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-
- **************************************************************
- * *
- * R E A D I N G F O R P L E A S U R E *
- * *
- * Issue #19 *
- * October/November 1991 *
- * *
- * *
- * Editor: Cindy Bartorillo *
- * *
- * Reviews by: Cindy & Drew Bartorillo, Howard Frye, *
- * Carl Ingram, Darryl Kenning, Janet Peters, Robert *
- * Pittman, Peter Quint, Carol Sheffert, Annie Wilkes, *
- * Robert Willis *
- * *
- **************************************************************
-
- CONTACT US AT: Reading For Pleasure, 103 Baughman's Lane, Suite 303,
- Frederick, MD 21702; 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. This electronic edition is free, but print editions
- cost $2 each for printing and postage.
-
- **************************
-
- 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.
-
- Academia Pomono, NJ Ken Tompkins 609-652-4914
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-
- RFP Home Board (all issues available all the time):
- Baudline II Frederick,MD the Bartorillo's 301-694-7108
- (RFPs downloadable on first call; 9600 HST)
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- Any board that participates in the RelayNet (tm) email system can
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- NOTE: Back issues on CompuServe may have been moved to a different
- library.
-
- **************************
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
- Editorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119
- 1991 Readercon Small Press Awards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 151
- Mainstream Fiction Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175
- Murder By The Book (Mystery Fiction Reviews) . . . . . . . . 581
- Loosen Your Grip On Reality (SF&F Reviews) . . . . . . . . . 1360
- Frightful Fiction (Horror Reviews) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2322
- Nonfiction Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3259
- Computer Corner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4253
-
- **************************
-
- EDITORIAL
-
- Here's our third annual Halloween Issue, and it sure is a big one,
- isn't it? A lot of great books have arrived here at RFP central, and
- our roving readers have dug up a few more, so there are lots and lots
- of titles for you to pick from. Hope you find some worthwhile
- suggestions.
-
- Don't hesitate to write to us, either electronically (on CompuServe,
- GEnie, or our home BBS, The Baudline II) or by regular post (Reading
- For Pleasure, 103 Baughman's Lane, Suite 303, Frederick, MD 21702). We
- really appreciate hearing from you, whether it's with suggestions,
- questions, or material suitable for including in RFP. If you do submit
- material for inclusion (a book list, a review, etc.), please state
- specifically that it is OK to print your material in a future edition
- of RFP. We don't use contracts, but we'd still like to be on safe
- legal ground.
-
- Our second favorite thing to get in the mail (after books) is news. We
- love to hear about new books that are being written or about to be
- published. Nobody here at RFP has an inside track in the book
- industry; we have to pick up our news in the back alleys like everyone
- else. So if you've got a book coming out, please drop us a note so we
- can pass the word along. Be sure to let us know what it is, when it'll
- show up, and where we can get it. (There is nothing in the world worse
- than a great-sounding book that you can't get your hands on.)
-
- Have a safe and spooky Halloween, and we'll see you again in RFP's
- Holidays Issue, being released December 1, 1991.
-
- **************************
-
- 1991 READERCON SMALL PRESS AWARDS
-
- Novel: RED SPIDER, WHITE WEB by Misha (Morrigan)
- Magazine (Fiction): JOURNAL WIRED edited by Mark Ziesing & Andy
- Watson
- Magazine (Nonfiction): NEW YORK REVIEW OF SCIENCE FICTION edited by
- David Hartwell et al.
- Magazine Design: JOURNAL WIRED designed by Andy Watson
- Collection: THE BRAINS OF RATS by Michael Blumlein (Scream/Press)
- Anthology: WHEN THE BLACK LOTUS BLOOMS edited by Elizabeth Saunders
- (Unnameable Press)
- Value in Bookcraft: SLOW DANCING THROUGH TIME edited by Gardner
- Dozois (Ursus/Ziesing)
- Short Work: ENTROPY'S BED AT MIDNIGHT by Dan Simmons (Lord John
- Press)
- Reprint: THE ATROCITY EXHIBITION by J.G. Ballard (Re/Search)
- Nonfiction: ACROSS THE WOUNDED GALAXIES by Larry McCaffrey (Univ. of
- Illinois Press)
- Jacket Illustration: H.R. GIGER'S BIOMECHANICS by H.R. Giger
- (Morpheus Int.)
- Interior Illustrations: H.R. GIGER'S BIOMECHANICS by H.R. Giger
- (Morpheus Int.)
- **************************
-
- MAINSTREAM FICTION REVIEWS
-
-
- BOY'S LIFE
- by Robert R. McCammon
- (Pocket Books, August 1991, $21.95, ISBN 0-671-74226-4)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- "No one," Mrs. Neville whispered, "ever grows up...They
- may look grown-up...but it's a disguise. It's just the
- clay of time. Men and women are still children deep in
- their hearts. They still would like to jump and play, but
- that heavy clay won't let them. They'd like to shake off
- every chain the world's put on them, take off their
- watches and neckties and Sunday shoes and return naked to
- the swimming hole, if just for one day. They'd like to
- feel free, and know that there's a momma and daddy at home
- who'll take care of things and love them no matter what.
- Even behind the face of the meanest man in the world is a
- scared little boy trying to wedge himself into a corner
- where he can't be hurt."
-
- If you'd like to recapture the magic of childhood, you couldn't do any
- better than Robert McCammon's latest novel, BOY'S LIFE. (Also check
- out SUMMER OF NIGHT by Dan Simmons, reviewed in this issue's Frightful
- Fiction section.) Up till now, McCammon's stories have been solidly
- within the Horror genre, but BOY'S LIFE refuses to be constrained by
- any category and wanders the entire depth and breadth of the life of
- one 12-year-old boy in 1964 Alabama. Interestingly, McCammon has used
- his familiar palette to paint this original and distinctive picture:
- within BOY'S LIFE you will find murder, monsters, voodoo, and zombies.
- And yet all of this fits easily in the world of childhood--there are
- no discordant notes.
-
- Cory Mackenson is accompanying his father as he delivers milk to the
- inhabitants of Zephyr, Alabama, when a car jumps across the road in
- front of them and falls into the bottomless hole that is Saxon's Lake.
- Cory's father swims to save the driver of the car, only to find that
- the driver is already dead and is naked, hideously beaten, has a piano
- cord around his neck, and is handcuffed to the steering wheel. When
- the local sheriff can find no one missing, nor anyone who knows
- somebody with a tattoo like the dead man had, the case is dropped. But
- it is not forgotten by Cory, who has the only clue to the murderer: a
- green feather. Nor is it forgotten by Cory's father, who is being
- consumed by bad dreams. As he tells Cory:
-
- "When I was your age, I wanted to believe I lived in a
- magic town...where nothin' bad could ever happen. I wanted
- to believe everyone was kind, and good, and just. I wanted
- to believe hard work was rewarded, and a man stood on his
- word. I wanted to believe a man was a Christian every day
- of the week, not just Sunday, and that the law was fair
- and the politicians wise and if you walked the straight
- path you found that peace you were searchin' for...There
- never was such a place," my father said. "There never will
- be."
-
- During the year covered by BOY'S LIFE there will be comedy and
- tragedy, wonderment and pain, all the colors that life comes in. There
- are at least half a dozen characters that are simply unforgettable.
- The best description of BOY'S LIFE is given by one of the characters
- within it: Vernon, a rich man's son and failed writer describes his
- one completed novel:
-
- "It was the flow and the voices, the little day-to-day
- things that make up the memory of living. It meandered
- like the river, and you never knew where you were going
- until you got there, but the journey was sweet and deep
- and left you wishing for more."
-
- Robert McCammon is a master storyteller and BOY'S LIFE is his finest
- novel to date. The opportunity to spend 1964 with Cory Mackenson, his
- parents, his friends, and the other inhabitants of Zephyr, Alabama, is
- not to be missed. Highly recommended.
-
- NOTE: A recent article in Publishers Weekly states that Robert
- McCammon is currently either writing or outlining his next TEN books.
- His last novel, MINE, recently won the Bram Stoker Award for Novel
- from the Horror Writers of America. Reviewed in RFP #14, MINE is a
- terrific suspense thriller about two women who were politically active
- in the sixties. One became a yuppie, the other's unbalanced mind leads
- her to kidnap the yuppie's newborn baby. Fast paced and exciting.
-
- **************************
-
- THE FIRM
- by John Grisham
- (Doubleday, 1991)
- review by Robert Pittman
-
- This is a gripping story of suspense and intrigue written by a
- practicing lawyer, John Grisham who is a criminal defense attorney in
- Mississippi. He also has political experience having served two terms
- in the Mississippi House of Representatives. His professional
- background is evident in the quality and style of his writing and
- lends authenticity to a tale that demands reader attention and
- guarantees reward.
-
- The "Firm" is Bendine, Lambert & Locke, a small, very rich, very
- private tax law firm located in Memphis, Tennessee. It infrequently
- recruits new lawyers to its staff, but when it does, it goes for the
- best. The principal character in the story is Mitchell McDeere who has
- been a hard working, dedicated student at Harvard Law School and is
- about to graduate third in his class and take a job with a large,
- prestigious law firm in Wall Street. Bendine, Lambert & Locke
- aggressively recruit Mitch, and on his interview visit to Memphis, he
- is immediately taken with the operation of the group and the qualities
- of the partners and associates. The firm demands total commitment and
- long working hours, but young lawyers are paid well (including a new
- BMW as a starting bonus) and the pathway to partnership is short for
- those who produce.
-
- Mitch's wife Abby, who has been a loyal supporter throughout his years
- in law school, joins in the decision to accept the Memphis job. She
- has an uneasy feeling about the generosity of the employment offer and
- the implied excessive demands on Mitch's future time, but both feel
- that they can cope with most anything for a year or so as Mitch earns
- his place among the associates.
-
- His first few months at the firm are uneventful except for the quick
- discovery that security at the firm is unusually strict. There is a
- large, round the clock security staff of rough, tough characters who
- function in a dictatorial and militaristic manner. He also learns that
- certain physical areas of the office are closed to most of the staff
- for security reasons. His concerns about this are sublimated to his
- desire to excel and his struggle to cope with the demands of work
- which increase and become more complex daily. Sixteen hour days and
- twelve hour weekends are rapidly becoming his normal schedule.
-
- The story accelerates and the intrigue is heightened on a day during
- his lunch break when Mitch is approached by a man who identifies
- himself as an FBI agent. As they walk along the street together, the
- agent tells him that his law firm is not legitimate. It is a front for
- money transport and money laundering and is owned and operated by
- organized crime figures. Mitch is shocked and unbelieving but the
- agent presses his case as he explains that he leads a team that has
- been investigating Bendine, Lambert & Locke and that until recently,
- two of the senior lawyers were providing him with inside information
- necessary for indictments. Regrettably, both were killed in a boating
- "accident." The agent needs a new inside source and Mitch is the
- chosen one. Mitch's doubtful attitude is erased when the FBI shows him
- that his telephone is tapped, his house is bugged, and even his BMW
- carries a transmitter linked to the firm's security office. Mitch is
- in danger within the firm if he cooperates, and if he does not
- cooperate, he is party to a criminal enterprise and will eventually
- face felony charges.
-
- With wiser eyes, it does not take long for Mitch to verify that his
- firm is deep into evil doings and that the partners are murderous
- connivers who amass their great fortune in serving the criminal
- organization. His dilemma is that becoming an FBI informant puts his
- life and Abby's life at risk and failing to do so puts their future at
- risk.
-
- Mitch and Abby become a clever team in dealing with the two forces
- between which their present and their future is trapped. Youth and
- inexperience often take them to the brink of disaster, but they are
- fast learners, resourceful, and creative as they do battle with the
- firm, satisfy the demands of the FBI and plot for themselves a secure
- and safe future.
-
- THE FIRM is good reading! An adventure with innovative and surprising
- twists and turns all leading to a comfortable, satisfying ending.
-
- **************************
-
- GENUINE LIES
- by Nora Roberts
- (Bantam Fanfare, September 1991, $4.99, ISBN 0-553-29078-9)
- review by Janet Peters
-
- Author Nora Roberts, the winner of numerous romance writing awards and
- first inductee into the Romance Writers of America Hall of Fame,
- displays her narrative talents once again in GENUINE LIES. It's part
- contemporary romance, part Hollywood saga, part mystery.
-
- Eve Benedict is an aging superstar of the silver screen who has been a
- major Hollywood player for almost 50 years. Her marriages, feuds, and
- affairs have been the highlight of many gossip columns. But now Eve's
- decided to reveal all her secrets, push the lies aside and tell the
- whole truth to Julia Summers, the writer whom Eve has chosen to
- produce her biography. Julia is a single mother who has poured her
- heart into motherhood and her career for too many years and has built
- a tidy and safe world for herself and her son Brandon. Eve's stepson
- Paul threatens Julia's tidy world--he is instantly attracted to Julia,
- but is desperately against the projected biography.
-
- There are other people who are against the publication of Eve's
- biography, people who have secrets they don't want revealed: friends,
- ex-husbands, ex-lovers, current lovers. GENUINE LIES is all about
- secrets--sometimes they serve a purpose, sometimes they are a
- destructive force. Will Eve tell Julia everything? Will Julia print
- everything? Or will some nervous element from Eve's past prevent the
- biography from ever reaching a publisher? GENUINE LIES is an exciting
- and satisfying story--also great fun.
-
- **************************
-
- THUNDER OF EREBUS
- by Payne Harrison
- (Crown Publishers, 1991)
- review by Robert Pittman
-
- Mount Erebus, we learn from this book, is a volcanic mountain located
- on Ross Island in the Antarctica. It is close to an exploratory
- drilling site at a U.S. base on the Ross Island ice shelf where
- scientific teams from Russia and the U.S. are engaged in a joint
- venture. In carrying out their mission, they share equally in the
- scientific effort and the scientific discovery. While many projects
- are under way as part of this joint venture, the principal undertaking
- involves drilling through the ice shelf into the lava beds below and
- beyond that into the geological history of the Antarctica land mass.
-
- The story takes place a few years in the future. Gorbachev has been
- displaced as the leader of Russia but some of his initiatives have
- survived. The Russian society is more open and there is more interface
- with the international community. Military power, however, has enjoyed
- a resurgence and has again become the dominant force in government.
- Relations between the two superpowers are cordial, but each is very
- cautious about guarding its ability to protect its own interests.
-
- As the summer season in the Antarctica draws to a close, the
- scientific team packs up and begins its annual departure, leaving
- behind a small guardian force to sustain the base during the long,
- inhospitable winter. A final core sample is taken from the drilling
- site, divided between the Russians and the Americans and off it goes
- for study and analysis at home. That action triggers a conflict
- between Russia and the U.S. which is told with a spellbinding
- technique and breathtaking suspense that almost precludes putting down
- the book until it is finished.
-
- When the core sample is examined, it is found to be composed of the
- carnallite mineral which contains a large amount of the rubidium-96
- isotope. This isotope, which is rare, has been successfully used by
- the U.S. in an experimental strategic missile defense system based on
- graser energy. Full application of the graser could yield a capability
- that equals the power of atomic weapons without the problem of
- fall-out and radio-active contaminants. To the Americans, it would be
- the ultimate conventional weapon for controlling and defending the
- Persian Gulf area so critical to a world in which oil supplies are so
- precious.
-
- A successful, ongoing espionage program made the Russians aware of the
- graser experiments and they also understand the American need for
- additional supplies of rubidium-96. The Russians want access to the
- Persian Gulf oil as sources in Russia too are falling short of demand
- and they have no counter to the development of graser weaponry as
- there is no source of the rubidium-96 isotope in Russian territory.
- Thus the stage is set for a reluctant but desperate conflict between
- the two superpowers.
-
- The Russian leaders conclude that America will not share access to the
- source of rubidium-96 with them, and that they must have the isotope
- in order to maintain their relative position in the international
- community. Their choice then, is to forcibly take over the Antarctica
- base and defend it from an American counterattack for the ten to
- twelve weeks which they will need to mine the source and take home
- enough mineral to provide them a supply of rubidium-96.
-
- From that point on the reader is locked into an awesome battle which
- the author stages in a series of "short clips" that transpose the
- reader directly into the action and into the elements creating the
- action. We become part of each side in the conflict and feel that we
- have a presence with each battle group - from submarines to air crews
- to the high-tech troops operating on the ground. It is an exciting way
- to tell the story and leaves the reader with a vivid impression of
- having been directly involved.
-
- The conflict does not end quickly. It is a true tug of war
- demonstrating that both the Russians and the Americans have competent
- military leaders and a surprising array of tools to support their
- campaigns. They are also subject to mistakes, to faulty information,
- and at times are profoundly affected by the forces of nature. It is a
- costly conflict for both nations. The price in lives, in resources and
- in individual ambitions is great. While the entire world suffers some
- penalty from this war, positive lessons do emerge if humanity is alert
- enough to find them.
-
- The final signature to this story is written by Mother Nature as Mount
- Erebus adds a small hiccup to the grand designs of humankind.
-
- **************************
-
- GLITTERBUG
- by Tony Kenrick
- (Carroll & Graf, October 1991, $18.95, ISBN 0-88184-748-8)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Carroll & Graf demonstrate once again why they are one of my favorite
- publishers--studying their catalog always gets me books that are not
- only great, but that I would never have known about otherwise. (Write
- to Carroll & Graf, 260 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10001 and see if
- they'll send you a catalog too.) GLITTERBUG is one more terrific novel
- that I have C&G to thank for, and I bet you'll like it too.
- (Apparently various Hollywood types liked it, because it's been bought
- by Tri-Star Pictures to be made into a Bruce Willis movie.)
-
- In the opening pages of GLITTERBUG, Jerry Parrish wakes up in a
- hospital with total amnesia. He doesn't remember who he is or how he
- got there. Jerry learns from the doctor that he was in a serious
- automobile accident and required brain surgery. He also finds out that
- he was a skip tracer, someone who finds people who have run away from
- their debts or other responsibilities. And he was very, very good at
- it--he frequently had these unexplainable hunches that almost always
- worked out. At least this is what people are telling Jerry; he has no
- memory of his job at all.
-
- After his body heals, Jerry returns to his job and discovers that he
- is, indeed, very good at finding people. But there are more ominous
- notes in his brand new world: Why does a stranger on the street call
- him Jack? How did a skip tracer get so competent in hand-to-hand
- combat? Why does he prefer chicken when his girlfriend says he prefers
- beef? As his reality becomes fluid, Jerry is in for some shocks and
- the reader is in for a very exciting trip. There's not much more I can
- say about the plot without giving away some of the many, many
- surprises. GLITTERBUG is one of those thrilling stories that proceed
- at breakneck pace and keep you up all night trying to finish it in one
- sitting. If you like thrills and surprises, you really shouldn't miss
- GLITTERBUG.
- **************************
-
- CALLING HOME
- by Michael Cadnum
- (Viking, 1991, $14.95, ISBN 0-670-83566-8)
- review by Janet Peters
-
- "Impersonating the dead is easy"--so begins this young adult novel by
- the author of such disturbing books as NIGHTLIGHT, SLEEPWALKER, and
- SAINT PETER'S WOLF (reviewed, respectively, in RFP #12, #16, #18). The
- dead referred to is Mead, and the impersonator is his best friend
- Peter. Everyone believes that Mead has simply disappeared, run away
- for reasons of his own. Only Peter knows that Mead is dead, and that
- Peter himself is responsible. Mead's parents are distraught, Peter is
- truly worried about the father's poor health, so to relieve their
- anxiety, Peter calls them pretending to be Mead, just to tell them not
- to worry. Peter is certain that telling the truth would just make
- things worse. But now Peter learns what it's like to live with an
- adult burden. Cadnum catches the feel of adolescence wonderfully, and
- his moving portrayal of Peter's anguish makes CALLING HOME another
- disturbing tale by a great new(ish) talent.
-
- **************************
-
- DREAM BABY
- by Bruce McAllister
- (Tor, October 1991, $4.99, ISBN 0-812-51098-4)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- Mary Damico, a nurse on the front lines in Vietnam, begins to have
- dreams--nightmares--about the fatally wounded soldiers she's working
- to save, dreams that tell her about the soldiers' past, hopes and
- fears. Nightmares are not unusual in combat, but the day after HER
- nightmare, the soldier from her dream is brought into her unit. She
- sees the terrible wounds. She hears the screams and cries and watches
- him die AGAIN.
-
- The CIA in Vietnam is very interested in people like Mary. They
- collect stories about soldiers who always seem to know where the
- booby-traps are; soldiers who know where the snipers are going to fire
- from; nurses who know in advance who is going to die. The CIA wants to
- know how these powers work--and they want to use those who have them
- to change the course of history.
-
- **************************
-
- THE FIRST MAN IN ROME
- by Colleen McCullough
- (Avon, August 1991, $6.95, ISBN 0-380-71081-1)
- review by Darryl Kenning
-
- A paperback book 1,076 pages is enough to intimidate almost anyone.
- Don't let that happen to you. THE FIRST MAN IN ROME is a lively,
- readable account of Rome during the last few decades of being a
- republic. A number of the names will be familiar to anyone with a
- basic education in western civilization, names like Sulla, Gaius
- Julius Caesar, Gaius Marius and the like. But don't get confused by
- the Caesar names since this is also a story of the relationships
- between the families of the men we learned about in school.
-
- "Rich tapestry" as a description of a novel has come to be a bit
- shopworn with overuse, and yet it is an uncannily descriptive phrase
- for this book. Colleen McCullough has written a number of other highly
- successful books so far including THE THORN BIRDS. This gargantuan
- novel will certainly embellish her reputation. I found the book
- eminently readable in spite of the length. The characters seem more
- human than the Roman legends usually come off in historical novels of
- the period. The book seems enormously well researched and the flavor
- of government, in all it's venality and sleaze in the day to day
- workings with real people comes booming through.
-
- I really enjoyed this book and think you will too. I recommend it
- though if your one of those folks who has a hard time putting down a
- book to take care of your day-to-day commitments you'd better be sure
- you can take a week or so off.
-
- Kenning Quotient (KQ) = 4 (0=rotten, 5=best)
-
- **************************
-
- * THE STAND-IN, a psychological thriller by Deborah Moggach (Little,
- Brown) about the tangled lives and destinies of a movie star and her
- stand-in, has been purchased for a theatrical production. The two lead
- roles will both be played by Anjelica Huston.
-
-
- #:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#
- # MURDER BY THE BOOK #
- #:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#
-
- editor: Cindy Bartorillo
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- Murder By The Book is a division of Reading For Pleasure, published
- bimonthly. This material is NOT COPYRIGHTED and may be used freely by
- all. Catalogs, news releases, review copies, or donated reviews should
- be sent to: Reading For Pleasure, 103 Baughman's Lane, Suite 303,
- Frederick, MD 21702.
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- A COUNTRY OF OLD MEN
- The Last Dave Brandstetter Mystery
- by Joseph Hansen
- (Viking, May 1991, $17.95, ISBN 0-670-83826-8)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Well, here it is--the book that so many fans never wanted to see--the
- last Dave Brandstetter mystery. Dave is the insurance investigator
- (now retired) whose adventures we've followed over the course of
- twelve novels and 21 years. It is also the series of books that taught
- many of us what it means to be a homosexual in America. As Joseph
- Hansen himself explains,
-
- "Dave is nearing seventy, and has been sensing his
- flagging energies for some time. The price a writer pays
- for letting a character age naturally is that, as in real
- life, the moment comes when they must say good-bye."
-
- In this last story, Dave is called out of retirement to solve the
- mystery presented by a small child with a large bruise on his face. He
- says he was kidnapped by a woman named Rachel. Zach had been hiding
- around an apartment development at night when, hearing gunshots, he
- ran around a corner and found this woman standing over a body holding
- a gun. She took him at gunpoint so he couldn't tell anyone what he had
- seen, but he finally managed to escape toward morning. Dave learns
- that the murdered man was Cricket Shales, a rock guitarist and junkie
- who was just released from jail. Rachel was his former girlfriend, and
- it was outside her apartment that Cricket died.
-
- The cast of suspects all agree that Rachel, who now can't be found,
- would never do such a thing. She's such a gentle person. They are all
- fond enough of Rachel to protect her, and they all have good motives
- for killing Cricket. And they're ALL telling lies. Dave Brandstetter
- must sort through the facts and fallacies and piece together the story
- of Rachel and Cricket and little Zach. Along the way the reader is
- treated to some of the most elegant spare prose to be found in the
- mystery section of the bookstore. I was very taken with a passage
- about Dave's reaction to a good friend with AIDS. Dave has driven over
- to talk to his long-time friend Ray, who has been living with another
- good friend who is now in the final stages of AIDS. Dave hadn't known
- until he sees the man carried upstairs to his bedroom. His reaction,
- and the ONLY words about the illness at all, are in this paragraph:
-
- "Dave turned away, went out through the open door, and
- stood on the porch, back turned to the hallway, waiting
- for Ray. He didn't see the trees, the sky, the lawn-mower
- jockey, the passing traffic. Something was wrong with his
- eyes."
-
- Joseph Hansen is still alive and writing, and is now working on a new
- series of novels based on his own life and times. To help you complete
- your collection and have all 12 Dave Brandstetter mysteries on your
- shelf, here's a list of them all:
-
- Fadeout
- Death Claims
- Troublemaker
- The Man Everybody Was Afraid Of
- Skinflick
- Gravedigger
- Nightwork
- The Little Dog Laughed
- Early Graves
- Obedience
- The Boy Who Was Buried This Morning
- A Country of Old Men
-
- **************************
-
- DARK CRIMES
- Great Noir Fiction from the '40s to the '90s
- edited by Ed Gorman
- (Carroll & Graf, September 1991, $21.95, ISBN 0-88184-699-6)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- "Noir" fiction is aptly named, "dark" being appropriate for the tone
- of such stories, the perspective, and frequently the setting. Noir
- fiction is suffused with a bleak or cynical attitude that suits a
- character living in a one-room cockroach-infested apartment in a city
- slum, sitting up at 2:30 AM staring at what's left of a bottle of
- Scotch. It's also fitting that this category is known by a French
- word. Though noir is an American invention that was nurtured in the
- 1940s in the pulp magazines, and later translated into Hollywood
- films, the genre has always been best appreciated by the French. Noir
- fiction is basically a subgenre of the crime story, and Ed Gorman has,
- in the pages of DARK CRIMES, provided a fascinating overview of noir
- past and present.
-
- There are two short novels included here: my favorite is THE RED SCARF
- by Gil Brewer, about an average man down on his luck who winds up with
- a whole suitcase full of mob money. He thinks he'll be able to keep
- both the money and his skin. What do you think? The other novel is
- ANATOMY OF A KILLER by Peter Rade, about a hired gun whose careful
- life is coming unraveled. Some 19 short stories fill out the rest of
- this hefty volume, most of which are superb. I particularly like Evan
- Hunter's "On the Sidewalk Bleeding", the title of which refers to a
- young member of an urban street gang. And then there's "Souls Burning"
- by Bill Pronzini, packing an extraordinary amount of emotion into a
- very small package (notice to fans: It's a "Nameless" story). I also
- enjoyed Karl Edward Wagner's "But You'll Never Follow Me", with its
- last line that lingers. "Dust to Dust" by Marcia Muller is about the
- traces that events leave behind them, and is as wonderful as all of
- her stories are. And I also liked F. Paul Wilson's "Faces", a
- disturbing story about the emotionally wounded.
