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-
- **************************************************************
- * *
- * R E A D I N G F O R P L E A S U R E *
- * *
- * Issue #10 *
- * *
- * *
- * *
- * Editor: Cindy Bartorillo *
- * *
- * *
- * EARTH DAY 1990 *
- * *
- * *
- * Stop Wasting The Earth's Resources: *
- * --> Install low-flow faucet aerators and toilet dams *
- * --> Take showers, not baths *
- * --> Set your water heater to 130 degrees *
- * --> Open windows instead of using the air conditioner *
- * --> Don't turn up the heat--wear a sweater *
- * --> Insulate your house *
- * --> Carpool whenever possible *
- * *
- * Stop Polluting Your Environment: *
- * --> Use unbleached coffee filters *
- * --> Avoid plastics--biodegradable plastics aren't *
- * --> Recycle everything possible *
- * --> Don't smoke *
- * *
- * Stop Buying Garbage: *
- * --> Buy as little packaging as possible *
- * --> Don't buy paper towels; use rags. *
- * --> Don't buy disposable diapers; use a diaper service *
- * *
- * Be A Humane Shopper: *
- * --> Don't buy ivory *
- * --> Don't buy products from endangered animals *
- * --> Don't buy tuna *
- * *
- * Give Something Back: *
- * --> Plant a tree *
- * --> Create a wildlife refuge in your backyard *
- * --> Pick up litter wherever you see it *
- * --> Start a compost pile *
- * *
- **************************************************************
-
- CONTACT US AT: Reading For Pleasure, c/o Cindy Bartorillo, 1819
- Millstream Drive, Frederick, MD 21701; or on CompuServe leave a
- message to 74766,1206; or on GEnie leave mail to C.BARTORILLO; or
- call our BBS, the BAUDLINE II at 301-694-7108, 1200-9600 HST.
-
- NOTICE: Reading For Pleasure is not copyrighted. You may copy
- freely, but please give us credit if you extract portions to use
- somewhere else. Sample copies of our print edition are available
- upon request. We ask for a donation of $1.50 each to cover the
- printing and mailing costs.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- DISTRIBUTION DIRECTORY
-
- Here are a few bulletin boards where you should be able to pick
- up the latest issue of READING FOR PLEASURE. See masthead for
- where to send additions and corrections to this list.
-
- Accolade! BBS Round Rock,TX Jack Moore 512-388-1445
- Ad Lib Monroeville,PA John Williams 412-327-9209
- The Annex Dayton,OH John Cooper 513-274-0821
- Beginnings BBS Levittown,NY Mike Coticchio 516-796-7296 S
- Billboard Bartlett,IL Gary Watson 708-289-9808 P
- Blcksbg Info Serv Blacksburg,VA Fred Drake 703-951-2920
- Boardello Los Angeles,CA Bryan Tsunoda 213-820-4527 P
- Bruce's Bar&Grill Hartford,CT Bruce 203-236-3761 P
- Byrd's Nest Arlington,VA Debbie&Alan Byrd 703-671-8923 P
- CC-BBS ManhattanBchCA Chuck Crayne 213-379-8817 P
- Center Point PCB Salt Lake,UT Kelvin Hyatt 801-359-6014 P
- Chevy Chase Board Chevy Chase,MD Larkins/Carlson 301-549-5574 P
- Computer Co-Op Voorhees,NJ Ted Hare 609-784-9404
- Daily Planet Owosso,MI Jay Stark 517-723-4613
- Death Star Oxon Hill,MD Lee Pollard 301-839-0705 P
- Del Ches Systems Exton,PA Peter Rucci 215-363-6625
- Diversified Prog PacPalisadesCA Jean-Pierre Denis 213-459-6053 P
- Farmington Valley Hartford,CT John Walko 203-676-8920 P
- Future Tech Boston,MA Napier & Moran 617-720-3600 P
- Futzer Avenue Issaquah,WA Stan Symms 206-391-2339 P
- Gentleman Loser Laurel,MD Robert West 301-776-0226 P
- HeavenSoft Dayton,OH John Wampler 513-836-4288
- House of Illusions Louisville,KY Pittman/Schardein 502-458-7666
- IBMNew CompuServe Library #0
- Inn on the Park Scottsdale,AZ Jim Jusko 602-957-0631 P
- Invention Factory New York,NY Mike Sussell 212-431-1273 P
- JETS Philadelphia T.A. Hare 215-928-7503 P
- JForum CompuServe Library #8
- KCSS BBS Seattle,WA Bob Neddo 206-296-5277 P
- ()Lensman() BBS Denver,CO Greg Bradt 303-979-8953 P
- Litforum CompuServe Library #12
- Lost Paradise Washington,DC 202-370-7795 P
- Magpie HQ New York,NY Steve Manes 212-420-0527 P
- NiCK at NiTE Salt Lake,UT Nick Zahner 801-964-1889 P
- Nostradamus Los Angeles,CA Al Menache 213-473-4119 P
- Oak Lawn Oak Lawn,IL Vince & Chris 708-599-8089 P
- Poverty Rock PCB Mercer Is.,WA Rick Kunz 206-232-1763 PS
- Quantum Connec. PacPalisadesCA Richard W. Gross 213-459-6748 P
- Riverside Premium Lyons,IL Don Marquardt 312-447-8073 P
- Science Fiction GEnie Library #3
- SF & Fantasy CIS Hom-9 Library #1
- Suburban Software Chicago,IL Chuck Valecek 312-636-6694 P
- Sunwise Sun City W.,AZ Keith Slater 602-584-7395
- Technoids Anon. Chandler,AZ David Cantere 602-899-4876 P
- Writers Happy Hr Seattle,WA Walter Scott 206-364-2139 P
- Writers' RT GEnie Library #1
- Your Place Fairfax,VA Ken Goosens 703-978-6360 P
-
- RFP Home Board (all issues available all the time):
- Baudline II Frederick,MD the Bartorillo's 301-694-7108
- (RFPs DLable on first call; 9600 HST)
-
- Any board that participates in the RelayNet (tm) email system can
- request RFPs from BAUDLINE.
-
- P = PC Pursuit-able
- S = StarLink-able
-
- NOTE: Back issues on CompuServe may have been moved to a
- different library.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
- Editorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 163
- What's News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212
- Good Reading Periodically . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 329
- According to Darryl Kenning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 375
- Environmental Reading . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 518
- According to Robert A. Pittman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 707
- Featured Author: Thomas Berger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 898
- The Civil War . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1064
- Overheard on RelayNet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1163
- India . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1192
- According to Fred L. Drake, Jr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1239
- New From Carroll & Graf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1496
- According to Ollie McKagen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1622
- Birthdays And Other Important Dates in April . . . . . . . . . 1683
- My Favorite Books of 1989 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1803
- The Middle Ages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1848
- Random Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1938
- Miscellaneous Recent Releases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2111
- Sharing The Wealth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2429
- Literary Awards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2529
- Back Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2552
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- The world is NOT to be put in order, the world IS order incarnate. It
- is for us to put ourselves in unison with this order.
- --Henry Miller
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- EDITORIAL
-
- Over the past three or four months there has been a proliferation of
- different versions of RFP. We here at RFP Central put out an
- electronic version in straight ASCII (RFP-xx.TXT), an electronic
- version in straight ASCII bundled with a custom reader program for IBM
- compatibles (RFP-xx.ZIP), and a print version. We have also heard of
- people who print out the .TXT version and pass it around, and people
- who photocopy the print version (or portions thereof) and pass THAT
- around. And there are numerous computer bulletin board systems that
- post the .TXT version in some form.
-
- The most elaborate non-Bartorillo version, though, would have to be
- the Macintosh edition created by Bill Pittman. So far he's done Mac
- versions of RFP #1, #2, #3, #7, #8, and #9, and, because of all the
- graphics and sound added, they require at least a Macintosh Plus, a
- hard drive, and 1 megabyte of RAM. Bill will be creating Mac versions
- of the other issues as his free time permits.
-
- You can get Bill's Mac editions from GEnie (Bill's address is
- TIME.RYDER if you'd like to drop him a note), or you can send a disk
- and a stamped, self-addressed return mailer to:
-
- Bill Pittman
- P. O. Box 22526
- Louisville, Kentucky 40252-0526
-
- Be sure to specify which RFP(s) you want, and include a separate disk
- for each issue. Or, if you'd rather save yourself some hassle, just
- send Bill $2 for each issue and he'll provide the disk and the
- shipping. While on the subject of Bill, I should point out that he
- also appears IN this issue (see Good Reading Periodically).
-
- This would be a good time to reiterate that RFP is NOT copyrighted,
- and the above-mentioned versions have the full blessing of RFP
- Central. All we ask is that you not misrepresent anything: if you
- reproduce something from RFP, please make sure it says it's from RFP;
- and if it's an article by Joe Cool, make sure it says "by Joe Cool".
- That seems fair to us, how about you?
-
- More news. For the first time we are releasing an RFP "novelty". We
- created a listing of baseball books being released this spring, but it
- ran MUCH too long. Rather than either trashing the whole list or
- boring non-baseball people with it, we decided to release it on its
- own. So if you like baseball, get the RFP 1990 Baseball Supplement
- (the electronic edition is called RFP-BB.TXT or RFP-BB.ZIP).
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- WHAT'S NEWS
-
- * THE HARLAN ELLISON HORNBOOK will be coming out as a limited edition
- from The Mirage Press, with a trade edition being published by
- Mysterious Press. I have heard that the limited edition will have "an
- added paperback with a screenplay", whatever that means, which will
- NOT be in the Mysterious Press edition.
-
- * Speaking of HE, Zebra has bought the rights to 21 Ellison titles,
- which will be released as the "Harlan Ellison Library". Most will be
- mass market paperbacks, but at least two, DANGEROUS VISIONS and AGAIN
- DANGEROUS VISIONS, will be trade paperbacks.
-
- * The idea of the Dream Park originated with Larry Niven and Steven
- Barnes in their novels DREAM PARK and THE BARSOOM PROJECT. Now there
- is Dream Park Corp., a company that has plans to build an interactive
- theme park based on the Niven/Barnes concept. Mark Matthews-Simmons,
- head of the new company, says that the park would use "advanced
- holographics and computer-driven special effects to create science
- fiction and fantasy environments...in five square-mile Gaming Areas".
- If you'd like more information write to: The Dream Park Corporation,
- 365 Town Green Way, Reisterstown, MD 21136.
-
- * Ballantine Del Rey has purchased reprint rights to 35 Edgar Rice
- Burroughs titles from Ace and now has exclusive English-language
- rights to Burrough's books. Watch soon for Del Rey to publish the
- "Pellucidar" series and for their repackaged "Tarzan" series. Other
- titles will appear over the next year or two.
-
- * Harambee: The Book Club for African-American Families and Friends
- has just started up. For a one-time $19.95 lifetime fee, members
- receive a gift title and must purchase four titles a year to keep the
- membership active. Titles are not sent to members automatically.
- Offerings include BELOVED by Toni Morrison (Knopf), PARTING THE WATERS
- by Taylor Branch (Simon & Schuster), LOVE AND MARRIAGE by Bill Cosby,
- and other adult and children's titles.
-
- * THE STARK TRUTH by Peter Freeborn, a tale of sexual obsession and
- high-stakes crime on Wall Street, will apparently be filmed by Stephen
- Frears (DANGEROUS LIAISONS) from a screenplay by John Guare.
-
- * Do you remember A CANTICLE FOR LEIBOWITZ by Walter M. Miller Jr.? It
- was originally published in 1959 and has been an cult classic as well
- as a critically acclaimed piece of literature. It turns out that
- Miller made notes for a parallel novel, but a 25-year-long writer's
- block prevented him from following through with it. Until now. He
- finally got it written and Bantam will publish it, possibly in late
- 1991. It's not exactly a sequel, but it includes many of the same
- characters as CANTICLE, and the same monastery, so it's definitely
- related. There is no working title yet.
-
- * Horror fans take note: There's going to be a World Horror
- Convention every year, starting in 1991 (February 28 to March 3, 1991
- to be precise). It will be held at the Nashville (that's Tennessee)
- Hyatt Regency, and the Guest of Honour will be Clive Barker, Artist
- Guest of Honor will be Jill Bauman. The "Trimatic Trio of M.C.'s" will
- be splatterpunks David Schow, John Skipp, and Craig Spector.
- Membership is $50 until June 31, 1990, $65 afterwards. For further
- details contact: World Horror Convention, PO Box 22817, Nashville, TN
- 37202 or call 615-226-6172.
-
- * It used to be that the only recourse with books damaged by acid was
- to microfilm them, a very costly procedure. Now, thanks to the work of
- the Library of Congress, the Hercules Chemical Company, and government
- researchers, we have a cheaper and environmentally safe way to
- neutralize the acid content of books and magazines. The books are
- exposed to diethyl zinc vapors which react with the water in the paper
- to form zinc oxide, which neutralizes acids formed after treatment.
- This process doesn't harm the books in any way, and costs $6-$10 per
- book. It's been licensed by the government to Akzo Chemicals of
- Chicago, and they've already built the first plant in Texas, capable
- of processing 40,000 books per year. For more information, writer to:
- Akzo Chemicals Inc., 300 So. Riverside Plaza, Chicago IL 60606.
-
- * Author Robert Adams died of lymphatic cancer on January 4, 1990. He
- is probably best known for his "Horseclans" series that he began in
- 1975 with THE COMING OF THE HORSECLANS. Ultimately there were 18
- novels and several anthologies in the series.
-
- * A new science fiction magazine will have appeared by the time you
- read this. The first quarterly issue of STARSHORE will be dated Summer
- 1990 and, as I write this, is due to be released in April. It will
- include fiction by Jack Dann, John Moore, Thomas Easton, Kristine
- Kathryn Rusch, Christopher Gilbert, K.D. Wentworth, and Renato
- Pestriniero (translated by Kim Stanley Robinson). One years'
- subscription (four issues) will cost you $12.95, which should be made
- out (and sent) to: McAlpine Publishing, 800 Seahawk Circle, Suite 116,
- Virginia Beach VA 23452.
-
- * Brian W. Aldiss' novel FRANKENSTEIN UNBOUND, included in our Time
- Travel Reading List in issue #9, has been filmed by Roger Corman, but
- no release date was available at press time. In a related story, we've
- heard that Aldiss has now written DRACULA UNBOUND, a sort-of sequel.
-
- * Novelist and playwright Samuel Beckett died in Paris at the age of
- 83 on December 22, 1989. He is most famous for the plays WAITING FOR
- GODOT and ENDGAME. He received the Nobel Prize for literature in 1969.
