viernes, 7 de octubre de 2011

Books Update


On the Cover of Sunday's Book Review

'The Better Angels of Our Nature'

By STEVEN PINKER
Reviewed by PETER SINGER
In his new book, Steven Pinker's central thesis is that our current era is less violent, less cruel and more peaceful than any previous period of human existence.

Also in the Book Review

Russell Banks

'Lost Memory of Skin'

By RUSSELL BANKS
Reviewed by HELEN SCHULMAN
Russell Banks's protagonist, a paroled sex offender living under a Florida causeway, befriends a mysterious sociologist.
The magnet core of a particle detector on the Large Hadron Collider.

'Knocking on Heaven's Door'

By LISA RANDALL
Reviewed by JIM HOLT
Developments in physics have the potential to radically change our understanding of the world.
Bruce Jay Friedman (circa 1971)

'Lucky Bruce'

By BRUCE JAY FRIEDMAN
Reviewed by JOHN LELAND
Bruce Jay Friedman - writer, editor, actor - reflects on an era.
Inside the Peoples Temple in Jonestown, Guyana, after the November 1978 murder-suicide ritual.

'A Thousand Lives'

By JULIA SCHEERES
Reviewed by ALAN RIDING
Julia Scheeres follows the experiences of five Peoples Temple members who went to Jonestown.

'Boundaries'

By ELIZABETH NUNEZ
Reviewed by ZOE SLUTZKY
In this novel, an editor from the Caribbean makes a life in Manhattan.

'Luminous Airplanes'

By PAUL LA FARGE
Reviewed by KATHRYN SCHULZ
In this novel, a programmer unmoored by the death of his grandfather returns to the town where he spent childhood summers.
Hazel Bryan and Elizabeth Eckford, Little Rock, Ark., September 1957.

'Elizabeth and Hazel'

By DAVID MARGOLICK
Reviewed by AMY FINNERTY
Two of the figures in a famous photograph come to complicated life.
John Lennon performing at Madison Square Garden in 1974.

'Lennon'

By TIM RILEY
Reviewed by JAMES PARKER
A biographer tries to make sense of John Lennon's pain.
Amitav Ghosh

'River Of Smoke'

By AMITAV GHOSH
Reviewed by CHANDRAHAS CHOUDHURY
This sequel to "Sea of Poppies" unfolds in the Chinese trading outpost of Canton.

'Alibis: Essays on Elsewhere'

By ANDRE ACIMAN
Reviewed by TEJU COLE
The scent of lavender is André Aciman's madeleine, connecting him with the past.

'Death in the City of Light'

By DAVID KING
Reviewed by GENE SANTORO
A crime history of Marcel Petiot, a serial killer in Nazi-occupied Paris.
The English economist Alfred Marshall, in 1892.

'Grand Pursuit'

By SYLVIA NASAR
Reviewed by JUSTIN FOX
Sylvia Nasar traces the evolution of modern economic thought, from John Maynard Keynes to Amartya Sen.

'The Matter With Morris'

By DAVID BERGEN
Reviewed by POLLY MORRICE
A newspaper columnist and grieving father turns to letter writing in this novel.

'The Reactionary Mind'

By COREY ROBIN
Reviewed by SHERI BERMAN
Conservatism at its core, this book argues, is about subjugating the lower orders.

'The Night Circus'

By ERIN MORGENSTERN
Reviewed by STACEY D'ERASMO
In Erin Morgenstern's historical novel, two lovestruck magicians are engaged in a battle of imagination and will.
An Ironman triathlon's 112-mile bike ride is sandwiched between a 2.4-mile open-water swim and a marathon run.

'You Are an Ironman'

By JACQUES STEINBERG
Reviewed by JAY JENNINGS
Jacques Steinberg profiles six everyday athletes and their attempts to complete an Ironman triathlon.

'A Small Hotel'

By ROBERT OLEN BUTLER
Reviewed by JOANNA SMITH RAKOFF
Instead of signing her divorce papers, a woman checks into the New Orleans hotel "thick with the ghosts" of her marriage.

'Political Evil'

By ALAN WOLFE
Reviewed by JONATHAN RAUCH
Moralizing is not the best way of dealing with political evil, Alan Wolfe writes.

'Your Medical Mind'

By JEROME GROOPMAN AND PAMELA HARTZBAND
Reviewed by DANIEL J. LEVITIN
The decisions we make as patients have a lot to do with our personal histories.

'Letters From an Unknown Woman'

By GERARD WOODWARD
Reviewed by JINCY WILLETT
A World War II British family deals with its privations in unsettling ways.

Back Page

ESSAY
Will the E-Book Kill the Footnote?
By ALEXANDRA HOROWITZ
The e-book may inadvertently be driving footnotes to extinction.
CHILDREN'S BOOKS

Men Who Made Magic

Reviewed by PAMELA PAUL
A puppeteer, a mime and a magician are the worthy subjects of three very different biographies for middle-grade readers about men who mastered some form of magic.
CHILDREN'S BOOKS

'Samantha on a Roll'

Reviewed by PAMELA PAUL
"Samantha on a Roll" is a new picture book about an adventurous girl who can't resist trying out her new skates.

Book Review Podcast

Featuring Stephen Greenblatt on his new book "The Swerve: How the World Became Modern"; André Aciman on his new collection of travel essays; and Jacques Steinberg on profiling Ironman triathletes.
ArtsBeat

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