-
- Then there's an ingenious Amos Walker story by Loren D. Estleman, "The
- Crooked Way"; the grisly "Hot Eyes, Cold Eyes" by Lawrence Block"; an
- emotionally satisfying story by Edward Bryant called "While She Was
- Out"; the haunting story, "The Seventh Grave" by Vann Anson Lister;
- the ambiguous "A Handgun for Protection" by John Lutz; "Exit" by
- Andrew Vachss, an ugly short-short; a touching story by editor Ed
- Gorman, "Deathman"; "The Tunnel of Love", a typically ghoulish treat
- from Robert Bloch; William Relling's tiny slice of psychopathology,
- "Tony"; the gothic "By the Hair of the Head" by Joe R. Lansdale; a Ms.
- Tree story from Max Allan Collins called "Red Light"; the mythic
- "Taking the Night Train" by Thomas F. Monteleone; the comically
- horrible "Stoner" by William F. Nolan; Robert J. Randisi's
- "Night-Walker", a dark piece of comeuppance.
-
- DARK CRIMES is both an introduction/overview of noir fiction, and a
- gripping collection of stories by some of the finest writers of the
- last 50 years. Just take a look at the authors represented. What a
- lineup! DARK CRIMES now has a place of honor on my shelves right
- beside my Cornell Woolrich collection.
-
- **************************
-
- THE PERFECT MURDER
- Five Great Mystery Writers Create the Perfect Crime
- by Jack Hitt with Lawrence Block, Sarah Caudwell, Tony Hillerman,
- Peter Lovesey, Donald E. Westlake
- (HarperCollins, 1991, $18.95, ISBN 0-06-016340-2)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- THE PERFECT MURDER is more of a novelty than a novel. It all started
- with Jack Hitt who created a character called Tim. It seems that Tim
- was a young man with no talents and no prospects, but who managed to
- make himself agreeable enough to marry a lady of great wealth. Now his
- wife is having another affair, this time with his best friend, and Tim
- has had enough (of his wife, that is, not of her money). Tim wants to
- murder his wife and frame his best friend for the crime. Since Tim is
- still without noticeable talents of any kind, he writes to five of the
- best murder-plotters to ask for their guidance. THE PERFECT MURDER was
- the result.
-
- The five suggested courses for Tim to take couldn't have been more
- varied in particulars or in tone. Donald Westlake's clever strategies
- are presented with a cheerful friendliness, while Peter Lovesey's
- enthusiastic recommendations are theatrical and comical. Tony
- Hillerman reverts to classical methods with a no-nonsense efficiency,
- and Sarah Caudwell's proposal is nothing short of a Scottish costume
- drama. Finally, Lawrence Block's response is shockingly cynical,
- condescending, and grisly. After the replies are all in, Tim writes to
- the five a second time, letting each one see the others suggestions,
- and asking for professional criticism. The five dutifully turn on each
- other with varying amounts of crankiness and glee, and then the party
- is over. I'm not sure that any genuine breakthroughs were made in the
- academic subject of murder, but a good time was had by all, including
- the reader. THE PERFECT MURDER is great fun.
-
- **************************
-
- BAYOU CITY SECRETS
- A Hollis Carpenter Mystery
- by Deborah Powell
- (Naiad Press, 1991, $8.95, ISBN 0-941483-91-6)
- review by Carol Sheffert
-
- The first novel by Deborah Powell and the first mystery of what is to
- be a series, BAYOU CITY SECRETS reminds me mostly of the stories of
- Raymond Chandler. The same hard-boiled detecting, the same political
- corruption, the same unprincipled rich people, the same general time
- frame, the same wry humor and hard truths. Well, there ARE a few
- differences. For one thing, our detective Hollis Carpenter is a
- journalist covering crime in 1936 Houston, not a California private
- eye. For another thing, Hollis is a woman. For a third thing, Hollis
- is a lesbian.
-
- BAYOU CITY SECRETS opens with Hollis being taken off her normal crime
- reporting and assigned to cover the centennial celebrations in Dallas
- and Houston. A naturally bristly personality not given to compromise,
- Hollis quits. As she puts it,
-
- "It is a physical impossibility for me to write about who
- designed Miss Edwina Snott's dress that she wore last
- Thursday night to the very chic party given by Mrs. Rear
- End in honor of Mr. Peg Leg who is in town visiting his
- fiancee Miss Jug Butt. I cannot do it."
-
- After that, strange events take over her life. The owner of the paper,
- the very rich Andrew Delacroix, invites Hollis to dinner to persuade
- her to go back to the paper and cover the centennial. Other than
- introducing Hollis to Andrew's fantastically beautiful wife Lily, the
- evening is a waste of time for everyone. Then Hollis' apartment in
- broken into. Then her cop friend Tony is murdered. And someone keeps
- following her in a green Chevrolet. After another murder or two, the
- police want to know why she keeps showing up around dead bodies. Brand
- new dead bodies.
-
- BAYOU CITY SECRETS is lots of exciting hard-boiled fun, with Hollis
- never far from a wisecrack or her Schnauzer named Anice. The period
- flavor is a delight, as in:
-
- "He played dumb about the girl until I slipped him a bill
- and he opened his beak and sang like a canary."
-
- One of the great things about a mid-1930s mystery written in 1991
- rather than in the mid-1930s is that the reader gets exactly the
- details that are most interesting. Like a character who is reading a
- brand new book called GONE WITH THE WIND. Or prices: a phone call is 5
- cents, a movie is 15 cents, you can bribe a hotel clerk with a dollar,
- and I don't even want to discuss the price of gas. A piece of literary
- and American history, with a few twists, BAYOU CITY SECRETS is a very
- fine mystery. And if you'd like to visit Hollis Carpenter too, be sure
- to bring some gingersnaps for Anice.
-
- If your local bookstore can't get BAYOU CITY SECRETS for you, send the
- list price plus 15% postage and handling to: The Naiad Press, PO Box
- 10543, Tallahassee, FL 32302. If you'd like to charge it you can order
- by phone: 1-800-533-1973. Be sure to ask for their catalog--Naiad
- Press has a lot of other good books.
-
- **************************
-
- UNSOLVED: GREAT TRUE CRIMES OF THE 20th CENTURY
- by Kirk Wilson
- (Carroll & Graf, April 1991, $10.95, ISBN 0-88184-703-8)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- In UNSOLVED author Kirk Wilson has taken what he judges to be the top
- ten unsolved crimes of the 20th century and written a brief but
- comprehensive synopsis of the case and all the major theories
- concerning its solution. The lack of editorial bias, and the author's
- consistent application of logic to all evidence and testimony, make
- UNSOLVED unparalleled as a basic reference for the ten cases he
- covers. Those cases are: the JFK assassination, the Jimmy Hoffa
- disappearance, the murder of Sir Harry Oakes, Marilyn Monroe's death,
- the murder of Serge Rubinstein, the von Bulow case, the T. Cullen
- Davis case, the murders of Joan Robinson Hill and John Hill, the
- disappearance of Helen Brach, and the Lord Lucan case.
-
- UNSOLVED not only makes a good place for the beginning true crime buff
- to begin, it can "clean the palate" of the more experienced reader.
- After reading several books in which authors push their own
- interpretation of the evidence, UNSOLVED will help you clear the air
- and get back to facts and logic. The pros and cons of each theory are
- adequately covered, with paradoxes and unanswered questions allowed to
- stand as such. If you love chewing over names, dates, fiber samples,
- and the other details of crime detection, you'll love UNSOLVED. One
- can only hope that a future edition will include a much-needed photo
- section, to illustrate the scenes of the various crimes and to give
- faces to the cast of characters. At $10.95, this is a True Crime Best
- Buy. Highly Recommended.
-
- Kirk Wilson is an investigative journalist, creative writer, film
- producer, and former police reporter who has won more than seventy
- awards for his work in various media.
-
- **************************
-
- THE MURDERS OF MRS. AUSTIN & MRS. BEALE
- by Jill McGown
- (St. Martin's, September 1991, $17.95, ISBN 0-312-06422-5)
- review by Carol Sheffert
-
- Mrs. Leonora ("Lennie") Austin was an artist who married for financial
- security. Her husband is an up-and-coming politician who married for
- respectability. Mrs. Rosemary Beale was an ex-hooker who married her
- gangster-husband for both money and respectability. The two women had
- so little in common, and yet both were violently murdered on one
- particular night. And they were connected by an open phone line. Why
- were both women murdered that night? Why were they both found near
- their phone, with a still-open line connecting their two houses? Did
- they know each other?
-
- Newly-promoted Detective Inspector Judy Hill must solve the Beale
- case, and cooperate with her live-in lover, Detective Chief Inspector
- Lloyd, on the Austin case. DI Hill's burden is considerable as she
- tackles a difficult case while still getting accustomed to her new
- seniority, bucking the male chauvinists in the department, and
- fighting her own tendencies toward obsessiveness. To make matters
- worse, she knew Lennie herself, and had received a suspicious phone
- call from Lennie's husband the night of the murders. Also, intimations
- that Judy's career is still on the upswing cause a few frictions with
- Lloyd, who finds that, while the prospect of a partner who is an equal
- is perfectly acceptable, the possibility of a partner who is a
- superior is troubling.
-
- Slightly confusing in the early pages before the characters sort
- themselves out, THE MURDERS OF MRS. AUSTIN & MRS. BEALE is a complex
- and fascinating case that carries the reader right through to the very
- end, with plenty of surprises and clever twists. I particularly liked
- the way a suspect is finally caught in a lie with a trick right out of
- DIAL "M" FOR MURDER. Interesting characters, fascinating puzzles--THE
- MURDERS OF MRS. AUSTIN & MRS. BEALE is a great read. Jill McGown is
- also the author of A PERFECT MATCH (1983), AN EVIL HOUR (1987), THE
- STALKING HORSE (1988), MURDER AT THE OLD VICARAGE (1988), GONE TO HER
- DEATH (1989), and MURDER MOVIE (1990). All are from St. Martin's
- Press.
- **************************
-
- HONEST MONEY: And Other Short Novels
- by Erle Stanley Gardner
- (Carroll & Graf, July 1991, $18.95, ISBN 0-88184-683-X)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- We have a lot to thank Carroll & Graf for, not the least of which is
- collecting early Erle Stanley Gardner stories and getting them back
- into print. Once Gardner had created his most famous character, Perry
- Mason, his earlier works became overshadowed and were soon forgotten.
- But Gardner could tell a pretty fair mystery with lots of action even
- before the appearance of Mason, Street, and Drake, and the Carroll &
- Graf collections prove it.
-
- Back in the 1930s, BLACK MASK magazine published six short novels by
- Gardner about a contentious young lawyer named Ken Corning. The were:
- HONEST MONEY (November 1932), THE TOP COMES OFF (December 1932), CLOSE
- CALL (January 1933), MAKING THE BREAKS (June 1933), DEVIL'S FIRE (July
- 1933), and BLACKMAIL WITH LEAD (August 1933). Shortly after that, Ken
- Corning evolved into Perry Mason and was never seen again. Now, for
- the first time, all six Ken Corning mysteries are available in book
- form, in Carroll & Graf's HONEST MONEY. An absolute must for any Erle
- Stanley Gardner fan's library.
-
- NOTE: Another early Gardner character from BLACK MASK was Ed Jenkins,
- featured in stories collected in Carroll & Graf's DEAD MEN'S LETTERS
- and THE BLONDE IN LOWER SIX.
-
- **************************
-
- SLEEP OF THE UNJUST
- by E.X. Ferrars
- (Doubleday, August 1991, $16.00, ISBN 0-385-41707-1)
- review by Carol Sheffert
-
- Virginia Freer arrives at the Appleyard home expecting to attend the
- wedding of her friend's niece, but instead she finds shocks and
- puzzles. The first shock is meeting her long-estranged husband Felix,
- who was invited without her knowledge. The second shock is the
- unexpected arrival of Andrew Appleyard, the Appleyard's movie actor
- son who hasn't been home in years. And the third shock is Andrew's
- body, an apparent suicide, discovered the morning after his arrival.
- The only trouble with the suicide theory is that there are three
- suicide notes! The police finally solve the murder of Andrew
- Appleyard, with just a little bit of help from Virginia and Felix.
-
- SLEEP OF THE UNJUST is a readable and pleasant example of the Cozy
- mystery, but it is certainly a minor example of E.X. Ferrars' talents.
- The pace drags a bit in the middle as each character strains to come
- up with a still more implausible explanation of Andrew's suicide and
- the three notes. When the truth of the matter is finally uncovered,
- it's only marginally more believable than the crazy theories. E.X.
- Ferrars is the author of more than 60 works of mystery and suspense.
- The British Crime Writers Association recently presented her with a
- special award for continuing excellence in the mystery field. She
- lives in England.
- **************************
-
- DEATH IN FIVE BOXES
- by Carter Dickson
- (International Polygonics, June 1991, $5.95, ISBN 1-55882-098-1)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- "I don't see it," returned Sanders. "On the contrary,
- that would make the whole crime absolutely impossible. One
- of them would have had to drug the cocktails--which is
- impossible. One of them would have had to get in and out
- of the building without being seen--which is impossible."
- "Uh-huh. I know. But," said H.M. gently, "I've had to
- deal with these impossible things before."
-
- He certainly has: H.M., also known as Sir Henry Merrivale, also known
- as The Old Man, solved more impossible crimes during the 1930s and
- 1940s than almost anyone except Dr. Gideon Fell. And, of course, both
- Dr. Fell's stories and those of H.M. were written by the same man:
- John Dickson Carr, one of the most prolific, and best loved, of the
- mystery writers from the Golden Age. Because his publishers were
- worried about the number of books being published under his own name,
- they insisted that the Merrivale mysteries be by "Carter Dickson", a
- thin disguise that never fooled anyone. Carr was an American by birth,
- but lived much of his life in England, and set most of his mysteries
- there. (The tradition of Americans writing British mysteries is
- carried on most ably today by Martha Grimes.)
-
- Sir Henry Merrivale is bald, overweight, pigeon-toed, smokes cigars,
- is loud and rather vulgar, and embarrasses his friends. Several
- reviewers mentioned early on that he resembled Winston Churchill,
- which apparently appealed to Carr because the Churchill-like traits
- expanded in later books. Merrivale was the favorite fictional sleuth
- of mystery expert Howard Haycraft (author of MURDER FOR PLEASURE) and
- was Carr's favorite from among his own characters.
-
- In DEATH IN FIVE BOXES, four people sit down at a dining room table:
- Sir Dennis Blystone, Mrs. Bonita Sinclair, Bernard Schumann, and Felix
- Haye. A surgeon and peer, an art expert, a dealer in Egyptian
- antiquities, and an investment broker. When found, Blystone, Sinclair,
- and Schumann are unconcious, the victims of atropine poisoning. They
- are taken to a hospital and all recover. Haye is dead, but not of
- atropine. He's been stabbed. To make matters more complicated, the
- three atropine victims have items with them that were apparently
- stolen from someplace else AFTER they were drugged. So the problem is:
- Who? Or, possibly even more important in an Impossible Crime story
- such as this: How? How did someone put atropine in the cocktails that
- were under constant scrutiny? How did someone slip in and out of the
- building that was locked in the back and had a witness at the front?
- You'll just have to follow The Old Man as he solves the puzzles.
- Another classic mystery brought back into print by International
- Polygonics Ltd.
-
-
- SIR HENRY MERRIVALE NOVELS:
-
- The Plague Court Murders (1934) $5.95
- The White Priory Murders (1934) $5.95
- The Red Widow Murders (1935) $4.95
- The Unicorn Murders (1935) $5.95
- The Punch and Judy Murders (1936; British title: The Magic Lantern
- Murders) $4.95
- The Peacock Feather Murders (1937; British title: The Ten Teacups)
- $5.95
- The Judas Window (1938) $5.95
- Death in Five Boxes (1938) $5.95
- The Reader Is Warned (1939) $5.95
- Nine--And Death Makes Ten (1940; British title: Murder in the
- Submarine Zone) $5.95
- And So to Murder (1940)
- Seeing Is Believing (1941)
- The Gilded Man (1942) $4.95
- She Died a Lady (1943)
- He Wouldn't Kill Patience (1944) $5.95
- The Curse of the Bronze Lamp (1945; British title: Lord of the
- Sorcerers)
- My Late Wives (1946)
- The Skeleton in the Clock (1948)
- A Graveyard to Let (1949)
- Night at the Mocking Widow (1950)
- Behind the Crimson Blind (1952)
- The Cavalier's Cup (1953)
-
- NOTE: The prices are for the IPL editions, available by sending the
- stated price plus $1 postage and handling for the first book and $.50
- for each book thereafter to: International Polygonics, Ltd., Madison
- Square, PO Box 1563, New York, NY 10159-1563. Ask for their catalog as
- well; IPL has other mysteries by John Dickson Carr and a lot of other
- great mystery writers (like Margaret Millar, Craig Rice, Ellery Queen,
- Anthony Boucher, etc.).
-
- **************************
-
- ACT OF DARKNESS
- A Gregor Demarkian Holiday Mystery
- by Jane Haddam
- (Bantam Crime Line, July 1991, $4.50, ISBN 0-553-29086-X)
- review by Carol Sheffert
-
- It's the Fourth of July and the cast is gathering: Senator Stephen
- Fox, a not-very-bright puppet politician; Dan Chester, Stephen's
- political manager and general puppeteer; Dr. Kevin Debrett, school
- chum of Stephen's and Dan's, a man who can't stand blood but who
- enjoys money; Janet, the senator's cooperative but aloof wife; Patchen
- Rawls, the senator's latest girlfriend; Victoria Harte, Janet's famous
- movie star mother; Clare Markey, the lobbyist; Gregor Demarkian,
- former FBI agent who has been invited to investigate the senator's
- mysterious "spells"; Bennis Hannaford, Gregor's friend; and Carl
- Bettinger, an FBI agent who shouldn't be hanging around but is.
-
- You see, they've all gathered at Victoria Harte's mansion on Long
- Island for a political seminar and the July 4th holiday. Senator Fox
- has recently begun to have these spells where he suddenly becomes
- paralyzed and falls to the ground, recovering a few minutes later. The
- doctors find nothing wrong, and all the suspects are always on the
- scene whenever one of these spells occurs. What most of the suspects
- have in common is children with Down's syndrome. The Senator has
- recently introduced a bill in Congress on their behalf; Dr. Debrett
- specializes in retarded children; Clare Markey lobbies for a group
- that aids retarded children; and Janet Fox gave birth to a child with
- Down's syndrome 10 years ago, a child who died several days later.
- Gregor Demarkian not only must discover what is causing Senator Fox's
- spells, but soon he must solve the murder of Dr. Debrett, who is found
- peacefully in his room with no apparent cause of death. There will be
- another murder before the case is solved, and Gregor will have to work
- fast before more deaths occur.
-
- This is one of a series of Holiday Mysteries by Orania Papazoglou
- writing under the pseudonym Jane Haddam, but it's the first I have
- read. Like the Patience McKenna mysteries she writes under her own
- name, this Gregor Demarkian novel is filled with carefully drawn
- characters. Even minor characters are incompletely-revealed
- three-dimensional people, not cardboard cutout "types". The front of
- ACT OF DARKNESS reveals two previous Holiday Mysteries: NOT A CREATURE
- WAS STIRRING (obviously a Christmas story), and PRECIOUS BLOOD
- (possibly an Easter story?). At the end there is even a preview of the
- next Holiday Mystery, a Halloween story called QUOTH THE RAVEN, which
- sounds great. It even has raven called Lenore.
-
- **************************
-
- BLACK LIGHT
- by Daniel Hearn
- (Dell, August 1991, $3.99, ISBN 0-440-20787-8)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- There was another letter. It was postmarked Los Angeles,
- California. Inside were a simple piece of typing paper and
- ten one-hundred-dollar bills.
- The message typed on the paper read:
-
- ANIMAL FARM
- NOVEMBER 20, 1970
-
- "ALL PIGS ARE EQUAL, BUT SOME ARE MORE EQUAL THAN OTHERS."
-
- TALK TO LENNY BYRD. CECELIA KNOWS WHERE HE IS.
- HER NAME IS NOW CELIA MATTHEWS. SHE IS AN ACTRESS IN NEW
- YORK.
-
- Typed at the bottom of the page where the signature
- would ordinarily be were the words "KEVIN MOON".
- Now I had two clients and they were both dead men.
-
- BLACK LIGHT is the second mystery novel featuring New York private eye
- Joe Noonan, who is a combination of Dashiell Hammett's Sam Spade,
- Raymond Chandler's Philip Marlowe and Bill Pronzini's Nameless
- detective. Joe has an unshakeable code of ethics, a weakness for
- booze, and a one-eyed cat named Lord Nelson. This time out, Joe gets a
- stroll down memory lane when he is hired by old acquaintance Evan
- Mattingly to find Lenny Byrd. Evan and Lenny were college-student
- members of a commune (called Animal Farm) back in the revolutionary
- sixties, along with various others like Alex Cutler, Ed Henits, Kevin
- Moon, and Carol Murdoch. Joe wasn't a member of the commune of course,
- but he was infatuated with Carol, who had an on-again, off-again
- relationship with leader of the pack Alex Cutler.
-
- Now Evan wants to locate Lenny Byrd, but Evan is killed almost
- immediately. Was it gay bashers, or possibly someone Evan was
- investigating for the consumer rights organization he worked for, or
- does it have something to do with why he wanted to find Lenny? Noonan
- must find Lenny and answer these questions, for he has accepted Evan's
- money and alive or dead Evan deserves his money's worth. Soon Joe is
- digging up the past and finds that Alex and Ed were drug dealers,
- Kevin Moon mysteriously died when the commune's house burned to the
- ground, and electronic genius Lenny Byrd is now an alcoholic cabbie.
- Noonan also gets to see Carol again, now a wealthy woman in Los
- Angeles working in the film industry. Why did Evan want Lenny found?
- Why was Evan killed? Is Kevin Moon really dead? BLACK LIGHT is a
- winner from the beginning to its slam-bang ending. Not to be missed.
- (The first Joe Noonan novel was BAD AUGUST.)
-
- **************************
-
- AND SOON I'LL COME TO KILL YOU
- by Susan Kelly
- (Villard, 1991, $18, ISBN 0-394-58415-5)
- review by Carol Sheffert
-
- Liz Connors used to teach college English, but now she supports
- herself by writing true-crime articles and the occasional short story.
- Her true-crime pieces are often disturbing to readers and infuriating
- to their subjects, so she gets a crank letter every once in a while
- and calls it part of the job. But when she begins to get a series of
- nasty messages, she takes them to her boyfriend Jack, who happens to
- be a policeman. When the letters get specifically threatening, she
- moves into Jack's place, but the letters follow her. Apparently her
- enemy is watching her every move. Despite her determination to live a
- normal life, Liz soon finds herself carrying a gun and making lists of
- potential enemies.
-
- AND SOON I'LL COME TO KILL YOU is an excellent suspense story that
- carries the reader along at breakneck pace from the first message
- ("You vicious bitch") to the last page. Several scenes are powerful
- enough to have you holding your breath--Susan Kelly is definitely a
- writer to keep your eye on. Why, though, did I get the impression that
- the story had been "sanitized"? Bad guys just didn't seem all that
- bad, and Liz's traumas didn't seem that upsetting (making the taut
- suspense of virtually every page all the more impressive). With or
- without the visceral edge, AND SOON I'LL COME TO KILL YOU is an
- exciting story of suspense; another fine novel from the author of THE
- GEMINI MAN.
- **************************
-
- SENATOR LOVE
- A Fiona Fitzgerald Novel of Suspense
- by Warren Adler
- (Donald I. Fine, September 1991, $18.95, ISBN 1-55611-244-0)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- The title politician is the seductively attractive Senator Sam
- Langford, a presidential hopeful with a lovely (rich) wife, the usual
- two wonderful children, and a afternoon hobby that's been going on for
- years. His current girlfriend is the wife of the Austrian ambassador,
- who shows up at all the Washington social events, as does Senator
- Langford and his wife, as does the Senator's ex-wife. It's lucky that
- Senator Langford is charming enough to juggle his women, past and
- present, and make all of them happy.
-
- Fiona Fitzgerald, a senator's daughter and now a homicide detective,
- also attends many Washington social events, and she is amused by the
- Senator's shenanigans and briefly falls under his spell at a party.
- The next day she is at the scene as "old bones" are found in a
- residential backyard. It's a perfectly preserved skeleton, apparently
- buried nude, but with a slave bracelet inscribed "MY BET". Fiona and
- her partner Cates soon discover that the bones belonged to Betty
- Taylor, a beautiful young woman who worked in Washington and
- disappeared a dozen years ago. When the Austrian Ambassador's wife
- turns up missing, and then dead, similarly buried in the backyard of
- an untenanted house, the connection is unmistakable. When the
- Senator's "fire control" man confirms that a previous girlfriend was
- named Betty Taylor, Fiona is off and running. Who is killing the
- Senator's girlfriends? Have there been others?
-
- Warren Adler keeps the reader guessing and turning the pages until the
- very end, with a few last twists just to keep the reader alert. I
- enjoyed this book even more than the last Fiona Fitzgerald mystery,
- IMMACULATE DECEPTION (reviewed in RFP #16). A very good mystery.
-
- **************************
-
- SOMETHING NASTY IN THE WOODSHED
- by Kyril Bonfiglioli
- (International Polygonics, August 1991, $7.95, ISBN 1-55882-090-6)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- How can I possibly give you an idea of what this book is like? When I
- began reading it I thought What Ho! This is written very much in the
- style of P.G. Wodehouse, right down to the characters. The story is
- told by a hard-drinking upper crust British gentleman with a bizarre
- manservant. After reading a while longer I noticed that an odd note of
- Thomas Harris had crept in. While the plot of SOMETHING NASTY IN THE
- WOODSHED isn't as horrifying as SILENCE OF THE LAMBS, the mystery does
- revolve around a series of violent rapes. This unusual dichotomy
- continues throughout the story, with an occasional Monty Python
- interlude to keep things jolly. As I read the last page, however, the
- whole bubbling stew turned into something more along the lines of
- Albert Camus. The author himself described the book:
-
- "A tragedy told by a compulsive comedian. Both the bad and
- the good end unhappily; that is the meaning of life."
-
- SOMETHING NASTY IN THE WOODSHED is enormously funny, but it is also
- shocking, perplexing, and sad. If you're tired of the same old thing,
- this is what you need.
-
- NOTE: SOMETHING NASTY IN THE WOODSHED is actually the second book
- starring the Hon. Charlie Mortdecai. The first was called DON'T POINT
- THAT THING AT ME and it won the first John Creasy Memorial Award. Both
- are available from IPL for $7.95 each. Send the list price plus
- shipping and handling ($1.00 for the first book, $.50 for each
- additional book) to: International Polygonics Ltd., Madison Square, PO
- Box 1563, New York, NY 10159-1563.
-
- **************************
-
- STATE STREET
- by Richard Whittingham
- (Donald I. Fine, September 1991, $18.95, ISBN 1-55611-250-5)
- commentary by the publisher
-
- The old song goes, "On State Street / That great street / I just want
- to say / They do things / They don't do / On Broadway", and Richard
- Whittingham captures the spirit of the song and the Windy City in
- STATE STREET, his authentic and thrilling foray into crime fiction.
-
- It's been over a year since Chicago detective Joe Morrison was
- transferred from Homicide to Organized Crime, but the images of the
- murder victims he has seen still wake him up in a sweat in the middle
- of the night. Now he spends most of his time in the State Street
- police headquarters acting as a liaison with other police departments,
- the Illinois Crime Commission, the FBI and his partner Norbert Castor,
- who knows more about the Mafia than "anybody below the level of
- consigliore in the Outfit itself". But Morrison is pulled back into
- the most violent sphere of Chicago's underworld after a mob capo's
- daughter is raped.
