sábado, 4 de junio de 2011

Book Review


Sunday Book Review

Summer Reading

Illustration by Frank Viva

Cookbooks

More than a dozen new cookbooks, full of fantasy, truth, good meals and bad.

Gardening Books

A bumper crop of new gardening books that make a good case for the simple joy of growing things.

Travel Books

In this season’s travel books, the most resonant journeys are recorded by writers who hit the road to escape failed relationships, broken marriages and dead-end careers.
Summer Reading: Music
Bob Dylan in 1965.
Don Hunstein
Bob Dylan in 1965.

Books About Bob Dylan

New books by Greil Marcus, David Yaffe and Daniel Mark Epstein reaffirm Bob Dylan’s enduring ability to captivate.

Biographies of Metallica and Queen

The life and times of Metallica and Queen, two of the world’s biggest, loudest and most emotionally complicated rock groups.

‘Electric Eden: Unearthing Britain’s Visionary Music’

Rob Young traces the pastoral roots of Britain’s folk music scene of the 1960s and ’70s.
Summer Reading: Hollywood
Robert Redford in 1975.
Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Robert Redford in 1975.

‘Robert Redford’

A meticulous, tiptoeingly respectful biography of Robert Redford: actor, director and environmental activist.

Show Business Memoirs

Memoirs by Dick Van Dyke and Barbara Eden recall a pioneering era of television comedy.

‘Good Stuff: A Reminiscence of My Father, Cary Grant’

Cary Grant’s daughter celebrates their relationship.

‘Infamous Players: A Tale of Movies, the Mob (and Sex)’

Paramount Pictures as seen from on high when the American new wave came in.
Summer Reading: Fiction

‘Sister’

In this novel, a free-spirited sister’s death — perhaps it was murder — forces a highly conventional woman to examine the truth of their relationship.
China Miéville

‘Embassytown’

On a distant planet, humans introduce the natives to a destructive habit — lying.

‘The Devil’s Light’

In Richard North Patterson’s new thriller, Al Qaeda plans to set off a nuclear bomb on Sept. 11, 2011.

‘22 Britannia Road’

In this first novel, a couple shattered by World War II struggle to start anew.
Sarah Winman

‘When God Was a Rabbit’

This darkly comic novel’s child heroine quotes Nietzsche at the dinner table and names her pet rabbit “God.”

‘Someday This Will Be Funny’

Lynne Tillman experiments with narrative form in these innovative stories.
OneFiveFourBy Lebbeus Woods.Unpaged. Princeton Architectural Press. $24.95.“Geometry and light are the essential elements of my work in architecture,” Woods declares, introducing this book of his projects from 1985 to the present, with a combination of text, drawings, models, and numerical and geometrical figures.

Science Fiction Chronicle

Speculative fiction by Lauren Beukes, Genevieve Valentine, Peter S. Beagle and Jo Walton.
Summer Reading: Travel & Adventure
Surveying during the Terra Nova expedition.

‘An Empire of Ice’

In time for the 100th anniversary of the conquest of the South Pole, a history of Antarctic exploration through the lens of science.

‘Wanderlust: A Love Affair With Five Continents’

For this traveler, each new place is more mirage than reality.
Margaret Hastings and New Guinea tribesmen.

‘Lost in Shangri-La’

How three World War II sightseers survived a crash in remote New Guinea.
The map by Nicolò Zen the Younger, published by Francesco Marcolini in 1558.

‘Irresistible North’

Andrea di Robilant’s discovery of an antique travel book sends him on a journey of his own.
Alexander von Humboldt and the botanist Aimé Bonpland at the foot of the Chimborazo volcano in Ecuador.

‘Andes’

A somewhat unlikely adventurer describes his trek down South America’s great mountain range to its icy finish in Patagonia.

‘The Tao of Travel’

Paul Theroux’s literary travel volume cites passages from his favorite authors.
Summer Reading: Sport
Joe Louis knocking out Max Schmeling at Yankee Stadium, June 22, 1938.

