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Donald Antrim's
  The Verificationist
Appreciation: Paul Bowles
Louis Auchincloss's
  Woodrow Wilson
David Ball's
  Empires of Sand
John Banville's
  Eclipse
Julian Barnes's
 Love, etc.
Charles Baxter's
  The Feast of Love
Madison Smartt Bell's
  Master of the Crossroads
Richard Bernstein's
  Ultimate Journey Francois Bizot's
  The Gate
Angela Bourke's
  The Burning of Bridget Cleary
Mark Bowden's
  Black Hawk Down
Paul Bowles's
  The Stories of Paul Bowles
Rick Bragg's
  Ava’s Man
  Somebody Told Me
Caedmon Spoken-Word Recordings Go Digital
Patricia Carlon's
  Death By Demonstration
  The Unquiet Night
  The Price of an Orphan
  Who Are You, Linda Condrick?
Celebrating Ulysses
Rich Cohen's
  Lake Effect
John Cornwell's
  Hitler’s Pope
Patricia Cornwell's
  Black Notice
Douglas Coupland's
  Miss Wyoming
Michael Crichton's
  Timeline
Jan Dalley's
  Diana Mosley
John Darnton's
  The Experiment
Michael Dibdin's
  Thanksgiving
James Dickey's
  Crux
Joan Didion's
  Political Fictions
J.D. Dolan's
  Phoenix
Robert Drewe's
  The Shark Net
Dave Eggers's
  A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
Lise Eliot's
  What’s Going on in There?
Joe Eszterhas's
  Hollywood Animal
Penelope Evans's
  First Fruits
Freezing

Dick Francis's
  Second Wind
Mary E. Wilkins Freeman's
  A New England Nun and Other Stories
Charles Gallenkamp's
  Dragon Hunter
Elizabeth George's
  A Traitor to Memory
William Gibson's
  All Tomorrow’s Parties
John Gimlette's
  At the Tomb of the Inflatable Pig: Travels Through Paraguay
M. Lee Goff's
  A Fly for the Prosecution
Allan Gurganis's
  The Practical Heart
Leonard Guttridge's
  The Ghosts of Cape Sabine
Carl Hiaasen's
  Skinny Dip
  Basket Case
  Sick Puppy
Patricia Highsmith's
  The Talented Mr. Ripley
  Ripley Underground
  Ripley’s Game
David Hunt's
  Trick of Light
Pico Iyer's
  The Global Soul
John Keegan's
  The First World War
Pagan Kennedy's
  Black Livingston
Tracy Kidder's
  Home Town
Stephen King's
  On Writing
  Hearts in Atlantis
Michael Knight's
  Divining Rod
Ted Koppel's
  Off Camera
Alan Lightman's
  The Diagnosis
John S. Littell's
  French Impressions
Brenda Maddox's
  Yeats’s Ghosts
Thomas Mallon's
  Two Moons
Ben Marcus's
  Notable American Women
Peter Martin's
  A Life of James Boswell
Andrés Martinez's
  24/7
Bobbie Ann Mason's
  Zigzagging Down a Wild Trail
Edna St. Vincent Millay's
  The Selected Poetry of Edna St. Vincent Millay
Nancy Milford's
  Savage Beauty
Haruki Murakami's
 Sputnik Sweatheart
 Underground
Re-Thinking Nabokov
Peter Nichols's
  A Voyage for Madmen
Redmond O'Hanlon's
Trawler: A Journey throught he North Atlantic
Michael Ondaatje's
  Anil’s Ghost
Kevin Patterson's
  The Water in Between
T.R. Pearson's
  Polar
Henry Petroski's
  Paperboy: Confessions of a Future Engineer
Jonathan Raban's
  Passage to Juneau
Stella Rimington's
  At Risk
David L. Robbins's
  War of the Rats
Richard Rhodes's
  Why They Kill
Katie Roiphe's
  Still She Haunts Me
Salman Rushdie's
  Fury
Witold Rybczynski's
  A Clearing in the Distance
Thomas Sanchez's
  King Bongo
Stacy Schiff's
  Vera (Mrs. Vladimir Nabokov)
Dava Sobel's
  Galileo’s Daughter
John Swain's
  River of Time
Amy Tan's
  The Bonesetter’s Daughter
James Tate's
  Memoirs of the Hawk
Kendall Taylor's
  Sometimes Madness is Wisdom
John Updike's
  Licks of Love
  Gertrude and Claudius
  More Matter
Edmund White's
  The Married Man
Jamie Zeppa's
  Beyond the Sky and the Earth

 

 

 

Archives
Book Reviews

Redmond O'Hanlon's Trawler: A Journey Through the North Atlantic

"For O’Hanlon, at least, the trawlerman’s journey is largely about running nets through deep, hidden places within himself. Doubtless, a book about the sea’s abysmal depths would have been compelling, but this one certainly has its delicious moments of comedy and existential terror."

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Stella Rimington's At Risk

"At Risk has an impressive hook for readers who prefer their thrillers to be quick, intense and above all realistic: it was written by Stella Rimington, who joined Britain’s Secret Service (MI5) in 1969 and served as its director general from 1992 to 1996.

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Thomas Fahy's Night Visions

Thomas Fahy’s debut thriller has nearly enough momentum to stave off a reader’s growing concern that the plot might not be as strong as it promises in the early pages.