-
- * If you've never read Arthur Conan Doyle's THE LOST WORLD, you now
- have a great chance. It was recently reprinted in an affordable
- paperback by Academy Chicago ($4.95, ISBN 0-89733-331-4). This is the
- classic story of an expedition by four Englishmen to a remote
- prehistoric land that has been cut off from the outside world by
- unscalable cliffs and is inhabited by pterodactyls, iguanodons, and
- prehistoric men. (Sounds like Washington, D.C., doesn't it?)
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- Crime and thriller stories have always appealed to me for the
- same reason that fairy stories do, and folk tales and myths. They
- deal directly with the conflict between good and evil, and for
- that reason touch the most fundamental levels of human
- experience.
- --Brian Cleeve
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- GOOD READING PERIODICALLY:
-
-
- GRUE Magazine
-
- review by Bill Pittman
-
-
- Horror has been a favorite genre of mine since childhood. Being
- frightened vicariously through a good horror story, fiction or
- non-fiction, is a welcome experience. Books by the masters such as
- Stephen King, Clive Barker, Dean Koontz, etc. have thrilled millions
- over the years, but they are not the only source for a good scare.
-
- If you enjoy good horror as I do, you owe it to yourself to sample
- Grue Magazine. Published quarterly, Grue contains works from both
- well-known and new authors. The range of subject matter is quite
- broad: many of the stories are intense explorations into the dark side
- of the human psyche, some travel into the unknown, while others delve
- into the realm of the curious and bizarre. You will also see a
- generous number of illustrations and photographs, the latter being the
- most intriguing. Unlike drawings, the photographs are created from
- real materials in a composition that quickly conveys the essence of
- the story you are about to read. The illustrations also are excellent,
- but beware - they are explicit in emphasizing the horror of the story.
- And if you enjoy poetry (I don't), well, you'll see some of that too.
-
- This isn't to say that all of the issues are of equal quality. At
- times, some of the stories have left me confused or even bewildered.
- Even so, there is enough good material in each issue to satisfy most
- readers. I particularly enjoyed the most recent issue, Grue #11,
- entitled The Raw Edge of Horror! I usually find one, maybe two stories
- in each issue that stand out from the others, but #11 was exceptional.
- The contributions seemed more polished than usual, in both writing
- style and content. This may suggest that experience is improving the
- editor's ability to attract and assemble better material for
- publication.
-
- A final nominee for the 1989 World Fantasy Award (Non-Professional
- category), Grue is well worth a look. The newsstand price is $4.50,
- and if your local bookseller doesn't stock Grue, write to: Grue
- Magazine, a division of Hell's Kitchen Productions, Inc., P. O. Box
- 370, Times Square Station, New York, NY 10108-0370
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- ACCORDING TO DARRYL KENNING....
-
- THE KENNING RATING SYSTEM: 5 = Superior reading material
- 4 = A darn good read
- 3 = OK if you're not too discriminating
- 2 = Probably not worth the time
- 1 = Does this stuff really sell?
- 0 = No redeeming value of any kind
-
-
- RIMRUNNERS
- by C. J. Cherryh
- Popular Library Questar 0-445-20979-8 $4.95
-
- This will astound people who know how many Science Fiction books I
- read in a week or month - I have never before read any of C. J.
- Cherryh's books. I did browse a number of earlier ones and felt that
- it was not the kind of writing I generally enjoy. Times change, so do
- tastes, and so do writers. This is probably a case of all three things
- operating.
-
- RIMRUNNERS is the story of Bet Yeager, a marine whose side lost the
- war, and her struggle to survive in space. The book radiates tension
- and is eminently believable. The functioning (or non-functioning) of
- the semi-frontier that is created and reshaped by the vastness of
- space and the war and the people who inhabit the space stations and
- ships is very well put together and somehow touches the bleakness that
- exists in us all.
-
- If I have any criticism at all, it is that I did weary, by the end of
- the book, of the constant introspection and verbalizational analysis
- of all the other characters and situations. That is really a minor
- flaw in an otherwise good book. The action flows, the prose is smooth
- and well done, and there is enough tech for most readers. This one
- should go into the "Read Soon" stack. Enjoy.
-
- Rating 4 ****
-
-
- A THIEF OF TIME
- by Tony Hillerman
- Harper 0-06-1000004-3 $4.95
-
- No, this is not Science Fiction and yes it does seem a little
- redundant to review a book that has been on the New York Times
- Bestseller list, but....
-
- Tony Hillerman writes, among other things, books of crime set into
- modern day Navajo Tribal settings. I think the title intrigued me most
- of all. I confess that I picked this one up in an airport for
- something to read on a 2 hour flight....what I got was a cracking good
- mystery novel, set in the southwest, dealing within an archaeological
- setting, and the Anasazi cultural mysteries.
-
- What I really liked was the insights into the Navajo culture, life and
- lifestyle. The inherent conflicts with mainstream society are
- skillfully blended, and the characters have more depth than I usually
- expect from a writer of this genre (OK, I know that sounds a bit
- snobbish, but I've been ruined by the best Science Fiction writers and
- folks like John D. MacDonald and Robert B. Parker).
-
- The Anasazi culture ranks with the Mayan mysteries as one of the most
- fascinating from the Americas. It seems like only yesterday one of my
- kids had to do a report for school on them, and ever since I've found
- an amazing number of good fiction books using them as a basis for at
- least some of the plot and background.
-
- If you haven't guessed, I really enjoyed this book and while I
- normally avoid best sellers - this one I do recommend. It is a good
- mystery, skillfully written, in a somewhat unusual setting. Try it,
- you'll like it.
-
- Rating 4 ****
-
-
- ROLLING HOT
- by David Drake
- Baen, 1989, $3.95
-
- The release date on this one is September, 1989. I don't know how I
- missed it, but it popped up in my local bookseller's this week
- (again?). This is vintage Drake at his best - non-stop action as
- Colonel Alois Hammer's Slammers roll over another planet in the
- ongoing saga of THE mercenary regiment.
-
- The regiment is primarily a tank and battle car group. The story is
- about the "conversion" of a hostile reporter and his trial by fire.
- The plot similarities to Vietnam are a bit heavy handed (no one ever
- accused David Drake of too much subtlety though). At any rate don't
- let that stop you from reading this one. I devoured it in one sitting
- and enjoyed every bloody minute of it - the man DOES have a way with
- words.
-
- rating 5 *****
-
-
- SWORN ALLIES
- edited by David Drake and Bill Fawcett
- Ace, 1990, $3.95
-
- Speaking of war stories.....this one is part of a "shared universe"
- set, book 4 of a group called "THE FLEET", and generally concerns the
- troops and battles around the Khalian attacks on the empire - an
- empire grown fat and lazy. This volume feature stories by: Poul
- Anderson, Anne McCaffrey, Bill Fawcett, N. Lee Wood, Larry Niven and
- David Drake, Diane Duane and Peter Morwood, Jody Lynn Nye, David
- Drake, and Christopher Stasheff. Now if those aren't enough reasons to
- read a book then you just don't like this kind of story.
-
- This series by multiple authors is one of the few that has held up
- over four books for me. Since the recent surge of popularity of
- military-SF a lot of junk (inevitably) has hit the stands. This series
- stands head and shoulders above most of the stuff. I do recommend that
- you get and read this one - what's nice is that you don't need to
- start with book one in the series, though I'm betting you'll want to
- after this one.
-
- rating 5 *****
-
-
- BOX SCORES
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
- : Phantom Regiments (R. Adams, ed.).........................2 :
- : Playmates (Robert B. Parker)..............................5 :
- : A Small Colonial War (R. Frazza)..........................2 :
- : The Stars Must Wait (K. Laumer)...........................3 :
- : There will be WAR: After Armageddon (J. Pournelle, cr.)...4 :
- : Wild Cards Vol I (G.R.R. Martin, ed.).....................2 :
- : What Might Have Been Vol II (Benford, ed.)................4 :
- : Buyiing Time (Joe Haldeman)...............................5 :
- : The War Machine Vol III (Allen & Drake)...................5 :
- : Sassinak (A. McCafferty)..................................4 :
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- Never lend books, for no one ever returns them; the only books I
- have in my library are books that other folks have lent me.
- --Anatole France
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- EARTH DAY READING
-
-
- THE POPULATION EXPLOSION
- by Paul R. Ehrlich & Anne H. Ehrlich
-
- Paul Ehrlich's landmark 1968 bestseller, THE POPULATION BOMB, warned
- against the catastrophic consequences of unchecked population growth.
- THE POPULATION EXPLOSION demonstrates that the environmental and
- demographic crises he predicted have now arrived.
-
- When Paul Ehrlich wrote THE POPULATION BOMB there were 3.5 billion
- people on Earth. Today there are 5.2 billion, and if every nation
- adopted zero population growth policies tomorrow, the worldwide
- population still would exceed 10 billion people before it stabilized.
- There is serious doubt in the scientific community that the planet can
- support that many people. Already there are signs of impending
- environmental collapse. Worldwide grain production seems to have
- peaked and begun to decline; intensive farming practices made
- necessary by overpopulation cause the loss of 26 billion tons of
- topsoil each year. Famine is now chronic in Africa. Global warming and
- tropical rain forest destruction both reflect the stresses of
- worldwide industrialization. Even in the U.S., where the population
- has stabilized (aside from immigration), our energy-intensive habits
- place a disproportionately large burden on the environment.
-
- This book is a plea from two highly respected environmentalists for a
- last-minute effort to take control of our destiny and avert the
- catastrophe that awaits us.
-
- (Paul R. Ehrlich is Bing Professor of Population Studies at Stanford
- University and a member of the National Academy of Sciences. Anne H.
- Ehrlich is a senior biological researcher at Stanford University, an
- environmentalist, and author of several books on the environment.)
-
- Simon & Schuster, ISBN 0-671-68984-3, $18.95, 288 pages, April
-
-
- EARTHRIGHT: Every Citizen's Guide
- by H. Patricia Hynes
- What you can do in your home, workplace and community to save our
- environment.
- Prima Publishing, ISBN 1-55958-027-5, $12.95, Trade Paper; ISBN
- 1-55958-028-3, $24.95, Hardcover; April
-
- 50 SIMPLE THINGS KIDS CAN DO TO SAVE THE EARTH
- by The Earth Works Group
- Gives kids simple, environmentally sound habits that really work.
- Andrews and McMeel, ISBN 0-8362-2301-2, $7.95, Paper, April
-
- THE NEXT ONE HUNDRED YEARS: Shaping the Fate of Our Living Earth
- by Jonathan Weiner
- Bantam, ISBN 0-553-05744-8, $19.95, Hardcover, March
-
- OUR EARTH, OURSELVES: The Action-Oriented Guide to Help You Protect
- and Preserve Our Environment
- by Ruth Caplan and The Staff of Environmental Action
- Bantam, ISBN 0-553-34857-4, $10.95, April
-
- THE GREENHOUSE TRAP: What We're Doing to the Atmosphere and How We Can
- Slow Global Warming
- by The World Resources Institute
- Explains the problems of climate change and gives guidelines for
- collective and individual action.
- Beacon Press, ISBN 0-8070-8502-2, Cloth, $21.95; ISBN 0-8070-8503-0,
- Paper, $9.95; April
-
- THE GLOBAL ECOLOGY HANDBOOK: What YOU Can Do About the Environmental
- Crisis
- by The Global Tomorrow Coalition
- Information on the major environmental problems and how to get
- involved in solving them. A supplement to the PBS series "Race to Save
- the Planet".
- Beacon Press, ISBN 0-8070-8500-6, Cloth, $29.95; ISBN 0-8070-8501-4,
- Paper, $16.95; April
-
- THE INDOOR RADON PROBLEM
- by Douglas G. Brookins
- Answers the most frequently asked questions and details affordable
- solutions to this dilemma.
- Columbia Univ. Press, ISBN 0-231-06748-8, $29.95, 228 pages
-
- SAVE OUR PLANET: 750 Everyday Ways You Can Help Clean Up the Earth
- by Diane MacEachern
- Dell, ISBN 0-440-50267-5, $9.95, Trade Paper, March
-
- HOTHOUSE EARTH: The Greenhouse Effect and Gaia
- by John Gribbin
- Grove Weidenfeld, ISBN 0-8021-1374-5, $18.95, June
-
- FIGHTING TOXICS: A Manual for Protecting Your Family, Community, and
- Workplace
- edited by Gary Cohen & John O'Connor
- The first complete citizen's guide to toxics cleanup tells you how to
- protect your family and community with reports from the front lines of
- successful grassroots toxics cleanup campaigns.
- Island Press, ISBN 1-55963-012-4, $19.95, Trade Paper, June
-
- WAR ON WASTE: Can America Win Its Battle With Garbage?
- by Louis Blumberg & Robert Gottlieb
- Takes us behind the scenes of one of the most important environmental
- debates of the century. The only book today that examines the
- fundamental causes of our solid waste crisis.
- Island Press, ISBN 0-933280-91-2, $19.95, Trade Paper, January
-
- NATURAL RESOURCES FOR THE 21ST CENTURY
- edited by R. Neil Sampson & Dwight Hair
- For the first time, information from America's leading resource
- experts on such topics as population and economic trends, climate and
- atmospheric trends, croplands and soil sustainability, water quantity
- and quality, wetlands, forestlands and wildlife.
- Island Press, ISBN 1-55963-002-7, $19.95, Trade Paper, March
-
- GREEN RAGE: Radical Environmentalism and the Unmaking of Civilization
- by Christopher Manes
- An insider's manifesto calling into question the wisdom and legitimacy
- of man's domination of nature.
- Little, Brown; ISBN 0-316-54513-9, $17.95, Hardcover, May
-
- ONE EARTH, ONE FUTURE: Our Changing Global Environment
- National Academy Press,ISBN 0-309-04141-4, $14.95, Hardcover, May
-
- FUELS TO DRIVE OUR FUTURE
- National Academy Press, ISBN 0-309-04142-2, $24.50, Hardcover, April
-
- GLOBAL ALERT: The Ozone Pollution Crisis
- by Jack Fishman & Robert Kalish
- Plenum, ISBN 0-306-43455-5, $24.95, Hardcover, 304 pages, April
-
- BUG BUSTERS: Poison Free Pest Control for House and Garden Pests
- by Bernice Lifton
- Avery, ISBN 0-89529-451-6, $9.95, Trade Paper, May
-
- HELOISE: Hints for a Healthy Planet
- by Heloise
- Perigee, ISBN 0-399-51625-5, $7.95, Trade Paper, April
-
- SAVING THE EARTH: A Citizen's Guide to Environmental Action
- by Will Steger & Jon Bowermaster
- Knopf, ISBN 0-679-73026-5, $19.95, Trade Paper, April
-
- CLEARER, CLEANER, SAFER, GREENER: A Blueprint for Detoxifying Your
- Environment
- by Gary Null
- How to combat toxins in food and home.
