an American Culture’

Noah Webster was a journalist, reformer and lexicographer.
Photograph of Jane Gross and her mother, Estelle.

‘A Bittersweet Season: Caring for Our Aging Parents — and Ourselves’

Jane Gross recounts her struggle to help an infirm parent and offers practical advice on eldercare.

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