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Carl Hiaasen's Skinny Dip

No one will ever accuse Carl Hiaasen of being a subtle novelist. He paints his satires with broad, broad strokes. But no one will accuse him of being boring or slow, either. Skinny Dip, his eleventh novel, is true to form.

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John Gimlette's At the Tomb of the Inflatable Pig: Travels Through Paraguay

To borrow from Voltaire, if magical realism didn’t exist, Paraguay would invent it. Only it would be even darker and more nightmarish than what we have on the shelves today.

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Joe Eszterhas's Hollywood Animal

"If Eszterhas had given his readers simply this childhood memoir, it would have been a powerful little book, and it would have helped replace the boorish, misogynistic role he’s perceived as playing with some of his louder screenplays."

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François Bizot's The Gate

"Wordsworth famously described poetry as the overflowing of emotion recollected in moments of tranquillity. Bizot certainly waited long enough to recount his ordeals in a Khmer Rouge prison camp, but by his own account, the tranquility will never come."

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Thomas Sanchez's King Bongo

"Squeezed into a short multi-plot summary, King Bongo certainly sounds familiar. But its settings, characters and thematic development keep it fresh."

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Re-Thinking Nabokov

"Nabokov is often trounced as an intellectual snob, a literary mandarin. With his complex plots and prose that draws on French, English and Russian (just to name three), he delights in laying traps for the unwary reader because he wants to prove his superiority. So the argument runs. In truth, as Boyd demonstrates, Nabokov is the most charitable of authors. He always gives the reader more than one path to his destination. In Nabokov’s teaching days, Boyd relates, he told his students: 'Curiously enough, one cannot read a book; one can only reread it. A good reader, a major reader, an active and creative reader is a rereader.'"

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Patricia Carlon's Who Are You, Linda Kondrick?

"Every time I pick up a new Carlon title I tell myself to slow down and savor the experience—but I can't. Her prose is so expertly lean and fast that I consume the book in a single night, and then I spend a year waiting for the next one."

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Caedmon Spoken-Word Recordings Go Digital

"This year, Caedmon celebrates its fiftieth anniversary, and in addition to releasing new recordings of classic literature (like Philip K. Dick's The Minority Report and Other Stories, read by Keir Dullea), it continues to digitalize its backlist. Arthur Miller, Charles Bukowski, Ernest Hemingway, James Joyce and Edgar Allan Poe are among the classic writers who have made it onto CDs, and the list is growing."

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Rich Cohen's Lake Effect

"Lake Effect is about the friendship of young men when girls are desired but still unfathomable objects, about bonds forged in cheap beer and borrowed cars and aimless adventures and talk late into the night, when it all feels important and exciting in some way you can't quite define and you can't imagine ever wanting any of it to change. And then it all changes, until there's nothing left of it but old stories you can't quite explain to your wife and in-jokes you no longer understand scrawled in your high school yearbook."

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Ben Marcus's Notable American Women

"Imagine a Mandelbrot pattern with its endlessly magnifying geometric complexities and you get some of Notable American Women's frenetic, hyperreal obsessiveness. And like a Mandelbrot pattern--and opposed to, say, an Antrim novel--the real focus here (both yours and Marcus's) seems to rest on the hallucinatory kaleidoscope of images, rather than the storyline itself."

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Henry Petroski's Paperboy: Confessions of a Future Engineer

"The author of books such as The Pencil and The Evolution of Useful Things, Petroski has a gift for rendering the ordinary in unexpectedly intriguing detail. Very large sections of Paperboy are devoted to the finer points of newspaper delivery, such as the range of techniques evolved to accommodate thick papers, thin papers, and Sunday papers with their stack of supplements. It's the sort of matter you might never otherwise have given a second thought to, like the million other components of everyday living, but once you've learned about it, you can't imagine why you never wondered about it before."

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Pagan Kennedy's Black Livingstone: A True Tale of Adventure in the Nineteenth-Century Congo

Black Livingstone is by turns an adventure story and a sobering look at both American and European history, as well as a biography of a man who managed, in his own largely non-political way, to fight the darkest tendencies of his time. It's a remarkable story, notable not only for its thrilling sense of adventure but for the fact that it's so little known today. Kennedy's fascination with Sheppard's story and her affection for him as a dynamic, complicated figure are apparent—and infectious.

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T.R. Pearson's Polar

Ordinarily, we would expect the foreground—the main characters and the central plot—to be favored over the background in a successful novel. Indeed, it would defy the notions of 'primary' and 'secondary' to invert their roles in a novel. And yet that's precisely what T.R. Pearson has done in his latest novel, Polar—and the effects, counterintuitively, are shockingly entertaining.

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Paul Bowles's The Stories of Paul Bowles

Paul Bowles has finally received what a writer of his stature deserves: a complete collection of his short fiction, stretching from his first often brilliant efforts in 1946 to his last, occasionally didactic work in 1993. Ecco's new The Stories of Paul Bowles is especially valuable to Bowles enthusiasts because it offers stories that have never been collected before. And since the stories (sixty-two in all) are presented in chronological order, we can watch Bowles establish and refine his central themes as well as witness how his notion of the form changed over nearly fifty years.