- Villard, ISBN 0-394-58316-7, $18.95, March
-
- CALL TO ACTION: Handbook for Ecology, Peace, and Justice
- edited by Brad Erickson
- Sierra Club, ISBN 0-87156-611-7, $12.95, Paper, June
-
- THE POPULATION EXPLOSION: From Global Warming to Rainforest
- Destruction, Famine, and Air and Water Pollution--Why Overpopulation
- is our #1 Environmental Problem
- by Paul R. Ehrlich & Anne H. Ehrlich
- Simon & Schuster, ISBN 0-671-68984-3, $18.95, April
-
- IN SEARCH OF ENVIRONMENTAL EXCELLENCE: Moving Beyond Blame
- by Bruce Piasecki & Peter Asmus
- Touchstone, ISBN 0-671-69089-2, $22.95, Hardcover; ISBN 0-671-69090-6,
- $10.95, Paper; August
-
- FOR EARTH'S SAKE: The Life and Times of David Brower
- by David Brower
- Portrays this pre-eminent environmentalist through personal
- reminiscences and collected writings.
- Gibbs Smith, $22.95, May
-
- THE GREEN LIFESTYLE GUIDE: 1001 Ways to Heal the Earth
- edited by Jeremy Rifkin and the Greenhouse Crisis Foundation
- Henry Holt/Owl Books, $7.95, Trade Paper, April
-
- STATE OF THE WORLD 1990: A Worldwatch Institute Report on Progress
- Toward a Sustainable Society
- by Lester R. Brown
- Norton, ISBN 0-393-02788-0, $18.95, Hardcover; ISBN 0-393-30614-3,
- $9.95, Trade Paper; February
-
- THE DREAM OF THE EARTH
- by Thomas Berry
- Traces the course of human thinking that has resulted in near disaster
- for the ecology.
- Sierra Club, ISBN 0-87156-622-2, $9.95, Trade Paper, April
-
- FORESTS: A Naturalist's Guide to Trees and Forest Ecology
- Wiley, $12.95, Trade Paper, April
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- ACCORDING TO ROBERT A. PITTMAN....
-
-
- THE SPY WORE RED
- by Aline, Countess of Romanones
- Random House Edition - May, 1987
- Charter House Edition - June, 1988
- ISBN: 1-55773-034-2
-
- This is not a review of THE SPY WORE RED - perhaps it is best
- described as a comment on the book. I have avoided the term "review"
- because the book is more than two years old and has been widely
- reviewed by national publications and commented on by a variety of
- columnists and writers. The paperback edition carries an extensive
- range of blurbs taken from the original reviews which indicate that
- the story is "electrifying", "thrilling", "interesting", "marvelous",
- "exciting", "delicious", "explosive", "colorful", "snappy",
- "fascinating" and so on as would be expected for a book that makes it
- to the best seller list.
-
- THE SPY WORE RED is the story of Aline Griffith, a young woman who
- joins the OSS in World War II and is trained as an undercover agent
- and is sent to Spain in 1943. Her assignment is to become prominent in
- Madrid society, and to build a network of contacts with diplomatic and
- political figures.
-
- Her cover while in Spain is as an employee of the American Oil Mission,
- but it is her nerve and verve that moves her so successfully into the
- world of spies and counterspies who are so prevalent in neutral Spain
- during World War II.
-
- In telling her story, the author starts with her desire to become
- involved and contribute to the national effort in wartime. During the
- OSS training, we see a rather naive and provincial young woman being
- shocked and jolted into a new reality, and on reaching her assignment
- in Spain, we follow her development farther as she becomes a social
- sophisticate and a confident operative.
-
- Unlike most fiction, in this real life story, the Countess of
- Romanones tells us of her doubts and fears as readily as she recounts
- her strengths and successes. That level of candidness keeps the reader
- confident of the validity of the astounding events in which the author
- is involved. In fact, when you finish the book, you feel as if you
- have almost lived through an exciting adventure of World War II.
-
- Even though I do not describe this as a review, I have given an
- appreciation and a summary of the book. That is necessary, I believe,
- in order to provide a bridge to my primary intent: that of commenting
- on another aspect of the book and its affect on me as the reader.
-
- It is great when you read a book and enjoy it. It is even more
- rewarding when the book leaves you with a desire to know more about
- the subject and provokes you to dig deeper and to expand your
- knowledge. THE SPY WORE RED had that effect on me and it arose from
- the author's description of Madrid, its people and its customs in the
- period when Spain was beginning to recover from its own civil war. It
- was ruled by General Franco, who at that time had only a tenuous hold
- on power. The social leaders were a somewhat shabby and befuddled
- remnant of nobility and the general population was impoverished by the
- civil war and was sharply divided by a variety of inimical political
- views. Material shortages were rampant and public services were spotty
- and unreliable. At the same time, Spain was beginning to profit from
- its neutral position in the war. It was trading everything from
- critical materials to political favors with both the axis and the
- allies but was also risking retribution from the great powers on both
- sides. All of this unfolds in the environment and background as the
- Countess of Romanones tells her story.
-
- The intriguing nature of this setting has given me a compelling demand
- to learn more about these people, this era and this place. Last week I
- was in the library searching through the references for fiction that
- focuses on Spain at the end of its civil war and during World War II,
- for history on Spain's role in World War II, and for selected writings
- on the social and cultural changes as the country moved through the
- years from 1939 to 1943. In just one visit to the library, I am
- surprised at the wealth of available material and the ease with which
- I will be able to explore this subject.
-
- It is certainly going to be a fascinating venture and a confirmation
- that reading for pleasure is very worthwhile.
-
-
- RAMA II
- (A sequel to RENDEZVOUS WITH RAMA)
- by Arthur C. Clarke and Gentry Lee
- Bantam Books 1989
-
- Rendezvous With Rama was published in 1973 and is often ranked as one
- of the top science fiction works of recent years. It is a story that
- tantalizes the intellect with its marvels of mechanics and technology,
- and at the same time, delivers a range of intriguing and thoughtful
- human relationships. It is also a story with a conclusion and
- satisfactory ending that still leaves openings for the reader to
- predict the possibility of sequels.
-
- It was exciting to learn last year that Arthur C. Clarke was releasing
- RAMA II and was to follow that with two more sequels, The Garden of
- RAMA and RAMA Revealed! The only reservation about this news was that
- the book was being written in collaboration with Gentry Lee. Messrs.
- Clarke and Lee have worked together previously in co-authoring a book
- titled CRADLE. CRADLE was a disappointment; not up to the usual
- writing standards of Arthur C. Clarke. Even so, one has faith and I
- approached the reading of RAMA II fully anticipating the enjoyment of
- a grand adventure into the unexpected. Much of what I found was
- unexpected, but it definitely was not grand!
-
- RENDEZVOUS WITH RAMA describes the visit of a huge space vehicle to
- the Solar System and the related attempt of an official contingent of
- humans to board and enter the vehicle. Understanding its contents as
- well as the purpose of its visit is their objective. The boarding
- party is successful in gaining entry to RAMA, and the richness of the
- story arises in their efforts to explore the interior of the craft and
- to probe its mysteries. They are constantly challenged by technical
- wonders but through their explorations, broaden their knowledge and
- understanding of the craft. In the end, they do not uncover the
- specific meaning or purpose of RAMA and it leaves the Solar System
- with an endless trail of questions.
-
- RAMA II picks up the story with a similar space craft as it approaches
- in a pathway toward Earth. It is sighted, and immediately there is a
- world-wide collaboration of political, military and scientific leaders
- to select and prepare an exploration group to meet the vehicle in
- space. Much effort and care goes into choosing the expert team,
- preparing contingency plans and defining the general investigative
- approach. The intent is to improve the potential for understanding
- RAMA II and for protecting and promoting the interests of humankind.
- It is rather amazing that all this preparatory effort produces a team
- of misfits and malefactors who proceed to muddle, mismanage and
- subvert their own efforts in examining and understanding RAMA II.
-
- Among the more prominent and puzzling of the team members are:
-
- Dr. David Brown, senior scientist for the mission, is an egotist
- focused on his preconceived notions about RAMA II. As we learn during
- the story, he also has his own agenda for monetary gain at the expense
- of scientific pursuit and even human life.
-
- Francesca Sabatini is a TV news reporter whose primary objective is to
- advance her own career. We also learn that she and has a substantial
- knowledge about medicines and drugs because she once did a feature
- story on that subject.
-
- General O'Toole is an experienced military leader. He is strongly
- influenced by his Christian faith but so uncertain of its meaning that
- much of the time he is paralyzed with self-debate and indecision.
-
- Nicole des Jardins is the medical doctor for the mission. She is
- pictured as a capable medical expert and is genuine in her support of
- the mission. However, her personal convictions and her decision making
- capabilities are so weak that she constantly flounders in carrying out
- her duties. She is also the mother of a child unknowingly fathered by
- the King of England! For some unfathomable reason, the authors throw
- that little item in and digress to this odd subject from time to time.
-
- There are other characters in the book who are presented as reasonable
- human beings and who fill their roles quite well. But this team was
- supposed to be an assemblage of the best and brightest minds on Earth,
- so it is difficult to understand how so many problem people could have
- passed through the screening process and have gained access to this
- critical team of experts. The story dwells excessively with these
- flawed characters and only a small portion of the text is dedicated to
- the mysteries and wonders of RAMA II.
-
- Sequels inherently have the problem of linking the reader to the
- previous story, but authors usually manage to create bridges that
- summarize and provide sufficient understanding of past happenings. In
- RAMA II, that needed linkage was missing in many areas. This was
- particularly true in the treatment of the space vehicle. RAMA is a
- vast and complex machine and the original book concentrated on that
- subject. In the second book, references to details about the
- spacecraft are so out of context that they have little meaning unless
- one has read the first book and also has a sharp memory. Even with
- this deficiency, when the authors concentrate on RAMA II and involve
- their characters with the space vehicle rather than each other, it
- becomes a more interesting and readable story. Unfortunately, only a
- few chapters have that focus.
-
- The book ends with several unfinished elements, setting the stage for
- the two additional sequels that the publisher promises. It is my
- fondest wish that in the next story, Mr. Clarke take us back to his
- usual high standards of writing and that he not give us a product of
- collaboration.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- Wherever they burn books they will also, in the end, burn human
- beings.
- --Heine
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- FEATURED AUTHOR:
-
- THOMAS BERGER
-
- Thomas Berger is an American novelist born in Ohio in 1924. He is a
- distinctive, satirical writer, and not to everyone's taste, but you
- owe it to yourself to try at least one of his books. If his peculiar
- combination of cynicism and good humor matches yours, if his black
- comedy catches your fancy, you may find Thomas Berger is one of your
- favorite authors. He's crossed many genre boundaries, so there's sure
- to be something to your taste in his 16 novels. Below is a grab bag of
- information about Berger's novels--take it to the library or bookstore
- on your next trip and pick something out. Have fun.
-
- The 16 Novels:
-
- CRAZY IN BERLIN (1958) This is the first of the Reinhart novels, a
- chronicle of the foibles and frustrations of Carlo Reinhart from the
- ruins of Berlin at the end of World War II (CRAZY IN BERLIN), through
- REINHART IN LOVE, VITAL PARTS, and through the 1970s in REINHART'S
- WOMEN. Pure black comedy, Reinhart proves to be no match for the cold
- and hostile world in which he lives.
-
- REINHART IN LOVE (1962) The second Reinhart novel.
-
- LITTLE BIG MAN (1964) Considered by some to be Berger's most
- ambitious novel, LITTLE BIG MAN is about the American Wild West--the
- legend versus the reality. An affectionately comic portrayal of the
- title character, the only white survivor of the Battle of Little Big
- Horn.
-
- Dell ISBN 0-440-34976-1 Paperback $5.95
-
- KILLING TIME (1967) Arthur and Betty Bayson arrive at her mother's
- home for their annual Christmas Eve dinner to find the murdered bodies
- of Betty's mother and sister, as well as that of the household's
- current boarder. The novel, which begins as a mystery story, develops
- into a psychological study of human beings, particularly one Joseph
- Detweiler, a young, amiable taxidermist who is the world's most
- serious, sincere, thoughtful, and actually likable murderer.
-
- Little, Brown ISBN 0-316-09147-2 Trade Paperback $9.95
-
- VITAL PARTS (1970) The third Reinhart novel.
-
- REGIMENT OF WOMEN (1973)
-
- SNEAKY PEOPLE (1975)
-
- WHO IS TEDDY VILLANOVA? (1977) A parody of hard-boiled detective
- novels.
-
- Doubleday ISBN 0-385-29149-3 Paperback $3.95
-
- ARTHUR REX (1978) Berger brings his wit and humor to the legend of
- Camelot. They're all here: Merlin the magician, the beautiful and
- mysterious Lady of the Lake, Excalibur, the Holy Grail--but with new
- plot twists only Thomas Berger could invent. And the exciting climax
- brings together Launcelot and Galahad to answer the eternal question
- of who is truly the greatest knight of all time.
-
- Little, Brown ISBN 0-316-09146-4 Trade Paperback $10.95
-
- NEIGHBORS (1980) Sort of Kafka Meets Suburbia a la Berger. This is
- twenty-four hours in the life of Earl Keese--the people in the
- neighborhood in which he's lived happily for twenty years and the new
- next-door neighbors who somehow trigger the best, worst, and certainly
- most unusual day Earl has ever experienced.
-
- Doubleday ISBN 0-385-28745-3 Paperback $5.95
-
- REINHART'S WOMEN (1981) The further adventures of Reinhart and the
- women in his life. Carl has no become such a talented chef that he is
- offered a TV show.
-
- THE FEUD (1983) Thomas Berger turns his attention to American life in
- the 1930s. It's the story of the Beelers and the Bullards, and the
- ways in which their various members get along (or don't).
-
- NOWHERE (1985)
-
- Doubleday ISBN 0-385-29464-6 Paperback $8.95
-
- BEING INVISIBLE (1987) Would-be novelist Fred Wagner has troubles. To
- begin with, he's stuck in a job with no future, writing small
- paragraphs of hype for mail-order catalogues. Then his wife walks out
- on him, and his shrewish sister writes to him regularly to remind him
- what a failure he is--just in case he ever forgets.
-
- One day, while standing naked in front of a mirror, Fred slowly
- disappears. He's still standing there, but there's no reflection in
- the mirror. With practice he finds that he not only can become
- invisible at will, but anything he touches will disappear too. The
- opportunities and challenges of invisibility prove to be more complex
- than Fred (or the reader) would have thought.