-
- Morrison and Castor begin their investigation of the rape--even though
- the Mafia boss has his own idea of justice--but Morrison finds himself
- sidetracked when an old family friend, Theo Warner, is murdered. As
- Morrison works with his old homicide colleagues to solve the Warner
- case, some colorfully raffish suspects emerge, including commodities
- trader Dennis Courtland, "major street animal" Tommy Bates and his
- girlfriend Jo Kane. When Norbert Castor is shot, Morrison is left to
- his own street-smart devices, in the honored tradition of Hammett's
- Sam Spade and McBain's Steve Carella, to make sure justice is served.
-
- STATE STREET captures the same excitement and flavor of the Chicago
- streets that Richard Whittingham chronicled in his nonfiction work,
- JOE D: ON THE STREET WITH A CHICAGO HOMICIDE COP. STATE STREET is his
- first novel.
- **************************
-
- LIE TO ME
- by David Martin
- (Pocket Star Books, August 1991, $5.95, ISBN 0-671-73876-3)
- review by Drew Bartorillo
-
- Mary and Jonathan Gaetan are fabulously wealthy and own a mansion in a
- plush Washington D.C. suburb. They are very happily married and
- looking forward to going to a party this fateful night. While they are
- gone, an intruder breaks in, a serial killer who has been watching
- Mary and Jonathan's house. The killer carries with him the hand of his
- last victim, a fifteen year old hitchhiker, and has chosen the
- Gaetan's for his next victims. In a night of terror, he threatens
- them, tortures them, and then goes on to reveal secrets about them no
- stranger could ever know or possibly guess.
-
- The next day, Jonathan Gaetan is found dead in his bathtub, brutally
- mutilated with a Bowie knife. His penis is severed, hanging by a
- thread. When the police arrive, Mary Gaetan tells them nothing about
- the vicious killer. Instead, she claims that Jonathan committed
- suicide. With the bathroom door locked from the inside the police have
- no recourse but to believe her.
-
- Just to be sure, though, investigator Teddy Camel, the human lie
- detector, is asked to interrogate the widow. Teddy is within two years
- of retirement and relegated to a desk job. His major accomplishment
- each day is managing to stay awake at his desk, not too successfully I
- might add. After interrogating the widow, Teddy claims she is telling
- the truth. Is she? If not, why is Teddy hiding the awful truth? How
- many victims will our serial killer claim before he is finally
- stopped?
-
- Now here is a book that will make you sleep with one eye open! I
- especially like two opening passages in the book:
-
- "He sits in the woods holding her hand."
-
- "Squeezing the girl's hand and speaking softly......"
-
- We come to find out that all the killer IS holding is the girl's hand,
- not the rest of her. This is pretty much the way the entire book goes.
- The killer carries around this hand, plus items from other victims, in
- his deranged, psychotic killing spree. I enjoyed LIE TO ME very much
- and found it well paced and difficult to put down. The intermingling
- of the stories of the psychotic killer, Mary Gaetan, and the off-beat
- cop Teddy Camel was very well done. The novel has an "Ellery Queen"
- type of ending and even a twist that you won't be prepared for. I
- highly recommend LIE TO ME and look forward to reading other novels by
- the same author, David Martin.
-
- **************************
-
- * THE COFFEY FILES by Joe Coffey and Jerry Schmetterer is a nonfiction
- book coming from St. Martin's Press. It's the story of Joe Coffey who
- saw his father almost killed by the Mafia and grew up to join the New
- York Police Department and head a unit specializing in Mafia murders.
- The book has been optioned by New World Television who is planning to
- turn it into a movie-of-the-week that will, they hope, turn into a
- long-running TV series. Best bet to play Coffey, as I type this, is
- Ken Wahl, best known from the TV series WISEGUY.
-
- * Be sure to get the latest catalog from Mystery Loves Company, a
- mail-order mystery bookstore run by Sue Feder, Kathy Harig, and Paige
- Rose. Write to them at: Mystery Loves Company, 1730 Fleet Street,
- Baltimore, MD 21231; 301/276-6708.
-
- * Delilah's back in SET-UP, a mystery by Maxine O'Callaghan coming
- from St. Martin's in November 1991 ($17.95, ISBN 0-312-06462-4).
- Delilah's luck has changed. She even has all those nice C-things: car
- phone, condo, computer. But, as usual, she's up to her ears in
- trouble--this time of the explosive kind--when she finds herself in
- the crossfire between Orange County land developers and
- environmentalists.
-
-
- <-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->
- < >
- < LOOSEN YOUR GRIP ON REALITY >
- < >
- <-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->
-
- << Editor: Darryl Kenning >>
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- Loosen Your Grip On Reality is a division of Reading For Pleasure,
- published bimonthly. This material is NOT COPYRIGHTED and may be used
- freely by all. Contributions of information, reviews, etc. should be
- sent to:
-
- Darryl Kenning CompuServe: 76337,740
- 6331 Marshall Rd. or GEnie: D.Kenning
- Centerville, Ohio 45459 HeavenSoft BBS 513-836-4288
- The Annex BBS 513-274-0821
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- THE KENNING QUOTIENT (KQ) is a rating applied to books read by the
- editor of this section, a number ranging from 0 (which means the book
- is an unredeemable stinker) to 5 (meaning the book is absolutely top
- drawer).
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- --------- RANDOM ACCESS ---------------------------------------------
-
- Interesting Times AGAIN!
-
- No one who lived through the 50's or 60's would have foreseen the
- world events in Eastern Europe as they have swirled around us in the
- past year. In fact, I would bet that any such musings would have been
- dismissed as mere wishful thinking. Whatever the ultimate outcome it
- undoubtedly will be more different than any of us can imagine.
-
- What brings these ramblings on was a short newspaper article that
- mentioned that a Soviet (is that the right description?) Mars Buggy
- will be tested in California this year after undergoing some
- "preliminary" tests in one of the Russian Republics. That started me
- to thinking about the impressive level of technology - albeit a brute
- force technology - that They have accomplished. More importantly, what
- is going to happen to that technology.
-
- Given the social difficulties they are facing for the next decade or
- so, and given the propensity for politicians to prefer to do the
- expedient, I have a real concern that the space related technology
- will disappear and be lost to us all. On the plus side of course is
- that newspaper article that seems to imply that the much wished for
- cooperative ventures may be more of a reality than most of us had
- dared hope.
-
- The other concern that I have is that the level of spending for space
- related technology in the U.S. may continue to slide without the
- political bogeyman to justify the expenditures. The really sad part of
- all this is that the Space Program is about the only thing (besides
- Defense) that the Federal Government has undertaken that has given us
- much return on the investment. It does almost make you cry to think of
- the billions of dollars spent on social programs, later abandoned as
- wasted, that might have us living and working in space right now.
-
- I'm afraid that I have no quick answer, no magic wand to wave and fix
- all this. You know that about the only thing we can do as individuals
- is to let our federal officials, especially in Congress, know that we
- want a say in how our money is spent. But it is important to let them
- know that, and it is important to ask about ways we can work with the
- Soviet Government, whatever that may end up looking like, to preserve
- our technological heritage for the benefit of all mankind.
-
- dkk
-
- **************************
-
- JOHN W. CAMPBELL MEMORIAL AWARD
- For Best SF Novel of 1990
-
- Winner: PACIFIC EDGE by Kim Stanley Robinson
-
- Runners-up: QUEEN OF ANGELS by Greg Bear (2nd place)
- ONLY BEGOTTEN DAUGHTER by James Morrow (3rd place)
-
-
- THEODORE STURGEON MEMORIAL AWARD
- For Best Short SF of 1990
-
- Winner: "Bears Discover Fire" by Terry Bisson
-
- Runners-up: "Episodes of the Argo" by R.A. Lafferty
- "My Advice to the Civilized" by John Barnes
- (both tied for 2nd place)
-
- **************************
-
- OWLSWICK PRESS
- by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Owlswick Press publishes beautifully bound volumes of SF and fantasy
- for very reasonable prices. You can get their catalog by writing to:
- Owlswick Press, PO Box 8243, Philadelphia, PA 19101-8243. Here are a
- few of their titles. (The prices include postage and handling, so you
- can just send the listed price, plus 6% sales tax if you're in PA, to
- Owlswick Press to get any of the following books.)
-
-
- ANITA
- by Keith Roberts
- (November 1990, $20.25, ISBN 0-913896-27-6)
-
- This is a reprint of a classic 1970 collection of stories originally
- published in SCIENCE FANTASY and THE MAGAZINE OF FANTASY AND SCIENCE
- FICTION. They are all centered on a teenage girl named Anita Thompson,
- very similar to teenage girls everywhere, except that she is a witch.
- A real one. She lives with her grandmother, who is a witch of the old
- school--broomstick, bubbling cauldron and all. With one foot in the
- mists of antiquity and one foot in the modern world of boys and fast
- sports cars, Anita is a perfect point-of-view character for Roberts'
- serious comments about life, morality, and dreams. In addition to the
- stories from the original collection, ANITA contains a new
- introduction by the Roberts and one additional story ("The Checkout").
- With a full-color dust jacket and interior illustrations by Stephen
- Fabian, ANITA is a lovely book, both to look at and to read.
-
-
- THE ADVENTURES OF DOCTOR ESZTERHAZY
- by Avram Davidson
- (January 1991, $24.50, ISBN 0-913896-28-4)
-
- A collection of all 13 Enquiries of the celebrated sage of the Triune
- Monarchy (Scythia-Pannonia-Transbalkania, bordering on Graustark and
- Ruritania), including several long stories never before in book form.
- In his foreword, Gene Wolfe writes: "The few writers whom we read with
- continued pleasure become our friends, although we may never encounter
- them outside their own pages...Avram Davidson is the author we should
- all read." THE ADVENTURES OF DOCTOR ESZTERHAZY has a full-color dust
- jacket by George Barr and interior drawings by Todd Cameron Hamilton,
- and is also available in a signed, limited, boxed edition for $50
- (ISBN 0-913896-30-6). Avram Davidson is the author of THE PHOENIX AND
- THE MIRROR, PEREGRINE: PRIMUS, and PEREGRINE: SECUNDUS, along with
- many other classics of erudite, witty fantasy such as this.
-
-
- THE INFINITE KINGDOMS
- by Michael Rutherford
- (December 1990, $12.00, ISBN 0-913896-32-2)
-
- Three journeys through the Infinite Kingdoms by Michael Rutherford, a
- new talent to watch in the fantasy field. The first is "The Tale and
- Its Master", in which the fatally proud Remus, who thought himself
- master and not servant of the enchantments of Storytelling, seeks and
- finds a new and shining tale (told here in full). He wins it from a
- witch--at a price. The second is "Wager of Dreams" wherein the world
- loses belief in anything that cannot be touched or tasted. So potent
- is the smog of materialism that the creatures of Dream inevitably must
- lapse into nonbeing--unless Trundle, the last of the Dreamers, will
- take on himself the burden of a quest. Lastly, "Knights of Darkness,
- Knights of Light", which begins with the chance encounter between the
- freebooter Ragnack and Apollyon, a demon disguised as human, sent by
- the Soul Eaters on a desperate quest for untainted souls. Thus the
- stage is set for an epic conflict of two worlds. With a full-color
- cover and interior illustrations by Janet Aulisio. (THE INFINITE
- KINGDOMS is also available in hardcover for $24.)
-
- **************************
-
- THE DRAGON REBORN
- Book Three of THE WHEEL OF TIME
- by Robert Jordan
- (Tor Fantasy, November 1991, $22.95, ISBN 0-312-85254-1)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- Robert Jordan has taken the mythologies of four continents, from
- Celtic and Norse to Hindu, from African to Amerindian, and woven
- together the common and uncommon elements to create something
- completely original--something new that we can almost believe is the
- source of those ancient legends.
-
- THE EYE OF THE WORLD ("the best of its genre"--THE OTTAWA CITIZEN; "a
- combination of Robin Hood and Stephen King that is hard to resist--
- MILWAUKEE SENTINEL) and THE GREAT HUNT ("leaves the reader hovering
- between the desire to know the outcome now and the promise of much
- more good reading ahead"--NEWS AND COURIER, Charleston, South
- Carolina), are Books One and Two of THE WHEEL OF TIME series.
-
- Book Three, THE DRAGON REBORN, tells of the long-prophesied leader who
- will save the world, but in saving it will destroy it. Rand al'Thor is
- on the run from his destiny--able to touch the One Power but unable to
- control it, he only knows that he must face the Dark One.
-
- Winter has slowed the war, yet men are dying, calling out for the
- Dragon. But where is he? Perrin Aybara is in pursuit with Moiraine
- Sedai, her Warder Lan, and Loial the Ogier. Bedeviled by dreams,
- Perrin is grappling with a deadly problem that threatens his own
- humanity.
-
- Egwene, Elayne, and Nynaeve are approaching Tar Valon, where Mat will
- be healed, if he lives until they arrive. They cannot know that worse
- things await in the White Tower.
-
- Ahead, for all of them, in the Heart of the Stone, lies the next great
- test of the Dragon Reborn.
-
- **************************
-
- ECCE AND OLD EARTH
- Book Two of the Cadwal Chronicles
- by Jack Vance
- (Tor, September 1991, $21.95, ISBN 0-312-85132-4)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- Environmental conservation calls for political action. In Jack Vance's
- ECCE AND OLD EARTH, set 1,000 years in humanity's future, these
- politics mean life or death--both for the planet Cadwal and for the
- young couple fighting the opposition to save the Conservancy.
-
- World Fantasy Award-winning author Vance returns to the planet Cadwal
- for the second novel in his intriguing hard science fiction trilogy,
- which began with ARAMINTA STATION (Tor, 1988). Cadwal, a world of
- extraordinary beauty with an abundance of strange and unique species,
- has been protected from human exploitation by the Conservancy
- established by the Cadwal Charter 1,000 years earlier. Now, opposition
- groups are calling for the abolition of the Charter. They want to open
- lands on the unsettled continents for settlement, allegedly for the
- underclass known as the Yips. Leaders of the opposition (the Life,
- Peace, and Freedom Party, or LPFers) come from the aristocratic
- families, whose power dates back to the founding colony at Araminta
- Station. Ulterior motives lurk behind the apparent altruism of these
- powerful LPFers--specifically lust for huge estates and wealth, at the
- expense of the Yips.
-
- Vance, one of science fiction's great stylists, has won many Hugo and
- Nebula awards, and his 1989 novel, MADOUC, won the World Fantasy
- Award. LOCUS said ECCE AND OLD EARTH "is Jack Vance in SF adventure
- mode, redolent of the '50s and perfumed with the even more exotic
- essences of adventure fiction (and travel literature) predating the
- pulps." PUBLISHERS WEEKLY said "Vance's rich lyrical style makes this
- follow-up to ARAMINTA STATION a pleasure to read...provocative and
- fun."
- **************************
-
- STREET MAGIC
- by Michael Reaves
- (Tor, July 1991, $18.95, ISBN 0-312-85125-1)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- "I'm not crazy, am I? There IS real magic in the world,
- isn't there?"
-
- So says Liz Gallegher, a hardboiled editor of the tabloid STAR, at the
- climax of Michael Reaves' STREET MAGIC, voicing the universal feelings
- of all the characters in Reaves' engaging glimpse of Faerieland.
-
- Michael Reaves brings Faerie--usually found only under the hills of
- Ireland--to life in contemporary San Francisco. Danny, a runaway from
- an abusive, control-crazy father, now lives among the street people of
- the city. Squatting in an abandoned hotel with drug addicts, Danny
- scams nickels and dimes on the street for a living, while dreaming of
- escaping to his fantastical Middle Earth, populated with trolls and
- wizards, as well as Robin Hood, Flash Gordon, and Godzilla. You see,
- Danny half-believes he carries magic deep within himself.
-
- Danny's dreams seem to have a chance to become real when a troupe of
- Scatterlings recognizes him as a changeling and takes him in. The
- Scatterlings are themselves runaways from Faerie, and want to go home,
- but they need a Keymaster, one who can open the GALLITRAP into
- Faerieland. Danny will become that Keymaster, if only he can tap into
- his latent magic abilities.
-
- However, Danny's pathological father wants him back. He hires Scott
- Russell, a down-on-his-luck unemployed private detective. Finding a
- runaway on the streets of San Francisco seems a hopeless task, but
- with the help of editor Liz, they follow leads through comic book
- shops and science fiction bookstores.
-
- Reaves builds his story around his well-defined characters, with the
- chase to claim Danny revealed to the reader through their experiences.
- Exposure to so much magic affects the lives of all involved--some
- gain, some lose in the end.
-
- **************************
-
- THE JUNGLE
- by David Drake
- (Tor, September 1991, $18.95, ISBN 0-312-85197-9)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- "The terraformers' centuries-long work continued. Later
- cylinders spewed the seeds and eggs of multicelled
- lifeforms onto the newly receptive planet. Trees of myriad
- species; vines, grasses and epiphytes, ALL the diversity
- of Earth, plus multiple mutations for every original
- species. Through the burgeoning jungles stalked
- beasts--insects, arachnids, crustaceans...Human-engineered
- changes to gene plasm had coupled eagerly with the virgin
- environment and the high level of ionizing radiation
- penetrating the clouds of water vapor. The result was a
- hell of aggressive mutations like nothing ever seen on
- Earth."
-
- Welcome to Venus, as depicted in David Drake's THE JUNGLE, where
- humans have been able to survive UNDER the planet's oceans in vast
- "Keeps", each one ruled by a Council of Twelve. Now, rival Keeps are
- competing for resources and fishing grounds, and the next step may be
- to explore the planet's vast, impenetrable jungle populated by
- monstrous aliens and deadlier plants, turf where no one has survived
- before. Officer-Trainee Henry Wilding wants to direct human energy to
- taming and utilizing this land surface, but the choice is made for him
- as war begins between the Wyoming Keep (Wilding's family is one of the
- Twelve Families directing affairs) and the Asturias Keep.
-
- Wilding and the hovercraft team of mercenaries commanded by Ensign
- Brainard endure a virtual trial by fire when they are driven ashore
- and forced to enter that ominous environment. In THE JUNGLE Drake
- reprises the universe first created by Henry Kuttner in the classic
- CLASH BY NIGHT, which describes life on Venus after Earth has been
- destroyed.
-
- While the inhabitants of the Keeps continue to party, Wilding,
- Brainard and the crew encounter three-inch man-attacking ants,
- meat-eating fish, super-strong eels, infections, hunger, grievous
- damage to their craft--a vast array of plot-moving, page-turning
- debacles.
- **************************
-
- THE PHOENIX GUARDS
- by Steven Brust
- (Tor Fantasy, September 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-312-85157-X)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- Alexandre Dumas gave us THE THREE MUSKETEERS in 1846, an action-filled
- tale of the dashing D'Artagnan and his trio of heroes. Steven Brust
- takes off exponentially on the classic Dumas pere adventure. We still
- have a D'Artagnan-type leader, Khaavren, and three intrepid comrades
- who rely on swordplay, sorcery, skill, wits and blind luck to see them
- through a series of adventures, secret plots, and fabulous intrigues.
- But Brust is not rooted in the history and imagination of the 19th
- century. In THE PHOENIX GUARDS, the author transports his readers far
- into the future, into an ambiance never dreamed of by Dumas.
-
- Brust returns to the Dragaera Empire, the world he created for Vlad
- Taltos, the hero of his ongoing series, but the time frame is 1,000
- years BEFORE Vlad's birth. In THE PHOENIX GUARDS, Khaavren is a young,
- somewhat naive swordsman who decides to join the Imperial Guards, and
- on his way to meet the Phoenix Emperor, encounters three other
- blade-flashing, smooth-mannered aspirants...and the games begin.
-
- Steven Zoltan Brust, whose ancestry is Hungarian, was born in 1955. He
- describes himself as the father of ten novels and four children, not
- necessarily in that order. He is also one of the founding fathers of
- the Minneapolis Fantasy Writers' Group--aka "The Scribblies"--that has
- produced such stars as Patricia C. Wrede, Emma Bull, Kara Delkey,
- Pamela Dean and Will Shetterly.
-
- **************************
-
- CUP OF CLAY
- Book I of The Taliswoman
- by Carole Nelson Douglas
- (Tor Fantasy, September 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-312-85146-4)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- Carole Nelson Douglas is a versatile writer who gracefully swings from
- stories about shrewd women who can out-sleuth Sherlock Holmes (GOOD
- MORNING, IRENE and GOOD NIGHT, MR. HOLMES), to mysteries involving
- literary cats (CATNAP), to her new Taliswoman Trilogy, in which she
- mixes feminism, fantasy, horror, and ecology in her fictional world of
- Veil.
-
- In this first book of the series, CUP OF CLAY, we meet Alison Carver,
- a reporter for a Twin Cities newspaper, who discovers that in the
- magical land of Veil, water is not safe to drink--the stunning
- waterfalls are actually poisonous--and that while the vegetation is
- lush, the flowers emit a vile stench.
-
- Even worse, in Veil, although women are put on pedestals, they have
- virtually no rights...and although children are loved, they are also
- exploited. The children of Veil, known as the "Littlelost", are exiled
- by their parents and sent to live in the beautiful forests, where they
- are captured by brutal men, the "Takers", who are not exactly running
- a day-care center.
-
- Alison wants to help the kids, but she also wants to return to Earth.
- Her best way out is with the help of Rowan, a red-haired young man,
- who unfortunately has another agenda: his mission is to become
- guardian of the "Cup of Earth", the Cup of Clay, a talisman that is
- won by song...and song alone.
-
- **************************
-
- PAPERBACK BOOKSHELF
-
- BARRAYER
- by Lois McMaster Bujold
- (Baen Books, October 1991, $4.99, ISBN 0-671-72083-X)
- review by Darryl Kenning
-
- BARRAYER is the newest in the extraordinarily popular Miles Vorkosigan
- series of novels. If you hadn't noticed Lois McMaster Bujold has won
- both the Hugo and the Nebula award. This book continues the rich
- legacy we have come to expect. A nice plus is the timeline she added
- to the end of the book that matches dates with novels and the events
- in Miles's life.
-
- This particular novel deals with Cordelia Naismith, who married Aral
- Vorkosigan and ultimately became Mile's mother. The story picks up
- after the marriage but just before Lord Vorkosigan become the regent
- for the boy king. This nicely leaves the earlier part of her life
- available for another story (soon I hope). The author continues to
- show a fine flair for creating characters that have real depth. The
- universe she has assembled works well and there are enough "human"
- inconsistencies in the way the social fabric comes together to
- convince the reader that this version of reality could come into
- being. I am impressed with the way the stories and people stay in
- character so well with how I remember the other books, which is where
- many authors seem to have trouble with connected stories.
-
- I had to exercise real self discipline to keep from devouring the
- entire book at one reading. If you've read the other books by Ms.
- Bujold you'll want to make a special trip to the bookstore for this
- one. If you haven't this a good one to start with. Need I say more?
-
- KQ = 5
-
- **************************
-
- THE SUM OF THINGS
- by Roland J. Green
- (ROC, May 1991, $3.99, ISBN 0-451-45080-9)
- review by Darryl Kenning
-
- When you see this book on the newsstands the first thing to catch your
- eye will be the name of the series STARCRUISER SHENANDOAH. This is
- book #3 in the series by Roland J. Green. An accomplished writer, this
- series is an attempt to blend the traditional space navy book with the
- ground war novel. In the main it succeeds reasonably well.
-
- I found the plot turns a little more intrigue than I normally like and
- was hard pressed to keep the characters straight - a problem I did not
- have in the earlier books. This story uses the triangular complexities
- of multiple antagonists; some using surrogates to influence events in
- ways that will be helpful to their long-term interests - but not so
- apparent in the short run. There are some nice underlying commentaries
- about diplomacy and the difficulties inherent in the attempts to
- negotiate reasonable solutions given the problems of individual and
- societal greed.
-
- This book fits in nicely with the rest of the series and it is easy to
- identify with at least one of the main characters. I enjoyed this book
- and have no hesitation about recommending it for a pleasant stint of
- reading.
-
- KQ = 3
-
- **************************
-
- THE ALBINO KNIFE
- by Steve Perry
- (Ace, July 1991, $4.50, ISBN 0-441-01391-0)
- review by Darryl Kenning
-
- Another in the series that began with THE MAN WHO NEVER MISSED. The
- action is just as hard-boiled as ever, the plot twists move in plenty
- of unexpected ways, and in the end this is a very readable action
- story. The book picks up after the Confed has been toppled and life
- has returned to near normal for the Matadors.
-
- Suddenly the daughter he didn't know he had appears to Emile Khadaji
- and his former wife has been kidnapped. The hero and his friends must
- now follow the trail with the newly found daughter to its ultimate
- conclusion. It is fun having the characters we have seen developed in
- the series reappear. Unfortunately the authors tips the reader to the
- main plot a tad too early in the story and for those of us who have
- read the earlier books the outcome is pretty much what you would
- expect. In spite of that very minor flaw, if you like action-adventure
- space operas you'll enjoy this one.
-
- KQ = 3
-
- **************************
-
- THE YEAR'S BEST SCIENCE FICTION: Eighth Annual Collection
- edited by Gardner Dozois
- (St. Martin's, July 1991, $15.95, ISBN 0-312-06009-2)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Seems like every year this collection wins one or more major
- Collection awards, and likewise every year Gardner Dozois wins one or
- more major editing awards. Every year, the vote comes up the same: if
- you care about Science Fiction, the Dozois collection is the one book
- you have to buy. Not only does it collect a ton of wonderful short
- fiction from the previous year (as the cover says, "More than 250,000
- words of fantastic fiction") but you get Gardner Dozois' terrific
- "Summation", with everything you need to know about that year in the
- world of SF. If you missed something you shouldn't have, the Summation
- will point it out.
-
- In this year's collection, with fiction covering the year 1990, you
- get award-winning stories like: "Bears Discover Fire" by Terry Bisson,
- "Tower of Babylon" by Ted Chiang, and the short novel THE HEMINGWAY
- HOAX by Joe Haldeman. The other authors represented read like a who's
- who of the SF world: John Brunner, Ursula K. Le Guin, Michael
- Moorcock, Pat Murphy, Lucius Shepard, Lewis Shiner, Robert Silverberg,
- Bruce Sterling, Kate Wilhelm, Connie Willis... You get the idea. An
- important volume in any SF fan's core collection, THE YEAR'S BEST
- SCIENCE FICTION puts 1990 into one convenient affordable package.
-
- **************************
-
- NEW SCIENCE FICTION & FANTASY FROM TOR
- commentary from the publisher
-
- SEPTEMBER TITLES:
-
-
- N-SPACE
- by Larry Niven
- ($5.99, ISBN 0-812-51001-1)
-
- Once when noted science fiction author Arthur C. Clarke was
- interviewed on a Los Angeles TV talk show, he was asked who his
- favorite writer was. Without hesitation, Clarke replied, "Larry
- Niven." N-SPACE, a major Niven retrospective, combines previously
- published work with unpublished short stories and excerpts from longer
- ones. Rich with gossip and storytelling vigor, N-SPACE offers a
- fascinating insight into one of our most prolific and
- thought-provoking authors.
-
- Niven, author of such classics as RINGWORLD and THE INTEGRAL TREES,
- began his writing career in 1964, quickly moving to the top of the
- field. RINGWORLD won both the Nebula and Hugo awards, and Niven also
- won the Hugo Award four times for his short fiction. His successful
- collaborations with Jerry Pournelle and Steven Barnes resulted in the
- NEW YORK TIMES bestsellers THE MOTE IN GOD'S EYE and FOOTFALL. N-SPACE
- is a major event in science fiction, coming from the author who has
- been an influence among both readers and writers in the genre.
-
- (NOTE: N-SPACE is a fabulous one-volume introduction to a classic SF
- writer--almost 700 pages of material that also includes a
- bibliography.)
-
-
- BERSERKER LIES
- by Fred Saberhagen
- ($3.99, ISBN 0-812-50563-8)
-
- Machines invented during a long-ago war, the Berserkers were
- programmed to kill all enemy life forms, wherever they are found. But
- they were programmed badly, and instructed instead to eradicate all
- life. The race that invented them was among the first to be wiped out.