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Carl Hiaasen's Basket Case

Basket Case's plot isn't as convoluted as Hiaasen's last novel, Sick Puppy. Where Sick Puppy was high farce, Basket Case is a more traditional murder mystery offering the standard genre-driven elements (femme fatale, etc.) as well as some nicely broad comic highlights (this is Hiaasen, after all). Unfortunately, that means it lacks some of Sick Puppy's speed and dizzying changes of direction (traits at which Hiaasen excels). On the other hand, it doesn't lack for zany comic antics, particularly when it comes to comically absurd violence (another Hiaasen trademark).

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Nancy Milford's Savage Beauty:
The Life of Edna St. Vincent Millay

The shock value of a woman talking openly and even callously about sexuality is lost on us today. Years ago, Madonna taught us that women's underwear can be outerwear, and Britney Spears's efforts to make lurid Lolitas mainstream get edgier with each music awards show. Cunningly composed poetry just won't cut the mustard with us, these days. But Milford apparently likes a tough sell when it comes to biographical subjects. Her Zelda: A Biography jump-started critical and popular interest in F. Scott Fitzgerald's artistic but troubled wife, and I suppose she hoped to perform the same task for Millay with Savage Beauty.

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Edna St. Vincent Millay's The Selected Poetry of Edna St. Vincent Millay

The fact that her poetic style was conventional and easily understood by the average reader (in ways that many of her modernist contemporaries were not) certainly helped sales, but it's always sex that moves the books, right? And Millay, whose audience included an emerging generation of freethinking women, was really like a waggish, crossdressing Metaphysical poet in her approach to love and sex.

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Allan Gurganus's The Practical Heart

For all its abundant stylistic variety, Allan Gurganus's The Practical Heart: Four Novellas has a single gesture, if not theme, at its center: in each story, a character (usually middle-aged) looks back at the past and mulls over its effect on him / her in the present. When, if not where, that past lies is only a part of this superb collection's creative diversity.

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Bobbie Ann Mason's Zigzagging Down a Wild Trail

Despite the characters' unhappiness (or perhaps because of it), Mason's stories here are beautifully kinetic. Characters wonder through snow storms and escape their dull lives by catching a bus to a Mississippi casino 'boat.' The movement—'zigzagging down a wild trail'—mirrors the character's unsettled states of mind, of course, but it also makes for some fast reading. And the comedy in Mason's stories tends to sneak up on you delightfully too.

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Joan Didion's Political Fictions

It's not Didion's fault, of course, if her subjects are depressing. In fact, this collection demonstrates that Didion is quite simply one of America's best essay writers, with a keen eye for detail and a knack for dogged deconstructive analysis—to say nothing of her writing style. Her elaborate sentence structures (she's particularly enamored of sentence-stretching parenthetical points) often read like intoxicating acrobatic maneuvers, and the points she makes with them are so carefully developed that one often feels they should be read purely for the pleasure of watching them work, no matter how depressing the subject.

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Katie Roiphe's Still She Haunts Me

The strongest character in Roiphe's book is, fittingly, Alice herself: the object of Dodgson's desires (whatever their form) and, by extension, ours. Roiphe's work with Alice is particularly distinguished by the complexity of her character development. Alice is no mere victim of Dodgson's illicit desires; she is, even when she first appears in the novel as a four year old, fully cognizant of both the way people see her and the way she can manipulate her own image for their benefit (or shock).

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Salman Rushdie's Fury

Fury's protagonist has to carry more than his relatively uninteresting character can handle. He's too passive—often, he's simply a keen observer with a backstory—and it weakens the novel's narrative thrust considerably. At one point, Rushdie writes, "This about New York Solanka liked a lot—this sense of being crowded out by other people's stories, of walking like a phantom through a city that was in the middle of a story which didn't need him as a character." The reader can't help thinking that Solanka himself often seems crowded out of his own novel.

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At its most intriguing moments, Taylor's biography raises a series of profoundly compelling, if troubling, questions: what form would Fitzgerald's fiction have taken without Zelda as his model? What might have become of their lives if Fitzgerald had taken doctors' advice and stopped drinking? What might Zelda have achieved if Fitzgerald had not so thoroughly blunted her own struggle for creative expression?

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Many contemporary readers may initially find Bragg's writing voice to be a bit sentimental. In fact, it's not. He simply explores—and shows—deeply felt, sincere emotions, and what might strike some of us today as sentimentality is actually Bragg's complete lack of postmodern irony. Irony might be today's chosen voice, but so much of Bragg—not just his subject matter, but him—belongs to the past. And I can't imagine someone doing a better, more noble service to the past than Bragg does here.

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Again and again, Bragg's stories evoke an unsettling, abiding feeling that the world—especially today—isn't as stable or as changeless as we would like. None of us are shielded from sudden, catastrophic violence or government-sanctioned or economy-driven loss of freedom. Our fates, in short, are not always of our own making, and Bragg excels at reminding us of this frightening fact.

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James Tate's Memoir of the Hawk

Some of these poems make me think of automatic writing, as if Tate were watching his hand curiously to see what it would write next. Salvador Dali might have liked these poems. (In fact, Tate, like the great surrealist, seems intrigued with spiders; in "Hotel of the Golden Dawn," an entire hotel is populated with arachnids that keep the flies off a guests' eggs in the morning.)

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Elizabeth George's A Traitor to Memory

George's deeper themes—of memory's frailties, of the lies we tell ourselves to make life more palpable, and, perhaps most importantly, of the enduring bonds that sustain dysfunctional families—are admirable, and they suggest George is hunting for big game here. That doesn't mean the book is flawless, though.