-
- Little, Brown ISBN 0-316-09158-8 Hardcover $16.95
-
- THE HOUSEGUEST (1988) Chuck Burgoyne is, as far as the Graveses are
- concerned, the perfect houseguest. He's quiet, self-sufficient, a
- gourmet cook, and when called upon, a lifesaver. But then something
- goes terribly wrong. Sinister-sounding men leave ominous messages for
- "Charlie" or "Chaz". Chuck blackmails his host and steals from his
- hostess. He takes unthinkable liberties with their daughter-in-law. He
- cuts the phone lines and cripples the family cars. What are the
- Graveses to do? Modern life and modern manners lampooned in the
- typical Berger style.
-
- Little, Brown ISBN 0-316-09163-4 Hardcover $16.95
-
- CHANGING THE PAST (1989)
-
- "Many human beings feel that what they are has been imposed upon them
- from without. Well, here's the chance to test the validity of that
- theory. You can go back and change whatever you don't like."
- --The "little man" talking to Walter Hunsicker
-
- Walter Hunsicker meets an odd "little man" while avoiding the rain in
- a downtown doorway, and his life is never the same again (or, rather,
- it IS, but then that's jumping ahead of myself). The little man offers
- to change the past for Walter, in any manner he chooses, with no risk.
- If at any time Walter is dissatisfied, he can change everything back
- again. This is very difficult for conventional Walter to believe. He
- is chief copy-editor for a major publishing house, with a lovely wife
- and a son who is a successful lawyer. Walter is a completely happy and
- satisfied man. Or is he?
-
- Once Walter has been given the option to tinker with the past, he
- can't resist making a few editorial alterations. Unfortunately, he
- makes one mistake after another, and each new life he leads fails to
- be an improvement on the original. The reader and Walter together
- learn a valuable lesson about life, and about choices. Once again
- Thomas Berger's vision is piercing but forgiving, and he illuminates
- another aspect of life with humor and compassion.
-
- "Everything in existence is consequential....What you must do is get a
- past of the kind to put you in the sort of situation you'd like today,
- but then you must accept what goes along with it."
-
- "The average writer is a self-pitying neurotic with some kind of
- addiction, most often alcohol though it can be anything else as well,
- drugs, sex, sometimes all of them at once, he's usually in debt, a
- monster of vanity, wracked with envy..."
- --Walter Hunsicker/Jack Kellog
-
- from Little, Brown
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- ISBN 0-300-04115-2
-
- Have you ever wondered what this notation means? You'll find it on the
- cover of paperbacks and on the copyright page of hardcover books, and
- it identifies a title very particularly. First off, ISBN stands for
- International Standard Book Number. The first digit is the code for
- the area of origin (0 means that this books was published in an
- English-speaking country). The next group of digits is the code for
- the publisher (300 means Yale University Press). The next group of
- digits represents the exact title and is a number assigned by the
- publisher (04115 indicates LOST IN A BOOK: The Psychology of Reading
- For Pleasure by Victor Nell, published in 1988). The final digit is
- the check number, an error-checking device to make sure that the
- scanning computer got the rest of the digits correctly.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- THE CIVIL WAR (FICTION)
-
- Marching On by James Boyd
- The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane
- Miss Ravenel's Conversion From Secession to Loyalty by John William
- DeForest
- A Time for Drums by John Ehle
- Shiloh by Shelby Foote
- Jim Mundy by Robert H. Fowler
- None Shall Look Back by Caroline Gordon
- The Long Roll by Mary Johnston
- Long Remember by MacKinlay Kantor
- The History of Rome Hanks and Kindred Matters by Joseph Pennell
- By Antietam Creek by Don Robertson
- The Wave by Evelyn Scott
- The Killer Angels by Michael Shaara
- The Way to Fort Pillow by James Sherburne
- Major Stepson's War by Matthew Vaughan
-
-
- THE CIVIL WAR (FACT)
-
- Grant Takes Command by Bruce Catton
- This Hallowed Ground by Bruce Catton
- The Gettysburg Campaign: A Study in Command by Edwin B. Coddington
- The Coming of the Civil War by Avery Odelle Craven
- The Last Cavalier by Burke Davis
- Contribution to Civil War History by William C. Davis
- Ironmaker to the Confederacy: Joseph R. Anderson and the Tredegar Iron
- Works by Charles B. Dew
- Charles Sumner and the Coming of the Civil War by David H. Donald
- Gone for a Soldier: The Civil War Memoirs of Private Alfred Bellard by
- David H. Donald
- The Seven Days: The Emergence of Lee by Clifford Dowdey
- The Compact History of the Civil War by R. Ernest Dupuy and Trevor N.
- Dupuy
- History of the Southern Confederacy by Clement Eaton
- The Civil War: A Narrative by Shelby Foote
- The Illustrated Confederate Reader edited by Rod Gragg
- The Civil War by Harry Hansen
- The Story of the Confederacy by Robert S. Henry
- Battle Cry of Freedom: The Era of the Civil War by James M. McPherson
- Great Battles of the Civil War by John MacDonald
- The Negro's Civil War by James M. McPherson
- The Gleam of Bayonets by James V. Murtin
- The Children of Pride by Robert Manson Myers
- The War for the Union: War Becomes Revolution, 1862-1863 by Allan
- Nevins
- Great Civil War Heroes and Their Battles edited by Walton Rawls
- Combined Operations in the Civil War by Rowena Reed
- A House Divided by Richard H. Sewell
- The Papers of Ulysses S. Grant by John G. Simon
- Trial by Fire by Page Smith
- The Union Cavalry in the Civil War by Stephen Z. Starr
- An End to Valor by Philip Van Doren Stern
- Chickamauga by Glenn Tucker
- William Henry Seward by Glyndon G. Van Deusen
- Their Tattered Flags by Frank E. Vandiver
- Voices of the Civil War by Richard Wheeler
- Patriotic Gore: Studies in the Literature of the American Civil War by
- Edmund Wilson
-
- New Books & Recent Rereleases:
-
- GRANT MOVES SOUTH 1861-1863
- by Bruce Catton
- Little, Brown ISBN 0-316-13207-1 $25.00 Hardcover April
- ISBN 0-316-13244-6 $13.95 Paper April
-
- GRANT TAKES COMMAND 1863-1865
- by Bruce Catton
- Little, Brown ISBN 0-316-13210-1 $25.00 Hardcover April
- ISBN 0-316-13240-3 $13.95 Paper April
-
- THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR: An Aerial View
- photography by Sam Abell, text by Brian Pohanka
- Photographs of historic landscapes are accompanied by quotations from
- generals' writings and tactical descriptions.
- Thomasson-Grant $37.50 March
-
- NO BETTER PLACE TO DIE: The Battle of Stones River
- by Peter Cozzens
- Recounts the events of the bloody Civil War battle and its political
- consequences.
- Univ. of Illinois Press $24.95 March
-
- THE CIVIL WAR BATTLEFIELD GUIDE
- edited by Frances H. Kennedy
- Maps and descriptive essays on 60 major battlefields.
- Houghton Mifflin $16.95 Trade Paper April
-
- CIVIL WAR WOMEN: The Civil War Seen Through Women's Eyes in Stories by
- Louisa May Alcott, Kate Chopin, Eudora Welty, and Other Great Women
- Writers
- edited by Frank McSherry, Jr., Charles G. Waugh, Martin Greenberg
- Touchstone ISBN 0-671-70248-3 $8.95 176 pages May
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- OVERHEARD ON RELAYNET (tm)
-
- (This was a message written by Buzz Dixon; the subject was Peter
- Straub.)
-
- Normally Straub's incoherent chapters are at the end of the book, viz.
- SHADOWLAND, which had a great first half only to "peter" off into
- nothingness.
-
- I like Straub's writing style. The opening hook of GHOST STORY ("Tell
- you the worse thing I ever did? No, I won't tell you that...but I will
- tell you the worse thing that ever happened to me.") is absolutely
- marvelous, but that book also squandered all its energy in the end.
-
- My number one criticism against Straub is that he simply doesn't know
- how to resolve a story. ALL of his books suffer from weak climaxes. IF
- YOU COULD SEE ME NOW is perhaps his strongest climax, but also his
- weakest book all around. JULIA is a more old fashioned ghost story and
- as such doesn't need the hard resolution his other tales do.
-
- GHOST STORY trails off into oblivion. SHADOWLAND completely
- disintegrates. FLOATING DRAGON does have a climax, but so obtusely
- written as to make it damn near impossible to decipher. KOKO has a
- great set up and nifty plot twists, but once Barbar the elephant is
- introduced becomes silly and contrived; the ending is a real cheat to
- give Straub room to have a sequel.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- INDIA
-
-
- (The F & NF refer to Fiction and NonFiction.)
-
- Neglected Lives by Stephen Alter (F)
- Two Leaves and a Bud by Mulk Raj Anand (F)
- The Untouchable by Mulk Raj Anand (F)
- A Cultural History of India edited by A.L. Basham (NF)
- The Wonder That Was India by A.L. Basham (NF)
- Fire on the Mountain by Anita Desai (F)
- The Siege of Krishnapur by J.G. Farrell (F)
- Gandhi by Louis Fischer (NF)
- Zemindar by Valerie Fitzgerald (F)
- A Passage to India by E.M. Forster (F)
- Ahmed and the Old Lady by Jon Godden (F)
- The River by Rumer Godden (F)
- Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent by J.C. Harle (NF)
- Heat and Dust by Ruth Prawer Jhabvala (F)
- Kim by Rudyard Kipling (F)
- The Speaking Tree: A Study of Indian Culture and Society by Richard
- Lannoy (NF)
- The Village Had No Walls by Vyankatesh Madgulkar (F)
- Nectar in a Sieve by Kamala Markandaya (F)
- Bhowani Junction by John Masters (F)
- India Yesterday and Today by Clark D. Moore & David Eldredge (F)
- Taj by T.N. Murari (F)
- The Man-Eater of Malgudi by R.K. Narayan (F)
- The Vendor of Sweets by R.K. Narayan (F)
- The Serpent and the Rope by Raja Rao (F)
- The Art and Architecture of India by Benjamin Rowland (NF)
- Midnight's Children by Salman Rushdie (F)
- The Raj Quartet by Paul Scott (F)
- Song of Kali by Dan Simmons (F)
- The Oxford History of India by Vincent Smith (NF)
- Indigo by Christine Weston (F)
- Behind Mud Walls: 1930-1960 by William H. & Charlotte Viall Wiser (NF)
- A New History of India by Stanley Wolpert (NF)
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- Writers aren't exactly people...they're a whole lot of people
- trying to be one person.
- --F. Scott Fitzgerald
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- ACCORDING TO FRED L. DRAKE, JR......
-
-
- RUSALKA
- by C.J. Cherryh
- 1989, Del Rey/Ballantine Books, $18.95, ISBN 0-345-35953-4
-
- This is the most recent work of fantasy by this rather well known
- author of science fiction, who has two Hugo awards to her name, as
- well as a considerable following. Unfortunately, Ms. Cherryh's fantasy
- writing has yet to match her science fiction works in quality, though
- she has edited volumes of other peoples' fantasy short stories as well
- as having written a number of fantasy novels of her own. RUSALKA is
- not exactly a bad book, and can be described as interesting, even, but
- more for its use of Russian folklore as a foundation over the more
- common Germanic background lore found in today's volumes of fantasy
- prose, rather than for the story itself.
-
- The story centers around a pair of boys in a small village a few
- hundred miles north of Kiev. The elder of the pair, Pyetr Ilitch
- Kochevikov, who is the cause for the initial action which leads to the
- main plot of the book, is something of a simple troublemaker. Sasha
- Vasilyevich, the younger, was caught up in the story when Pyetr was
- trying to get away from the law, Pyetr having been accused of a murder
- he did not commit. Sasha, a stableboy, tended to a wound Pyetr had
- received and perceived Pyetr's innocence, and both escaped the
- village, where neither had any solid friends.
-
- After escaping the village and getting away to a forest to the north,
- Pyetr's wound grows worse, and the two take refuge in a house they
- find away in the woods. Pyetr, ever the cynic, derides Sasha's belief
- in the various spirits of the forest, even after the wizard who lives
- in the cottage returns and heals Pyetr's very serious wound. Pyetr
- continues to ridicule the very idea of magic until he falls in love
- with the spirit of the wizard's deceased daughter, which certainly
- changes his plans to escape to brilliant Kiev. The story continues
- with Sasha becoming apprenticed to the old wizard and the three of
- them working to remove the daughter's murderer, a wizard himself, from
- the picture and bring her back to life. Pyetr must learn to accept and
- even to some degree understand the workings of the spirit world, and
- to live with magic, for Eveshka, the wizard's daughter, is a powerful
- wizard in her own right.
-
- Like most of Cherryh's novels, there are only a few characters, and
- the physical surroundings are not described in depth. The action
- scenes are reasonably well written as well. Readers comfortable with
- her level of characterization will enjoy this book, though it may be
- intended primarily for the "young adult" reading level, rather than
- the "serious" fantasy market. RUSALKA presents a light but enjoyable
- read.
-
-
- HIGHER GROUND
- by Caryl Phillips
- 1989, Viking Penguin, New York, $17.95, ISBN 0-670-82620-0
-
- Caryl Phillip's fourth book, HIGHER GROUND, is appropriately billed as
- a "triptych" novel, that is, a novel in three parts. Being one who
- enjoys seeing tightly composed, complex works in any artistic media, I
- grabbed at the chance to read this book. My expectations, as always,
- were quite high. As I began to get into the book, I found that my
- understanding of a triptych and Mr. Phillip's, or his publisher's,
- were a bit different. Or so I thought at first. In the fine arts, the
- word "triptych" is used to describe a group of three works which are
- meant to be considered a single work and taken together rather than as
- three individual productions, and are intimately related to each other
- on many levels. HIGHER GROUND is a group of three stories, two of
- which are obviously related, and a third which seems to have few ties,
- if any, to the others. But as we all know, first impressions will be
- just that, impressions, and often are wrong.
-
- The first tale, "Heartland," is the story of an African herdsman who
- became a translator with the coming of the Europeans, since there was
- no way to continue with his previous life. In living with the white
- man he learns that he, as an individual, means little to others: in
- the several years he lives with white man on the shores of Africa no
- white man so much as asks his name, though a couple treat him
- reasonably well when speaking to him. As the story progresses, the
- herdsman helps a young girl who had been sexually abused by one of the
- whites, and takes her as his woman. They come to care for each other
- as best they may in their predicament, but are forced apart by the
- cruelty of one of the whites. We never learn her name, either.
-
- "The Cargo Rap" is a highly discomforting story of a young black man
- held in an Alabama prison close to contemporary times. He tells his
- tale through many letters to family members, of how he has been beaten
- and oppressed, and we learn of his crime. By the end of the story he
- has served at least seven years for attempting to steal forty dollars.
- Yes, there is reason for this man to be upset, for his treatment is
- unjust, and he is prevented from any appeal to authority. But though
- the reader is made to understand his situation and led to agree that
- an injustice has been perpetrated, there is little room for sympathy.