- Able to build more of themselves, in every shape and size that seems
- useful to their quest, the Berserkers still roam the galaxy,
- ruthlessly obeying their ancient orders.
-
-
- THE PRINCES OF THE AIR
- by John M. Ford
- ($3.99, ISBN 0-812-50958-7)
-
- Here are the swashbuckling adventures of three young friends from the
- planet Riyah Zain. Orphaned, indentured, and illegitimate, they share
- a passion for computer games, a flexible approach to the truth, and a
- burning desire to get off the world of their birth. THE PRINCES OF THE
- AIR is as thrillingly plotted as a Dumas adventure, and as sharp and
- quick as a computer simulation game.
-
-
- ECHOES OF VALOR III
- edited by Karl Edward Wagner
- ($3.99, ISBN 0-812-55758-1)
-
- This third volume of the sword-and-sorcery classics from the golden
- age of pulp adventure includes the rarely-reprinted original story of
- RED SONYA, by CONAN creator Robert E. Howard, now famous through comic
- book adaptation and movies. The writers in ECHOES OF VALOR III helped
- create the genre of sword-and-sorcery which thrives today. By going
- back to the pulp magazines of decades past, Karl Edward Wagner brings
- the classics to modern fans of fantasy adventure.
-
-
- WHITE JENNA
- by Jane Yolen
- ($3.99, ISBN 0-812-51840-3)
-
- WHITE JENNA, a 1991 Nebula Award nominee, continues the story of
- Jenna, the child of prophesy in Jane Yolen's SISTER LIGHT, SISTER
- DARK. Jenna, now the beautiful and proud White Queen, desperately
- oversees a battle-torn land. As a child Jenna had learned the lore of
- the mountain women who raised her. There, she had called forth her
- dark sister, Skada, who exists only in moonlight, or fire's glow. NOw
- the Dark Queen remains bound to Jenna's side, but confined to the
- dark. A tour-de-force fantasy, WHITE JENNA tells a powerful tale of
- the events that ended a culture and created a new mythology.
-
- Winner of the Caldecott Award for her children's book OWL MOON, Jane
- Yolen is one of the most respected Young Adult authors in the United
- States. Also the author of many adult novels, she won the World
- Fantasy Award for FAVORITE FOLKTALES FROM AROUND THE WORLD.
-
-
- MOON CALLED
- by Andre Norton
- ($3.99, ISBN 0-812-51533-1)
-
- Thora, chosen from birth to serve the Lady, must struggle to survive
- in a world menaced by the dark underground empire of Set. Can Thora
- unravel the secrets of the Dark, and remain true to her Lady?
-
- Author Andre Norton, creator of the WITCH WORLD series, has won the
- World Fantasy Award for life achievement and been named a Grand Master
- by the Science Fiction Writers of America.
-
-
- STEEL BROTHER
- by Gordon R. Dickson
- ($3.99, ISBN 0-812-51547-1)
-
- An outstanding collection of short stories and nonfiction, STEEL
- BROTHER is both an anthology and an appreciation of the work of Gordon
- R. Dickson. With several unforgettable science fiction stories by the
- Nebula and Hugo Award-winning author, STEEL BROTHER also presents an
- original essay by Dickson on the creation of his acclaimed CHILDE
- CYCLE, and a revealing interview with the author. This book will be
- eagerly sought by Dickson's growing legion of fans.
-
-
- CONAN THE HERO
- by Leonard Carpenter
- ($3.99, ISBN 0-812-51907-8)
-
- In the steaming jungles of Venji, Conan fights a seemingly endless war
- against drug-crazed raiders who strike without warning and vanish like
- smoke, and the implacable wizard, Mojourna.
-
- Conan also faces enemies which he cannot see. The powerful court
- eunuchs and the generals who covet the throne lay plots to thwart him.
- Even his own mind turns against him. Only one man could survive all
- this and triumph...only CONAN THE HERO.
-
-
- Special Re-Release!
-
- ENDER'S GAME
- ($4.95, ISBN 0-812-51349-5)
- SPEAKER FOR THE DEAD
- ($4.95, ISBN 0-812-51350-9)
- both by Orson Scott Card
-
- Tor Books is pleased to re-release the first two books in Orson Scott
- Card's ground-breaking "Ender Wiggins" saga, in connection with the
- publication of XENOCIDE, their long-awaited sequel. Both ENDER'S GAME
- and SPEAKER FOR THE DEAD won the Hugo and Nebula awards, becoming the
- first series titles to win this pair of prestigious honors. XENOCIDE,
- in its first few weeks, quickly climbed onto bestsellers lists across
- the country.
-
- (NOTE: RFP reviewed all three Ender novels in issue #17.)
-
-
- OCTOBER TITLES FROM TOR:
-
-
- IMMORTALITY, INC.
- by Robert Sheckley
- ($4.99, ISBN 0-812-51931-0)
-
- Tor once again makes available IMMORTALITY, INC., a classic tale by
- Robert Sheckley, and the story on which the soon-to-be-released
- Paramount motion picture--FREEJACK--is based. FREEJACK, starring
- Anthony Hopkins (SILENCE OF THE LAMBS), Emilio Estevez (YOUNG GUNS)
- and Mick Jagger (lead singer of the Rolling Stones) could well be the
- BLADE RUNNER of the '90s.
-
- Junior Yacht Designer Tom Blaine dies in a car crash in the 20th
- century, but wakes up in a strange new future where poltergeists are
- scientific fact and the Afterlife is open to anyone who can pay the
- price. Hunted by assassins legalized by the Permitted Murder Act,
- Tom's only allies are the beautiful Marie, a Ghost named Ray and a
- Zombie named Smith, who wants Tom alive for deadly reasons of his own.
- Can Tom move fast enough to keep body and soul together in a world
- where Death is not the end?
-
-
- CONAN THE DESTROYER
- by Robert Jordan
- ($3.99, ISBN 0-812-51401-7)
-
- The fabled city of Shadizar contains many attractive opportunities
- --none more alluring than the beautiful maiden Jenna, who must be
- taken to recover a sacred gem. This key will unlock a treasure even
- greater than Conan could ever imagine.
-
- Conan must battle with Bombatta, the murderous henchman of an evil
- princess and fight for his life against the many-fanged demon-god
- Dagoth. Deadly to his body and to his soul, this peril is one that
- Conan MUST vanquish. To survive he must be--CONAN THE DESTROYER.
-
-
- A TRANSATLANTIC TUNNEL, HURRAH!
- by Harry Harrison
- ($3.99, ISBN 1-812-51591-9)
-
- From Harry Harrison, creator of THE STAINLESS STEEL RAT and BILL THE
- GALACTIC HERO, comes an imaginative novel of alternate history and
- high-tech thrills. Two hundred years after the American Revolution
- failed, with George Washington hanged as a traitor, Her Majesty's
- Empire attempts the greatest engineering feat in the history of
- mankind: an underground train tunnel linking Great Britain and North
- America. Over 4,000 miles in length, it is a project that will take
- years to complete, risk lives and fortunes, and make or break the
- reputation of one man: Captain Augustus Washington, descendant of the
- infamous rebel.
-
-
- DAWN FOR A DISTANT EARTH
- by L.E. Modesitt, Jr.
- ($3.99, ISBN 0-812-51613-3)
-
- The Empire spanned the galaxy, leaving behind the ruins of Old
- Earth--now a frigid devastation of gray deserts and poison, ice storms
- and land spouts; a wasteland home only to coyotes and rats, degenerate
- shambletowners and feral devilkids. Sometimes a fad would sweep the
- Empire to reclaim the homeworld. But environmental salvation took too
- long, cost too much, and the fads were always forgotten--except by
- MacGregor Gerswin.
-
- As a captured devilkid, Gerswin was trained for space combat. But he
- was too savage, too brilliant, too independent for the military, which
- exiled him to his home. There Gerswin found a challenge that would
- consume all his strength and rage, through the decades and centuries
- of his life. He conspired to wage a one man war against the
- indifference, the incompetence, the vanity of an empire. In his
- struggle, he would use patience, politics and manipulation--even
- sabotage, scandal and ambush. Somehow Gerswin would find a way to
- bring Earth back from the dead.
-
-
- AMBIENT
- by Jack Womack
- ($3.99, ISBN 0-812-51605-2)
-
- It's the near future in New York City, and Seamus O'Malley is the
- bodyguard, secretary and right-hand man to Mister Dryden, son of the
- richest man in the world. When he isn't helping Dryden and his father
- consolidate their iron grip on a city gone crazy, Seamus lives in
- Loisaida (the Lower East Side) with his sister Enid, an Ambient. The
- original Ambients were radiation scarred mutants from out on Long
- Island, where permanent war rages and no one goes any more. Enid, and
- a growing number of others, are Ambients by choice, those who
- masochistically alter their bodies beyond the realm of normal.
- Ambients have their own religion (in opposition to the mainstream
- Church of Elvis), their own mysterious trans-human powers...and their
- own unique way of looking at life.
-
- When Mister Dryden offers the hand of his mistress, Avalon, if Seamus
- will kill the elder Dryden, he takes the offer--only to be swept up
- into the murderous secrets of the Dryden family. There he learns the
- true secret behind the Ambients, and discovers how the Drydens have
- managed to inherit control of what's left of the United States.
-
-
- GRAND MASTER'S CHOICE
- edited by Andre Norton
- ($3.99, ISBN 0-812-50619-7)
-
- GRAND MASTER'S CHOICE offers up the best short stories from each of
- the first eight Grand Masters of science fiction, as chosen by the
- Science Fiction Writers of America. Previously published only in a
- limited hardcover edition by the New England Science Fiction
- Association, one of the first established science fiction clubs in the
- world, in commemoration of the fiftieth World Science Fiction
- Convention. That edition sold out its entire printing immediately.
-
- GRAND MASTER'S CHOICE includes stories by Robert A. Heinlein, Isaac
- Asimov, and Arthur C. Clarke (perhaps the three bestselling science
- fiction authors of all time) along with perennial bestsellers Clifford
- Simak, Fritz Leiber, and Andre Norton. All are prolific novelists
- beloved by millions of readers. Jack Williamson and L. Sprague de
- Camp, among the most durable favorites in the field, have been
- entertaining their legions of fans with a special brand of fantasy and
- science fiction for decades.
-
- **************************
-
- ----> BOX SCORES
- .....................................
- /: KQ :
- : : BARRAYER :
- : : Lois McMaster Bujold....5 :
- : : THE JUPITER WAR :
- : : Bill Fawcett editor.....3 :
- : : SYNNERS :
- : : Pat Cadigan.............2 :
- : : PYRAMIDS :
- : : Fred Saberhagen.........3 :
- : : THE ALBINO KNIFE :
- : : Steve Perry............3 :
- : : THE SUM OF THINGS :
- : : Roland J. Green........3 :
- : : :
- : : by darryl kenning :
- : :...................................:
- :..................................../
-
- **************************
-
- People with narrow minds usually have broad tongues.
-
- **************************
-
- TREKOLOGY
-
- TNG - Stardate Sequence:
-
- 41153.7 Encounter at Farpoint - Part I 101 09/26/87
- 41153.8 Encounter at Farpoint - Part II 102 09/26/87
- 41209.2 The Naked Now 103 10/03/87
- 41235.2 Code Of Honor 104 10/10/87
- 41242.4 Datalore 114 01/16/88
- 41249.3 Lonely Among Us 108 10/31/87
- 41255.6 Justice 109 11/07/87
- 41263.1 Where No One Has Gone Before 106 10/24/87
- 41294.5 Haven 105 11/28/87
- 41309.5 Too Short A Season 112 02/06/88
- 41365.9 11001001 116 01/30/88
- 41386.4 The Last Outpost 107 10/18/87
- 41416.2 Coming Of Age 119 03/12/88
- 41463.9 Home Soil 117 02/20/88
- 41503.7 Heart Of Glory 120 03/19/88
- 41509.1 When The Bough Breaks 118 02/13/88
- 41590.5 Hide And Q 111 11/21/87
- 41601.3 Skin Of Evil 122 04/23/88
- 41636.9 Angel One 115 01/23/88
- 41697.9 We'll Always Have Paris 124 04/30/88
- 41723.9 The Battle 110 11/14/87
- 41775.5 Conspiracy 125 05/07/88
- 41798.2 The Arsenal Of Freedom 121 04/09/88
- 41986.0 The Neutral Zone 126 05/14/88
- 41997.7 The Big Goodbye 113 01/09/88
- 42073.1 The Child 127 11/19/88
- 42193.6 Where Silence Has Lease 128 11/26/88
- 42286.3 Elementary, Dear Data 129 12/03/88
- 42402.7 The Outrageous Okona 130 12/10/88
- 42437.5 The Schizoid Man 131 01/21/89
- 42477.2 Loud As A Whisper 132 01/07/89
- 42494.8 Unnatural Selection 133 01/28/89
- 42506.5 A Matter Of Honor 134 02/04/89
- 42523.7 The Measure Of A Man 135 02/11/89
- 42568.8 The Dauphin 136 02/18/89
- 42609.1 Contagion 137 03/18/89
- 42625.4 The Royale 138 03/25/89
- 42679.2 Time Squared 139 04/01/89
- 42686.4 The Icarus Factor 140 04/22/89
- 42695.3 Pen Pals 141 04/29/89
- 42761.3 Q Who 142 05/06/89
- 42779.1 Samaritan Snare 143 05/13/89
- 42823.2 Up The Long Ladder 144 05/20/89
- 42859.2 Manhunt 145 06/17/89
- 42901.3 The Emissary 146 06/24/89
- 42923.4 Peak Performance 147 07/08/89
- 42976.1 Shades Of Gray 148 07/15/89
- 43125.8 Evolution 150 09/23/89
- 43152.4 The Survivors 151 10/07/89
- 43173.5 Who Watches The Watchers 152 10/14/89
- 43198.7 The Bonding 153 10/21/89
- 43205.6 Booby Trap 154 10/28/89
- 43349.2 The Enemy 155 11/04/89
- 43385.6 The Price 156 11/11/89
- 43421.9 The Vengeance Factor 157 11/18/89
- 43462.5 The Defector 158 12/30/89
- 43489.2 The Hunted 159 01/06/90
- 43510.7 The High Ground 160 01/27/90
- 43539.1 Deja Q 161 02/03/90
- 43610.4 A Matter Of Perspective 162 02/10/90
- 43625.2 Yesterday's Enterprise 163 02/17/90
- 43657.0 The Offspring 164 03/10/90
- 43685.2 Sins Of The Father 165 03/17/90
- 43714.1 Allegiance 166 03/24/90
- 43745.2 Captain's Holiday 167 03/31/90
- 43779.3 Tin Man 168 04/21/90
- 43807.4 Hollow Pursuits 169 04/28/90
- 43872.2 The Most Toys 170 05/05/90
- 43917.4 Sarek 171 05/12/90
- 43930.7 Menage A Troi 172 05/26/90
- 43957.2 Transfigurations 173 06/02/90
- 43989.1 The Best Of Both Worlds, Part 1 174 06/16/90
- 44001.4 The Best Of Both Worlds, Part 2 175 09/22/90
- 44012.3 Family 178 09/29/90
- 44085.7 Brothers 177 10/06/90
- 44143.7 Suddenly Human 176 10/13/90
- 44161.2 Remember Me 179 10/20/90
- 44215.2 Legacy 180 10/27/90
- 44246.3 Reunion 181 11/03/90
- 44286.5 Future Imperfect 182 11/10/90
- 44307.3 Final Mission 183 11/17/90
- 44356.9 The Loss 184 12/29/90
- 44390.1 Data's Day 185 01/05/91
- 44429.6 The Wounded 186 01/26/91
- 44474.5 Devil's Due 187 02/02/91
- 44502.7 Clues 188 02/09/91
- 44614.6 Galaxy's Child 190 03/09/91
- 44631.2 Night Terrors 191 03/16/91
- 44664.5 Identity Crisis 192 03/24/91
- 44704.2 The Nth Degree 193 03/31/91
- 44741.9 Qpid 194 04/21/91
- 44769.2 The Drumhead 195 04/28/91
- 44805.3 Half A Life 196 05/05/91
- 44821.3 The Host 197 05/12/91
- 44885.5 The Mind's Eye 199 06/02/91
- 44932.3 In Theory 198 06/09/91
- Unknown The Ensigns Of Command 149 09/30/89
- Unknown First Contact 189 02/16/91
- Unknown Symbiosis 123 04/16/88
- Unknown Redemption 200 06/23/91
-
- **************************
-
- The moon may be smaller than Earth, but it's further away.
-
- **************************
-
- NEWS 'N' NOTES
-
- Received: RADIO FREE THULCANDRA
-
- RFT is a fanzine edited and published for Christian Fandom, and
- interdenominational fellowship of christians and SF fans interested in
- the courteous and accurate representation of Christian viewpoints in
- the fannish community. Edited by Marty Helgesen. For info and samples
- etc. ( follows the tradition of most fanzines) write:
-
- Marty Helgesen
- 11 Lawrence Ave.
- Malverne, NY 11565-1406 USA
-
- please mention that you saw this information in READING FOR PLEASURE
-
- **************************
-
- The problem with the gene pool is that there is no lifeguard.
-
- **************************
-
- * Disney has purchased the film rights to the WILD CARDS shared-world
- series edited by George R.R. Martin. Martin will write the screenplay.
-
- * Gay Star Trek fans have started the Gaylactic Network, and they're
- currently engaged in a letter-writing campaign asking that STAR TREK:
- THE NEXT GENERATION have a character who is openly gay. If you'd like
- to add you voice, send your petition to: Gene Roddenberry, 5555
- Melrose Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90038, with a copy to Brandon Tartikoff
- at the same address. For more information about the Gaylactic Network,
- write to: The Gaylactic Network, Box 1051, Back Bay Annex, Boston, MA
- 02117-1051.
-
- * Carroll & Graf, one of our favorite publishers, has recently
- purchased reprint rights to the entire available backlist of SF novels
- by A.E. van Vogt. By "available backlist" I mean books whose rights
- are not currently owned by someone else. For instance, Tor (another of
- our favorite publishers) holds the rights to the "Weapon Shops" series
- and SLAN. Carroll & Graf plan to put every out-of-print van Vogt novel
- back into print over the next three to four years.
-
- **************************
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
- * *
- * FRIGHTFUL FICTION *
- * *
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- Editor: Annie Wilkes
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- Frightful Fiction is a division of Reading For Pleasure, published
- bimonthly. This material is NOT COPYRIGHTED and may be used freely by
- all. Catalogs, news releases, review copies, or donated reviews should
- be sent to: Reading For Pleasure, 103 Baughman's Lane, Suite 303,
- Frederick, MD 21702.
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- BRAM STOKER AWARDS
-
- Given out by the Horror Writers of America.
-
- Novel: MINE by Robert R. McCammon (Pocket)
- First Novel: THE REVELATION by Bentley Little (St. Martin's)
- Novelette: "Stephen" by Elizabeth Massie (BORDERLANDS)
- Short Story: "The Calling" by David B. Silva (BORDERLANDS)
- Collection: FOUR PAST MIDNIGHT by Stephen King (Viking)
- Nonfiction: DARK DREAMERS by Stanley Wiater (Avon)
- Lifetime Achievement Award: Hugh B. Cave & Richard Matheson
-
- **************************
-
- * I'm sure you're aware of THE BRIDGE by John Skipp and Craig Spector,
- being released by Bantam Books October 1991. But did you know that
- this book also has an original soundtrack CD? The authors wrote,
- performed, recorded, and produced the material, and the CD should be
- available at the same time as the book.
-
- * Speaking of Skipp & Spector, remember the zombie anthology they
- edited called BOOK OF THE DEAD? The one that was supposed to have a
- sequel, which got hung up for awhile? Well the sequel is back on track
- now, called STILL DEAD, and will contain stories by K.W. Jeter, Gahan
- Wilson, Nancy Collins, Kathe Koja (THE CIPHER), Poppy Z. Brite, Pat
- Cadigan, and maybe even a few surprise contributors. I hope to find
- out the release date by next issue.
-
- * Movies Filmed Recently: RED SLEEP, screenplay by Richard Christian
- Matheson, directed by John Landis, possibly starring Robert DeNiro.
- Also, SLEEPWALKERS, screenplay by Stephen King, directed by Mick
- Garris.
-
- * An emergency medical and financial hardship fund has been
- established by the Horror Writers of America. It was kicked off with
- several thousand dollars raised by auctions and donations. If you'd
- like to donate to this fund, send your check to: Horror Writers of
- America (Hardship Fund), Cheryl Curry Sayre, Treasurer, Box 1301,
- Ontario, CANADA 91762-9991.
-
- * Richard T. Chizmar is the editor/publisher of CEMETERY DANCE
- magazine (see Peter Quint's article in this issue). He is also the
- editor of an anthology of "dark mystery fiction" called COLD BLOOD, a
- genre-crossing book whose stories include elements of horror, mystery,
- suspense, crime, and murder. It should be available by the time you
- read this from Ziesing Books (Mark V. Ziesing, PO Box 76, Shingletown,
- CA 96088, 916-474-1580). We now hear that Chizmar is editing another
- anthology for Ziesing Books called THE EARTH STRIKES BACK, "tales of
- ecological/environmental terror", and yet another anthology, of
- original horror/suspense stories, called SHIVERS for SpineTingling
- Press (see reviews of SpineTingling Press' BONE-THROWER and FREAK LINK
- audio books in RFP #18 and information about their book SEXPUNKS &
- SAVAGE SAGAS in this issue).
-
- * Because of the success of the TV mini-series adaptation of Stephen
- King's IT last year, ABC has bought the rights to his THE
- TOMMYKNOCKERS for another mini-series. King's latest, NEEDFUL THINGS,
- the last Castle Rock novel, has also been purchased (but for the movie
- theater, not TV). It is rumored that the price paid for TOMMYKNOCKERS
- might have set a record for TV, and the grapevine has it that King got
- $1.75 million for the movie rights to NEEDFUL THINGS.
-
- **************************
-
- THE SHAPE UNDER THE SHEET
- The Complete Stephen King Encyclopedia
- by Stephen J. Spignesi
- (Popular Culture Ink, 1991, $110, ISBN 1-56075-018-9)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- If you're hoping that this is another overpriced piece of nonsense
- cranked out for King fanatics with more money than sense, I've got
- some bad news for you: THE SHAPE UNDER THE SHEET is not only wonderful
- throughout its 780 gigantic pages, it is easily worth all one hundred
- and ten dollars it takes to buy yourself a copy. Let me try to give
- you a hint of all the neat things in THE SHAPE UNDER THE SHEET:
-
- The core of the Encyclopedia is the concordance section. Each
- published--and unpublished--work by Stephen King is listed
- chronologically, and for each work you get a skeleton, or outline, of
- the entire work, plus an alphabetical listing of entries under the
- headings: "People", "Places", and "Things". Not just the SIGNIFICANT
- people, places, and things, you understand. ALL the people, places,
- and things. For instance, one of the Things listed for THE DEAD ZONE
- is "JUDE THE OBSCURE--A book read by Chuck Chatsworth." Can't remember
- who Chuck was? Look under People and you'll find "CHATSWORTH,
- CHUCK--The seventeen-year-old boy that John Smith tutored." According
- to the publishers there are 18,000 entries in the concordance area.
-
- Other sections of THE SHAPE UNDER THE SHEET include: discussions about
- Stephen King's background, interviews with friends and relatives,
- articles about King, articles about King fandom, all about CASTLE ROCK
- (the Stephen King newsletter), complete coverage of film adaptations,
- discussions of King's poetry, a guide to audiotape versions of King
- works, an annotated bibliography, interviews with King's literary
- contemporaries (about King, of course), coverage of material King
- hasn't finished and/or hasn't even begun yet. Also, every section
- contains numerous "sidebars" of related interesting material, making
- this a fabulous browsing book as well as a reference volume. And this
- Encyclopedia is meant to be used. There are two Tables of Contents,
- with the material arranged sequentially and then classified by type.
- There are over a dozen Indexes, so you can look up King material any
- way that suits you. And the front and rear endsheets provide two of
- the most important Indexes in the easiest to find location.
-
- Out of all the books published about Stephen King (and I've got almost
- one entire shelf of them myself), THE SHAPE UNDER THE SHEET stands out
- as the one book to have for King fans. I'm having a particularly good
- time with THE SHAPE UNDER THE SHEET and King's new NEEDFUL THINGS.
- This latest novel from King is supposedly the last that will be set in
- his fictional town of Castle Rock, and many of Castle Rock's
- residents, seen in previous books, make a curtain call. With THE SHAPE
- UNDER THE SHEET nearby, I can remind myself about these previous
- stories and enjoy many King plots and characters all over again. Don't
- miss THE SHAPE UNDER THE SHEET.
-
- If your local bookstore can't help you get THE SHAPE UNDER THE SHEET,
- you can write to the publisher at: Popular Culture, Ink, PO Box 1839,
- Ann Arbor, MI 48106. Better yet, get your credit card ready and call
- 1-800-678-8828 (orders only).
-
- **************************
-
- SUMMER OF NIGHT
- by Dan Simmons
- (Putnam, January 1991, $22.95, ISBN 0-399-13573-1)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- "Dale Stewart sat in his sixth-grade classroom in Old
- Central and was quietly certain that the last day of
- school was the worst punishment grown-ups had ever devised
- for kids.
- Time had slowed worse than when he was in a dentist's
- office waiting, worse than when he was in trouble with his
- mom and had to wait for his dad to come home before
- punishment could be meted out..."
-
- SUMMER OF NIGHT is a both an evocation of childhood worthy of Ray
- Bradbury and a horror thriller worthy of the author of THE SONG OF
- KALI and CARRION COMFORT (Dan Simmons). Taking place over the course
- of a couple of months, SUMMER OF NIGHT weaves a shocking tale of evil
- against the backdrop of a small rural town. The cast of characters
- includes eleven-year-old Dale and his younger, 8-year-old brother
- Lawrence, and the rest of Dale's contemporaries: the mature and
- religious Mike; the budding writer and overweight egghead Duane; the
- slightly strange newcomer Kevin; the good boy from an unfortunate
- home, Jim. All the kids you knew as a child are here: the school
- bully, the bully's moronic sidekick, the most beautiful girl in the
- class, your best friend, the dirt-poor family and the filthy-rich
- family. They're all here.
-
- Also very much present in SUMMER OF NIGHT is the setting: the summer
- of 1960 in a small rural town in Illinois. John F. Kennedy is winning
- the nomination as Democratic candidate for President, the Echo space
- satellite is being launched, rural homes didn't get locked at night,
- entertainment consisted of picnics and outdoor movies, and a boy's
- best friend was his bike. (Do you remember your bike? How many
- possessions do you have today that mean anywhere NEAR as much to you
- as your bike did back then?) I don't remember any author that has
- caught the Babyboomer childhood as well as Dan Simmons has here.
- Reading this book brought back to me the sense of "territory" that I
- had as a child, how well I knew the position of every tree, every
- brook, every hiding place in my neighborhood. Dan Simmons has once
- again stretched his boundaries as a writer and written a story that is
- truly different from anything he has done before.
-
- But SUMMER OF NIGHT is not all campouts and ballgames--there is a
- terrific horror story drawn onto this backdrop. Tubby Cooke, one of
- the poorest students in Old Central (both academically and
- economically), is introduced on page 15 and lasts only to page 20, at
- least as a living character. There are forces alive in the small town
- of Elm Haven that apparently only the children can sense--they hear
- voices, see lights, feel drafts. Soon there will be apparitions, and
- much, much worse. Tubby's sister Cordie calls them "night things", and
- it will take the combined talents of Dale and all of his friends to
- fight the evil that is taking over his town. Not all will live through
- the battle; the end of summer and the end of innocence will go hand in
- hand. The ending, which of course I won't give away, is wrenchingly
- wonderful--I have always been in awe of Dan Simmons ability to END a
- story with a bittersweet sense of finality and closure.