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Patricia Carlon's Death by Demonstration

Why Patricia Carlon, the Australian master of psychological suspense, has not seen her mysteries adapted to the screen is...well, a mystery. Given how close she is in tone and technique to Hitchcock, I can't fathom why filmmakers have passed over her for so long. Death by Demonstration probably won't find itself on the top of many producers' project wish lists, though.

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Charles Gallenkamp's Dragon Hunter: Roy Chapman Andrews and the Central Asiatic Expeditions

As a biographer, Gallenkamp wisely avoids what he calls "unfounded psychological analysis" on the grounds that an adventurer like Andrews had little interest in philosophical ponderings or soulful introspection. Surely, Andrews could have been cracked open by a diligent therapist willing to follow Andrews around and poke at him with probing questions (his fear of water is particularly tantalizing), but the chances of performing such maneuvers now, given Andrews's taciturn record, are slim. Besides, one has to wonder whether all biographical subjects are rendered more complicated by denying they are truly as focused on their stated goals as they seem.

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Peter Nichols's A Voyage for Madmen

As the race progresses into the seemingly impassable Southern Ocean, Nichols's text takes on an ominous quality of encroaching doom. "The further I go," one yachtsman writes in his logbook, "the madder this race seems." Shrieking gales and eighty-foot waves aside, though, the most compelling material may be the shocker that comes two-thirds of the way through the book: one of the contestants decides to fake his journey and meticulously maps out his feigned, record-breaking progress, which he reports by radio daily to a thrilled audience back home.

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Haruki Murakami's Sputnik Sweetheart

Sputnik Sweetheart's metamorphosis theme is pure Kafka, but I think Murakami's philosophical interests lean as much to the great magical realist, Julio Cortázar: the solidity of self is not merely questioned but nullified, and the world into which the self formerly settled cozily becomes a barren desertscape worthy of Antonioni (who adapted Cortázar's short story, "Blow-Up," of course: it's a small ontological world).

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Haruki Murakami's Underground: The Tokyo Gas Attack and the Japanese Psyche

One thinks, reflexively, of Shiva Naipaul's account of the Jonestown cult suicide (Journey to Nowhere), but Underground is better, I think, both as an account of cult aberrations and literary-level reportage. It's a fascinating, if harrowing, account which has questions of fate and, to paraphrase Frost, the train car not taken at its center.

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Richard Bernstein's Ultimate Journey

A reader casually stumbling onto Richard Bernstein's Ultimate Journey, in which Bernstein follows the path of a seventh-century Buddhist monk from China to southern India, might be forgiven for expecting the book to have an overtly spiritual purpose. After all, the monk set out on his five thousand mile journey along the Silk Road with the purpose of finding the Ultimate Truth of Buddhism. But the reader's casual assumption, reasonable at face value, would be wrong.

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Peter Martin's A Life of James Boswell

Let's face it: moving from a damning portrait of debauchery to a sad portrait of sexual addiction and morbidity is really a matter of shading and interpretative insights. By my count, Martin lists seventeen separate gonorrheal infections for Boswell, and a man who expends himself on a prostitute four times in a single night certainly couldn't be termed chaste. On the other hand, Martin certainly seems right to favor the 'complicated' interpretation of Boswell's carnal excesses: they suggest more a man in psychological turmoil than they do a simple, carefree hedonist.

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John Banville's Eclipse

Banville has written twelve books now to great critical acclaim, but widespread popular success has inexplicably eluded him. I don't know that Eclipse will change that; I can only say that I hope it will. He is truly one of the most sophisticated, subtle novelists working today, and it's nothing short of embarrassing to see the money going to the legal thrillers while the only works likely to survive the distance go sinfully underappreciated in their authors' prime.

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Michael Dibdin's Thanksgiving

Michael Dibdin has already established a sterling critical reputation as a mystery novelist, and he brings to Thanksgiving the speed and efficiency of a no-nonsense mystery writer who understands how to let his story progress through quick, adept dialogue. Dibdin's pace is fast without seeming relentless, and the effect—cinematic, really—is whoppingly pleasurable.

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Dave Eggers's A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius

I mostly liked this book, though now of course I have to say what I didn't like in order to prove that I am not a swinish slave to popular taste, or trying to curry favor with Dave Eggers. So okay. The word "fuck," along with its various derivatives and near-relatives, was used more than I thought strictly necessary; like the red chili sauce on the table at the Vietnamese restaurant, a little "fuck" goes a long way, though both are a matter of taste.

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Julian Barnes's Love, etc.

Love, etc.'s darker developments may disturb readers who enjoyed the light, witty comedy of Talking It Over (to which it is a sequel), but it's undeniably a work whose deeper themes merit our attention, and Barnes's cunning (if not exactly playful) presentation of them is, as always, refreshingly adept.

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Amy Tan's The Bonesetter's Daughter

LuLing's story—of a childhood spent first with her Precious Aunt and then in an orphanage during the Japanese invasion that preceded World War Two and finally her immigration to America—is engaging in itself, but it's her character's jarring transformation that most impresses the reader.