‘At the Fights’

Essays on boxing by A. J. Liebling, Richard Wright, Joyce Carol Oates, Gay Talese and others survey a world of extreme risk and unique nobility.

‘It’s All About the Bike’

The cyclist Robert Penn sets out to assemble a “talismanic machine.”
Summer Reading: Baseball

‘The Captain: The Journey of Derek Jeter’

This biography of the Yankees’ shortstop has only good things to say about him.
Hank Greenberg and Joe DiMaggio at Yankee Stadium, September 1939.

Biographies of Joe DiMaggio and Hank Greenberg

Short biographies of Joe DiMaggio and Hank Greenberg, two of the most feared hitters in baseball.
Stan Musial’s 3,000th hit, May 13, 1958.

‘Stan Musial: An American Life’

A biography of Stan Musial, one of baseball’s great hitters who nonetheless kept a low profile.
REMEMBERING FENWAY PARK:An Oral and Narrative History of the Home of the Boston Red Sox.By Harvey Frommer.237 pp. Stewart, Tabori & Chang. $45.A hundred years of Green Monster visions and lore in a chorus of voices, starting with the opening game in 1912, six days after the Titanic went down, and proceeding decade by decade with the Babe, the curse, Williams and Yaz, the heartbreak of '86 and World Series redemption.

Baseball Chronicle

A grudge-bearing memoir by Bill White; accounts of Joe DiMaggio’s 56-game hit streak and a 19th-century manager’s back-to-back pennant wins; and a retired ballplayer’s Zen-inspired meditation on the game.
Summer Reading: Comics
Horsefeathers: Billy DeBeck's “Barney Google,” in “The Comics” (Dec. 26, 1920).

‘The Comics: The Complete Collection’

An illustrated history of American newspaper comics, from the Yellow Kid to Dilbert.
Summer Reading: Food

Books About Lobster

Two short books on lobster, the food and the creature.
Book News and Reviews
Bill James
Crystal Image Photography, Lawrence, Kan.
Bill James
BOOKS OF THE TIMES

‘Popular Crime’

Bill James, known for his analysis of baseball statistics, tackles data pertaining to well-known murders.
BOOKS OF THE TIMES

‘State of Wonder’

In Ann Patchett’s new novel, a research scientist goes outside her comfort zone, to the Amazon jungle, to help solve the mystery of a colleague’s death.
NOTICED
IN PRINT Kourtney Kardashian, left, Nicole Polizzi and Lauren Conrad are among a collection of celebrites with book deals.

In Their Own Words? Maybe

There is an understanding among publishers, editors and agents that ghostwriters are behind many novels by celebrities.
Q&A
Philip Connors spends his summers looking for fires in the Gila National Forest of New Mexico.

A Fire Lookout on Solitude (and Lots of Time to Read)

Philip Connors, the author of “Fire Season,” spends his summers living in a remote cabin in the Gila National Forest of New Mexico, where he is on the lookout for fires.
AT HOME WITH KELLY COYNE AND ERIK KNUTZEN
Erik Knutzen and Kelly Coyne (with flax harvest) at their home.

Living Large, Off the Land

Kelly Coyne and Erik Knutzen gave up a long commute to promote a do-it-yourself revolution from their home in Los Angeles.
BOOKS OF THE TIMES
John Donohue

‘Man With a Pan’

John Donohue has assembled a collection of essays and recipes by men who love cooking.
Georgina Bloomberg, left, on Inauguration Day 2010 as Mayor Bloomberg took the oath of office for his third term.

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.
Book Review Back Page
SKETCHBOOK | AMY GOLDWASSER AND PETER ARKLE
The Books We Read Outdoors
On a recent partly sunny Sunday afternoon on the Sheep Meadow in Central Park, we asked some outdoor readers to give their ground-level book reviews.