-
- SUMMER OF NIGHT is another rousing and literate horror tale from Dan
- Simmons. Whatever you do, don't miss this one, and be sure to check
- out the earlier SONG OF KALI and CARRION COMFORT if you haven't
- already. Tor is reprinting SONG OF KALI in a paperback edition this
- month--October 1991. (And I can't very well talk about Dan Simmons
- without at least mentioning HYPERION and FALL OF HYPERION, a two-book
- SF/horror combination that is simply breathtaking.)
-
- SIMMONS UPDATE: His next novel, CHILDREN OF THE NIGHT, has been
- turned in to Putnam and is tentatively scheduled for publication in
- July 1992.
- **************************
-
- THE STAKE
- A Novel of the Supernatural
- by Richard Laymon
- (St. Martin's, June 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-312-06016-5)
- review by Drew Bartorillo
-
- On the way home from a weekend outing, Larry Dunbar, a famous horror
- novelist, his wife and the next door neighbors decide to do some
- exploring in an old ghost town called Sagebrush Flat. Underneath the
- floor of what used to be the town's main hotel, they find a coffin
- containing a shriveled female corpse impaled by a wooden stake.
- Everyone's initial reaction is that someone had killed a vampire (of
- course no one REALLY believes in vampires). Larry is having a hard
- time getting started on his next horror novel (hasn't even decided
- what to write about yet) and decides to come back later and take the
- corpse home. His intention is to write a horror nonfiction novel
- mirroring his real-life adventures with the corpse. During the writing
- of his new novel, Larry finds out who the corpse is and eventually
- even who killed her, along with two other young girls in the town
- where they all live. But, the whole time, the corpse is in Larry's
- garage attic with the stake still in her chest. What would happen if
- someone pulled out the stake? Is she REALLY a vampire and would she
- come back to life?
-
- I found THE STAKE very enjoyable and extremely fast paced. Richard
- Laymon's writing style will keep you riveted to every word and
- anxiously awaiting the final outcome of the story. I found myself
- screaming for someone to pull out the darned stake and see what
- happens (after all this is a supposed to be a novel of the
- supernatural). Well, someone does pull out the stake eventually
- and...... ! I can highly recommend THE STAKE and look forward to
- reading other books by Richard Laymon.
-
- **************************
-
- HANGMAN
- by Christopher A. Bohjalian
- (Carroll & Graf, May 1991, $18.95, ISBN 0-88184-685-6)
- review by Annie Wilkes
-
- Brian and Marcia Middleton are moving from the hectic world of New
- York City to a large farmhouse in Vermont. They are seeking a simpler
- and more rewarding lifestyle as well as a fresh start for their shaky
- marriage. Their delight with the new house is short-lived, for the
- Middletons are soon told that the house comes with a reputation for
- being, well, strange. It seems that early in this century a 6-year-old
- girl hanged herself in the house's attic, and the noose is hanging
- there still. Marcia also notices other problems with the attic, like
- the fact that it's often colder up there than it is outside. When
- Marcia finds her husband hanging from the noose in the attic, she
- numbly tells the police that he was killed. Now it will be Detective
- J.P. Burrows' job to discover who (or is it what?) killed Brian
- Middleton, and of course Marcia is the obvious suspect.
-
- HANGMAN is a slightly old-fashioned supernatural tale, a bit more
- slowly paced than the modern monster fests, and with a terrific moody,
- atmospheric quality. The characters are engaging and the Middleton's
- Vermont house just might remind you a bit of Hill House. HANGMAN is a
- great Halloween choice for readers a bit tired of monsters and mayhem.
-
- Christopher A. Bohjalian's first novel, A KILLING IN THE REAL WORLD
- (1988), was optioned by CBS Entertainment for the movie DEADLY
- REUNION. He now lives in Vermont where he is working on his third
- novel.
-
- **************************
-
- HORROR COMICS: The Illustrated History
- by Mike Benton
- (Taylor Publishing, July 1991, $21.95, ISBN 0-87833-734-2)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Do you know...
-
- 1. Which female vampire comic book hero wore a leather bikini, drank
- synthetic blood, and came from the planet Drakulon?
- 2. What Freddie Krueger, Steve Martin, and the Swamp Thing have in
- common?
- 3. Which famous HBO Television series host originally appeared in a
- 1950s EC horror comic? (Hint: His father had two heads and his
- mother was an Egyptian mummy.)
- 4. Why vampires and werewolves double-date?
- 5. Why the United States Senate, a New York governor, a Harlem
- psychiatrist, and ten thousand mothers wanted to ban the horror
- comics of the 1950s?
-
- HORROR COMICS is the first of a new series called "The Taylor History
- of Comics". In this volume, author Mike Benton gives a complete
- history of those nasty comic books that our parents never wanted us to
- read. The ones with the exploding heads and dripping corpses (in
- glorious, hideous color) on the covers. You'll find out how all this
- awfulness got started, who the movers and shakers were, who the
- creative artists were, and the whole story is brought up to the
- present day with titles like THE VAMPIRE LESTAT and HELLBLAZER. Of
- course, you can't cover the history of horror comics without talking
- about Frederic Wertham's SEDUCTION OF THE INNOCENT, the Congressional
- investigation into the way comics warp the minds of our young, and the
- resultant Comics Code. HORROR COMICS will tell you all about it, and
- an Appendix gives you the actual text of the Comics Code. Did I
- mention that every page of HORROR COMICS has full-color reproductions
- of covers and story pages of notable horror comics? You can see and
- read portions of the old comics to get a feel for the content
- yourself. And Mike Benton knows that you won't be able to resist all
- these delectable delights for long, so he includes a chapter about
- collecting and ends the book with a heavily-illustrated guide and
- checklist to all the major horror comic books published in the last
- fifty years. HORROR COMICS is irresistible.
-
- ANSWERS: 1. Vampirella. 2. They all appeared in horror comic books
- based on movies. 3. The Crypt-Keeper. 4. They never argue about
- where or who to eat later. 5. Read the book! You can find the answer
- to this question--and thousands more--in HORROR COMICS: THE
- ILLUSTRATED HISTORY by Mike Benton.
-
- Mike Benton has been a comic book collector, dealer, and investor for
- more than 25 years. He is co-owner of Custom Comic Services, the
- country's largest exclusive publisher of educational comics, and has
- written COMIC BOOK COLLECTING FOR FUN AND PROFIT and THE COMIC BOOK IN
- AMERICA. If you local store can't help you find HORROR COMICS, try
- writing to the publisher at: Taylor Publishing Company, 1550 W.
- Mockingbird Lane, Dallas, TX 75235.
-
- **************************
-
- THE BAD PLACE
- by Dean R. Koontz
- (1990)
- review by Drew Bartorillo
-
- Frank Pollard regains consciousness in an alley not knowing who he is
- or where he has been. All he can remember is his name. He has with him
- a leather flight bag full of money. Where did it come from? Suddenly
- he is being chased by a mysterious blue light. Stealing a car, he
- tries to escape but is pursued by the blue light which has the power
- of smashing in the car windows and bursting the car tires. The blue
- light materializes into a dark stranger and the chase continues.
-
- Bobby and Julie Dakota own a detective agency that specializes in
- surveillance and background investigation cases, not your "normal"
- missing person or cheating spouse type of case. Their big goal is to
- earn enough money to retire early and be able to do what they really
- want to do for the rest of their lives. Frank Pollard will seek their
- help in finding out who he is and their destiny will be changed
- forever.
-
- The Dakotas and Frank will eventually cross paths with a ruthless
- killer called Candy who was taught at an early age by his mother that
- the easy way to kill people, young and old, is to bite their necks,
- gouging out large chunks until they were dead. He has also developed a
- liking for cocktails of his victims' blood. Candy has a very
- specialized talent, the capability to transport himself, at will, to
- any place that he can visualize. He can reach his victims simply by
- touching something they've touched, since their "presence" remains on
- every item they come in contact with. Candy can detect your presence,
- visualize where you are, and presto, instant death arrives.
-
- I really, really enjoyed THE BAD PLACE. This is the second Dean Koontz
- book I have read, PHANTOMS being the first. I was less than thrilled
- with PHANTOMS, but since then Koontz has made some major advancements
- in the field of suspense writing. THE BAD PLACE has all you can ask
- for in a suspense thriller with a touch of the supernatural thrown in.
- Koontz's vision of how human teleporation might take place is
- fascinating. I found myself unable to put THE BAD PLACE down--I just
- couldn't wait to find out what Frank Pollard, the Dakotas and Candy
- had in common. THE BAD PLACE also has a really power-packed ending. I
- was breathless after completing the book and even now occasionally
- think about it. There isn't too much more I can say about the central
- plot of the book without giving it away. All I can say is try it,
- you'll really like it.
-
- WARNING: Those of you that object to or have queasy stomachs when it
- comes to animal mutilation might be a little cautious when it comes to
- THE BAD PLACE. You see, Candy is not partial to feeding on the flesh
- and blood of humans. He'll occasionally feast on a rabbit or cat.
-
- NOTE: The next Dean Koontz novel will be HIDEAWAY, coming from Putnam
- in January 1992.
- **************************
-
- SOMETHING STIRS
- by Charles L. Grant
- (Tor, November 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-312-85152-9)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- It matters not what you believe.
- What matters is what you forgot:
-
- The sun will shine on loch and kirk,
- But in the dark, child,
- Something stirs.
-
- What would autumn be without a Charles Grant novel? I will always
- associate him with the rustling leaves and dark corners of an evening
- in autumn, or the unnatural stillness during a nighttime blizzard in
- the following winter. SOMETHING STIRS is set in a small town in
- November and December, and the lead characters are a clique of high
- school teenagers, Grant's specialty. Indeed, Grant portrays teenagers
- better than any other writer I can think of except Stephen King. These
- teenagers, of course, have a problem. Their leader, Eddie Roman, has
- apparently hacked his father to death and then, somehow, torn himself
- to pieces. At first the police say that it couldn't have been a
- suicide, but when no suspects are forthcoming suicide looks most
- likely. The rest of the Pack, however, know that something had been
- bothering Eddie for weeks--he had been deeply frightened. Of
- something. And they also heard the screaming that night, from all
- corners of the town. What is going on?
-
- SOMETHING STIRS is a story about childhood nightmares that are
- forgotten but not gone. Though the explanation at the end of the novel
- is the weakest part, it seems that your childish fears can come back
- to get you. Not as good as last year's STUNTS, SOMETHING STIRS is
- nonetheless a fine moody and atmospheric tale of things that really DO
- go bump in the night. For in the darkness, child, something stirs.
-
- **************************
-
- TALONS
- by Anthony Mancini
- (Donald I. Fine, August 1991, $19.95, ISBN 1-55611-234-3)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- Evocative of such classic man-versus-nature thrillers as JAWS and "The
- Birds", TALONS refers to the razor-like claws of a voracious rogue
- eagle who is a more deadly threat than the most sadistic of human
- predators. A genetic mishap resulting from the Chernobyl nuclear
- disaster, this bird has an insatiable appetite; for her, man is but an
- appetizer. In the midst of the action there's also irony (the falconer
- who smuggles the bird into the U.S. experiences her fury firsthand)
- and an engaging romance between a New York police lieutenant, David
- Torino, and the Central Park Zoo's beautiful and brainy ornithologist,
- Antonia Meadows, who is assigned to capture--or kill--the eagle.
-
- Anthony Mancini has written four previous novels, including MENAGE and
- THE YELLOW GARDENIA. A veteran New York POST reporter, he has also
- written for Cosmopolitan, Penthouse and the Washington POST.
-
- **************************
-
- SEXPUNKS & SAVAGE SAGAS
- Dark, Quirky, Erotic Stories
- by Richard Sutphen
- (Spine-Tingling Press, October 1991, $18.95, ISBN 0-87554-476-2)
- review by Annie Wilkes
-
- In RFP #18 we reviewed two audio cassettes from Spine-Tingling Press:
- BONE THROWER and FREAK LINK, both of which were written and read by
- Richard Sutphen. In SEXPUNKS & SAVAGE SAGAS, Sutphen provides a print
- copy of his two title stories from the tapes, along with a dozen other
- stories--all weird tales with extensive sexual content. In the back of
- the book Sutphen discusses the origin of the stories, many of which
- derive from terrifying occult experiences he has discovered in real
- life. There is also an excerpt from BRAIN DAMAGED, a novel by Sutphen
- scheduled for released in Summer 1992.
-
- If you like weird fiction, occult stories, and kinky sex, SEXPUNKS &
- SAVAGE SAGAS may be just the book for you. I think I still prefer the
- audio version of BONE THROWER, though--thrilling stories like that
- work best as drama. SEXPUNKS & SAVAGE SAGAS is also available in a
- signed and limited first cloth slipcased edition of 350 copies ($50,
- ISBN 0-87554-479-7) and on audio tape (ST103, two tapes, three hours,
- $14.95, ISBN 0-87554-487-8). You can get all Sutphen material from:
- Spine-Tingling Press, Box 186, Agoura Hills, CA 91376. Include list
- price plus $3 shipping for first book, $1 for each additional book. Or
- get your credit card and call 1-800-421-6603 (orders only).
-
- **************************
-
- DESCENT
- by Ron Dee
- (Dell Abyss, October 1991, $4.50, ISBN 0-440-20708-8)
- review by Annie Wilkes
-
- Suck away my death and bring me alive.
- Lose your self and I arrive.
-
- So sings satanic rock star Aliester C. in a concert at the beginning
- of Ron Dee's DESCENT, a fast-paced race between the powers of life and
- death. Vickie Laster's father died when she was young, and she wanted
- her father back so badly that she unknowingly forged a relationship
- with Death beyond anything known before. Now she's a young married
- woman with an abusive husband and a dead baby that mysteriously died
- in the womb. Soon Vickie is due to give birth to Death in Life and she
- will become an infernal conduit between the two, a connection between
- two worlds that were never meant to be joined.
-
- While it seems to me that DESCENT just misses out on excellence--the
- underlying cosmic theory could have been clearer and the characters
- were sketchily drawn--the story is compelling and the pace is swift.
- Read DESCENT with a little Alice Cooper on your music machine, or
- maybe some Ozzy Osbourne and Black Sabbath. DESCENT is loud, fast, and
- grim. Give it a try.
-
- NOTE: Stephen King had this to say about Dell's new Abyss line of
- horror fiction: "In terms of quality, production, and plain old
- story-telling reliability (that's the bottom line, isn't it?) Dell's
- new line is amazingly satisfying...a rare and wonderful bargain for
- readers."
-
-
- Hope you didn't miss the September volume from Dell Abyss:
-
- MASTERY
- by Kelley Wilde
- (Dell Abyss, September 1991, $4.50, ISBN 0-440-20727-4)
-
- This is the same Kelley Wilde whose first published novel, THE
- SUITING, won the Bram Stoker Award for a First Novel. And his MAKOTO
- was pretty good too.
-
- **************************
-
- THE HEADSMAN
- by James Neal Harvey
- (Donald I. Fine, August 1991, $19.95, ISBN 1-55611-263-7)
- review by Drew Bartorillo
-
- During colonial times, the town of Braddock, New York, employed an
- executioner who plied his bloody trade with a huge double-bladed ax.
- According to a grim local town legend, the executioner returns every
- so often to punish adulterers and other perceived sinners. One day the
- students of the local Braddock High School have a heated debate over
- the pros and cons of the town legend. That night one the the class
- students, the daughter of a prominent citizen, is found decapitated
- and one of the other students has a "vision" of the decapitation
- taking place. In the vision, a giant of a man, clad all in black and
- wielding the awful doubled-bladed weapon, appears out of the shadows
- to do his gruesome work and, once done, disappears back into the
- shadows. Is the legend just an old wives' tale and there really is a
- deranged killer in the town of Braddock using the legend to mask his
- gruesome deeds? Or does the horrifying executioner materialize
- periodically, as the legend states?
-
- I found reading THE HEADSMAN to be quite dry at times. There is way
- too much emphasis placed on details that have absolutely nothing to do
- with the progress of the story. For example: the great detail,
- paragraph after paragraph, of a shopping trip one of the main
- characters takes. As is usual in a horror novel, I assumed I was being
- set up for a main event in the story. Unfortunately, nothing happened
- and I was left wondering why the ramblings even took place. The novel
- is full of this type of digression, but I was continually wondering
- whether the executioner was out of the legend or actually one of the
- town's people. This kept me going, through each murder, till I
- finished the novel and found out. I'm not too sure I'd recommend this
- book to anyone who is used to fast-paced action/terror novels. You
- might find this one a bit slow for you, but it still is above average.
-
- **************************
-
- BY BIZARRE HANDS
- by Joe R. Lansdale
- (Avon, September 1991, $3.99, ISBN 0-380-71205-9)
- review by Peter Quint
-
- BY BIZARRE HANDS is about the easiest book to recommend in the entire
- bookstore. Unless you got the Mark V. Ziesing hardcover edition in
- 1989 you NEED this book. Here's the way it stacks up: Horror (or "dark
- fantasy" or whatever you want to call it) and short stories go
- together like a pit and a pendulum; Joe Lansdale is one of horror's
- leading talents; Joe's very best work is short; most of Joe's stories
- have been published in small magazines so you probably haven't seen
- them; and this is Joe's first collection. That's about as simple as I
- can say it.
-
- In this collection you'll find a couple of stories you might have
- heard of before, like "Night They Missed the Horror Show" and "On the
- Far Side of the Cadillac Desert with Dead Folks". If you didn't see
- them in SILVER SCREAM and BOOK OF THE DEAD, respectively, maybe you
- read that they won a few awards. The first story won the Bram Stoker
- Award and the second won the Bram Stoker Award, the American Horror
- Award, and an award presented by the British Fantasy Society. BY
- BIZARRE HANDS also has stories you probably haven't heard of,
- including two ("The Fat Man and the Elephant" and "The Steel
- Valentine") that are original to this volume and one ("Hell Through a
- Windshield") that appears in its entirety for the first time.
-
- So here's my recommendation: Buy this book. It'll be the best $3.99
- you ever spent.
- **************************
-
- The Horror Writers of America Present:
- UNDER THE FANG
- edited by Robert R. McCammon
- (Pocket Books, August 1991, $4.95, ISBN 0-671-69573-8)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Shared-world anthologies can be found all over the SF bookshelves, but
- here is one for horror fans. Edited by bestselling author Robert R.
- McCammon and presented under the auspices of The Horror Writers of
- America, UNDER THE FANG collects stories about a future world in which
- the vampires have taken over. Vampires run the governments and own the
- media, and the humans that are left must run and hide and form
- resistance movements in the sunlight. As you might imagine, this
- premise makes for some mighty depressing stories--this is definitely
- DARK fantasy. Included in UNDER THE FANG are stories by: McCammon,
- Nancy A. Collins, Clint Collins, Sidney Williams & Robert Petitt, Al
- Sarrantonio, Charles de Lint, Chet Williamson, Suzy McKee Charnas &
- Chelsea Quinn Yarbro, Richard Laymon, J.N. Williamson, Ed Gorman,
- Brian Hodge, David N. Meyer III, Thomas F. Monteleone, Clifford V.
- Brooks, Lisa W. Cantrell, and Dan Perez.
-
- NOTE: The Horror Writers of America already have a second collection
- planned (different premise). It'll be called FREAK SHOW and will be
- edited by F. Paul Wilson. The ad reads: "Travel with the freaks of the
- Peabody-Ozymandias Traveling Circus and Oddity Emporium. The
- performers aren't quite human--their acts are quite sinister. Beware
- if they come to your hometown!" Scheduled released date is sometime
- during the summer of 1992.
-
- **************************
-
- PETER QUINT READS THE MAGAZINES
-
-
- MIDNIGHT ZOO
- Jon L. Herron, editor
-
- Here is a terrific magazine that you should know about. It's
- bimonthly, with a an additional special edition in December. It's
- large--the two issues I've seen are both over 140 (8-1/2 by 11) pages
- long--and the insides run the gamut of genres and types. There's
- fiction, poetry, articles, essays, interviews, reviews, artwork, even
- cartoons. Subject matter is varied too. As the cover states: "The Best
- Horror, Science Fiction, Fantasy, & Science Fact." Best may be
- arguable, but the material is certainly very good. I particularly
- enjoyed the interviews in Volume #1, Issue #4 (July 1991) with
- Katharine Kerr, Barry Harrington, and Philip Jose Farmer. It doesn't
- matter if you like their work or have even HEARD of their work, the
- interviews are great.
-
- The best part of MIDNIGHT ZOO, at least as far as I'm concerned is the
- wide coverage. I read a lot of horror novels and horror magazines
- (hence my appearance here in RFP), but my tastes extend a lot further
- than that. It's not that I insist on a vampire in every story, but I
- like the freedom that the fantasy genres allow authors--so I always
- keep an eye out in the SF & Fantasy sections of the bookstore as well
- as the Horror aisle. It's nice to see everything in one great big
- collection; almost like Mr. Herron consulted me personally.
-
- Another part of MIDNIGHT ZOO that deserves mention: the poetry. Now
- I'm not really into poetry and I generally skip over it in most
- magazines, but I read a few from MZ and then read a few more, and then
- a few more. These poems are fun! My hat's off to both the poets for
- writing them, and to the editor for choosing them. Great stuff.
-
- OK, so how do you get MIDNIGHT ZOO for yourself? Annual subscriptions
- are $29.95, single issues are $4.95 (plus $1.05 shipping/handling),
- the special December edition if $19.95 (plus $2.77 shipping/handling).
- Send it to: Midnight Zoo, 544 Ygnacio Valley Road, #A273, PO Box 8040,
- Walnut Creek, CA 94596. (Phone: 415/942-5116 FAX: 415/933-3801)
-
-
- WEIRD TALES #302: Special William F. Nolan Issue
- (Terminus Publishing, Fall 1991, $4.95)
-
- I had been anxiously awaiting WEIRD TALES #302 because I've been a fan
- of William F. Nolan for quite a few years. It doesn't disappoint. The
- interview with Mr. Nolan is fascinating. He talks about his career,
- his writing technique, and his literary preferences. At a time when it
- seems like every writer working today is trying to distance himself
- from the horror genre, William F. Nolan has decided he likes the
- neighborhood and would like to stay awhile. Here are a few excerpts
- from the interview:
-
- "I literally do not understand the kind of British writer
- who opens the door to an apartment and spends the next
- five pages describing what's in the room, or writers who
- take half a chapter to get their character across a
- kitchen in a breakfast scene. I'm in and out of the
- kitchen and down the road and into the next county by the
- time they're reaching the marmalade."
-
- "I'm not too worried about Stephen King and Peter Straub
- and all these people. I'm worried about William F. Nolan.
- I've got to keep doing better than this guy, or else I'm
- not going to make it....You've got to keep stretching
- yourself."
-
- The William F. Nolan material consists of an essay about the
- beginnings of his love for horror literature; a poem about how much he
- loves being a horror writer; a short story called "The Visions", a
- provocative little piece that could have been a Twilight Zone episode;
- and a fabulous novella called "Broxa" that mixes the detective story
- with the horror story and produces a mystery with bite. If this issue
- doesn't win more fans for William F. Nolan, nothing will.
-
- There are a few non-Nolan pieces in #302. Like "The Hell Book" by
- Jason Van Hollander, a nice updating of a rather Lovecraftian theme.
- "The Creative Urge" by Weird Tales favorite Robert Bloch is a short
- self-referential piece that puts one in mind of Hofstaedter's "strange
- loops" (from GODEL, ESCHER, BACH). Think about it too long and smoke
- starts to seep out of your ears. For the more fantasy-oriented reader,
- there is "The Luststone" by Brian Lumley and "The Magician" by Ronald
- Anthony Cross. Sadly, there is no book review column in this issue, so
- I guess we're stuck with RFP this time out. All in all, #302 is a
- first-rate issue of WEIRD TALES. Don't miss it.
-
- SUBSCRIPTION: For $24/$46 you can get 6/12 quarterly issues of WEIRD
- TALES delivered to you anywhere in the U.S. Send to: WEIRD TALES, PO
- Box 13418, Philadelphia, PA 19101-3418.
-
-
- CEMETERY DANCE
- Summer 1991, Vol. 3, Issue 3
- Richard T. Chizmar, editor
-
- Another fine issue of one of the most dependable horror magazines. (I
- still call it a horror magazine, but they seem to be drifting in a
- suspense-dark mystery direction, which is perfectly OK with me.) There
- is a profile of Chelsea Quinn Yarbro and an interview with Anne Rice,
- both of which are superb--those are two very interesting ladies. CD
- has expanded their review sections, and this issue features a Douglas
- Winter review of THE M.D. by Thomas M. Disch, Edward Bryant writing
- about NEEDFUL THINGS by Stephen King, BOY'S LIFE by Robert R. McCammon
- reviewed by Lori Perkins, and about a dozen more good books covered by
- various reviewers. Tyson Blue is back with another column about
- Stephen King and others--lots of good information for readers who like
- to keep up.
-
- The fiction is good too. There's a story from Bill Pronzini called
- "The Pattern" and Andrew Vachss is represented by "It's A Hard World".
- Equally good is "Saviour" by Gary A. Braunbeck, "With the Wound Still
- Wet" by Wayne Allen Sallee, "Have You Seen Me?" by Nancy Holder, and
- "Spitting Image" by Michael Thomas Dillon. But the shorter fiction is
- all overshadowed by the longer story, saved appropriately for the end
- of the magazine, by John Shirley: "Just Like Suzie". There's not much
- I can say about this story in a family publication like RFP--it's
- pretty extreme, sort of a laugh-and-puke-at-the-same-time kinda thing.
- Let's just say the images stick with you.
-
- If you don't get CD already, you'd better get your checkbook out
- before you miss another issue. Make a check out to CD Publications for
- $15/$25/$40 for 4/8/12 quarterly issues. Send it to: Cemetery Dance,
- PO Box 16372, Baltimore, MD 21210.
-
-
- DARK TOME #8 (August 1991)
- Michelle Marr, editor
-
- A small desktop-published magazine of weird fiction. Send $2 for one
- copy, $10 for 6 bi-monthly issues, or an SASE for fiction submission
- guidelines to: Dark Tome, PO Box 705, Salem, OR 97308.
-
-
- **************************
-
- GAUNTLET #3
-
- It's not too early to reserve your copy of GAUNTLET #3, the annual
- dedicated to covering the issue of censorship and the printing of
- censored material. See Peter Quint's review of GAUNTLET #2 in RFP #17.
-
- The focus of issue #3 will be on the "politically correct", though
- GAUNTLET will retain all of its regular features. This section will
- contain some provocative, highly "politically incorrect" satire and
- commentary, bound to offend just about everyone as well as insightful
- commentary and debates.
-
- Issue #3 will explore the Persian Gulf War from a unique perspective;
- no rehashing of old news. If we can't shed new light on the War, we'll
- leave it to others to scrutinize what has already been analyzed.
-
- GAUNTLET #3 will feature two retrospective pieces: a look at Lenny
- Bruce and how he paved the way for today's no-holds-barred comics and
- an interview (with illustrations) with MAD's William M. Gaines, who
- compares censorship today with that of the 50s.
-
- GAUNTLET will feature the work of at least three noteworthy artists
- who have faced their share of controversy: S. Clay Wilson, Joe Coleman
- and J.K. Potter, complete with portfolios of their censored work.
-
- Ramsey Campbell introduces a story of his own he censored from a
- collection of erotic fiction, with the story following (naturally). F.