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Madison Smartt Bell's Master of the Crossroads

While Master of the Crossroads can be read alone, Bell's intentions are so clearly epic—combined, the first two volumes run to over twelve hundred pages—that the trilogy begs our close and complete attention. These are stunningly good, dense novels of lasting importance, and as far as I can see, they achieve everything they set out to accomplish.

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John S. Littell's French Impressions: The Adventures of an American Family

French Impressions is a very funny book in many parts, as Mary struggles to hold together family and home with two small children and a bare grasp of the most rudimentary French. I don't know if this book would be as entertaining to a reader with no experience of travel with children, but it is a welcome addition to the ranks of the literature of wandering, a genre where children are largely conspicuous by their absence.

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John Updike's Licks of Love

While "Rabbit Remembered" is arguably long enough to have been published on its own, Updike seems determined to collect and bind everything but his grocery lists, and he throws in twelve short stories to accompany "Rabbit Remembered." Frankly, he shouldn't have, if only because some readers will be so unmoved by them they may not read their way through to "Rabbit Remembered."

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Angela Bourke's The Burning of Bridget Cleary: A True Story

In the extended passages where Bourke establishes the principal characters and reconstructs the moments surrounding Bridget's murder and burial, The Burning of Bridget Cleary reads like a well-paced suspense thriller. But Bourke is clearly up to something much more profound and complicated. She's an expert on the Irish oral tradition, and she does brilliant work deciphering the minutiae about fairy belief that is vital to understanding the Bridget Cleary case.

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M. Lee Goff's A Fly for the Prosecution

Unfortunately, Goff plays it straight, and who can blame him? The man's a legitimate scientist and wants to be taken seriously and not thought to be making wit at the expense of the dead. The result, however, is a book that skips quickly over the icky stuff and the backstory on the bodies and instead spends a great deal of time on rather dry technical laboratory details with first instars and Berlese funnels and soil fauna.

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Ted Koppel's Off Camera: Private Thoughts Made Public

While he doesn't clarify his stances by listing his political party affiliations, it's readily clear that Koppel isn't exactly proud of Bill Clinton's personal behavior in the White House, has great misgivings about the way American foreign policy is conducted today and is generally unhappy about the direction America took in the last years of the second millennium. But Koppel reserves some of his greatest ire for his own medium, network news.

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Dava Sobel's Galileo's Daughter

In stepping away from the familiar track of the Galileo narrative—man of science versus power-mad Church—to bring to life the lifelong devotion between daughter and father, Sobel's book becomes finally, unexpectedly, and most pleasurably, a love story.

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Robert Drewe's The Shark Net

The serial killer Eric Cooke's presence in Robert Drewe's new memoir certainly isn't gratuitous: Cooke killed one of Drewe's friends and was a Dunlop employee who sometimes made deliveries to the Drewe house. Indeed, one marvels at first that Drewe doesn't give Cooke more space in his text. But Drewe is up to something far more subtle with the Cooke material.

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Stephen King's On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft

After publishing bestsellers for more than a quarter of a century, Stephen King is ready to let us in on the secret of his success. Ready? There is no secret. A lot of reading, a lot of writing, and knowing his gerunds from his participials (as well as obsessively pulling up adverbial weeds as they sprout) is the key to his success. Disappointed? (And you thought it was going to be so easy....)

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Alan Lightman's The Diagnosis

The Diagnosis is by turns a grimly black comedy and a bleak cautionary tale. But it is also, in the end, simply an immensely moving, sad story, particularly when Lightman shows Chalmers's brightly burning love for his son, Alex. The cautionary aspects of The Diagnosis may make it necessary reading; its tragic elements—our caring for Chalmers as a human—make it almost unbearably haunting.

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Penelope Evans's First Fruits and Freezing

The skill with which Evans lays out her clues in First Fruits and twists Kate's voice to show her profound underlying vulnerabilities is astonishing: it's patient, intelligent and even fugue-like in its subtle complexities. It's impossible to anticipate where Evans will take the plot, although the basic images and thematic issues are laid openly before us—which is a stunning achievement in itself.

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Mary E. Wilkins Freeman's A New England Nun and Other Stories

'Regionalist' shouldn't of necessity be a pejorative term that implies primitivism or merely an historical intention to capture 'local color.' Freeman's stories often achieve something quietly profound that lifts them above the domain of local color into that more rarified plane of universal values, but they often do it with rather than despite the languid, beautifully described, lazy quality of her fictional country world.

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Patricia Carlon's The Unquiet Night and The Price of an Orphan

It's one of the publishing industry's odd mysteries that Patricia Carlon's superb psychological thrillers had to wait more than thirty years to be published in America. She has been compared—justifiably—to such masters of the genre as Alfred Hitchcock and Patricia Highsmith, and yet despite her having written more than fifty novels and being translated into seven languages, until Soho Press began publishing her work four years ago, she was entirely unknown to most Americans.

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Edmund White's The Married Man

The Married Man picks up its pace and sense of urgency in the final one hundred pages, where, as the lovers travel to Morocco for a final trip together, White's writing becomes so beautifully sad that it's almost too painful to read at times. Strangely, while reading these pages, I found myself thinking of Catherine and Frederick Henry's flight from the war in A Farewell to Arms. Both couples are fleeing death—hopelessly, of course—and trying to find a quiet respite of love, but it's such an odd, unexpected comparison that I won't belabor it.