Book Review Podcast

Featuring Sam Sifton on new cookbooks and Dominique Browning on new books about gardening.
  •  This Week's Book Review Podcast (mp3)
WEEK IN REVIEW
Paul Theroux, right, lovingly inscribed one of his novels for V. S. Naipaul. It was put up for sale, sparking a 15-year feud. It ended last weekend with a handshake at a book festival in Wales.

In Book Circles, a Taming of the Feud

One of the last old-school literary dust-ups passed into history last week. Can Twitter feuds fill the void of swinging fists?
Children’s Books

‘Blackout’

A Brooklyn family experiences a blackout in this picture book.

‘The Absolute Value of Mike’

In this middle grade novel, a boy becomes aware of his father’s strengths, and his own, while spending the summer with relatives.

‘Blood Red Road’

In this debut young adult novel, a girl searches for her brother in a postapocalyptic world.

‘Far From Shore’

A field biologist and ornithologist’s illustrated journal of a four-month scientific voyage on the Pacific Ocean.
CHILDREN’S BOOKS
Bookshelf: Growing Up
Reviews of new picture books.
Summer Reading: Crime

‘Popular Crime’

A baseball statistician turns to his other passion: true crime cases, from Lizzie Borden to JonBenet Ramsey.
Violette Nozière in custody, September 1933.

‘Violette Nozière: A Story of Murder in 1930s Paris’

A lurid murder case from the 1930s sheds light on a time of social change in France.
CRIME

Ghostbusters

Mystery novels by Michael Koryta, Justin Evans, Jason Starr and Sara Gran.
The Times's Critics
Recent reviews by:
Arts & Leisure
Picasso's “Head of a Sleeping Woman (Study for Nude with Drapery),” which was once owned by Gertrude Stein.

Modern Is Modern Is ...

San Francisco exhibitions a block apart explore Gertrude Stein as an art collector and as half of a public gay union.
Autos
BOOKS

The Books of Summer, Awaiting Your Armchair

There is good automotive reading for the summer out there, and while the books may be too hefty for the beach, they are certainly good for the front porch.
Obituaries
Johanna Fiedler

Johanna Fiedler Dies at 65; Wrote of the Met Opera

Ms. Fiedler wrote tell-all books about the Metropolitan Opera and about her father, Arthur Fiedler.
Hans Keilson photographed in the Netherlands in 2010.

Hans Keilson, Novelist of Life in Nazi-Run Europe, Dies at 101

Mr. Keilson, a German-born psychoanalyst, won literary fame at the end of his long life when his long-forgotten stories, set in Nazi-occupied Europe, were republished to great acclaim.
Book Review Features

Up Front: Sam Sifton

In the age of Google, it’s not that hard to find a photograph of of The Times’s restaurant critic — but we’re not about to make Sam Sifton’s day job any more difficult by printing one here.
TBR
Steve Berry

Inside the List

Beach-reading season may be in full swing, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t a whole lot of constitutional law being debated on the best-seller list.

Editors’ Choice

Recently reviewed books of particular interest.

Paperback Row

Paperback books of particular interest.

Bloqueo del nervio axilar guiado por ultrasonido: un estudio voluntario de un nuevo método


Bloqueo del nervio axilar guiado por ultrasonido: un estudio voluntario de un nuevo método.
Ultrasound-guided block of the axillary nerve: a volunteer study of a new method
C. ROTHE, S. ASGHAR, H. L. ANDERSEN,  J. K. CHRISTENSEN, K. H. W. LANGE
Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica Volume 55, Issue 5, pages 565-570, May 2011