- Paul Wilson's "Pelts", a story animal rights activists can relate to,
- will be given a comic-strip treatment (a GAUNTLET exclusive). Del
- Close and Nancy Collins provide two plays that were to be part of an
- aborted off-Broadway production. R.C. Matheson, Brian Hodge, James
- Kisner, Ron Leming and others add top notch fiction to the GAUNTLET
- mix.
-
- Ever read an intriguing story in a daily and wonder why there was no
- follow-up? Shoddy journalism. GAUNTLET on the other hand, will provide
- updates on stories featured in issue #2: what's happened to Charles
- Freeman, the boycott of a Korean produce store by blacks in New York,
- the teacher at a Philadelphia school who had students rip out 144
- pages from a contemporary literature text, the ongoing saga of Salman
- Rushdie and Chicago's Father Pflegler.
-
- GAUNTLET has commissioned a slew of investigative reports on abortion,
- men as victims of rape due to media sensationalism, a Catholic
- College's attempt to stifle allegations of widespread date rape...just
- to name a few.
-
- For GAUNTLET #3 (due to ship March 1992), send $12.95 plus $2 postage
- and handling to: GAUNTLET, Dept. S91, 309 Powell Rd., Springfield, PA
- 19064.
- **************************
-
- DANGEROUS WOMEN
-
- "Ligeia" by Edgar Allan Poe (1838)
- THE GREAT GOD PAN by Arthur Machen (1890)
- "Xelucha" by M.P. Shiel (1896)
- "The Beckoning Fair One" by Oliver Onions (1911)
- THE LAIR OF THE WHITE WORM by Bram Stoker (1911)
- THE IRISH WITCH by Dennis Wheatley (1973)
- SWEETHEART, SWEETHEART by Bernard Taylor (1977)
- GHOST STORY by Peter Straub (1979)
- THE GIRL IN A SWING by Richard Adams (1980)
- THE HUNGER by Whitley Strieber (1981)
- THE QUEEN OF THE DAMNED by Anne Rice (1988)
-
-
- CTHULHU MYTHOS STORIES *NOT* BY LOVECRAFT
-
- THE OPENER OF THE WAY by Robert Bloch (1945)
- THE LURKER AT THE THRESHOLD by August Derleth (1945)
- THE WEB OF EASTER ISLAND by Donald Wandrei (1948)
- THE MASK OF CTHULHU by August Derleth (1958)
- THE TRIAL OF CTHULHU by August Derleth (1962)
- THE MIND PARASITES by Colin Wilson (1967)
- DAGON by Fred Chappell (1968)
- THE PHILOSOPHER'S STONE by Colin Wilson (1969)
- THE GREAT WHITE SPACE by Basil Copper (1974)
- THE BURROWERS BENEATH by Brain Lumley (1974)
- STRANGE EONS by Robert Bloch (1978)
- THE COLOR OUT OF TIME by Michael Shea (1984)
-
- **************************
-
- NEW FROM TOR IN SEPTEMBER
- commentary from the publisher
-
- NECROSCOPE V: DEADSPAWN
- by Brian Lumley
- ($5.99, ISBN 0-812-50835-1)
-
- From Brian Lumley, the two-time winner of the British Fantasy Award,
- comes the fifth book in the bestselling NECROSCOPE series, one of
- Tor's most popular horror series. NECROSCOPE IV: DEADSPEAK was a
- Waldenbooks Mass Paperback Bestseller.
-
- In DEADSPAWN, Harry Keogh's life becomes incredibly complicated. Since
- discovering that vampires are real, Keogh has learned to use his
- powers as a necroscope to combat them. But he's allied himself with
- Father Ferenczy, the dead father of Earth's vampires, an alliance
- which may prove to be Keogh's downfall. Now he is called upon to solve
- a most unusual murder case. The only being who can identify the killer
- is the ghost of one of his victims. The murderer seems to be a
- vampire, but that's impossible, because Keogh THOUGHT he destroyed
- them all...
-
- As time runs out in his search for the mad killer, the vampire
- influence deep in Keogh's mind struggles for release, threatening to
- metamorphose him into a dreaded bloodsucker! If Keogh loses the fight,
- no one and no place will be safe from the incredible powers of a
- vampire necroscope.
-
-
- THE DARK DESCENT #1: THE COLOR OF EVIL
- edited by David G. Hartwell
- ($4.99, ISBN 0-812-51898-5)
-
- THE COLOR OF EVIL features such masters of the horror tale as Ray
- Bradbury, Stephen King, H.P. Lovecraft, and Robert Bloch. With stories
- to delight any reader, THE COLOR OF EVIL brings fans old favorites and
- new treasures and gives those unfamiliar with modern horror a wide
- range of styles and subjects.
-
- Originally published in hardcover as part of the landmark anthology,
- THE DARK DESCENT, the stories in THE COLOR OF EVIL now appear for the
- first time in paperback. Two other paperbacks containing more from THE
- DARK DESCENT will follow in November and January.
-
- Editor David G. Hartwell, author of AGE OF WONDERS, is a three-time
- Hugo Award nominee for Best Editor. The 1991 LOCUS Magazine Poll and
- Survey named Hartwell as one of the top ten editors in the field.
-
-
-
- NEW FROM TOR IN OCTOBER
- commentary from publisher
-
-
- SONG OF KALI
- by Dan Simmons
- ($4.99, ISBN 0-812-51592-7)
-
- Set in the hot, seething city of Calcutta, SONG OF KALI follows
- American writer Robert Luczak into the dark underworld of the cult of
- Kali, the Hindu goddess of death and destruction. Luczak is after a
- manuscript, thought to be merely a paean to the goddess. But the
- manuscript is more than that; it is the incantation that will free
- Kali to once again work her evil in this world from which she was
- banished thousands of years ago. What begins as a journey into an
- exotic landscape quickly turns into terror--the fanatic followers of
- Kali will kill to appease their goddess...and Luczak's kidnapped
- infant daughter could be their sacrifice.
-
- Dan Simmons won the World Fantasy Award for SONG OF KALI, and
- subsequently won the Bram Stoker Award for Best Horror Novel for his
- recent bestseller CARRION COMFORT and the Hugo Award for Best Science
- Fiction Novel for HYPERION, making him one of the hottest new writers
- in two genres.
-
- (NOTE: If you only have $5 to spend this month, make sure you get
- yourself a copy of SONG OF KALI. Trust me. --A. Wilkes)
-
-
- JINX HIGH
- by Mercedes Lackey
- ($4.99, ISBN 0-812-52114-5)
-
- Fay, the most beautiful girl at Jenks High wants only one thing: to
- get Deke Kestrel into bed. Though she looks like an innocent
- 16-year-old, Fay is really over 200 years old, a powerful witch who
- practices sex magic.
-
- Now that she's discovered latent psychic/magic ability in the boy
- (ability hidden from Deke by his similarly gifted parents) Fay intends
- to use Deke as a centerpiece of a sex rite that will leave her
- incredibly powerful and virtually immortal--and Deke dead. Deke's
- father, suspecting something is afoot, calls for Diana Tregarde.
- Tregarde, a practicing witch of no small ability, and Guardian of all
- that is right in the world, has arrived to stop the evil--and Fay
- Harper doesn't stand a chance.
-
-
- ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
- :: ::
- :: NONFICTION REVIEWS ::
- :: ::
- ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
-
-
- CYBERPUNK: Outlaws and Hackers on the Computer Frontier
- by Katie Hafner & John Markoff
- (Simon & Schuster, 1991, $22.95, ISBN 0-671-68322-5)
- review by Carl Ingram
-
- "In the 1960s and 1970s, to be a computer hacker was to
- wear a badge of honor...It signified a dedication to
- computers that was construed as fanatical by outsiders but
- was a matter of course to the hackers themselves...The
- inspiration for this book came when we began to see a
- change in the way computers were being used. We found
- harbingers of cyberpunk, young people for whom computers
- and computer networks are an obsession, and who have
- carried their obsession beyond what computer professionals
- consider ethical and lawmakers consider acceptable."
-
- Compellingly told by two experienced journalists who have specialized
- in hi-tech, CYBERPUNK introduces us to several examples of a new brand
- of criminal, one who can break-and-enter, steal, and spy, all without
- leaving the comfort of his chair. This new criminal can be genuinely
- malicious like Kevin Mitnick, the subject of the first section of the
- book, an overweight alienated teenager who took vengeance on the world
- by becoming a hacker/phone phreak. On the other hand, the criminal can
- be a bit more sympathetic, like Pengo and his other German computer
- friends who prowled U.S. networks for fun and wound up selling stolen
- Western software to the KGB for a little extra cash. (One of Pengo's
- friends was the target of Clifford Stoll's hacker-hunt, told in
- Stoll's book, THE CUCKOO'S EGG.) And finally, the criminal can be
- simply a well-meaning genius who is not accustomed to limits, like
- Robert Tappan Morris, the Cornell graduate student who unleashed a
- virus that crashed hundreds of computers on the Internet network.
-
- Through 350 pages of painstakingly recreated detail, Hafner and
- Markoff introduce each of these three hackers, and their compatriots,
- to the interested reader. Actually, the main virtue of CYBERPUNK--its
- impartial and comprehensive journalism--is also its major limitation.
- By recounting every stage of their stories with blow-by-blow detail,
- they rob the tales of any dramatic pacing. This is more noticeable
- than it would otherwise be to anyone who has read Clifford Stoll's THE
- CUCKOO'S EGG, in which the charming and personable author told his
- story in terms of high drama. Stoll's personality and point of view
- was a large part of his story. In contrast, CYBERPUNK's value is in
- giving the reader the facts, all the facts, and all in one place. It
- makes fascinating reading for anyone whose life is touched by
- computers, and is sure to start many conversations.
-
- Talking to Katie Hafner and John Markoff:
-
- Q: What is cyberpunk?
-
- A: It's a kind of science fiction, and like a lot of science fiction,
- what it predicted is beginning to happen. The classic image of a
- cyberpunk is a kid with a mohawk and a computer. Pengo, the Berlin
- hacker in our book, was a cyberpunk who sat in front of his computer
- screen all day with his headphones on, listening to punk rock and rap
- music.
-
- And cyberpunk is where high technology meets outlaw culture. When
- Kevin Mitnick and his hacking partner Lenny DiCicco couldn't find any
- other hacking outposts, they became cyberpunk nomads, taking their
- computer and their modem to seedy $18 motels in the middle of the drug
- and prostitute scene in the San Fernando Valley in Los Angeles and
- hacking from there.
-
- **************************
-
- THE BEST OF MALEDICTA
- The International Journal of Verbal Aggression
- edited by Reinhold Aman
- (Running Press, 1987, $12.95, ISBN 0-89471-499-6)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- "Every day around the world, tens of thousands of people
- are humiliated, demoted, fired, fined, jailed, injured,
- killed, or driven to suicide because of MALEDICTA:
- insults, slurs, curses, threats, blasphemies, vulgarities,
- and other offensive words and expressions."
-
- Maledicta ("bad words"): They incite a lot of emotion in many people,
- and are for that reason alone worth study. Why do some words, simple
- sequences of sounds made with the human mouth, cause such commotion?
- If you have an interest in the world of "bad" language, you should
- definitely know about Reinhold Aman's annual collection called
- MALEDICTA. This volume from Running Press is the perfect introduction,
- being a selection of material from the 2,500 pages of the first 8
- installments of the periodical.
-
- What will you find in THE BEST OF MALEDICTA? There are ethnic jokes,
- sex jokes, examples of bathroom graffiti, long lists of synonyms for
- body parts and bodily functions, a list of "vanity" license plate
- taboos, pejorative terms used by medical personnel, Italian and
- Venetian profanity, AIDS jokes, and a whole lot more. But don't think
- for a minute that this is merely a journal for the verbally immature.
- Each subject is treated with full academic honors: examples of usage
- are given, defined, and occasionally dissected. What you find here is
- a healthy intellectual interest in a cultural phenomenon. Sure to
- offend many, THE BEST OF MALEDICTA is both fascinating and hugely
- funny.
-
- If your local bookstore can't help you, you can order THE BEST OF
- MALEDICTA directly from Running Press by sending the list price
- ($12.95) plus $1.50 postage and handling to: Running Press, 125 South
- 22nd St., Philadelphia, PA 19103.
-
- NOTE: The next issue of MALEDICTA will be #11, due to be published in
- December 1991. If you'd like a copy, send a check (made out to R.
- Aman) for $22 to: Maledicta Press, PO Box 14123, Santa Rosa, CA
- 95402-6123. There is also a quarterly newsletter available called the
- Maledicta Monitor that costs $8 per year.
-
- **************************
-
- ESPIONAGE: DOWN & DIRTY
- by Tony Lesee
- (Loompanics Unlimited, 1991, $17.95, ISBN 1-55950-068-9)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- "In the half-light of espionage, hardly anything is as it
- seems. There are secrets, false identities and documents,
- cover stories, lies and evasions, denials, and a pervasive
- atmosphere of conspiracy. This atmosphere is attractive to
- some people, but it's also very dangerous."
-
- In eleven chapters, Tony Lesee takes the reader through the murky
- world of the professional spy, not the fantasy playground of James
- Bond but the real-life system of manipulation, conflicting loyalties,
- and disinformation. The author discusses the goals of spying, how
- spies are recruited, how spies infiltrate a foreign country, and how
- they are evacuated when "blown". You'll find out about Hollywood's
- favorite last-ditch measure, the Lethal Pill, how countries try to
- secure their secrets from spies, and what happens to spies who get
- caught. Along the way, the author illustrates his points with
- real-life case histories, like: the Rosenbergs, the Walker spy ring,
- Kim Philby, Richard Miller (the spy in the FBI), the "Falcon" and the
- "Snowman", the Pollard Case, and many more that are not as widely
- known. At the end of each chapter is a list of Sources that will guide
- the interested reader to further spy study.
-
- Real-life spying may be a dirty job, but it's a lot of fun to read
- about. I think you'll find that even without the melodramatics of
- Hollywood spying, the real story has a fascination all its own. And I
- just realized I haven't mentioned one of the best parts of ESPIONAGE:
- DOWN & DIRTY, the Glossary at the back. Here's just a sample:
-
- MOKRIE DELA Russian for "wet affairs," or "wet work,"
- slang for the dirty tricks department. Also known as the
- "Department of Dirty Water." The British "Special
- Operations Executive" during World War II was such an
- organization. Some of its actions were so dirty that the
- British Government ordered its records burned at the end
- of the war.
-
- You can order ESPIONAGE: DOWN & DIRTY from Loompanics Unlimited by
- sending a check for the list price ($17.95) plus $3 shipping and
- handling to: Loompanics Unlimited, PO Box 1197, Port Townsend, WA
- 98368. Along with the book, you'll get a current Loompanics catalog,
- full of strange books you'll never find in your local library.
-
- **************************
-
- EVERYONE'S GUIDE TO COPYRIGHT, TRADEMARKS, AND PATENTS
- (Running Press, 1990, $14.95, ISBN 0-89471-752-9)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Protecting your creative endeavors, whether they be books, inventions,
- or the company you started yourself, can be a maze of government forms
- and bureaucratic rituals. EVERYONE'S GUIDE is exactly what you need to
- help you decide if you need legal protection, what kind of protection
- you want, and how to go about getting it. Everything is spelled out in
- clear easy-to-read text and arranged so that you can pull out just the
- information you need with no wasted effort. It not only will guide you
- through the copyright, trademark, or patent procedure step-by-step,
- but the myriad forms that you may need are all reproduced here in
- full, so you can see what you'll need to go through before you even
- start. Do you need an attorney? How much will it cost? How long will
- it take? What kind of protection does a copyright, a trademark, or a
- patent provide? All of these questions, and many, many more, are
- answered in Running Press' EVERYONE'S GUIDE TO COPYRIGHT, TRADEMARKS,
- AND PATENTS. A very helpful book for creative people.
-
- If your local bookstore can't help you, you can order EVERYONE'S GUIDE
- TO COPYRIGHT, TRADEMARKS, AND PATENTS directly from Running Press by
- sending the list price ($14.95) plus $1.50 postage and handling to:
- Running Press, 125 South 22nd St., Philadelphia, PA 19103.
-
- **************************
-
- SUBURBAN NATURE GUIDE
- How to Discover and Identify the Wildlife in Your Backyard
- by David Mohrhardt & Richard E. Schinkel
- (Stackpole Books, 1991, $16.95, ISBN 0-8117-3080-8)
- review by Janet Peters
-
- What a wonderful reference book for the whole family! The SUBURBAN
- NATURE GUIDE is a one-volume field guide to that part of nature's
- bounty you are most likely to come into contact with in the eastern
- U.S. suburbs. Over 350 illustrations help you identify exactly what it
- is you've got, and the text entries will tell you about habitat, life
- cycles, and other pertinent and interesting information.
-
- The book covers small mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibians, what
- the GUIDE calls "creatures in moist places" (what I call "slimy
- things"), insects and spiders, trees and shrubs, vines, flowers,
- grasses, ferns, mosses, and fungi. An Appendix gives directions for
- two bird houses and two bird feeders. The authors not only provide
- biological information, but help the average suburban homeowner to
- cope with their natural wildlife. In other words, they tell you how to
- attract the life forms most people enjoy (like birds and butterflies),
- and how to get rid of or repel the more objectionable neighbors (like
- snakes and hornets).
-
- The SUBURBAN NATURE GUIDE is a great start for budding naturalists, as
- well as being a good book for the whole family, to help them enjoy and
- interact with the wildlife around them. Why go to the zoo when you've
- got a veritable Noah's Ark right there in your backyard?
-
- **************************
-
- PROMISES TO KEEP: The Family's Role in Nursing Home Care
- by Katherine L. Karr
- (Prometheus Books, July 1991)
- (Hardcover: $19.95 ISBN 0-87975-660-8)
- (Paperback: $13.95 ISBN 0-87975-661-6)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- When a family member must be placed in a nursing home, the entire
- family suffers. Facilities are often overcrowded, understaffed, and
- the care provided is frequently impersonal. We learn from Ms. Karr,
- however, that our elders need not be abandoned to these institutions,
- and that a caring family can contribute much to make the experience
- more rewarding (or at least less traumatic) for everyone. The author
- has distilled personal experience into clear step-by-step instructions
- for taking care of the physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual
- needs of nursing home residents.
-
- By augmenting the basic care given at a nursing home, providing
- special care needs (such as massage, favorite foods, grooming, etc.),
- and staying constantly alert for signs of neglect, family members can
- improve the quality of life for their elders at a time when such
- attention is most needed. This compassionate and caring volume is
- absolutely indispensable to the family and friends of nursing home
- residents, and is important reading for volunteers and professionals
- who deal with the elderly in their work.
-
- **************************
-
- CNN: WAR IN THE GULF
- From the Invasion of Kuwait To the Day of Victory and Beyond
- (Turner Publishing, 1991, $19.95, ISBN 1-8786-8501-5)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- Accept no substitutes---for a retrospective photo album and
- comprehensive recounting of Desert Storm and all that surrounded it,
- CNN: WAR IN THE GULF is unbeatable. The photographs cover the entire
- emotional range from breathtaking to humorous, agonizing to
- comforting. You'll see photos of all the major players, the armaments,
- the soldiers, the hostages, the devastation. You'll see our ships and
- planes from the inside and outside. All the drama, the outrage, and
- the terrible waste of the War in the Gulf is apparent in the hundreds
- of photos covering 240 pages.
-
- The text helps explain what happened and why it happened, in chapters
- entitled:
-
- * A Troubled Middle East
- * An Armed Middle East
- * The World of Saddam
- * Assault on an Arab Neighbor
- * To Build a Coalition
- * The Air Campaign
- * Saddam Strikes Back
- * Thunder From the Sea
- * Prelude to Battle
- * The 100-Hour War
- * Shining Victory, Dark Clouds
-
- The network that brought the war into our homes now provides the
- ultimate memory book of that conflict. Alongside the photos and the
- text are numerous maps and charts illustrating troop movements,
- timetables, and various kinds of armaments used in the Gulf. One
- full-page chart gives a breakdown of exactly who participated in the
- war: what countries sent how many of what kinds of forces. Whether you
- approved of U.S. actions or not, whether you are proud of our
- accomplishments or are saddened by world hostilities, CNN: WAR IN THE
- GULF is a vivid full-color album recording a very significant event in
- recent world history. Highly Recommended.
-
-
- NOTE: Another notable, and very different retrospective is DESERT
- MIRAGE: THE TRUE STORY OF THE GULF WAR by Martin Yant (Prometheus
- Books, September 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-87975-678-0). As the publisher
- says, "Yant pieces together his convincing case from thousands of
- reports from dozens of sources that sporadically seeped through the
- administration's veil of deceit to reveal that the thunderously
- triumphant Desert Storm was actually a deviously devised Desert Mirage
- with far more foreboding causes and consequences than what the public
- probably could ever imagine."
-
- **************************
-
- BROKEN VESSELS: Essays
- by Andre Dubus
- (David R. Godine, July 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-87923-885-2)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Co-winner of the fourth annual PEN/Malamud Award for distinguished
- short story writers, Andre Dubus provides, in BROKEN VESSELS, ample
- evidence that he is just as valuable a voice in the field of personal
- essay. He writes with a searing candor that is sometimes funny,
- sometimes heartwrenching, always moving. He writes with a simplicity
- and grace that allows us to share his experiences without being
- consumed, to acknowledge the ways in which we are all different and
- yet all the same.
-
- In "Of Robin Hood and Womanhood" Dubus reflects upon gender roles and
- examines the parallels between a writer's life and that of a
- housewife--both must structure their own time in solitude and must
- carry their successes, failures, frustrations, and doubts within
- themselves. In other essays he explores the relationship between the
- sensible, well-meaning adult and street crime, and contemplates the
- trouble that lovers can bring upon themselves with words. In "After
- Twenty Years" he considers the futility of fiction:
-
- "I have always known that writing fiction had little
- effect on the world; that if it did, young men would not
- have gone to war after THE ILIAD."
-
- In "Selling Stories" Dubus discusses the business of being a writer:
-
- "We short story writers are spared some of the major
- temptations: we don't make money for ourselves or anybody
- else, so the people who make money from writers leave us
- alone."
-
- You will also discover why Dubus' first sale to PENTHOUSE magazine was
- his last. In other essays the writer talks about his deep commitment
- to his religion, his life as a man, a husband, and a father, of his
- love for the game of baseball, and of his experiences with ghosts.
-
- With equal candor Andre Dubus discusses the accident that put him in a
- wheelchair. On a July evening in 1986, Dubus stopped to help a female
- motorist who had had an accident. In the course of assisting her and
- her brother, Dubus was struck by a car. He nearly died, but after many
- operations and several months in a hospital, he only lost one leg from
- the knee down and much of the use of the other leg. Two years later he
- lost his wife and two small children to divorce. Yet Dubus survived,
- physically, mentally, and emotionally, and describes his experiences
- with a calmness and warmth that is, by then in the pages of BROKEN
- VESSELS, familiar. Indeed, getting to know this extraordinary man, if
- only slightly, is the highlight of this volume. Highly recommended.
-
- **************************
-
- LIVING WITH IT
- Why You Don't Have To Be Healthy To Be Happy
- by Suzy Szasz
- (Prometheus Books, August 1991, $22.95, ISBN 0-87975-659-4)
- review by Janet Peters
-
- Author Suzy Szasz found out at the age of 13 that she had Systemic
- Lupus Erythmetosus, an autoimune disease in which the antibodies
- attack healthy tissue. It is a chronic condition that has defined a
- great portion of her life, but as she says in LIVING WITH IT, "Unlike
- the hypochondriac who wants to be accepted as a patient, I have always
- wanted to be accepted as a non-patient, a person whose primary
- identity is something other than being a patient." With openness and
- good cheer, Ms. Szasz describes her struggles with Lupus and as a
- person distinct from her condition.
-
- Most medical books are about acute diseases and conditions--at the end
- the patient either dies or recovers. In either case the patient's
- ordeal is over. With a chronic condition, however, the day-to-day
- inevitability of the problem becomes the biggest hurdle. Whatever the
- successes or failures of today, the battle must be faced again
- tomorrow. Without the high drama of an acute disease, the chronic
- patient's difficulties are accorded too little attention and respect.
- And as medical science extends lifespans and eliminates the fatal
- nature of many diseases, it also ensures an ever-expanding list of
- chronic diseases and conditions. Ms. Szasz provides, in the pages of
- LIVING WITH IT, sympathy, advice, and encouragement to the chronic
- patient, their friends, family, and caregivers. Not only is LIVING
- WITH IT a valuable health text, but it is also fascinating reading.
- Ms. Szasz's voice is so natural, so engagingly candid and humorous,
- that reading the first page will take you to the last page without any
- effort at all. A wonderful and important book.
-
- **************************
-
- NIGHTWATCH: An Equinox Guide to Viewing the Universe
- by Terence Dickinson
- (Camden House, 1989, $24.95, ISBN 0-920656-89-7)
- review by Carl Ingram
-
- If you were enthralled by the PBS series THE ASTRONOMERS, here's the
- perfect book to escort you from abstract interest to the beginning of
- a lifelong hobby. Spiral-bound for ease of access, NIGHTWATCH is
- heavily illustrated with sky charts and includes more than 70
- breathtaking photos, almost all of which were taken by amateur
- astronomers. As the author points out, today the amateur astronomer
- doesn't have to make their own telescope. Indeed, not only can you buy
- advanced technology already built, but even with purchased equipment
- astronomy is no more than a medium-priced hobby.
-
- NIGHTWATCH is not just a beginning textbook on astronomy, but is also
- a practical guide for the hobbyist. You'll find chapters on
- "Stargazing Equipment", "Photographing the Night Sky", and a final
- chapter called "Resources" that lists magazines, books, clubs,
- conventions, planetariums, observatories, telescope equipment and
- accessories companies, etc. By the way, this edition of NIGHTWATCH has
- been revised and updated for use through the year 2000.
-
- NIGHTWATCH makes fascinating reading for the science buff, naked-eye
- skywatchers, or budding amateur astronomers of any age, level of
- skill, and depth of pocketbook. With more than 100,000 in print,
- NIGHTWATCH is a deservedly popular and beautiful volume on the
- universe we live in. Highly recommended.
-
- **************************
-
- THE STARGAZER'S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY
- by Q.L. Pearce
- (Tor Young Adult, September 1991, $4.99, ISBN 0-812-59423-1)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- With full sky maps of both the northern and southern hemispheres, and
- a punch-out Star Wheel in the back of the book, THE STARGAZER'S GUIDE
- TO THE GALAXY is fun, entertaining, and educational. Divided by
- season, the sections open with a two-page map. Each constellation is
- given its own page, including a star map of the individual
- constellation, pertinent science facts, and the illustrated myth or
- legend associated with the constellation.
-
- An introduction (actually a short astronomy primer) covers important
- topics ranging from what stars are made of, to the difference between
- comets and shooting stars, to why the night sky looks different at
- different times of the year, to what scientists are looking for in
- space. Both John Hodge, Director for the Santa Monica College
- Planetarium, and Alan Harris, Supervisor of the Earth and Planetary
- Physics Group at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, have contributed
- editorially to this book.
-
- **************************
-
- THE SNACK BAR GOURMET
- Versatile Treats for People on the Go
- by Marsha Eines & Elliott Katz
- (Great North Books, 1989, $6.95, ISBN 0-920361-02-1)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- First off, let me confess that I'm a snack bar type person--I blame it
- on the manufacturers. They make these great-tasting servings of
- edibles and put them in ready-to-go packages and they're irresistible.
- For lunch I can just grab a bar or two, a cold bottle of soda, and
- head back to the word processor. So what if the bars are loaded with
- sugar, sodium, and preservatives? The price of convenience, right?