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Charles Baxter's The Feast of Love

Isolated as individual voices, Baxter's characters appear inarticulate on the subject of love. But read together, they begin to define it surprisingly well, albeit indirectly. Through the diverse, conflicting stories about love and its various forms—sexual, self-reflected, paternal, maternal—we seem to get a greater understanding of the need for love and even perhaps something of its form(s). Ironically, for a novel that begins and ends in darkness, Baxter suggests the Platonic source of love is, at least metaphorically, light.

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Jan Dalley's Diana Mosley

On a personal level, Jan Dalley's new biography of Diana Mosley certainly expands our understanding of the Mitford family. But it's far more powerful as a cultural history of a remarkably diverse period, from the hedonistic 1920s through fascism's heyday in the 1930s and the worldwide reckoning that followed. And Diana seems to be the perfect biographical subject for such a history.

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Kevin Patterson's The Water in Between: A Journey at Sea

A cynic might point out that Patterson's book puncturing the myths of travel and adventure literature is being pitched, somewhat inaccurately, by its publisher as "a high seas adventure story." And the liberal sprinkling of technical lingo—mizzen masts and whisker poles and port forestays and halyards—might leave landlubbers wishing for a glossary. What makes the book succeed, however, is Patterson's strong, insightful writing and his humor, much of it at his own expense. If I had to spend months at sea in a small boat, Kevin Patterson is the kind of travelling companion I'd hope to have.

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Jamie Zeppa's Beyond the Sky and the Earth: A Journey into Bhutan

If Zeppa followed her story's most obvious narrative trajectory, her book would have all the makings of a Hollywood movie and not much more. But Zeppa allows reality to intrude its complexities and contradictions on the story. There is a suffocating lack of privacy in her Bhutanese village, and the burden of social disapproval. There is little questioning of authority. There is a growing civil unrest between northern and southern Bhutanese, argued only in rhetoric and rumor. And a world without VCRs and Calvin Klein is also a world without clean water and sanitation, where children die of easily preventable diseases.

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Louis Auchincloss's Woodrow Wilson

"For all the tragic potential, it's the revealing glimpses Auchincloss gives us of a Wilson at odds with the popularly conceived, remote, coldly rational figure that might move, even surprise, many readers. Can you imagine Wilson, whom Henry Adams once described as "a mysterious, a rather Olympian personage and shrouded in darkness from which issue occasional thunderbolts," entertaining house guests with such comic impersonations as 'the drunken man staggering about with a cowlike look in his eyes, the heavy Englishman with an insufferably superior accent and an invisible monocle, the villain done with a scowl and a dragging foot'?"

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Michael Ondaatje's Anil's Ghost

Anil's Ghost almost feels like a thriller at times with its ferociously addictive pull, but Ondaatje is up to far more complex things here than most thrillers pursue: complex themes; sophisticated, extended backstories; and—perhaps most importantly—a supreme attention to the artistic weight of each sentence as an end in itself. Ondaatje (who has published more books of poetry than he has fiction) writes with an understated concision, moving with a stunning smoothness between the past and the present and breaking his chapters up into smaller sections that seem to balance and hover over the text with a magical, poetic glow.

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J.D. Dolan's Phoenix: A Brother's Life

Unlike a novelist pressed to manufacture motivation and explain the inexplicable, Dolan never fully understands why his brother stopped speaking to him, nor does he try to convince his readers otherwise. Readers who expect neat closure should probably stick to novels. Dolan doesn't pull back when it comes to acknowledging painful truths, and he isn't willing to fabricate false endings, even when it would make everyone (perhaps even some of his readers) happier. The result is a searing, unforgettable work that rises above the other entries in today's burgeoning memoirs market.

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Mark Bowden's Black Hawk Down

Ninety-nine Americans were left on the ground in Mogadishu overnight, scrambling to stay alive. By the time it was over, it would be the longest firefight American soldiers had engaged in since the Vietnam War. Remarkably, given the conditions, only eighteen American soldiers died and another seventy-three were wounded. By comparison, at least five hundred Somalis died, and another thousand or more were wounded. The casualty numbers alone would suggest that the Americans won the battle. But that's not how the White House or Congress saw it.

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Pico Iyer's The Global Soul

Lacking Rybczynski's centralizing focus on architecture, Iyer often uses himself and his equally multi-national (or perhaps post-national) friends as his points of reference—perhaps not a great tradeoff, but given his background, it's justifiable as an essay device, if not a scientifically accurate one.

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John Updike's Gertrude and Claudius

John Updike undertook something that could have been either a refreshingly revelatory experiment or a creatively challenged disaster: he wrote a prequel to Shakespeare's Hamlet, with the focus shifted from Hamlet to Gertrude (and, to a much lesser extent, Claudius as well). Happily, the book turns out to be an intelligent, engaging story. And the key to Updike's success lies in his winning portrait of Gertrude herself.

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Donald Antrim's stunning new novel is so...unusual that well-grounded readers might very well find themselves searching nervously for similarities to known, stable works. Slyly, Antrim welcomes such comparisons.

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Leonard Guttridge's The Ghosts of Cape Sabine

From expedition diary entries, Guttridge paints the excruciating toll taken by isolation, darkness, cold and hunger. "Most of us are out of our right minds," one member of the expedition scrawled. They were reduced to eating their own shoes and clothes. Of the seven survivors, one was found to have nothing but suppurating stumps left at the end of both legs, the result of severe frostbite; having held out so long, he died on the passage home.