-
- Rudy's letters give the impression that he is quite psychotic, and
- spends his time reacting against his white oppressors and languishing
- in the torment, accepting their cruelty as proof of his black
- superiority. We find that Rudy has led himself to believe that
- anything a white man thinks must be inherently evil and anything a
- black man does or believes, which was not picked up from the white
- man, is inherently good. In his chaotic zeal to convince himself of
- the truth of this, Rudy never realizes how many things he has accepted
- from the white man without realizing it: he criticizes others quickly
- and with little information, and yet is unable to bear witness for his
- own actions. He discusses several major black historical figures in
- his letters, telling his audience why each were great; every time, he
- misses the beat and praises his heroes for everything but their final
- leap to heroism, exclaiming that these leaps were the faults that
- brought their downfall. These tellings, along with the accompanying
- philosophical and political advice which Rudy freely gives his family,
- are all very narrow minded and reactionary.
-
- These first two tales are related in an obvious fashion in that both
- are stories of black men trying to survive in what amounts to hostile
- territory. "Heartland" tells of a black man's separation and
- estrangement from his own people, and then again from his adopted
- people; "The Cargo Rap" tells of another man's divorce from society,
- dignity, and, finally, his own mind. A fine diptych when viewed only
- with the other, but still not a triptych; for that we need the third
- and final tale, "Higher Ground."
-
- It was not until some time after I had finished the entire book that I
- understood the level of the relationships between the initial diptych,
- though I thought I did, and that is what prevented me from
- understanding the structure of the book until I had had time to
- reflect upon the words of the author, and his description of the whole
- as a novel rather than a collection of novellas. The last telling is
- not centered around a black man, as are the others, though there is a
- black man as an important character who closes a tie critical to the
- triptych.
-
- "Higher Ground" tells the tale of a woman driven from Poland by the
- second world war as a young child, who flees to England in hope, and
- possibly fear, of escaping the horrors of home. Irene has long since
- gone insane and found little in the world to make life bearable. She
- is working in a library cataloging children's books when she meets a
- man named Louis from the West Indies. The story is not a happy one,
- and explores the loneliness and solitude of each character through
- their interactions with each other and additional characters. Louis
- closes the circle by taking the place of the herdsman of "Heartland"
- by attempting to be kind, but finding that he has not the wherewithal
- to stand against the discrimination which prevents him from getting a
- job, and Irene completes a different kind of cycle, also begun by the
- herdsman. Hers does not lead to a return home, but rather pulls the
- personal desolation of Rudy, from "The Cargo Rap," to a conclusion
- which allows for no return.
-
- Phillips has crafted a complex novel which brings forth many ideas
- about relations not just between blacks and whites, but between any
- groups with identifiable differences, especially differences in
- lifestyle and cultural priorities. While it is by no means certain
- that Phillips does not intend the book as an indictment of past and
- present white behavior towards black men, his presentation of ideas is
- powerful and forces one to think about issues of discrimination.
- HIGHER GROUND is a powerful book which will leave the reader thinking
- for quite some time.
-
-
- GYPSIES
- by Robert Charles Wilson
- 1989, Doubleday, $16.95, ISBN 0-385-24933-0
- 1989, Bantam/Spectra Special Edition, $4.50, ISBN 0-553-28-304-9
-
- Robert Charles Wilson's books are generally considered to be science
- fiction, which is a reasonable classification, if not ideal. His
- books, or those which I have read, certainly don't fit into other
- categories any better, though GYPSIES might be considered to fit into
- the fantasy category with equal appropriateness, unlike his MEMORY
- WIRE. The truth is, GYPSIES doesn't fit into any category unless it is
- described as "revelatory"; it is a story of self-discovery and,
- therefore, is somewhat a tale of individuals growing up. It might also
- be described as an alternate worlds exploration. One thing this book
- is definitely not, is "genre fiction."
-
- GYPSIES is a tale of two sisters and a brother who grew up like any
- other children, with just one exception: they could step...sideways,
- through that odd angle that others could not see or perceive. These
- children were able to create windows and doors into other incarnations
- of the world; what are popularly known simply as "alternate worlds" to
- the modern science fiction reader. Karen, Laura, and Timothy have no
- idea where this ability came from or why they are possessed of it, but
- as children they are able to use it as a toy, a playground. Their
- parents, unable to open such doors, teach the children that it is an
- evil ability, not to be used in any way. The children, as children
- will, developed their own ideas, each independent of the others.
-
- The primary emphasis of the story is the search for an understanding
- of the ability by Karen and her fifteen year old son, Michael. The
- search is started, and given importance by, the return of a mysterious
- individual from Karen's childhood whom she had only remembered as a
- bad dream, and known only as the Gray Man. Little is known about the
- Gray Man except that he wants Michael to go with him to the alternate
- world he came from, which created him.
-
- During the search for knowledge, Karen must learn to accept the
- ability to step between worlds as a natural part of her being, rather
- than the evil thing her parents claimed: she must learn that the
- "normal" life she had long sought must include rather than reject her
- ability, since it was a part of her birthright, as well as Michael's.
- Her sister Laura is a help here, allowing Karen and Michael to stay
- with her while avoiding the Gray Man. Karen must reveal to her son
- more about their heritage and the alternate worlds than she had hoped,
- for it turns out that Laura lives in a California which is...
- different, in that weird way they knew as children.
-
- There is a period of quiet, inward reflection and searching in a small
- California village, during which Karen begins to understand the need
- to know more about their ability, and to tell Michael as much as she
- can, so he will not be completely defenseless when the Gray Man
- catches up with them. Laura finds that Michael is able to do much more
- than any of the original brothers and sisters simply from stumbling
- about, trying things on his own. Following this period of
- introspection, there is a trip to visit Karen and Laura's parents,
- after which the sisters and Michael reunite with Tim. The story
- becomes faster-paced after this, with Tim's loyalties coming into
- question.
-
- The main aspects of growth in GYPSIES are intellectual, with the
- reader watching the characters actions, only rarely having direct
- access to their thoughts, and having to determine for himself the
- subtle changes in the characters' inner selves. There are few specific
- points at which these inner changes can be pinpointed as occurring,
- and there is little to cause us to say that the characters are either
- "good" or "bad," they are simply the people we move with through the
- story and the people we watch from a sort of "outside"; in this way
- the story is very believable.
-
- Wilson is one of the major authors in the science fiction community
- who is moving the genre away from the "traditional" field it occupies
- and into the mainstream of modern fiction, bringing it stylistically
- closer to modern "literary" fiction than to simple hero-oriented
- narrative.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- If you'd like to travel to Japan without leaving your armchair, and be
- entertained to boot, you might like to try one (or more) of the Otani
- mysteries by James Melville (a pseudonym of Peter Martin).
-
- The latest is:
-
- A HAIKU FOR HANAE (Scribners, ISBN 0-684-19131-8, $16.95)
-
- The previous Otani mysteries are available in paperback from Fawcett.
-
- THE WAGES OF ZEN (ISBN 0-449-20838-9, $2.95)
- THE CHRYSANTHEMUM CHAIN (ISBN 0-449-20822-2, $2.95)
- A SORT OF SAMURAI (ISBN 0-449-20821-4, $2.95)
- THE NINTH NETSUKE (ISBN 0-449-20823-0, $2.95)
- SAYONARA, SWEET AMARYLLIS (ISBN 0-449-20825-7, $2.95)
- DEATH OF A DAIMYO (ISBN 0-449-20824-9, $2.95)
- THE DEATH CEREMONY (ISBN 0-449-21131-2, $2.95)
- GO GENTLY, GAIJIN (ISBN 0-449-21413-3, $2.95)
- KIMONO FOR A CORPSE (ISBN 0-449-21644-6, $3.50)
- THE RELUCTANT RONIN (ISBN 0-449-21619-5, $3.50)
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- NEW FROM CARROLL & GRAF:
-
-
- UNSOLVED: GREAT MYSTERIES OF THE 20TH CENTURY
- by Kirk Wilson
-
- In this engaging investigation into the top ten mysteries of our time,
- we meet or come close to identifying the killers who literally got
- away with murder.
-
- All ten are real life cases, some still under investigation. Kirk
- Wilson writes about an amazing array of carefully researched unsolved
- cases acting as informed judge, jury and prosecutor. To qualify for
- inclusion in this volume, the author required that each case fulfill
- three essential criteria: that each was a) a genuine "page one"
- sensation, b) a first rate tale of murder, and c) still unsolved and
- therefore mysterious.
-
- As it happens, several of the cases interestingly tie into one
- another. John F. Kennedy and brother Robert had affairs with Marilyn
- Monroe and may have had some connection with her death. The Kennedys
- were tape-recorded in their diversions with Marilyn by arch-enemy
- Jimmy Hoffa, who in turn subsequently became a posthumous suspect in
- the JFK assassination conspiracy. Mafia figures also weave their
- shadowy ways through a number of the cases.
-
- CONTENTS: The Last Time We Saw Camelot: The Assassination of John
- Kennedy; With Friends Like These: The Disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa;
- The Two Kings of the Bahamas: The Murder of Sir Harry Oakes; The Man
- Who Wore a Common Face: The Search for Martin Bormann; Vanishing
- Justice: The Disappearance of Judge Joseph Force Crater; The Girl Who
- Cried Wolf Beautifully: The Death of Marilyn Monroe; The Price of
- Being Born Again: The T. Cullen Davis Murder Trial; Napoleon's Demise:
- The Murder of Serge Rubinstein; Sunny in Darkness: The Trial of Claus
- von Bulow.
-
- ISBN 0-88184-470-5 Hardcover $18.95 250 pages March
-
-
- THE WOMAN CHASER
- by Charles Willeford
-
- According to critics, Charles Willeford "wrote the most eloquently
- brainy and exacting pulp fiction every fabricated". (Richard Gehr) In
- THE WOMAN CHASER, one Richard Hudson, ex-used car salesman and
- manipulator of attractive women (including a Salvation Army volunteer
- whom he tempts into prostitution) is one of the most self-conscious
- (and therefore artful) creations in the history of the genre. He is a
- 1950s middle class underground man who understands that his life is a
- walking allegory for American culture; a man driven to control his
- destiny but primed for self-destruction.
-
- ISBN 0-88184-556-6 Paperback $3.95 192 pages March
-
-
- THE MULLER-FOKKER EFFECT
- by John Sladek
-
- John Sladek--along with Philip K. Dick and J.G. Ballard--is one of the
- liveliest and most creative science fiction writers of the last twenty
- years. THE MULLER-FOKKER EFFECT, his second novel, is considered to be
- more than a decade ahead of his time.
-
- Bob Shairp--a writer and dreamer--has agreed to be a guinea-pig in a
- military experiment to find out if his personality can be turned into
- data and stored on computer. But a computing error quickly destroys
- Shairp's physical body, leaving his mind stranded in an encoded world.
- Can the process be reversed? Can a human being be recycled? And is
- this experiment just another twisted scheme for the U.S. military to
- play with? These are some of the questions that Sladek invites in this
- pungent combination of science fiction and black humor.
-
- ISBN 0-88184-548-5 Paperback $3.95 224 pages March
-
-
- MORE CARROLL & GRAF TITLES:
-
-
- A COFFIN FOR DIMITRIOS
- by Eric Ambler
-
- Eric Ambler's enduring tale of international intrigue remains one of
- the very best thrillers ever written.
-
- April Mass Market Paperback $3.95 ISBN 0-88184-619-8
-
-
- DEAD MEN'S LETTERS
- by Erle Stanley Gardner
-
- This exciting collection contains nine of the very best Erle Stanley
- Gardner novellas, none of which has ever before been published in book
- form. Each story features Gardner's most enduring "pulp" character,
- the inimitable Ed Jenkins.
-
- April Hardcover $18.95 ISBN 0-88184-579-5
-
-
- BY REASON OF INSANITY
- by Shane Stevens
-
- This truly scary novel has been acclaimed as both a popular classic
- and a psychological masterpiece.
-
- April Mass Market Paperback $5.95 ISBN 0-88184-609-0
-
-
- ANYTHING FOR A QUIET LIFE
- by Michael Gilbert
-
- April Hardcover $16.95 ISBN 0-88184-581-7
-
-
- THE BEST HORROR FROM FANTASY TALES
- edited by Stephen Jones & David Sutton
-
- April Hardcover $17.95 ISBN 0-88184-571-X
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- I took a course in speed reading and was able to read WAR AND
- PEACE in twenty minutes. It's about Russia.
- --Woody Allen
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- ACCORDING TO OLLIE McKAGEN....
-
-
- FORBIDDEN SANCTUARY
- by Richard Bowker
- 1982, Del Rey Books / Ballantine
-
- With this title and unlikely plot, Pope Meets Aliens, a book could
- languish forever. Found in a library sale, cost two bits. Daunted by
- the cover picture of the visitors' ship, a glowing blue pyramid, I
- began it only in desperation one night when I'd forgotten to pick up a
- paper. Begins in media res, fast interleaves to new scenes. Lost
- thread at once; started again. Hey, this has color!! And, a hint of a
- purpose in the makeup of the initial character. Lessee now.... The
- aliens are here, on a trip dedicated in the rituals of their state
- religion. They've crossed interstellar space despite technology that
- requires them to hand scribe leaflets to drop on a city. Their
- presence is a dominant factor in a volatile post-arrival world
- political scene. At home they are repressing a small cult group as the
- Romans did Christianity. Of those, one named Tenon has secretly
- enlisted on the voyage. At an opportune moment he appeals to an
- interpreter, a good Catholic. She tells her priest and he tells a
- Jesuit friend who knows the Pope's secretary. No one between Tenon and
- the Pope can ignore (God works in strange ways) a witness that their
- most basic tenet, Crucifixion, is occurring on other worlds. This
- could be the miracle the Church needs to regain lost status. Following
- close on the heels of the message to the Pope's secretary is the
- defection of Tenon from the ship. He is spirited away by one of the
- intermediaries. The aliens want him back, threaten the UN with massive
- earthly destruction. Can they?? We can't afford to take the chance;
- the least they will do is leave, taking with them the secret of
- interstellar travel. But the Church won't give him up...and this is
- just the first few chapters.
-
- The book is dramatic and has a fine set of actors, developed by
- running the action through their eyes. Bowker succeeded with a
- difficult technique: a nice layer of carefully refined flesh is
- deposited around everyone in the cast, including the chief aliens.
- There are no archetypes here; even the strongest have fitting faults.
- Beside Pope Clement, I especially liked Father Bernardi and Madeleine
- West, a tough lady FBI agent. Their game of cat and mouse itself is
- worth the $.25, but it is only a part of a detailed and involved plot
- structure that sets at odds even those on the same nominal sides,
- filling out minor themes along the way. There is room in such a
- straightforward but complex structure for a writer to set traps for
- the players. And surprises for the readers. So smoothly is this done
- that, even if prewarned, you'll never twig to it in time.