Background: Interscalene brachial plexus block (IBPB) is the gold standard for perioperative pain management in shoulder surgery. However, a more distal technique would be desirable to avoid the side effects and potential serious complications of IBPB. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to develop and describe a new method to perform an ultrasound-guided specific axillary nerve block. Methods: After initial investigations, 12 healthy volunteers were included. We performed an in-line ultrasound-guided specific axillary nerve block by injecting 8 ml local anesthetic (lidocaine 20 mg/ml) after placing the tip of a nerve stimulation needle cranial to the posterior circumflex humeral artery in the neurovascular space bordered by the teres minor muscle, the deltoid muscle, the triceps muscle and the shaft of the humerus. Needle placement was aided by simultaneous nerve stimulation. We assessed sensory (pinprick and cold stimulation) and motor (active resistive force) block of the axillary nerve before, 15, 30, 60, 90 and 120 min after performing the block and every 30 min until termination of the block. Results: All 12 volunteers demonstrated sensory block of the axillary nerve and 10 volunteers demonstrated complete motor block. Even though it was difficult to directly visualize the axillary nerve, the block was easy to perform with easily recognizable ultrasonographic landmarks. Block duration was approximately 120 min. Conclusions: We describe a new ultrasound-guided technique to specifically block the axillary nerve. The potential clinical role of this new block remains to be determined.

Diferentes curvas de aprendizaje para bloqueo braquial axilar: guía con ultrasonido vs. estimulación nerviosa
Different Learning Curves for Axillary Brachial Plexus Block: Ultrasound Guidance versus Nerve Stimulation.
Luyet C, Schüpfer G, Wipfli M, Greif R, Luginbühl M, Eichenberger U.
Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Therapy, University Hospital and University of Bern, Inselspital, CH-3010 Bern, Switzerland.
Anesthesiol Res Pract. 2010;2010:309462. Epub 2011 Jan 20.
Abstract
Little is known about the learning of the skills needed to perform ultrasound- or nerve stimulator-guided peripheral nerve blocks. The aim of this study was to compare the learning curves of residents trained in ultrasound guidance versus residents trained in nerve stimulation for axillary brachial plexus block. Ten residents with no previous experience with using ultrasound received ultrasound training and another ten residents with no previous experience with using nerve stimulation received nerve stimulation training. The novices' learning curves were generated by retrospective data analysis out of our electronic anaesthesia database. Individual success rates were pooled, and the institutional learning curve was calculated using a bootstrapping technique in combination with a Monte Carlo simulation procedure. The skills required to perform successful ultrasound-guided axillary brachial plexus block can be learnt faster and lead to a higher final success rate compared to nerve stimulator-guided axillary brachial plexus block.


Comparación entre estimulador nervioso y ultrasonido como técnicas para anestesia del plexo braquial
Comparision of nerve stimulator and ultrasonography as the techniques applied for brachial plexus anesthesia.
Zencirci B.
Kahramanmaras Sutcu Imam University Medical Faculty, Department of Anesthesiology and Reanimation Kahramanmaras, Turkey.bzencirci@fastmail.fm.
Int Arch Med. 2011 Jan 21;4(1):4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Brachial plexus block is useful for upper extremity surgery, and many techniques are available. The aim of our study was to compare the efficacy of axillary brachial plexus block using an ultrasound technique to the peripheral nerve stimulation technique. METHODS: 60 patients scheduled for surgery of the forearm or hand were randomly allocated into two groups (n = 30 per group). For Group 1; US, and for Group 2 PNS was applied. The quality and the onset of the sensorial and motor blockade were assessed. The sensorial blockade, motor blockade time and quality of blockade were compared among the cases. RESULTS: The time needed to perform the axillary brachial plexus block averaged is similar in both groups (p > 0.05). Although not significant statistically, it was observed that the sensory block had formed earlier in Group 1 (p > 0.05). But the degree of motor blockade was intenser in Group 1 than in Group 2 (p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Ultrasound offers a new possibility for identifiying the nerves of the brachial plexus for regional anesthesia. The ultrasound-guided axillary brachial plexus block is a safe method with faster onset time and better quality of motor blockade compared to peripheral nerve stimulation technique

Atentamente
Anestesiología y Medicina del Dolor