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Thomas Mallon's Two Moons

Two Moons is that rare achievement, an historical novel that so completely transcends its genre that even readers who shirk historical subjects will find it makes for addictive reading. But it's not a mere speed trick—a writer's gimmick—that propels readers through the novel.

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Douglas Coupland's Miss Wyoming

Coupland puts his strong visual sensibilities and his Pynchonesque skills at illuminating the Pop images that form the bedrock of contemporary society to good use in Miss Wyoming. But he's up to something radically different on a larger, thematic scale. While Pynchon's adventures in the semiotic maze are playfully comic, Coupland's forays here have a decidedly moral tone.

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James Dickey's Crux: The Letters of James Dickey

By and large, Dickey is not setting out to impress the reader with the weight of his poetic feeling in these letters, as he did when writing for publication. Indeed, quite often, he's setting out merely to complain or belittle his fellow poets—which makes for wonderfully entertaining reading, of course.

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Carl Hiaasen's Sick Puppy

Celluloid evidence to the contrary, Hiaasen has a remarkable knack for farce-speed momentum, and in his latest novel, he gives his characters (the good guys, at least) more depth and sincerity than you'd expect in a broad comedy.

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Patricia Highsmith's The Talented Mr. Ripley / Ripley Underground / Ripley's Game

Tom Ripley, it would seem, lives as a rudimentary quality—not mere emptiness so much as an awareness of it: a largely amoral ghost desperately in search of a soul. It's Highsmith's wonderfully nuanced exploration of a decidedly disturbing character that makes the first installment in the Ripley series so engrossing—and such a grand achievement.

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Brenda Maddox's Yeats's Ghosts: The Secret Life of W.B. Yeats

By 1917, Yeats was fifty-two and feeling increasing pressure to carry on his family name. He'd enjoyed his late-blooming life as a flirtatious bachelor, but now, he told himself, he needed to settle down—and soon. Yeats, who believed fervently in astrology, had been advised that a marriage would be best accomplished in October 1917, 'when the number of favorable planetary conjunctions would be quite extraordinary.' Yeats faced only one problem: he didn't have a bride, nor did one seem likely to pop up soon.

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Jonathan Raban's Passage to Juneau: A Sea and Its Meanings

Why, for God's sake, would Raban leave his wife and four-year-old daughter behind to sail a body of water that had already killed seventy people in six years? Not to fish, of course, though the Inside Passage is a busy commercial fishing route. Not merely to test his mettle either, as if the outing were merely an Iron John of the Sea bestseller in the making. White-knuckled aquatic adventures aren't exactly Raban's cup of tea, though he does have his fair share on the journey. Instead, his motivation to light out for the watery territories infinitely more complicated.

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John Cornwell's Hitler's Pope: The Secret History of Pius XII

When he began doing the research for this book, John Cornwell didn't set out to write a stinging condemnation. Of course, Pius XII has often been accused of making inadequate efforts to save Jews from Nazi prison camps, but Cornwell believed (at least initially) that if Eugenio Pacelli's 'full story were told—from childhood on—his pontificate as Pius XII 'would be vindicated.' So Cornwell approached the Vatican, he writes, and told them he was on the Pope's side. Archivists readily granted him access to previously unseen material. Then the problems started.

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Dick Francis's Second Wind

This is decidedly a fast, easy read. And, as Francis always manages to do, he's given his book that hard-to-define addictive quality without turning it into a cheap page-turner. He's a good, spare stylist, and the reader isn't forced to wade through weak prose to arrive at the solution breathless and beaten, in the tradition of too many easy bestsellers. But Francis has produced such wonderful mysteries in the past that the reader can't help wishing he'd accomplished a little more, this time out.

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William Gibson's All Tomorrow's Parties

All Tomorrow's Parties can be difficult to decipher at times, and part of the reason lies in Gibson's unique writing style. Jean-Luc Godard's films might be the closest another artist's work comes to Gibson's technique: they both use abbreviated scenes, confusing close shots and jump cuts to disorient their audience. Gibson's writing is wonderful when he pares it down, but it suffers when he overworks it. But All Tomorrow's Parties still makes for fun, heady reading—particularly if you like your sci-fi mysteries shrouded in a form-concealing gothic fog.

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Andrés Martinez's 24/7: Living it Up and Doubling Down in the New Las Vegas

It could only happen in America: to generate material for a proposed book, Martinez talks his publisher into giving him $50,000 to blow on a month's gambling in Las Vegas. And like that, Martinez is living in the Vegas glitter, with his lodging and meals provided free of charge once the hotels he stays in realize he's a high roller—or at least one of the people whom the casinos believe will leave a fair proportion of their money at the table.

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Michael Crichton's Timeline

Reading Timeline, you can't help thinking how fast the movie will be, if the screenwriter simply stays as close to the novel as possible. Eye-catching premise, short, crosscutting chapters, compressed time, breakneck pace, characters with a single, easily conveyed trait: Crichton probably comes as close to writing pure Hollywood films in the novel genre as you can get.