-
- Taken by the way basic religious themes were made credible in a very
- unlikely story, I found ample to reflect on in the writer. Mr. Bowker
- is highly skilled and obviously learned about "the one true Church."
- Everything is theologically disciplined as well as artistically exact.
- Nowhere does anything fall flat (yeah there *is* a bit of unlikely
- dialogue), though explaining so much plot coincidence in terms of the
- hand of God is both neat and trite. But it moves the book, maybe even
- this review, along very well. Those unhappy with this big a bite can
- still take pleasure in other good things within, including an epilogue
- both resolutory and inspirational.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- BIRTHDAYS AND OTHER IMPORTANT DATES IN APRIL
-
- 01 1697 Abbe Prevost; French novelist and journalist
- 01 1755 Anthelme Brillat-Savarin; French lawyer, politician, writer
- 01 1868 Edmond Rostand; French playwright
- 01 1875 Edgar Wallace; English writer
- 01 1922 William Manchester; American writer
- 01 1926 Anne McCaffrey; American writer
- 01 1929 Milan Kundera; Czech writer
- 01 1942 Samuel R. Delany; American writer
- 02 1805 Hans Christian Andersen; Danish writer
- 02 1840 Emile Zola; French writer and critic
- 02 1940 Peter Haining; writer and editor
- 02 1948 Joan D. Vinge; American writer
- 03 1593 George Herbert; English metaphysical poet
- 03 1783 Washington Irving; American essayist, biographer, historian
- 03 1822 Edward Everett Hale; American clergyman and writer
- 04 1896 Robert Sherwood; American playwright and editor
- 04 1896 Tristan Tzara; French poet Samuel Rosenfeld
- 04 1914 Marguerite Duras; French novelist & filmmaker Marguerite
- Donnadieu
- 04 1928 Maya Angelou; American writer
- 05 1588 Thomas Hobbes; English political philosopher
- 05 1725 Giovanni Casanova; Italian adverturer who wrote the 12-volume
- MEMOIRES
- 05 1837 Algernon Swinburne; English poet and man of letters
- 05 1917 Robert Bloch; American writer
- 05 1920 Arthur Hailey; English-born Canadian novelist
- 06 1671 Jean-Baptiste Rousseau; French poet
- 06 1866 Lincoln Steffens; American journalist
- 06 1892 Lowell Thomas; American journalist
- 06 1906 John Betjeman; English Poet Laureate 1972-1984
- 07 1770 William Wordsworth; English poet
- 07 1889 Gabriela Mistral; Chilean poet Lucila Godoy Alcayaga
- 07 1915 Henry Kuttner; American writer
- 07 1931 Donald Barthelme; American writer
- 08 1898 C.M. Bowra; English classical scholar and professor of poetry
- at Oxford University
- 09 1821 Charles Baudelaire; French poet
- 10 1778 William Hazlitt; English essayist, journalist, drama critic,
- painter
- 10 1847 Joseph Pulitzer; Hungarian-born American journalist
- 10 1903 Clare Boothe Luce; American playwright & diplomat
- 10 1934 David Halberstam; American journalist
- 10 1941 Paul Theroux; American novelist & travel writer
- 11 1722 Christopher Smart; English poet and journalist
- 11 1901 Glenway Wescott; American writer
- 11 1934 Mark Strand; American poet, editor, translator
- 12 1823 Aleksandr Ostrovsky; Russian playwright
- 13 1906 Samuel Beckett; French novelist, dramatist, poet
- 13 1909 Eudora Welty; American writer
- 13 1922 John Braine; English novelist
- 14 1828 The first edition of Noah Webster's AN AMERICAN DICTIONARY OF
- THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE is published
- 14 1879 James Branch Cabell; American novelist and essayist
- 14 1889 Arnold Toynbee; English historian
- 14 1946 Tom Monteleone; American writer
- 15 1843 Henry James; American writer and critic
- 16 1844 Anatole France; French writer & critic Jacques Anatole
- Francois Thibault
- 16 1871 John Millington Synge; Irish dramatist
- 16 1921 Peter Ustinov; English playwright, actor, fiction writer,
- director, essayist
- 16 1922 Kingsley Amis; English writer
- 17 1622 Henry Vaughan; English poet
- 17 1885 Isak Dinesen; Danish writer Baroness Karen Dinesen Blixen
- 17 1897 Thornton Wilder; American novelist and playwright
- 18 1817 George Henry Lewes; English philosophical writer & literary
- critic
- 18 1864 Richard Harding Davis; American journalist & novelist
- 18 1907 Stephen Longstreet; American writer
- 19 1832 Jos Echegaray; Spanish dramatist
- 19 1900 Richard Hughes; English writer
- 21 1816 Charlotte Bronte; English novelist
- 21 1838 John Muir; American naturalist and writer
- 22 1707 Henry Fielding; English novelist and playwright
- 22 1724 Immanuel Kant; German philosopher
- 22 1766 Madame de Stael; Swiss-French belle-lettrist
- 22 1873 Ellen Glasgow; American novelist
- 23 1547 Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra; Spanish writer
- 23 1616 William Shakespeare died
- 23 1899 Vladimir Nabokov; Russian-born American novelist & poet
- 23 1899 Ngaio Marsh; New Zealand detective-story writer
- 23 1923 Avram Davidson; American writer
- 24 1800 The Library of Congress was established
- 24 1815 Anthony Trollope; English novelist
- 24 1905 Robert Penn Warren; American poet and novelist
- 25 1873 Walter De la Mare; English poet, novelist, anthologist
- 26 1564 William Shakespeare was baptized in Holy Trinity Church
- 26 1711 David Hume; Scottish philosopher and historian
- 26 1820 Alice Cary; American poet
- 26 1889 Ludwig Wittgenstein; Austrian philosopher & professor at
- Cambridge University
- 26 1893 Anita Loos; American novelist and screenwriter
- 26 1912 A.E. Van Vogt; American writer
- 26 1914 Bernard Malamud; American writer
- 27 1737 Edward Gibbon; English historian
- 27 1759 Mary Wollstonecraft; English writer
- 27 1820 Herbert Spencer; English philosopher
- 27 1903 Frank Belknap Long; American writer
- 27 1904 Cecil Day Lewis; English Poet Laureate, critic, author of
- detective stories under the name Nicholas Blake
- 27 1932 Hart Crane, sailing from Mexico to New York on the
- ORIZABA, commits suicide by jumping overboard
- 28 1917 Robert Anderson; American playwright and novelist
- 28 1926 Harper Lee; author of TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD
- 29 1667 John Arbuthnot; Scottish writer
- 29 1863 William Randolph Hearst; American newspaper publisher
- 29 1908 Jack Williamson; American writer
- 30 1888 John Crowe Ransom; American poet and critic
- 30 1938 Larry Niven; American writer
- 30 1945 Annie Dillard; American writer
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- I've given up reading books. I find it takes my mind off myself.
- --Oscar Levant
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- MY FAVORITE BOOKS OF 1989
-
- by Cindy Bartorillo
-
-
- I've given the matter some thought (some: more than a little, less
- than a lot), and here are my three favorite novels of 1989:
-
- SACRED MONSTER by Donald E. Westlake
- THE MEZZANINE by Nicholson Baker
- THE EIGHT by Katherine Neville
-
- Now that I sit here staring at the list it occurs to me that all three
- are in some sense experimentally structured, which is odd, because I
- really don't seek out the "new and unusual". On the contrary, if
- anyone were to ask I'd probably say that I'm as conventional a reader
- as you're likely to find. Let me go even further. If you had itemized
- the major distinctions of these novels like this:
-
- SACRED MONSTER: You spend the whole book finding out what's happening
- on the first page.
-
- THE MEZZANINE: There's almost no plot at all, and what little plot
- there is is pretty boring.
-
- THE EIGHT: The author juggles Romance Novel characters, real
- historical figures, and an armload of puzzles, and somehow manages to
- keep all in the air at once (and for a prodigious number of pages).
-
- for me before I read them, I probably wouldn't have read them. I don't
- know about you, but these descriptions are not appealing to me. I've
- seen books like each of these descriptions, and hated them all. Except
- these. The one distinction that these three books have is that, for
- me, their authors pulled it off. Each one could be considered a vanity
- piece; the author set him(her)self a challenge, tied one hand firmly
- behind the back, and then proceeded to astonish one and all with feats
- of literary wit and daring. Stunts like this put some people off, of
- course, which is a shame. I love to see talented people stretching
- themselves, and when they manage to do something interesting and
- different with the novel form, I'm just glad I was there to enjoy it.
- And I'll be there again and again, I'm sure. All three of these books
- bear rereading, and all three I of course recommend unreservedly.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- THE MIDDLE AGES
-
- (The F & NF refer to Fiction and NonFiction.)
-
- Mont-Saint-Michel and Chartres by Henry Adams (NF)
- The Knight and Chivalry by Richard Barber (NF)
- The Penguin Guide to Medieval Europe by Richard Barber (NF)
- Art of the Middle Ages by Michael Batterberry (NF)
- The Economic Development of Medieval Europe by Robert-Henri Bautier
- (NF)
- Feudal Society by Marc Bloch (NF)
- The Women Troubadours by Meg Bogin (NF)
- The Age of Charlemagne by Donald Bullough (NF)
- Our Ancestors by Italo Calvino (F)
- War in the Middle Ages by Philippe Contamine (NF)
- Fabulous Feasts by Madeleine Cosman (NF)
- Medieval Panorama by George G. Coulton (NF)
- The Age of Faith by Will Durant (NF)
- The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco (F)
- The Rise of Christianity by W.H. Frend (NF)
- Life in a Medieval Castle by Joseph & Frances Gies (NF)
- Life in a Medieval City by Joseph & Frances Gies (NF)
- The Spire by William Golding (F)
- The Medieval World by Friedrich Heer (NF)
- Narcissus and Goldmund by Herman Hesse (F)
- The Earl by Cecelia Holland (F)
- Medieval Europe: A Short History by C. Warren Hollister (NF)
- Medieval Pageant by Bryan Holme (NF)
- Notre Dame de Paris by Victor Hugo (F)
- The Waning of the Middle Ages by Johan Huizinga (NF)
- The Pelican History of Medieval Europe by Maurice Keen (NF)
- Eleanor of Aquitaine and the Four Kings by Amy Kelly (NF)
- The Dwarf by Par Lagerkvist (F)
- The Holy Sinner by Thomas Mann (F)
- The Crusades by Hans E. Mayer (NF)
- The Golden Warrior by Hope Muntz (F)
- Destiny of Fire by Zoe Oldenbourg (F)
- Joan of Arc by Regine Pernoud (NF)
- The Bastard King by Jean Plaidy (F)
- The Stones of the Abbey by Fernand Pouillon (F)
- Medieval People by Eileen Power (NF)
- Medieval Women by Eileen Power (NF)
- The Cloister and the Hearth by Charles Reade (F)
- The Portable Medieval Reader edited by James B. Ross & Mary M.
- McLaughlin (NF)
- Everyday Life in Medieval Times by Marjorie Rowling (NF)
- Ivanhoe by Sir Walter Scott (F)
- Western Europe in the Middle Ages by Brian Tierney & Sidney Painter
- (NF)
- Kristan Lavrandsdatter by Sigrid Undset (F)
- Peter Abelard by Helen Waddell (F)
- Bird of Fire by Helen White (F)
- Medieval Technology and Social Change by Lynn White (NF)
-
- Recent Releases:
-
- KINGS & QUEENS OF EARLY BRITAIN
- by Geoffrey Ashe
- All the rulers and events, real or mythical, that are part of the rich
- tapestry of early history in Britain.
- (Academy Chicago -- April 1990)
- ISBN 0-89733-347-0 $19.95 Hardcover 300 pages
-
- AN ARTHURIAN DICTIONARY
- by Ruth Minary & Charles Moorman
- Arthurian characters, places, themes and topics from the first written
- records of early myths and legends through Sir Thomas Malory's epic
- MORTE DARTHUR.
- (Academy Chicago -- April 1990)
- ISBN 0-89733-348-9 $7.95 Paper 144 pages
-
- LIFE IN A MEDIEVAL VILLAGE
- by Frances & Joseph Gies
- (Harper & Row -- February 1990)
- ISBN 0-06-016215-5 $22.95 Hardcover
-
- CHILDHOOD IN THE MIDDLE AGES
- by Shulamith Shahar
- Routledge 400 pages $29.95 Hardcover
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- The love of reading is in part a compulsion. I am powerless to resist
- the temptation to read. I perceive the magic, wondrous power that
- reading brings, and wish that more people could share this simple
- insight.
- --Steve Allen ("DUMBTH")
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- RANDOM REVIEWS:
-
-
- WEIRD WONDERS AND BIZARRE BLUNDERS
- The Official Book of Ridiculous Records
- by Brad Schreiber
- (Meadowbrook Press, 1989)
-
- Some record books settle arguments. This one is more likely to start
- them. Are the "facts" in this book factual? An extremely limited and
- highly unscientific poll has shown that there is disagreement on this
- point. Some people point to the first chapter, "How to Get Your Record
- Published in This Book", and say, "See? I told you so." (I didn't say
- these people were brain surgeons.) Other people will point to the
- entry concerning Lena Wroclaw (of Lodz, Poland), who keeps a five-foot
- ball of earwax in her living room, and say, "Yeah. Right. Furshure."
- This is what makes communication so intellectually stimulating.
-
- There is simply no end to the fascinating information in this book.
- Take, for instance, the Most Repulsive TV Commercial Jingle. There was
- obviously a GREAT deal of competition in this category, but the
- Johnson Tire Company won with, "Buy Johnson tires. / Use your head. /
- If you buy someone else's. / You're as good as dead." A classic.
-
- In the pages of WEIRD WONDERS you'll find the true heart of modern
- culture. Has Guinness caught up with these concepts?
-
- Greatest Amount of Liposuction
- Most Annoying Street Mime
- Digital Watch with the Most Functions
- Slowest Fast-Food Restaurant
- Leather Jacket with the Most Zippers
- Longest Search for a Parking Space
-
- There's no doubt about it, WEIRD WONDERS AND BIZARRE BLUNDERS is the
- record book for the rest of us. You may not be any smarter after
- reading this book, but you'll be laughing so hard you won't care.
-
-
- SHACKLES
- by Bill Pronzini
- (St. Martin's, 1988)
-
- This is another of Pronzini's wonderful Nameless Detective stories,
- but one in which Nameless' girlfriend Kerry and partner Eberhardt have
- only walk-on roles. Indeed, SHACKLES' 245 pages is almost entirely an
- interior monologue, as Nameless copes with a level of stress that many
- of us, thankfully, will never experience.