-
- Wrong. THE SNACK BAR GOURMET has over 70 pages of snack bars for any
- taste. They're divided into: Fruit and Nut Bars, Chocolate and Carob,
- Fruit Leathers, Breakfast and Anytime Bars, Fudge Bars, Rice Crisps
- and Nut Brittles, and Traditional Baked Bars. Not all recipes are low
- in calories, but that's the great thing about making these bars
- yourself: You get to pick what goes in them. Put more or less sugar,
- leave out the raisins if you'd rather, add a little coconut if you're
- that kind, etc. They're easy to make and you can customize them for
- your particular needs and tastes. I personally liked Autumn Apple
- Cinnamon Granola Bars and Anything-But-Ordinary Granola Bars, and I've
- already made three batches of Banana Peanut Butter Delights. The Apple
- Raisin Oat Comforts, Classic Date Bars, and Tahini Oasis Bars were
- also very good. Some are crumbly and better for eating at some kind of
- table, but others are perfect to stuff in a pocket as you rush out the
- door. A great way to get some more fruit in your diet, or to add fiber
- (fiber and snack bars seem to go together). Great food for informal
- eating.
- **************************
-
- LIZZIE BORDEN: THE LEGEND, THE TRUTH, THE FINAL CHAPTER
- By Arnold R. Brown
- (Rutledge Hill, August 4, 19991, $18.95, ISBN 1-55853-099-1)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Some people love to read about Jack the Ripper. Others are fascinated
- by the Kennedy assassinations. Still others can't quite stop rehashing
- the final days of Marilyn Monroe. For me the most tantalizing crime
- has always been the Borden murders. On August 4, 1892 someone hacked
- up Abby Borden, and about two hours later did the same to her husband
- Andrew Borden. The only known occupants in the house during the time
- period in question were daughter Lizzie and the maid Bridget. As most
- people know, Lizzie was tried for the murders and found innocent. Was
- she? If Lizzie WAS innocent, who else could have done the murders? If
- she wasn't, how could someone get away with such a strategically
- difficult and messy pair of murders and yet be as dull-witted as
- Lizzie appears to be in the transcript of her inquest testimony? It's
- a provocative situation.
-
- As we all know, books about very famous crimes tend to be minor
- variations on the same old theme--with so many interested people over
- the years, original ideas are tough to come up with. Arnold Brown's
- LIZZIE BORDEN is different. Very different. He accidentally came
- across new evidence that gives a whole new slant to the story, and
- what a doozy it is. I don't want to spoil your fun in reading the book
- by giving away Arnold Brown's theory, but here are a few interesting
- elements:
-
- * Remember that note that Lizzie says Abby received during the morning
- hours? The one that said a friend was sick and that Abby was going out
- to stay with them? Only Lizzie mentioned the note, and almost
- everyone, even Lizzie-defenders, have assumed it was a figment of
- Lizzie's weird imagination. Arnold Brown says the note was real.
-
- * What was John Morse doing that day, and why did he return to the
- Borden house? Everyone has assumed that he was expected for lunch, but
- was he? And if not, why DID he return?
-
- * Why did Dr. Bowen leave the Borden house so abruptly after declaring
- Andrew Borden dead? It is usually assumed that he left to send a
- telegram to Lizzie's sister Emma, at Lizzie's request, but the
- doctor's testimony shows that Lizzie made the request AS HE WAS
- LEAVING. Why was he leaving so quickly? And why did it take so long to
- send a telegram?
-
- Lizzie Borden fans will love Arnold Brown's new book as the first
- fresh look at their favorite case. True Crime fans will enjoy LIZZIE
- BORDEN for the new evidence and the careful, step-by-step
- reconstruction of the crime and analysis of ALL available testimony
- (the most interesting of which has only recently been released). And
- mystery fans will enjoy the way Mr. Brown tells the tale, with the
- pacing and the drama of the best detective stories. The author keeps
- the reader on the edge of their seat until the final pages as he drops
- hints and builds the tension. An extraordinary new look at one of
- America's most interesting crimes. LIZZIE BORDEN: THE LEGEND, THE
- TRUTH, THE FINAL CHAPTER is an exciting and thought-provoking book.
-
- **************************
-
- PAPIER-MACHE TODAY
- by Sheila McGraw
- (Firefly Books, 1990, $19.95, ISBN 0-920668-85-2)
- review by Carol Sheffert
-
- Papier-mache is nearly a perfect home craft: it's cheap to do, it
- recycles common materials, it doesn't require extensive artistic skill
- or physical dexterity, and it is useful for making either practical
- household articles or beautiful works of art. On top of all that,
- papier-mache is supremely creative. You take cheap and unsightly
- materials and transform them into colorful pieces to adorn home and
- office. With newspapers, paste, and paint, you can create a rainbow of
- items both serious and silly.
-
- Sheila McGraw's PAPIER-MACHE TODAY is a superb introduction to this
- wonderful hobby. Nothing is assumed. First she takes you through all
- the materials and equipment you need or might want. She discusses what
- you'll need for a work space and how much cleanup will be required.
- Next she discusses basic papier-mache technique: getting a form,
- making a paste, applying layers of newspaper to your form, drying,
- etc. Photographs illustrate each procedure.
-
- The majority of the book is devoted to specific projects, which are
- divided into 3 categories: animals, monsters, and home decor. In each
- category there is a project suitable for beginners as well as more
- advanced projects. (One project is called Meatloaf Cat, and another is
- a lifesize statue of a little girl.) The last section of the book
- discusses Finishing, where you can correct minor flaws and add color
- and other realistic details. Once you've graduated from Sheila
- McGraw's PAPIER-MACHE TODAY, you're ready to make anything you can
- imagine. PAPIER-MACHE TODAY is a first-rate introduction to a
- first-rate craft.
- **************************
-
- WHEN I AM AN OLD WOMAN I SHALL WEAR PURPLE
- edited by Sandra Martz
- (Papier-Mache, July 1991)
- Hardcover: $16 ISBN 0-918949-15-7
- Paperback: $10 ISBN 0-918949-16-5
- review by Janet Peters
-
- An important, moving, and life-affirming book, WHEN I AM AN OLD WOMAN
- I SHALL WEAR PURPLE is a collection of poetry, prose, and photographs
- on the subject of old age. Specifically a woman's old age. The various
- works speak about dignity, about respect, and about caring. About
- saying goodbye to old friends and hello to new ones. About joys and
- passions. About NOT growing old gracefully, if that's what suits you.
- Over 60 contributors present a kaleidoscopic vision of the
- elderly--the disappointments, satisfactions, and the many
- little-talked-about advantages of being old.
-
- WHEN I AM AN OLD WOMAN I SHALL WEAR PURPLE won the Benjamin Franklin
- Award for Design and Content as well as the American Booksellers' Book
- of the Year Honors Award. It has also given Papier-Mache Press the
- push they needed to evolve from a nights-and-weekends labor of love to
- a full-time publisher who now have an entire line of books. WHEN I AM
- AN OLD WOMAN I SHALL WEAR PURPLE is an illuminating, encouraging,
- radiant book. A book to enjoy, share with family and friends, and give
- as gifts. (Don't miss the wonderful fabric and thread collage by
- Deidre Scherer, "Laughing Rose", on the cover.) For the curious: the
- title comes from a poem (included in the collection) by British poet
- Jenny Joseph. Editor Sandra Martz has another collection due next
- spring called IF I HAD MY LIFE TO LIVE OVER AGAIN...I WOULD PICK MORE
- DAISIES. If your bookseller can't help you get WHEN I AM AN OLD WOMAN
- I SHALL WEAR PURPLE, just send the list price (above) plus $1.50/$3
- (3rd class/1st class) to: Papier-Mache, 795 Via Manzana, Watsonville,
- CA 95076.
- **************************
-
- PRESCRIPTION: MEDICIDE---The Goodness of Planned Death
- by Jack Kevorkian, M.D.
- (Prometheus Books, September 1991, $23.95, ISBN 0-87975-677-2)
- commentary by the publisher
-
- Iconoclast Dr. Jack Kevorkian, inventor of the controversial "suicide
- machine", outlines his startling views on planned death and its
- potential impact on organ harvesting and medical experimentation.
-
- Kevorkian made headlines in June of 1990 when he aided Janet Adkins, a
- victim of rapidly degenerating Alzheimer's disease, in performing the
- first publicly acknowledged physician-assisted suicide--what he terms
- MEDICIDE. Dubbed the "suicide Doctor", he is a man to whom the highest
- ethical principle is individual self-determination. In this book, he
- takes on the medical establishment, politicians, and all those who
- actively resist a rational and comprehensive program of dignified,
- humane, and beneficial planned death.
-
- Kevorkian's discussion begins with a graphic commentary on current
- methods of judicial execution. He contends that allowing condemned
- criminals to choose death by irreversible general anesthesia with the
- option of organ donation and/or human experimentation is far more
- humane than any existing form of execution. The thousands who die each
- year because suitable organs are unavailable underscore the senseless
- waste of condemned prisoners, many of whom would gladly donate organs
- or permit experiments on their person were it not for timid state
- legislatures and the "stone-age ethics of space-age medicine".
-
- Kevorkian recalls how he came upon the concept of "medicide" and his
- 30-year campaign for its implementation; how his proposal almost came
- to fruition, in Sacramento, only to be defeated by legislative
- wrangling; and discloses his informal survey of death row inmates to
- determine their level of support. He also explains how and why he came
- to devise the suicide machine (which he named the "Mercitron"),
- describes several moving experiences with the first patients who
- requested use of it, and gives an account of the Adkins case.
-
- Kevorkian considers the loss of life a negative under all
- circumstances; he explains why the use of his suicide machine lightens
- the moral burden on doctors and emphasizes the freedom of the
- individual. He asserts that such procedures represent the first step
- toward a positive ethical stance by setting the stage for a new
- specialty, "obitiatry", which would offer concrete medical options
- under strictly controlled conditions, thereby allowing individuals to
- determine the real value of personal death. He concludes with
- reflections how obitiatry can help medical science unlock the secrets
- of life and death.
- **************************
-
- A NOEL PERRIN SAMPLER
- by Noel Perrin
- (Univ. Press of New England, June 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-87451-551-3)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- "If present trends continue, the time is clearly coming
- when, however much a paradise it may be for machines, a
- library will seem purgatorial to most human beings. They
- will enter what was once a splendid, solemn, and silent
- house of books. They will be surrounded at once by the
- whine and chatter and hum of countless machines."
-
- Reading essays is like having a conversation with the author. Reading
- really good essays, like those in A NOEL PERRIN SAMPLER, is like
- having a conversation with a very interesting person who expresses
- himself with brevity and style. The pieces included in this SAMPLER
- center on the subjects of normal human conversation: government,
- marriage, literary research, New York City, professional pretensions,
- libraries, university life. With a penetrating eye Perrin examines the
- bits and pieces of our lives, sometimes reacting with wonderment,
- sometimes confusion, sometimes a smile, sometimes with a wry shrug of
- the shoulders, but always with a great enjoyment of the chaotic circus
- that people create around themselves.
-
- Noel Perrin is a native New Yorker and was once a research student at
- Trinity Hall, Cambridge, England. Since 1959 he has taught English at
- Dartmouth College while learning and writing about the ways of rural
- New England from his home in Thetford Center, Vermont. His popular
- articles and reviews have appeared in publications as diverse as
- COUNTRY JOURNAL, THE NEW YORKER, NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW, and
- WASHINGTON POST. Among his books are A READER'S DELIGHT (1988), FIRST
- PERSON RURAL (1978) and its two sequel volumes, GIVING UP THE GUN:
- JAPAN'S REVERSION TO THE SWORD 1543-1879 (1979) and AMATEUR SUGAR
- MAKER (1972). A NOEL PERRIN SAMPLER is charming, amply deserving its
- niche on my shelf next to E.B. White.
-
- **************************
-
- WAITING FOR THE WEEKEND
- by Witold Rybczynski
- (Viking, August 1991, $18.95, ISBN 0-670-83001-1)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- "There are now tens of millions of people who cannot--or
- do not--read books. The large number of books published
- each year (more than fifty thousand titles in the United
- States alone) camouflages the fact that book buyers are an
- extremely small group, perhaps as small as ten percent of
- the total population."
-
- "The number of people who read for pleasure is a good
- indicator of leisure, since reading requires the
- availability of not only money but, more important, time."
-
- "There is no more leisurely occupation than reading a
- novel. It requires calm surroundings, a comfortable chair,
- and long periods of uninterrupted time."
-
- "Solitary reading is the ideal vehicle for individual
- leisure. The reader can do something--or nothing. He can
- pick up one book or another. He sets the pace, reading
- uninterruptedly or leafing through a book at random,
- letting his imagination free to make what connections it
- will."
-
- Do you live for the weekend? Do you mark the time from Monday through
- Friday by its relative position to the weekend? What role does leisure
- time play in your life? Is your leisure time recuperative or
- exhausting? Do you look at your life as your leisure time interrupted
- by tiresome but necessary workdays, or as your career with occasional
- interruptions of leisure? What do you do with your weekends? Is it the
- same thing your parents did? If you could restructure your time, how
- would you lay out work periods and leisure time? Would you keep the
- basic rhythm of 5-and-2?
-
- If these questions catch your fancy, you will enjoy Witold
- Rybczynski's WAITING FOR THE WEEKEND. In it he traces the origins of
- our planetary week (named for the 7 known planets, the week was the
- one period of time not based on natural cycles), the origins of the
- beloved "weekend", how the weekend became Saturday and Sunday, and the
- mass of conflicting attitudes people have about work vs. leisure.
- Somehow, Mr. Rybczynski has a way of seeing these fascinating,
- transparent subjects that are such an intimate part of our lives and
- yet are normally ignored. A few years ago he wrote a book about the
- history of the idea of "home" called, ingenuously, HOME. Both HOME and
- WAITING FOR THE WEEKEND are engrossing, thought-provoking, and
- illuminating. These aren't books you SHOULD read, they're books you
- treat yourself to when you've been extra good. Recommended.
-
- **************************
-
- RIDDLE OF THE ROCK
- The Only Successful Escape From Alcatraz
- by Don DeNevi
- (Prometheus Books, August 1991, $24.95, ISBN 0-87975-647-0)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- Did the infamous "Tablespoon Trio" actually get away from Alcatraz?
- RIDDLE OF THE ROCK solves one of America's most tantalizing mysteries
- with startling new information and evidence about the escape of the
- century.
-
- Only the most incorrigible prisoners were sent to the twelve-acre
- "Rock" which lay stark and alone in the formidable San Francisco Bay.
- However escape-proof Alcatraz might have been, inmates never stopped
- plotting for freedom. The record: seven attempted breaks--and seven
- complete failures. But on the windy night of June 11, 1962, John W.
- Anglin, Clarence R. Anglin, and Frank L. Morris, who had spent almost
- a year digging out of their concrete cells, slipped into the frigid
- waters of the Bay and disappeared. If the escape was successful, and
- if they are alive today, John would be 59, Clarence 58, and Frank 63.
- (RIDDLE OF THE ROCK includes a photo insert with
- never-before-published photographs and composite sketches of what the
- men would look like now.)
-
- Don DeNevi has been researching Alcatraz prison lore and the 1962
- escape for two decades. After he made an appearance on the TV program
- "Unsolved Mysteries" in February 1989, the Northern California U.S.
- Marshall's Office reopened the case. Included in the book are
- extensive interviews with many former inmates of Alcatraz, including
- the late Clarence "Joe" Carnes, who was to have been the fourth man in
- the escape party but decided at the last minute to opt for parole.
- Carnes related eyewitness details of the escape to DeNevi in the late
- 1970s; he had received word from a reliable source that the trio
- survived. DeNevi also obtained the previously unpublished 1962 FBI
- manhunt report and details of the ensuing 29-year search for the men
- by various branches of the U.S. Justice Department.
-
- Don DeNevi teaches both history and psychology at the College of
- Alameda, California; he is the author of more than 30 books, and the
- co-author of A YOUTH IN BABYLON: CONFESSIONS OF A TRASH-FILM KING. His
- book ALCATRAZ '46: THE ANATOMY OF A CLASSIC PRISON TRAGEDY was made
- into a major TV movie.
-
- **************************
-
- A PICTURE IS WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS
- FOR BLIND AND VISUALLY IMPAIRED PERSONS TOO!
- An Introduction to Audiodescription
- (American Foundation for the Blind, $4.95, ISBN 0-89128-212-2)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- Have you ever noticed how many visual images fill the average
- television show, theatrical production, and film without the benefit
- of dialogue or descriptive information? Millions of blind and visually
- impaired persons do and find the viewing experience frustrating when
- they have to ask others to explain all the key nonverbal cues and
- details. Moreover, they often feel excluded from conversations with
- family, friends, and coworkers when they talk about the latest music
- video on MTV, the newest Broadway play, or the most recent adventure
- movie at the box office.
-
- A PICTURE IS WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS FOR BLIND AND VISUALLY IMPAIRED
- PERSONS TOO! AN INTRODUCTION TO AUDIODESCRIPTION, a new publication by
- the American Foundation for the Blind, describes an innovative service
- called audiodescription which can change all that and revolutionize
- the way blind and visually impaired persons experience television,
- films, theatrical productions, and exhibits.
-
- Through a variety of technologies, audiodescription enables blind and
- visually impaired persons to hear--live and prerecorded--verbal
- descriptions of all the key visual aspects of a production, including
- sets, scene changes, actions, body language, and costumes; in short,
- all the information that is critical to understanding the plot, mood,
- style, and theme of a story. The descriptions are heard only when
- there are lapses in the regular dialogue or audio. Descriptions might
- include, for example, the point at which the couple is seen walking
- hand-in-hand into the sunset, the villain is stalking his victim, or
- the wild car chase is underway, all standard fare in movies and TV.
-
- A PICTURE IS WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS features a historical overview of
- the movement for audiodescription, who is providing the service, and
- why blind and visually impaired persons and their families want it. It
- also includes a complete listing of the television stations, museums,
- and theaters that now make audiodescription available throughout the
- country as well as suggestions for advocating for the service.
-
- "In our culture, there is a growing shift to visual and graphic
- presentation of all kinds of educational, vocational, and recreational
- information," said AFB President and Executive Director Carl R.
- Augusto. "Audiodescribed television programs, films, plays, and
- exhibits will provide millions of blind and visually impaired persons
- with equal access to this information, as well as enable them to
- interact in a more meaningful way in all kinds of social, work, and
- academic settings. For blind children and adults who have never seen,
- described visual mediums also offer such benefits as a better
- understanding of the physical environment, movements, facial
- expressions, and body language. Finally, audiodescription enables
- blind and visually impaired persons to achieve literacy in the
- broadest meaning of the word."
-
- A PICTURE IS WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS FOR BLIND AND VISUALLY IMPAIRED
- PERSONS TOO!: AN INTRODUCTION TO AUDIODESCRIPTION is available in
- large print and on audiocassette tape for $4.95, plus $3.00 shipping
- and handling. You may send your order to American Foundation for the
- Blind, Publications and Information Services Department, 15 West 16th
- Street, New York, NY 10011.
-
- The American Foundation for the Blind is a national nonprofit
- organization based in New York City with regional offices in Atlanta,
- Dallas, Chicago, San Francisco, New York, and Washington, DC. AFB's
- mission is to enable persons who are blind and visually impaired to
- achieve equality of access and opportunity that will ensure freedom of
- choice in their lives. AFB accomplishes this mission by taking a
- national leadership role in the development and implementation of
- public policy and legislation, informational and educational programs,
- diversified products, and quality services.
-
- **************************
-
- DORIS DINGLE'S CRAFTY CAT ACTIVITY BOOK
- Games, Toys & Hobbies to Keep Your Cat's Mind Active
- by Helen Levchuk, illustrated by John Bianchi
- (Alaska Northwest, 1991, $12.95, ISBN 0-88240-415-6)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- If your cat just lays around waiting for mealtime, get yourself a copy
- of DORIS DINGLE'S CRAFTY CAT ACTIVITY BOOK and let the games begin.
- Divided into three sections--Games, Hobbies, and Toys--there is
- something to capture the imagination of both human and feline on every
- page. Maybe you need to start off with a little physical activity to
- get the blood circulating: How about a rousing game of Bathtub Jai
- Alai? Or maybe you and your cat are more the Cork-on-a-Rope type. Why
- not try starting (and ending) the day with a violent game of Pounce
- among the bedsheets? In the Hobbies section you'll discover how to
- enhance, and possibly participate in, your cat's favorite activities.
- Whether it be TV-Watching, Reading the Newspaper, enjoying your cat's
- natural acquisitive tendencies, or classic Birdwatching, DORIS DINGLE
- has suggestions for increasing the pleasure potential all around. And
- what modern cat is complete without a full toybox? Luckily, Kitty's
- toys are much cheaper than ours, but they're just as much fun.
- Complete directions are given for making every toy: a couple require
- knitting, some require a bit of construction, some require only a bit
- of paper and a few seconds worth of crumpling. (One of the most
- ingenious toys is a paper-bag Pinata with homemade catnip toys
- inside.) DORIS DINGLE also discusses Catnip, with hints for growing it
- yourself as well as using it in teas or toys.
-
- Pervading every page of DORIS DINGLE'S CRAFTY CAT ACTIVITY BOOK is a
- caring and nurturing attitude toward our feline companions that not
- only makes this book irresistible to cat lovers, but also an excellent
- introduction to cat-human relations for young people living with their
- very first pet. And John Bianchi's illustrations are a delight,
- capturing the tone of the text beautifully. This is easily the best
- book of the year for cat people everywhere. If you have trouble
- finding DORIS DINGLE'S CRAFTY CAT ACTIVITY BOOK, write to the
- publishers at: Alaska Northwest Books, PO Box 3007, Bothell, WA
- 98041-3007, or get your credit card and call 1-800-343-4567.
-
- **************************
-
- THE HUNDREDTH MONKEY: And Other Paradigms of the Paranormal
- A SKEPTICAL INQUIRER Collection
- edited by Kendrick Frazier
- (Prometheus Books, September 1991, $17.95, ISBN 0-87975-655-1)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- This newest collection of essays and articles from the SKEPTICAL
- INQUIRER addresses engrossing and important issues at the intersection
- of science and popular belief.
-
- THE HUNDREDTH MONKEY takes its title from philosopher Ron Amundson's
- devastating expose of the "Hundredth Monkey Phenomenon", a claim about
- collective consciousness. Fifty-eight essays by forty-eight authors,
- including Carl Sagan, Isaac Asimov, Martin Gardner, Ray Hyman, Paul
- Kurtz, and James Randi, examine aspects of paranormal and
- fringe-science beliefs from an authoritative, scientific point of
- view. The penetrating and entertaining essays, many with timely
- updates, are grouped into eleven categories: Understanding Human Need,
- Encouraging Critical Thinking, Evaluating the Anomalous Experience,
- Examining Popular Claims, Investigating Psychic Claims, Assessing the
- New Age, Medical Controversies, Astrology, Crashed Saucer Claims,
- Considering Parapsychology and Controversies Within Science.
- Scientists and scholars discuss the burden of skepticism and the
- delicate balance between a creative openness to new ideas and the
- relentless scrutiny of new claims. A classic sourcebook for
- scientifically responsible explanations of controversies, hoaxes,
- bizarre mysteries, and popular cultural myths.
-
- **************************
-
- BOOKS ON TAPE
-
- TAO TE CHING by Lao Tsu
- translated by Gia-fu Feng & Jane English
- read by Jacob Needleman
- (Audio Literature, 1990, $15.95, ISBN 0-944993-24-9)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- The TAO TE CHING is one of the world's classic sacred texts,
- attributed to Lao Tsu and dating from the 6th century to the 3rd
- century BC. This Chinese text of the Taoist religion/philosophy is a
- brief work of 81 paragraphs of both verse and prose, advocating the
- following of the TAO (most often translated as the "Way"). The text is
- divided into two parts: "Concerning TAO" and "Concerning TE" (most
- often translated as "Concerning the Way" and "Concerning Virtue").
-
- The Audio Literature package consists of two cassette tapes: one
- containing the entire text of the TAO TE CHING as translated by Gia-fu
- Feng and Jane English, the second containing Dr. Jacob Needleman's
- helpful and fascinating commentary on the text. His deep, calm voice
- allows the listener to follow the highly concentrated material without
- strain, and his insights into the meaning of the TAO and how the
- modern student might best find its path are very rewarding. These are
- both excellent tapes to stick in your Walkman for long solitary walks.
-
-
- ZEN MIND, BEGINNER'S MIND
- by Shunryu Suzuki-roshi
- read by Peter Coyote
- (Audio Literature, 1988, $15.95, ISBN 0-944993-07-9)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- By "beginner's mind", the author is referring to that state of humble
- receptivity that the novice brings to a new endeavor, a state that is
- so often lost as time passes. Soon the student becomes more focused on
- measuring progress and dividing knowledge into what has been mastered
- and what hasn't. ZEN MIND, BEGINNER'S MIND is a practical introduction
- to Zen Buddhism and its practice. The Audio Literature package is a
- 2-tape, 3-hour abridgement of the original 1970 text.
-
- Beginning with the basics that become the whole, the author discusses
- how to sit, how to stand, and how to be present when you do so. The
- words are friendly and accessible, Peter Coyote's narration is warm
- and comforting. A very fine rendition of a wonderful book that will
- both introduce you to the practice of Zen and help you regain the
- center when you find yourself drifting.
-
- NOTE: Audio Literature has other spiritual classics on cassette tape,
- like: THE TEACHINGS OF DON JUAN by Carlos Castaneda, THE
- BHAGAVAD-GITA, THE BOOK OF JOB, BLACK ELK: THE SACRED PIPE by Joseph
- Epes Brown, THE DHAMMAPADA, etc. Order the above Audio Literature
- tapes and get a complete list of their offerings by writing to: Audio
- Literature Inc., 325 Corey Way, Suite 112, South San Francisco, CA
- 94080.
- **************************
-
- --> COMPUTER CORNER <--
-
- DOS 5 INSTANT REFERENCE
- by Robert M. Thomas
- (Sybex, 1991, $9.95, ISBN 0-89588-804-1)
- review by Carl Ingram
-
- This affordable little volume packs a lot of easily-accessed
- information in its 300 pages. The inside covers give you DOS commands
- sorted by function, Part 1 is "General Rules for Using DOS", Part 2 is
- an alphabetically-arranged reference for using the DOS commands, Part
- 3 covers the DOS shell, Appendix A discusses batch files, Appendix B
- is an alphabetically-arranged reference for the CONFIG.SYS commands,
- Appendix C talks about standard MS-DOS device drivers, and Appendix D
- provides explanations of the DOS error messages. Just in case you can
- think of some piece of DOS that isn't easily flipped to with this
- organization, there is an Index in the back.
-
- Each DOS command has a variety of large symbols that give you some
- useful instant information. These symbols will tell you if the command
- is an "internal" or "external" command (if you don't know what that
- means, DOS 5 INSTANT REFERENCE explains), what version of DOS the
- command is valid in (for instance 3.0+ means that the command works in
- DOS 3.0 and all later versions), whether or not the command is a TSR
- (also explained), and a special "bullet" flag is added whenever the
- command is potentially dangerous (overwrites or erases files). DOS 5
- INSTANT REFERENCE is a very handy book for day-to-day use with your
- MS-DOS computer.
-
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- MASTERING DOS 5
- by Judd Robbins
- (Sybex, 1991, $27.95, ISBN 0-89588-767-3)
- review by Carl Ingram
-
- MASTERING DOS 5 represents the other end of the spectrum from Sybex's
- DOS 5 INSTANT REFERENCE. Where the INSTANT REFERENCE is terse,
- MASTERING DOS 5 is comprehensive; where the INSTANT REFERENCE is
- designed for quick look-ups, MASTERING DOS 5 is for extended studying.