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Jon Swain's River of Time: A Memoir of Vietnam and Cambodia

When Swain moves on to Saigon, it is as if he has lost his first love. He portrays his life in South Vietnam in a harsher light, as he finds a cultural collision between the French remnants of the old colonial regime and the new and brash Americans, another great power facing eventual defeat. Still, he finds real love there as he begins a long affair with the most beautiful woman in Saigon. Yet he leaves her. As news comes of Phnom Penh's imminent fall to the Khmer Rouge, he catches the last flight into the capital. Many more adventures follow; Swain attracts them like metal draws lightning.

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John Updike's More Matter: Essays and Criticism

One definition of a good essay might be that it teaches the reader something he might never have learned otherwise. But a definition of an even better essay might be that it teaches the writer something he might never have learned otherwise. And the fact that Updike seems to learn as much from his essays as we do makes More Matter a strong collection indeed.

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Lise Eliot's What's Going on in There? How the Brain and Mind Develop in the First Five Years of Life

Luckily for such a complicated subject, Eliot's style is straightforward and clear. While she doesn't talk down to her readers, she simplifies enough to enable non-scientific individuals to understand the concepts, even if they don't memorize the terms. This should be required reading for anyone interested in realizing their child's potential.

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Michael Knight's Divining Rod

Knight has a strong eye as a writer (some of his imagery is breathtaking), and his mastery of a somewhat experimental form is astonishing, given his relative youth. But Divining Rod is no mere exercise in style. Knight shows great insight into his characters, and he puts his skills to good use by letting us feel the suddenness and unexpectedness with which his characters discover things about themselves.

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Richard Rhodes's Why They Kill: The Discoveries of a Maverick Criminologist

Rhodes has produced an odd hodge-podge of a book—part biography, part criminology primer, part history, part true-crime thriller with an intellectual twist. The transitions between the disparate parts can be a bit clumsy, but each is in itself interesting. And at times, it's absolutely fascinating.

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David Hunt's Trick of Light

While Trick of Light is as addictive a page-turner as any other thriller on the market today, somewhere along the way it quietly becomes something more: a serious, subtly complicated novel that offers its audience a disturbingly unsettling take on what the world around us may really be like.

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Stephen King's Hearts in Atlantis

Repeatedly in Hearts in Atlantis, King's characters—and, by extension, King implies, all baby boomers—face a critical question: when you pass from childhood's innocence into that heart-shattering world of adult experience, do you stand up against the worst things experience tries to force on you? Do you defiantly bring something of the innocent's splendor with you or do you quietly give in? Do you, at least, have the courage to try to defy it?

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John Darnton's The Experiment

Steven Spielberg has already bought the film rights to Darnton's first novel (Neanderthal), and The Experiment, with its science-outracing-ethics theme, seems ripe for Spielberg as well. Who knows: a year or two from now, we may be debating clones and Kantian ethics the way Spielberg and Crichton's Jurassic Park made us wonder about dinosaurs and DNA replication.

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David Ball's Empires of Sand

If you enjoyed reading Victor Hugo and Jules Verne when you were a kid and have spent your adult reading life secretly wishing you could find the same sort of innocent, melodramatic rush in print, you're in luck. In pace, heft and story, Ball delivers nineteenth-century, romantic adventures by the handful.

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Patricia Cornwell's Black Notice

While Black Notice is one of the better Scarpetta titles of late, Cornwell would do her loyal readers a great favor if she dropped the shouting matches and went back to what attracted us in the first place: writing strong fantasies about the dark world we all knew so well as children, when the lights went out and the house grew quiet and something...over there, in that corner...behind you...creaked...

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Witold Rybczynski's A Clearing in the Distance

A Clearing in the Distance is something of a departure for Rybczynski: it's his longest work to date and the first to focus on a person rather than a concept (in the past, of course, he's written about home, weekends, airport design and city life, among other things). Happily, he manages the transition quite successfully—largely because, as he did in his earlier books (and essays), he sticks to traditional structures and writes in a casual, easily read voice.

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David L. Robbins's War of the Rats

Robbins is a deft storyteller who has learned that the best historical novels use history merely as a backdrop in order to allow human drama to develop in the foreground. It's a rare skill among historical novelists; for every hundred books of historical fiction, a full ninety-eight spend most of their time wallowing in the author's research. Fortunately, Robbins is in the select category, and his research (while superb) doesn't overshadow his novel—it enhances it.

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John Keegan's The First World War

Despite the awful bloodshed and suffering, there's something strangely quaint about the First World War. While it happened a mere twenty years before the Second World War, it might as well have been a century that separated them.

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Stacy Schiff's Vera (Mrs. Vladimir Nabokov)

It's happened before. A biography of James Joyce's wife has been written, as has one of F. Scott Fitzgerald's wife, and Ernest Hemingway's assorted wives have shared space in a joint biography. Nonetheless, skeptics might wonder whether we really needed a biography of Vladimir Nabokov's wife, Véra. After all, Nabokov himself has been studied at length. Surely, one might argue, Véra has vicariously gotten all the attention she deserves.

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Tracy Kidder's Home Town

The struggle against change is a central theme in Tracy Kidder's Home Town: should a town change at all? How much? And how can someone stop it from changing for the worse?

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Celebrating Ulysses: Sixteen Things to Do on Bloomsday

Bloomsday, on June 16, offers some unique, occasionally even mind-bending, celebratory rituals for the stout of heart.

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Appreciation: Paul Bowles

It's Bowles's willingness to reveal the abyss around us that rightly classifies him at least partly as an existential writer. But he isn't so easily pigeon-holed.

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