-
- Do not assume, however, that SHACKLES is one smidgen less exciting
- than your average mystery with at least 2 unclad female beauties and
- 3.7 car chases. The first-person perspective draws the reader in as
- Nameless is abducted in early winter by an unknown (and therefore also
- Nameless) enemy, taken to a lonely mountain cabin, and chained inside
- with limited provisions. The idea, you see, is for Nameless to last
- long enough to truly appreciate his doom and to have ample opportunity
- to suffer.
-
- The psychological rigors that Nameless withstands are both believable
- and fascinating. You'll find yourself wondering, at every stage, how
- you would fare in similar circumstances--all I managed to conclude is
- that I was awfully glad this was fiction, and about someone other than
- me. Just imagine being shut up for months with only a handful of old
- pulpy paperbacks. Gives you a shiver, doesn't it?
-
- SHACKLES is a fine example of the lengths to which our good modern
- writers have been able to stretch the mystery form. Bill Pronzini
- continues to be one of our finest and most undervalued mystery
- writers.
-
- There's a new Nameless story out now: JACKPOT by Bill Pronzini,
- Delacorte, $16.95, ISBN 0-385-29895-1
-
-
- "DUMBTH"
- by Steve Allen
- (Prometheus, 1989)
-
- "Mountains of evidence--both in the form of statistical studies and
- personal testimonies--establish that the American people are suffering
- from a new and perhaps unprecedented form of mental incapacitation for
- which I have coined the word DUMBTH."
-
- If you've been thinking that people don't seem to be as smart as they
- used to be, Steve Allen says you're right. He says he's been noticing
- the encroaching "dumbth" since the early 1960s. Somewhere along the
- line we stopped caring about effective methods of thinking and stopped
- teaching them to our children. Like a contagious disease, faulty
- reasoning is overrunning our country, and if you think it hasn't made
- a difference you haven't been paying attention. We are accustomed here
- to the attitude that if things are bad HERE, just imagine how they are
- in OTHER countries, the unstated assumption being that the U.S. is
- certainly best in all things. Now we must adjust to the concept that
- the U.S. is at pretty much the bottle of the global pile in
- brainpower. Soon our national image will in include our characteristic
- stupidity (if it doesn't already).
-
- "In another instance, a teacher of juniors and seniors in a high
- school raised the question of what tribes had invaded England. Among
- the guesses were the Aztecs and the Jews."
-
- "And as of the beginning of 1989, approximately one-third of America's
- high school students could not locate the United States on a map of
- the world."
-
- But, as Steve Allen argues, it's not simply that we're ignorant of
- facts--the most dangerous aspect of dumbth is that we've lost the
- ability to reason properly. He points to the rising tide of hate-
- related violence (prejudice, in case you haven't noticed, is
- flourishing today), people who mistake actors for the characters they
- portray, and our inability to deal rationally with major issues like
- the arms race, nuclear power, capital punishment, abortion, the
- homeless, and (coming full circle) the crisis in the schoolhouse.
-
- Mr. Allen's book is divided into two sections: The Problem, where he
- provides the above-mentioned "mountains of evidence"; and The
- Solution, where he lays out his suggestions of "81 Ways to Think
- Better". Incidentally, Mr. Allen's careful use of language, which I
- found discordant and awkward in his fiction, is used to great effect
- here. The clarity and precision of his phrasing is a delight to
- read--he never overstates his case nor does he permit himself bouts of
- emotionalism. The first half of the book is an effective, logically-
- structured argument of his premise.
-
- The second half, the 81 rules, should be required reading by all
- members of every household. Some are very general, others are very
- specific, all are worthy of careful consideration. My personal
- favorite is No. 34: "Decide to continue your education until death".
- Now THOSE are words to live by. And DUMBTH could very well be the most
- important book you've ever read--don't miss it!
-
- A few excerpts:
-
- "Which of the following is true about 87 percent of 10?"
-
- (A) It is greater than 10.
- (B) It is less than 10.
- (C) It is equal to 10.
- (D) Can't tell.
-
- Half of the students tested answered the question wrong, obviously
- having failed to grasp the point that 87 percent--of anything at all--
- cannot possibly be equal to all, or 100 percent, of it."
-
- "Incidentally, readers should by no means infer that, in writing such
- a book, I am presenting myself as a supremely reasonable authority,
- any more than they should assume that a clergyman who delivers a moral
- sermon is necessarily himself saintly."
-
- "Several years ago, the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare
- hired a private consultant, Rockwell International, to find out how
- many private consultants HEW had in its employ. From an original price
- tag of $378,147 Rockwell's contract had reached a cost of $2,200,000."
-
- "A telephone receptionist for a New York publishing company,
- responding to a request to speak to an executive, said, 'He don't work
- here no more.'"
-
- "We must inculcate a respect for wisdom and not put such heavy
- emphasis on material or financial accomplishment. Man was not put on
- this earth primarily to have hit record albums, to be utterly
- irresistible to the opposite sex, to get rich by any means, however
- unethical, or to wear the tightest possible jeans. Every other society
- in history that has accomplished anything of lasting importance has
- perceived such simple truths."
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- Why don't you write books people can read?
- --Nora Joyce to her husband, James
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- MISCELLANEOUS RECENT RELEASES
-
-
- INTELLECT: Mind Over Matter by Mortimer J. Adler
- Macmillan ISBN 0-02-500350-X $16.95 Hardcover March
- Adler looks into the intellect's uniqueness, artificial intelligence
- and more.
-
- A ROMANCE OF THE EQUATOR: The Best Fantasy Stories of Brian W. Aldiss
- Atheneum ISBN 0-689-12053-2 $18.95 April
-
- UNDERCOVER OPERATIONS: A Manual For the Private Investigator
- by K.P. Anderson
- Citadel Press ISBN 0-8065-1166-4 $5.95 Paper March
-
- DO'S AND TABOOS AROUND THE WORLD by Roger E. Axtell
- Wiley ISBN 0-471-52119-1 $10.95 Paper March
-
- ROOM TEMPERATURE by Nicholson Baker
- Grove Weidenfeld ISBN 0-8021-1224-2 $16.95 April
- The author of THE MEZZANINE gives a wry view of family life while
- feeding his baby daughter.
-
- HENRY FIELDING: A Life by Martin C. Battestin with Ruthe R. Battestin
- Routledge 738 pages 65 b&w plates $45 Hardcover
- Uses newly discovered letters, manuscripts and drawings by Fielding to
- illuminate the writer's life and work.
-
- JOHN BETJEMAN'S OXFORD by Sir John Betjeman
- Oxford Univ. Press ISBN 0-19-282714-6 $13.95 Paper March
-
- CAN SUCH THINGS BE? Tales of Horror and the Supernatural by Ambrose
- Bierce
- Citadel Twilight ISBN 0-8065-0550-8 $6.95 Paper March
-
- THE COMPLETE STORIES OF ROBERT BLOCH, VOLUME 1: Final Reckonings
- by Robert Bloch
- Citadel Twilight ISBN 0-8065-1144-3 $12.95 Paper March
-
- ABROAD IN AMERICA: Literary Discoveries of the New World from the Past
- 500 Years edited by Robert Blow
- Crossroad/Continuum $21.95 April
- Includes first impressions by such figures as Charles Dickens and
- Oscar Wilde.
-
- THEY NEVER SAID IT: A Book of Fake Quotes, Misquotes, and Misleading
- Attributions by Paul F. Boller, Jr. & John George
- Oxford Univ. Press ISBN 0-19-506469-0 $6.95 Paper March
-
- THE ROLLING STONES CHRONICLE: The First Thirty Years
- by Massimo Bonanno
- Henry Holt/Owl Books $14.95 Trade Paper February
- The band's lives and careers from 1961 to the present.
-
- THE POLICE MYSTIQUE: An Insider's Look at Cops, Crime, and the
- Criminal Justice System
- by Chief Anthony V. Bouza (Ret.)
- Plenum ISBN 0-306-43464-4 $23.95 Hardcover 287 pages April
-
- DON'T WORRY, HE WON'T GET FAR ON FOOT by John Callahan
- Vintage ISBN 0-679-72824-4 $8.95 Trade Paper April
- The humorous, illustrated autobiography of a quadriplegic cartoonist.
-
- POISON IN JEST by John Dickson Carr
- Perennial ISBN 0-06-081030-0 $4.50 Mass Market Paper February
-
- ASTOUNDING DAYS: A Science Fictional Autobiography by Arthur C. Clarke
- Bantam ISBN 0-553-34822-1 $8.95 Trade Paper March
-
- GILBERT: The Man Who Was G.K. Chesterton by Michael Coren
- Paragon House ISBN 1-55778-256-3 $22.95 Hardcover March
-
- THE MAN IN LINCOLN'S NOSE: Funny, Profound and Quotable Quotes of
- Screenwriters, Movie Stars, and Moguls by Melinda Corey & George Ochoa
- Fireside ISBN 0-671-68172-9 $8.95 April
-
- BUSINESS & LEGAL FORMS FOR AUTHORS AND SELF-PUBLISHERS by Tad Crawford
- Writer's Digest ISBN 0-927629-03-8 $15.95 Paper March
-
- FLOW: The Psychology of Optimal Experience by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
- Harper & Row ISBN 0-06-016253-8 $18.95 March
- The chairman of the department of behavior sciences at the University
- of Chicago maintains that quality of life can be improved by
- controlling the information that enters our consciousness.
-
- THE BEST OF ROALD DAHL by Roald Dahl
- Vintage ISBN 0-679-72991-7 $10.95 April
-
- TALES OF THE UNEXPECTED by Roald Dahl
- Vintage ISBN 0-679-72989-5 $10.95 April
-
- THE WENCH IS DEAD: An Inspector Morse Mystery by Colin Dexter
- St. Martin's $15.95 April
- Release coincides with the telecast of the third Inspector Morse
- series on PBS.
-
- THE COLLECTED STORIES OF PHILIP K. DICK, VOLUME 1: The Short Happy
- Life of the Brown Oxford by Philip K. Dick
- Citadel Twilight ISBN 0-8065-1153-2 $12.95 Paper March
-
- WHEN HARRY MET SALLY... by Nora Ephron
- Knopf $9.95 Trade Paper February
- The screenplay of the Rob Reiner movie.
-
- SWEET WOMEN LIE: An Amos Walker Mystery by Loren D. Estleman
- Houghton Mifflin ISBN 0-395-53767-3 $18.95 Hardcover
-
- THE EDGE by Dick Francis
- Fawcett Crest $5.95 Mass Market Paperback March
-
- THE ADVENTURES OF PAUL PRY by Erle Stanley Gardner
- Mysterious $9.95 Trade Paper February
- A novel involving one of the least known characters from the creator
- of Perry Mason.
-
- HYPE AND GLORY by William Goldman
- Villard ISBN 0-394-58432-5 $19.95 Hardcover April
- An insider's look at the Cannes Film Festival and the Miss America
- Pageant--two events Goldman recently judged.
-
- THE RANDOM HOUSE DICTIONARY FOR WRITERS AND READERS by David Grambs
- Random House ISBN 0-679-72860-0 $10.95 Paper April
-
- IN A DARK DREAM by Charles L. Grant
- Tor ISBN 0-8125-1844-6 $4.95 Mass Market Paperback April
-
- THE USE AND ABUSE OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE by Robert Graves & Alan
- Hodge
- Paragon House ISBN 1-55778-317-9 $10.95 Paper April
- Presents 41 principles of clear and graceful prose.
-
- BOOK OF THE DEAD: Celebrating 25 Years with the Grateful Dead by Herb
- Greene
- Delacorte ISBN 0-385-30088-3 $29.95 Hardcover March
- Delta ISBN 0-385-29947-8 $15.95 Trade Paper March
-
- MY LIFE IN THREE ACTS by Helen Hayes with Katherine Hatch
- HBJ ISBN 0-15-163695-8 $19.95 Hardcover
- Helen Hayes speaks with wit, wisdom and candor of the people she has
- known, the private, painful aspects of her personal life, and the
- problems she sees in today's theater.
-
- CARY GRANT: The Lonely Heart by Charles Higham
- Avon $4.95 Mass Market Paperback March
-
- THE BEST OF ABBIE HOFFMAN: Selections from Revolution for the Hell of
- It, Woodstock Nation, Steal This Book, and new writings
- Four Walls Eight Windows ISBN 0-941423-27-1 $21.95 Hardcover March
-
- TAKING CHARGE OF YOUR MEDICAL FATE by Lawrence C. Horowitz, M.D.
- Ballantine $4.95 Mass Market Paperback March
- How to get the best medical care.
-
- DEVICES AND DESIRES by P.D. James
- Knopf $18.95 February
- A new detective novel featuring Commander Adam Dalgleish.
-
- AN INTRODUCTION TO ANCIENT EGYPT by T.G.H. James
- Perennial ISBN 0-06-430196-6 $17.95 January
-
- INTELLECTUALS by Paul Johnson
- Perennial ISBN 0-06-091657-5 $10.95 Trade Paper April
- Portrays people whose thoughts and actions have shaped the modern
- world: Rousseau, Shelley, Ibsen, Hemingway, Sartre, and Russell.
-
- MASQUERADE by William X. Kienzle
- Andrews and McMeel ISBN 0-8362-6126-7 $15.95 Hardcover March
- Father Robert Koesler solves the murder of a popular televangelist in
- his 12th mystery.
-
- DEAR WIT by H. Jack Lang
- Prentice Hall ISBN 0-13-961715-9 $9.95 Paper February
- A collection of nearly 250 entertaining letters from Twain, Balzac,
- Churchill, Groucho Marx and more.
-
- KILLSHOT by Elmore Leonard
- Warner ISBN 0-446-35041-9 $5.95 Mass Market Paperback April
-
- MY COUSIN, MY GASTROENTEROLOGIST by Mark Leyner
- Harmony Books ISBN 0-517-57579-5 $7.95 Trade Paper April
- A melding of cyberpunk SF with hardboiled detective stories.
-
- IN THE LAKE OF THE MOON by David L. Lindsey
- Bantam $4.95 Mass Market Paperback February
- Stuart Haydon, the Houston homicide detective, returns in this
- Edgar-nominated novel.
-
- THE BOURNE ULTIMATUM by Robert Ludlum
- Random House ISBN 0-394-58408-2 $21.95 March
- Jason Bourne comes face-to-face with his arch-nemesis Carlos in a
- battle to the death.
-
- BEN HECHT: The Man Behind the Legend by William MacAdams
- Scribners ISBN 0-684-18980-1 $24.95 Hardcover April
- Chronicles the life of the man who wrote the scripts for GONE WITH THE
- WIND and A FAREWELL TO ARMS, seven novels and six Broadway plays.
-
- BLUE WORLD by Robert R. McCammon
- Pocket Books ISBN 0-671-69518-5 $4.95 Mass Market Paperback April
-
- THE JOURNALIST AND THE MURDERER by Janet Malcolm
- Knopf $18.95 February
- Explores the relationship between author Joe McGinnis and the subject
- of his book--Jeffrey MacDonald, a doctor accused of murdering his
- family.
-
- THE VINTAGE MENCKEN by H.L. Menckman
- Vintage ISBN 0-679-72895-3 $9.95 March
-
- LITERARY OUTLAW: The Life and Times of William S. Burroughs by Ted
- Morgan
- Avon $12.95 Trade Paper April
- The outrageous life and times of the author of NAKED LUNCH.
-
- THE PLEASURES OF AGE by Robert Morley
- Mercury House $15.95 March
- The actor reflects on eight decades of growing old.
-
- THE DESIGN OF EVERYDAY THINGS by Donald A. Norman
- Doubleday $12.95 Trade Paper March
- Hardcover title was THE PSYCHOLOGY OF EVERYDAY THINGS.
-
- BURN MARKS: A V.I. Warshawski Mystery by Sara Paretsky
- Delacorte Press ISBN 0-385-29892-7 $17.95 March
-
- CAREERS FOR BOOKWORMS AND OTHER LITERARY TYPES
- Passport Books ISBN 0-8442-8618-4 $8.95 Spring 1990
- A breezy-but-serious "must" for those who seek direction for careers
- involving reading, writing, editing or research talents.
-
- JACKPOT by Bill Pronzini
- Delacorte Press ISBN 0-385-29895-1 $16.95 April
- The Nameless Detective investigates the apparent suicide of a man who
- had won $200,000 at a Lake Tahoe casino.
-
- VINELAND by Thomas Pynchon
- Little, Brown $19.95 February
- The author's first novel in 17 years introduces a group of 1980s
- Americans struggling with the sexual and political consequences of the
- 1960s.
-
- ALFRED HITCHCOCK AND THE MAKING OF PSYCHO by Stephen Rebello
- Dembner ISBN 0-942637-14-3 $24.95 March
-
- THE WRITER'S COMPLETE CRIME REFERENCE BOOK by Martin Roth
- Writer's Digest ISBN 0-89879-397-1 $19.95 Hardcover March
- Explains standard structure of a police department, surveillance
- tactics, FBI facts, courtroom procedures and more.
-
- DECEPTION by Philip Roth
- Simon & Schuster ISBN 0-671-70374-9 $18.95 April/May
- A married American writer and his affair with a married Englishwoman.
-
- KATHARINE AND E.B. WHITE: An Affectionate Memoir by Isabel Russell
- Norton ISBN 0-393-30638-0 $8.95 Trade Paper February
- The author's recollection of the eight years she spent in the White's
- home as their personal secretary.
-
- WORDS OF WISDOM by William Safire & Leonard Safir
- Fireside ISBN 0-671-69587-8 $10.95 April
-
- RULES OF PREY by John Sandford
- Berkley ISBN 0-425-12163-1 $4.95 Mass Market Paperback April
-
- THE FALL OF HYPERION by Dan Simmons
- Doubleday/Foundation ISBN 0-385-24950-0 $8.95 Trade Paper March
- ISBN 0-385-26747-9 $18.95 Hardcover March
- A sequel to HYPERION.
-
- SEX, LIES AND VIDEOTAPE by Stephen Soderbergh
- Perennial $19.95 Hardcover $10.95 Trade Paper April
- The annotated screenplay and production notes for one of 1989's most
- talked-about films.
-
- DEMON NIGHT by J. Michael Straczynski
- Berkley ISBN 0-425-12104-6 $3.95 Mass Market Paperback April
- About a son who inherits the ability to open and close the gates of
- hell, and must use his legacy to reign in demonic forces in a book
- nominated as the best new novel of 1988 by the Horror Writers of
- America.
-
- 15 SECONDS edited by Ron Tussy, Doug Menuez, & David Cohen
- Island Press ISBN 1-55963-038-8 $19.95 Trade Paper
- The definitive photojournalistic record of the October 17, 1989
- Northern California earthquake. All sales to benefit victims of the
- earthquake. 52 color and 38 black-and-white photographs.
-
- DARK SHADOWS TRIBUTE BOOK by James Van Hise & Ed Gross; edited by Hal
- Schuster
- Pioneer Books ISBN 1-55698-234-8 $14.95 Trade Paper March
-
- THE LOST IN SPACE TRIBUTE BOOK by James Van Hise
- Pioneer Books ISBN 1-55698-226-7 $14.95 Trade Paper March
-
- THE DAME by Donald E. Westlake (writing as Richard Stark)
- Foul Play Press ISBN 0-88150-157-3 $4.95 Paper March
-
- THE DAMSEL by Donald E. Westlake (writing as Richard Stark)
- Foul Play Press ISBN 0-88150-156-5 $4.95 Paper March
-
- DROWNED HOPES by Donald E. Westlake
- Mysterious Press ISBN 0-89296-178-3 $18.95 Hardcover
- Dortmunder, the bad-luck burglar, tries to recover an underwater
- stash.
-
- A DEATH BEFORE DYING: A Lt. Hastings Mystery by Collin Wilcox
- Holt ISBN 0-8050-0979-5 $17.95 Hardcover
-
- THE DARK DOOR by Kate Wilhelm
- Tudor $4.50 Mass Market Paperback March
-
- THE SKIN TRADE: Night Visions 5 introduction by Douglas E. Winter
- Berkley $4.50 Mass Market Paperback March
- Previously unpublished stories by Stephen King, Dan Simmons and George
- R.R. Martin.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- SHARING THE WEALTH
-
- One of the rewards of being a Reader is the satisfaction of sharing a
- good book with a friend. Recently Darryl and I exchanged
- recommendations, with the following result:
-
-
- THE EIGHT
- by Katherine Neville
- Ballantine, 2-1-1990, 36623, $5.95
- review by Darryl Kenning
-
- In a word -- get it!
-
- Now I do know that is really two words, but what the heck, I couldn't
- think of a punchier beginning so I used what we used to call "poetic
- license". If I hadn't gotten a strong recommendation from someone
- whose advice on book reading I treasure (Thanks Cindy!), I would not
- have even looked at a book that has a cover blurb that reads "A
- feminist answer to Raiders of the Lost Ark".
-
- Katherine has blended history, chess, mystery, adventure, alchemy, and
- more in a delicious book that had me torn between a straight-through
- read and stretching it out as long as possible. I only wish I had
- started a diagram of the characters when I started the novel. If you
- are really interested in chess or history around the 1700's the book
- will blaze with an intensity that is extraordinary. On a simple level
- KN has produced a rousingly good adventure and mystery story...but you
- will just have to read this one yourself. I don't even want to start
- talking about the story line lest I give too much away and spoil your
- enjoyment. Have at it!, and when you are finished you see if you
- believe this is a first book!
-
- rating 5 *****
- (0 = ugh, 5 = outstanding)
-
-
- PLAYMATES
- by Robert B. Parker
- (Putnam, 1989)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- There have been allegations of point shaving by a member or members of
- the Taft University basketball team, and Spenser has been hired to
- discover the truth. It doesn't take him long to find that the star
- forward, Dwayne Woodcock is the main culprit. But Spenser can't leave
- it at that, he wants to know why. Why is Dwayne taking this risk? Why
- doesn't the coach know about this, or does he? And how in the world,
- when the coach makes a particular point of requiring his team to
- maintain an extra-high grade-point average, has Dwayne managed to hide
- the fact that he can neither read nor write? Doesn't anyone at the
- school know, or care, that they are ruining his life by allowing him
- to maintain this charade?
-
- The case gets sticky and Spenser soon finds he has a price on his
- head. Not a price high enough to suit him, but sufficient to attract a
- number of low-life hitmen, and cause Spenser to enlist the aid of his
- "tough-guy buddy" (that's dust jacket talk), Hawk. Spenser's
- girlfriend is brought into the picture when he needs someone with an
- understanding of academia and illiteracy. Girlfriend Susan, in fact,
- displays a shockingly casual attitude about cancelling her classes to
- follow Spenser around. What ever happened to professional dedication?
- But never mind, that's just picking nits.
-
- One of the reasons I love mysteries is the education you get on the
- particular background that the story uses. PLAYMATES has some
- fascinating bits about teaching, illiteracy, coaching, basketball, and
- the psychology of small-time hoods. (OK, I admit I didn't follow all
- the basketball material, but then baseball is more my game.) The
- information was not only interesting, but served a Purpose, if you
- care about such things.
-
- This, by the way, is not a mystery in the classic puzzle sense, but
- more of a Private Detective Novel. Interest is aroused by the slowly
- unveiled characterization and the progress of events. You get to see
- how Spenser upsets the interaction of the characters, pushing the plot
- toward its climax. The writing has such flow, and the plot is so
- involving, PLAYMATES turns out to be one of those gobble-it-in-one-
- sitting books, a fine novel. (I see a great deal of Chandler in
- Parker, and I'm now not surprised that he got such great reviews for
- finishing Chandler's POODLE SPRINGS.)
-
- As a semi-interesting sideline, this was my first Spenser mystery,
- probably because I was less than thrilled with the TV show and I kept
- hearing from so many people (all Spenser fans) how great, and
- wonderfully true to the books, the TV show was. So how does it happen
- that I liked PLAYMATES so much? My theory is that the TV show's fans
- were mostly all familiar with the books beforehand, allowing them to
- read subtleties into the scripts that I couldn't see. I know in this
- novel I particularly enjoyed Spenser's interior monologues, little of
- which, obviously, could be squeezed into a dramatic presentation where
- you had to make time for a few Spenser/Susan gropes, a few punches
- thrown, a few bullets fired, and at least 2 or 3 car chases. I just
- bet I'd like that show a whole lot better now.
-
- PLAYMATES is now available as a mass market paperback from Berkley for
- $4.95.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- LITERARY AWARDS
-
- The 1990 John Newbery Award (for the most distinguished contribution
- to American literature for children published in 1989) went to Lois
- Lowry for NUMBER THE STARS, which was edited by Walter Lorraine and
- published by Houghton Mifflin.
-
- The 1990 Randolph Caldecott Award (for the most distinguished American
- picture book for children published in 1989) went to Ed Young for LON
- PO PO: A RED-RIDING HOOD STORY FROM CHINA, which was translated by Ed
- Young, edited by Patricia Gauch, and published by Philomel Books.
-
-
- The Barry R. Levin Collectors Awards
-
- Most Collectable Author of the Year: Salman Rushdie
- Most Collectable Book of the Year: The limited, first edition of:
- MY PRETTY PONY by Stephen King (Whitney Museum of American Art)
- Lifetime Collectors Award: Harlan Ellison (for a uniquely collectable
- body of work)
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- BACK ISSUES
-
- ELECTRONIC EDITION: Check the BBSs in the Directory first. If what
- you want isn't available, send $5 to us for disks containing ALL
- available issues. Disk will be formatted using PC/MS-DOS (for IBM
- clones). Specify 3-1/2" or 5-1/4" floppy, high or low density.
-
- PRINT EDITION: Send $1.50 for each issue requested.
-
- Checks: Make checks payable to Cindy Bartorillo.
-
- Address: Reading For Pleasure, c/o Cindy Bartorillo, 1819 Millstream
- Drive, Frederick, MD 21701. On CompuServe leave a message to
- 74766,1206. On GEnie leave a message to C.BARTORILLO. Best of all,
- call our BBS, The Baudline II at 301-694-7108 (1200-9600 baud HST)
- where all RFPs are available for downloading on your first call.
-
- ISSUES AVAILABLE:
-
- #1: Premier issue: 1988 World Fantasy Awards; Books I'm Supposed to
- Like, But Don't; Pronunciation Guide to Author's Names; Christie
- Characters on Film; Featured Author: Richard Matheson; Baseball &
- Cricket Mysteries; Stephen King Checklist; Time Travel Books
-
- #2: Summer Reading Issue: Award Winners & Nominees; Beach Bag Books;
- Featured Author: Stanley Ellin; Splatterpunk; Murderous Vacations; The
- Psychology of Everyday Things; The Shining; SF Fan-Lingo; Pseudonyms
-
- #3: Books About Books Issue: Two-Bit Culture; Christopher Morley; 84
- Charing Cross Road; Assorted References; Bibliomysteries; Deep Quarry;
- Featured Author: Harlan Ellison
-
- #4: Hollywood Issue: Recent Awards; About Hollywood; Silver Scream;
- Death of a Salesman; Joe Bob Briggs; The Hollywood Mystery; Featured
- Author: Fredric Brown; The Dark Fantastic; Darryl Kenning Reviews
-
- #5: Halloween Issue: Hugo Awards; Year's Best Horror Stories XVII;
- Tracy Kidder; Supernatural Mysteries; Thomas Harris; Falling Angel
- Heart; Ray Garton; New From Underwood-Miller; Featured Author: Robert
- R. McCammon; The Modern Halloween Shelf; Darryl Kenning Reviews; The
- Ultimate Stephen King Character Quiz
-
- #6: Computers & Robots Issue: 1989 World Fantasy Award Nominations;
- Donald M. Grant, Publisher; Cyberpunk & Neuromancer; Computer Books;
- Digital Delights; Nightmare On Elm Street, The Comic; Banned Books;
- Featured Author: Josephine Tey; Mystery Terminology; Darryl Kenning
- Reviews; Books On A Chip; New From Carroll & Graf; Computer Cowboy
- Reading; and the usual
-
- #7: Happy Holidays Issue: New From Carroll & Graf; Featured Author:
- Charles Dickens; A Christmas Carol; Religious Reading; An Incomplete
- Education; Great Endings; New From Simon & Schuster; New From
- Underwood-Miller; Christmas Mysteries and Other Yuletide Reading; On
- Line With Steve Gerber; The Last Christmas Trivia Quiz; and the usual
-
- #8: True Crime Issue: New Age Books; Amazing Stories; True Crim in
- Paperback; Steve Gerber; Bluffers Guides; The Onion Field; Mysterious
- Press; Lizzie Borden; John E. Stith; Darryl Kenning; Bestselling
- Children's Books; Awards; Carroll & Graf; and more
-
- #9: Time Travel Issue: Bestsellers of the Christmas Season; Obscenity
- Ruling Reversed; The Turner Tomorrow Awards; Roc Books; Carroll &
- Graf; Meadowbrook; Time Passes For Baby Boomers; Darryl Kenning; Time
- Travel Reading List; Simon & Schuster; Featured Author: Jack Finney;
- Reviews; and all the usual
-
- #10: Earth Day Issue: The one you're reading now.
-
- #11: ???????: Should be out the beginning of June.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-