- Over 800 pages of illustrated text take the interested computer user
- through the vagaries of the DOS Shell, EDIT, QBASIC, macros, memory
- management, customizing DOS 5, organizing your hard disk, and
- everything else you can do with DOS 5. A particularly wonderful
- section covers the entire world of batch files, possibly the most
- important convenience tool available on your MS-DOS computer, and
- often overlooked by otherwise knowledgeable users.
-
- While opening chapters are aimed at computer novices, MASTERING DOS 5
- is for the computer user who will not be content with just the basics
- but who has set their sights on becoming a true Power User. Indeed,
- with the convenient arrangement of MASTERING DOS 5, the helpful
- illustrations, and comprehensive Index, you can ignore your DOS 5
- manuals and get everything you need to know right here. There are
- removable keyboard templates and a Quick Reference Card for DOS, DOS
- Shell, QBASIC, and EDIT printed on heavy stock in the back.
-
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- DOS 5.0 AT WORK
- by Mary Campbell
- (Addison-Wesley, June 1991, $22.95, ISBN 0-201-57716-X)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Designed for the beginning or intermediate user, DOS 5.0 AT WORK is
- part of Addison-Wesley's AT WORK series, with special features such
- as: At Work sidebars that illustrate actual DOS 5.0 uses in the real
- business world, adhesive tabs that let you mark your most-used
- sections of the book, chapter objectives and summaries that help the
- user focus on the important points and master each subject. In
- addition, the book is laid out to be used easily as a reference volume
- to look up specific questions or as a textbook to be read cover to
- cover by a DOS novice. Useful illustrations, logical organization of
- material, and clearly identified subsections contribute to make DOS
- 5.0 AT WORK a success as both reference volume and textbook.
-
- From the very first pages of DOS 5.0 AT WORK, in which beginners will
- find the DOS basics that everyone else just assumes you know, through
- a clear discussion of the DOS commands, all the way to showing you how
- to customize DOS for your particular system and how to create
- sophisticated batch files to make your computer life easier, this is a
- very helpful book. In the appendices at the back you will find quick
- references guides to error messages, DOS commands, ASCII codes, and a
- "Key Summary" to help you find the special-use keys of DOS 5.0. By
- including the necessary but often overlooked beginner material, DOS
- 5.0 AT WORK becomes a very valuable addition to the office computer
- shelf.
-
- NOTE ABOUT PAGE NUMBERS: As a dedicated user of page numbers, I have
- been disturbed lately by the lack of respect accorded these helpful
- little digits, particularly in works of nonfiction. A cookbook that I
- plucked off a shelf recently, a very thick and difficult to wield
- cookbook, had the page numbers printed on the inside corners of each
- page and were nearly impossible to see without holding the book down
- with both hands and forcing the pages apart. You'd think it cost extra
- money to put page numbers in a sensible place. I bring this subject up
- because of the page numbering in DOS 5.0 AT WORK, which is the very
- finest I've ever seen. All page numbers are large white number printed
- in a dark green rectangle and are placed at the outermost edge of each
- page. You can thumb through the book to the page you want with an
- absolute minimum of effort. Now why can't EVERY book do this?
-
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- THE DOS 5 USER'S HANDBOOK
- by Gary Masters & Richard Allen King
- (Sybex, 1991, $21.95, ISBN 0-89588-777-0)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- THE DOS 5 USER'S HANDBOOK is divided into two parts. Part I is fairly
- standard textbook-like guide to getting the most out of DOS 5. Novices
- can study it from beginning to end, and more experienced users can
- simply read the chapters of particular interest. The chapters of Part
- I are laid out this way:
-
- 1. Brave New DOS (what's so hot about DOS 5)
- 2. Memory Unbound (all about memory: low, high, expanded, extended)
- 3. Installing DOS 5
- 4. Graphical DOS
- 5. EDIT--The Full-Screen DOS Editor
- 6. The New DOS Shell and Task Swapper
- 7. Command-Line Editor, Macros, and Online Help
- 8. Disk and File Recovery Tools
- 9. New DOS 5 Commands
- 10. Enhanced Commands
- 11. QBASIC--The Quick BASIC Interpreter
-
- As you can see, this is a good general introduction to DOS, all
- handled in about 250 pages. Part II, though, is where THE DOS 5 USER'S
- HANDBOOK really shines: it's a DOS 5 Reference Guide, and it's great.
- As you probably know, DOS reference guides are alphabetical listings
- of the DOS commands with descriptions of what the command does and how
- to use it. Well, that's where Part II starts, but it's not where it
- ends.
-
- To begin with, you get a table of the DOS 5 commands, arranged into
- Essential DOS Commands, Useful DOS Commands, and Specialized DOS
- Commands. This gives the novice at least somewhere to start, a way to
- get a handle on what is otherwise a very large and messy subject. In
- the reference guide, commands have been given "type" designations:
- internal, external, batch, and configuration. You also are told what
- version of DOS the command first showed up in, in case you have
- installations using an earlier version. If you're already familiar
- with DOS and just want to know what's different about version 5, check
- the "DOS 5 Notes" and you'll get only what you want to know. Also, one
- of my favorite ideas is the "Related Commands" section of a command's
- coverage. Often I can think of one command that should do what I want,
- but who knows if it's the ONLY applicable command, and maybe it's not
- the best. With "Related Commands", I can quickly assure myself that
- I've covered the available commands and I can pick the best and most
- efficient for my purposes. Finally, Part II has sections called "In
- Depth" where you get a small article about the command along with a
- few practical examples. This is what you read when you need more
- information or a bit more help putting the command into use.
-
- With so much information given for each command, and yet all of the
- information organized into specific sections, you can get exactly the
- kind of information and the depth of information that you need, and
- you can get it quickly and without fussing with indexes and page
- numbers. THE DOS 5 USER'S HANDBOOK is a serious contender in the DOS
- textbook/reference book class, and also comes with Sybex's set of DOS
- 5 templates and quick guides printed on heavy paper, meant to be
- removed and put at your workstation. A very fine book.
-
-
- NOTE: Don't see the Sybex title you need here in RFP? No problem--get
- your own copy of the complete Sybex catalog of publications, write to:
- SYBEX, Inc., 2021 Challenger Drive, Alameda, CA 94501.
-
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- DOS 5 DEMYSTIFIED
- by James S. Forney
- (Tab Books/Windcrest, 1991, $24.95, ISBN 0-8306-1047-2)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Anyone who was ever really seriously interested in computers probably
- has a few Tab Books on their shelf. I know I do. Not the prettiest
- books on the block, but they were always the very best for people who
- really CARED about their machinery. They published books for hackers
- (an honorable term in yesteryear), computer users who had a burning
- desire to know not just how things worked, but why. People who wanted
- to TINKER with their machines, not just push buttons.
-
- Well, Tab Books are a whole lot prettier nowadays, but their editorial
- policies seem to be exactly the same. DOS 5 DEMYSTIFIED is the DOS
- guide as literature. James Forney obviously loves to tinker with his
- computer, has amassed a vast warehouse of knowledge about DOS, and is
- ready to share it with like-minded computer users. The prose is more
- informal, conversational than the other DOS manuals I've seen.
- Subjects are covered in more depth and there are more examples and
- hands-on experiments given, because Forney is talking to people who
- are ready to read a DOS book for fun. People who think working out a
- new macro to make a computer chore more efficient is a good way to
- spend their lunch hour. It doesn't matter if you're getting paid for
- it or not, Forney knows computers represent the most enjoyable
- intellectual challenge in the world. If you like computers and want to
- know more about DOS, not just the hows but the WHYs, DOS 5 DEMYSTIFIED
- is the book for you.
-
- (If your local bookstore can't help you find DOS 5 DEMYSTIFIED, write
- to: Tab Books, Blue Ridge Summit, PA 17294-0850.)
-
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- THE ABC'S OF DOS 5
- by Alan R. Miller
- (Sybex, 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-89588-770-3)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Here is the best book we've seen for the novice who is just starting
- out with both computer operating systems in general and Microsoft's
- DOS 5 in particular. Chapter 1 begins with "A Brief Survey of Your
- Computer", discussing the system unit, keyboard, mouse, printer,
- disks, etc. Chapter 2 helps you turn on your computer and use a few
- basic DOS commands. Chapter 3 explores the DOS shell that comes with
- DOS 5, with lots of illustrations of exactly what your screen will
- look like (so you'll know immediately when you've taken a wrong turn).
- Chapter 4 will help you figure out directories and files, and Chapter
- 5 will help you become proficient at file copying. Chapter 6 covers
- some of the most useful DOS programs that allow you to: format a disk,
- check for disk space and errors, compare two files, sort a text file,
- recover an accidentally deleted file, etc. Chapter 7 will show you how
- to use EDIT, the simple text editor that comes with DOS 5, and Chapter
- 8 provides an alphabetically-arranged summary of the DOS 5 commands
- and programs.
-
- The Appendices include: Hints for Beginners (practical, real-world
- advice for using your computer), The DOS Control Characters, The ASCII
- Characters and the Extended ASCII Characters, Preparing for the Worst
- (an unreadable hard disk), Restarting a Hard Disk (more difficult than
- it sounds), and Upgrading Your Computer to DOS 5. THE ABC'S OF DOS 5
- is a nicely-arranged primer for the new computer user, with helpful
- illustrations and information not normally included in the more
- technical computer manuals. The book also contains a removable Quick
- Reference Card on heavy stock, and two function key templates (one for
- the across-the-top key layout, one for the down-the-left layout).
-
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- SIMPLIFIED USER GUIDE FOR MICROSOFT MS-DOS 5.0
- by Richard Maran
- (maranGraphics, 1991, $14.95, ISBN 0-9694290-4-5)
- review by Carl Ingram
-
- It's difficult to imagine an easier to use reference book than Richard
- Maran's SIMPLIFIED USER GUIDE FOR MICROSOFT MS-DOS 5.0. There is a
- minimum of text and the author has used every possible device to make
- a point clearly and with maximum brevity. For one thing, you don't
- need to waste valuable time looking at the Table of Contents--all you
- have to do is thumb through the book, watch the edge of the pages and
- you'll see a boxed and colored representation of that section of the
- book with the current chapter highlighted. Along the top of the pages
- is a layout of the current chapter, with the particular subsection
- highlighted. The pages of information themselves are made up mostly of
- pictures of what the computer screen looks like during each step of a
- particular chore. Important sections are indicated with red lines and
- boxes, which are labeled and connected to the numbered step that they
- illustrate. Terms are never simply defined when they can be
- graphically represented.
-
- The book is divided into two main sections: Using the Command Prompt,
- and Using the MS-DOS Shell. This makes sense, as these are the two
- ways in which the computer user can access DOS. Richard Maran always
- presents information from the perspective of the user, never from that
- of the hardware or software. In this way, he provides a reference book
- that is unique as far as I know: a full-featured DOS 5 reference guide
- for non-computer people. If you need a DOS 5 manual that will answer
- your beginner-to-intermediate questions and answer them FAST, Richard
- Maran's book is definitely the one to get.
-
- NOTE: If your local bookstore doesn't have Richard Maran's SIMPLIFIED
- USER GUIDE FOR MICROSOFT MS-DOS 5.0, it may help them to know that the
- distributor for maranGraphics books is Firefly Books Ltd., 250 Sparks
- Avenue, Willowdale, Ontario, Canada M2H 2S4. If you'd like to contact
- the publisher yourself, write to: maranGraphics Inc., 5755 Coopers
- Avenue, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada L4Z 1R9.
-
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- THE LITTLE DOS 5 BOOK
- by Kay Yarborough Nelson
- (Peachpit Press, August 1991, $12.95, ISBN 0-938151-43-6)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- Here is the DOS book computer novices have been searching for--just
- about everything you really need to know about DOS and your computer,
- conveniently arranged and clearly explained, in under 150 pages. The
- first chapter starts out with the basics that nobody ever bothers to
- tell the uninitiated, stuff like: What's a command line? Where's the
- power switch? What's the difference between a "cursor" and a "prompt"?
- What is the "Enter key" and where is it? Why does everybody seem to
- think we're all BORN knowing these things?
-
- Chapter 2 gives you a guided tour of the DOS Shell which THE LITTLE
- DOS 5 BOOK assumes that any novice will have the good sense to use.
- You'll meet the Menu Bar, Dialog Boxes, the Directory Tree, Icons, and
- you'll learn how to use these arcane features with your mouse (that
- little box with buttons that you see people sliding all around their
- desk). Further chapters explain things like: how to enter commands,
- Files, Directories and Subdirectories, Disks, Programs, Backups,
- Printing, AUTOEXEC.BAT and CONFIG.SYS, and Chapter 11 is a complete
- alphabetical rundown on DOS 5 commands. I particularly like the "Tips"
- that are printed in the margins--almost all of them are small tricks
- that the computer cognoscenti always know and that reference books and
- how-to books never bother to explain. THE LITTLE DOS 5 BOOK should be
- at every workstation that serves computer novices.
-
- NOTE: If your local bookstore can't help you get THE LITTLE DOS 5
- BOOK, you can contact the publisher at: Peachpit Press, 2414 Sixth
- Street, Berkeley, CA 94710, 800/283-9444, 415/548-4393, FAX:
- 415/548-5991.
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- RUNNING MS-DOS: Fifth Edition (Covers Version 5)
- by Van Wolverton
- (Microsoft Press, 1991, $24.95, ISBN 1-55615-337-6)
- review by Carl Ingram
-
- RUNNING MS-DOS serves as an introduction to computers and DOS, a guide
- to getting the most out of DOS for all versions through 5.0, and as a
- complete DOS Command reference. The first few chapters are devoted to
- the novice, with basic types of information about computers, operating
- systems in general, disk drives, files, directories, and the like. The
- next few chapters are for the intermediate DOS student, discussing
- file management, printers, monitors, subdirectories, and fixed disks.
- After that, you get a one-chapter tutorial on each of three special
- DOS programs: Shell (DOS 5), EDIT (DOS 5), and EDLIN (up through DOS
- 4). The last handful of chapters carry you right through advanced
- topics like batch files, filter commands, DOSKEY, and other esoteric
- subjects. The appendixes include a Glossary, a DOS Command Reference,
- and a chapter on installing DOS. After all, knowing how to use it
- doesn't get you very far if you can't shoehorn the thing into your
- machinery. A very fine one-volume tutorial/reference guide to the disk
- operating system from Microsoft.
-
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- THE ONLY DOS BOOK YOU'LL EVER NEED
- by Doug Lowe & Patrick Bultema
- (Mike Murach & Assoc., 1991, $24.95, ISBN 0-911625-58-5)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- The title of this book is pretty brave when you take a look at all the
- dozens and dozens of DOS books available. (Believe it or not, there
- are quite a few more that DIDN'T make it into this RFP.) However, the
- authors have really managed to turn about 550 pages of text into a
- really comprehensive textbook/tutorial/reference guide to DOS (and
- other nifty things). How does this book differ from others?
-
- (1) It covers the gamut of experience levels. The first two sections
- provide a basic beginner's course on computers. This is the stuff you
- need to know to make any pretense at computer literacy. The third
- section covers the intermediate subjects like back-ups and error
- recovery. At this point you could hold your own with most computer
- users. The next two sections teach you about the DOS 4.0 shell and the
- DOS 5.0 shell, respectively. Now you're up to date. The sixth section
- covers utility programs that can enhance DOS--now you're well-read.
- And the seventh and final section teaches you about the exotic skills
- that most people don't even know about. Now you're an expert.
-
- (2) No time is wasted considering floppy-disk-only systems. THE ONLY
- DOS BOOK YOU'LL EVER NEED takes it for granted that you have a hard
- disk and all examples are so given.
-
- (3) Possibly the best thing about THE ONLY DOS BOOK YOU'LL EVER NEED
- is the coverage of third-party commercial software. Computer users do
- not live by DOS alone. Programs that are discussed in some real detail
- include: PC Tools Deluxe, Norton Commander, Pathminder, Fastback Plus,
- PC Fullback Plus, Mace Utilities Gold. Consideration is also given to
- other programs that provide: cursor control, print spooling, task
- switching and multitasking. Also, one entire chapter is devoted to the
- important subject of public domain and shareware utilities.
-
- THE ONLY DOS BOOK YOU'LL EVER NEED is a superb one-volume guide to
- getting the most out of your computer. If your local bookstore can't
- get it for you, you can contact the publisher at: Mike Murach &
- Associates, Inc., 4697 West Jacquelyn Avenue, Fresno, CA 93722-6427.
- Or, get your credit card handy and call 1-800-221-5528.
-
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- MICROSOFT MS-DOS PROGRAMMER'S REFERENCE
- (Microsoft Press, 1991, $24.95, ISBN 1-55615-329-5)
- review by Carl Ingram
-
- One of the great things about DOS is that it not only manages your
- computer's operations for you, much of the code used in DOS is
- actually available for you to use in your own programs. By tapping
- into system functions and interrupts, you can let DOS do a lot of the
- dirty work for you. If this sounds good to you, the one book you
- absolutely HAVE to have is the MICROSOFT MS-DOS PROGRAMMER'S
- REFERENCE. It won't teach you how to program, but it will give
- absolutely everything you need to know to program in an MS-DOS
- environment.
-
- Topics in the MICROSOFT MS-DOS PROGRAMMER'S REFERENCE include
- overviews of the MS-DOS system functions; a comprehensive reference to
- the system functions, interrupts, and structures; an explanation of
- device drivers; and a description of the function interfaces for
- MS-DOS extensions, such as print spooling, national language support,
- and task switching.
-
- MICROSOFT MS-DOS PROGRAMMER'S REFERENCE
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- Chapter 2: Overview of MS-DOS
- Chapter 3: File System
- Chapter 4: Character Input and Output
- Chapter 5: Program Management
- Chapter 6: National Language Support
- Chapter 7: Interrupts
- Chapter 8: Interrupt 21h Functions
- Chapter 9: Device Drivers
- Appendix A: Code Pages
- Appendix B: Extended Key Codes
- Appendix C: Error Values
- Index
-
- (NOTE: You can get the MICROSOFT MS-DOS PROGRAMMER'S REFERENCE, or
- any other Microsoft Press book, by calling 1-800-MSPRESS with your
- credit card handy.)
-
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- dBASE III PLUS PROGRAMMER'S REFERENCE GUIDE
- by Alan Simpson
- (Sybex, 1987, $29.95, ISBN 0-89588-508-5)
- review by Bob Willis
-
- This book is the most complete reference on the dBASE programming
- language that I have seen to date. It is a massive 1029 pages, and is
- divided into seven parts, as well as a number of appendices. The
- sections are:
-
- Part 1: Overview of dBASE Programming (53 pages)
- Part 2: dBASE as a Programming language (105 pages)
- Part 3: Screen Displays and Reports (45 pages)
- Part 4: Managing Information on the Database (211 pages)
- Part 5: The Programming Environment (145 pages)
- Part 6: Beyond the Programming Environment (105 pages)
- Part 7: Commonly Used Algorithms (60 pages)
-
- When the book arrived, I had just been given a project at work that
- was under extreme time pressure. I had to set up databases, gather
- data, and create reports in a very short period of time. My dBASE was
- a bit rusty, and I didn't have the time to re-read all the dBASE
- manuals. This book was a godsend, because it was very well organized
- and full of practical information. Pretty much anything you might want
- to do in dBASE is explained in detail, and includes numerous examples
- and (my favorite feature) "Tips" sections that give useful ways of
- using the material just presented.
-
- If you need a detailed reference on dBASE programming, get this book.
- It is rare to find a book that combines the comprehensive coverage of
- a reference work with the practical examples of a "How-To" or
- "Using..." book. If you are a dBASE user, from entry level to expert,
- you will find something of value in this work, and it will be a book
- that grows with you as your skills develop. Co-workers have borrowed
- it several times, and I still find Post-It notes marking pages as they
- have discovered a neat new trick or programming gem. One borrower told
- me that it was being used as a textbook in a dBASE course that he was
- taking.
-
- Bottom line: I like it a lot.
-
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- UNDERSTANDING SQL
- by Martin Gruber
- (Sybex, 1990, $26.95, ISBN 0-89588-644-8)
-
- UNDERSTANDING ORACLE
- by James T. Perry & Joseph G. Lateer
- (Sybex, 1989, $26.95, ISBN 0-89588-534-4)
- review by Bob Willis
-
- A few years ago, my primary task at work was to create and support a
- large relational database system using the ORACLE database management
- system. The only documentation available was the set of manuals
- provided by Oracle Corporation, which were reasonably complete but
- lacking in detail and examples. I had always wished that there was a
- comprehensive guide to ORACLE and SQL. I was excited when I had the
- chance to review the above books. However, they were not the great
- reference works that I was hoping for.
-
- SQL stands for 'Software Query Language', and was developed at IBM as
- an abstract set of rules for manipulating and querying relational
- databases. It has been implemented by a number of products, including
- dBASE IV, but has risen to software stardom as the query language used
- in the ORACLE database. ORACLE is a popular database system primarily
- for two reasons - it is available on a large number of platforms from
- mainframes to minicomputers all the way down to the IBM PC, and it
- comes with a robust and enhanced version of SQL (SQL*Plus).
-
- UNDERSTANDING SQL, at 434 pages, is a very basic introduction to
- Software Query Language. It does not focus on one particular
- implementation of SQL (the examples it gives use FirstSQL, an IBM PC
- program), but covers the basics of creating, modifying, and querying a
- database using SQL. It is a reasonable tutorial for a beginner with
- access to a version of SQL, but does not make a good reference work,
- and anyone interested in the complexities of SQL will have to look
- elsewhere. Bottom line: get it from the library.
-
- UNDERSTANDING ORACLE is another introductory work, albeit a meatier
- one at 634 pages. It contains an overview of the main ORACLE
- subsystems, concentrating on the IBM PC version of the program. The
- book covers a broad range of topics, but unfortunately at a shallow
- level. As with UNDERSTANDING SQL, you will come out with a basic
- knowledge of the subject; however, in order to get full use out of
- either product you will have to spend a lot of time mastering its
- tricks and idiosyncrasies or... find another book. Bottom line: This
- is a better introduction than the one that comes with the ORACLE
- documentation, but not enough in-depth information for continued use.
-
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- PC MAGAZINE GUIDE TO NOTEBOOK & LAPTOP COMPUTERS (with disk)
- by Bill Howard
- (Ziff-Davis Press, 1991, $29.95, ISBN 1-56276-005-X)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- This book is the most comprehensive coverage of portable computers I
- have ever seen. I can't think of a thing that isn't discussed here,
- from helping you choose the right computer in the first place, getting
- the right software and hardware accessories, through using your laptop
- like a pro and seeking out resources for further learning.
-
- In the very beginning, this GUIDE takes you through the initial
- purchase of a portable computer. The different kinds of portables are
- discussed, giving you the terminology, the distinctions, as well as
- the advantages and disadvantages of each. Chapters 2 & 3 cover the
- features available in laptops, what each feature does and how to
- decide if you want it or not. And when you're ready to buy, the GUIDE
- will advise you on where to go, how to judge the deal you're offered,
- and whether or not you should think about a used computer.
-
- Once you've bought your computer, you need to know how to set it up
- and arrange your hard disk, how to travel with it (that IS why you
- bought a portable, isn't it?), how to use a modem, how to use the
- various communications services available. The PC MAGAZINE GUIDE
- covers all these topics and more. There is a "Road Warrior Checklist"
- to help you pack everything you'll need for your computer when you
- travel, as well as a chart to tell you which side of the plane to sit
- on for best viewing of a laptop screen. If you get to your destination
- only to find that they don't have phones with modular plugs (for
- hooking up your modem), no problem. This GUIDE will tell you how to
- connect to the phone line anyway. You'll find out how to send and
- receive faxes, how to use on-line services, and how to connect your
- computer to others (using file-transfer software, LANs, remote-control
- software, etc.).
-
- One chapter is devoted to helping you decide what software you should
- get for your portable computer, and another discusses the extra
- hardware and accessories you might want to consider. Not only does the
- GUIDE discuss mice, printers, external keyboards, external monitors,
- CD-ROM drives and extra disk drives, but more exotic add-ons like
- scanners and bar code readers. One long chapter covers the resources
- available to the computer owner: computer magazines and newspapers,
- industry newsletters, sources of software reviews, computer books,
- training materials, trade shows, user groups, etc. Bill Howard
- actually names names and gives personal recommendations.
-
- The Appendices included are valuable as well: Troubleshooting Common
- Laptop Problems; Serial, Parallel, and Null Modem Pinouts;
- International Voltage and Outlet Plug Guide; Hayes-Compatible Modem
- Commands; Electronic Mail and Bulletin Boards; A Quick Guide to Using
- Laptops for Presentations; Laptop Buyer's Checklist (a complete
- checklist of features from Chapters 2 & 3 ready to photocopy and take
- to the store); Resources (addresses). There is a Glossary at the end
- to explain all the jargon you're likely to hear.
-
- There is also a 3-1/2" disk included with the PC MAGAZINE GUIDE TO
- NOTEBOOK & LAPTOP COMPUTERS. It contains such famous and useful
- programs as Vernon D. Buerg's LIST program for browsing through files,
- the virus detection/disinfection combo--SCAN and CLEANUP--from McAfee
- Associates, and Tiny Editor by Tom Kihlken. In addition, you'll get
- programs for:
-
- * A pop-up chart of ASCII codes
- * A utility to highlight the cursor line for easy visibility
- * Communications programs for automated MCI communications, and for
- using PC MagNet and CompuServe
- * Macro recording & playback
- * Modem utilities to setup and monitor the serial/modem port
- * Set the date & time using the National Institute of Standards and
- Technology
- * Remote PC operation by modem
- * Redirecting printer output to a file
- * High-speed file transfer between linked computers
-
- And more. The PC MAGAZINE GUIDE TO NOTEBOOK & LAPTOP COMPUTERS is the
- first, last, and final word on everything the portable computer user
- needs to know. Recommended.
-
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- THE HARD DISK SURVIVAL GUIDE (with disk)
- by Mark Minasi
- (Sybex, 1991, $29.95, ISBN 0-89588-799-1)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Last summer (1990), the hard disk upon which RFP was created died. One
- day it just rolled over, coughed a few times, and expired. Half of the
- next issue and the first edition of our brand new Index were trapped
- somewhere in the sealed confines of that mysterious metal box. (Not to
- mention one of the world's great collections of adventure games and
- pinball simulations.) Computer stores just wanted to sell us a new
- disk. Data recovery services wanted more money than we had. We finally
- found a Disk Wizard in a nearby city and took our problem to him. He
- was able to save much of the data, including the issue of RFP and the
- Index, but we still had spent several weeks in agony. Later that year,
- our computer installation was attacked by a computer virus. The
- majority of the infection was confined to, you guessed it, the RFP
- computer's hard disk, the replacement of the one that had died during
- the summer. We managed to recover from the virus, but it was a nasty
- couple of days of hard work.
-
- The point of all this is that we would have been in much better shape
- if we had had Mark Minasi's THE HARD DISK SURVIVAL GUIDE. Not only
- would we have understood what had happened to us better, but we would
- have saved ourselves a lot of emotional trauma and a fair amount of
- money. Within the pages of Minasi's book you will find nothing less
- than a complete course in the understanding and care of hard disks.
- How they work and why they sometimes don't. What can happen, how to
- avoid it, and what to do when it happens anyway. For instance, did you
- know that the distance between the read/write head of your hard disk
- and the actual platter is considerably smaller than the height of a
- fingerprint? Think about that the next time you slam your hand on the
- computer table to make a point, or pound the keyboard extra hard to
- show your frustration. Those vibrations could be gouging your data
- right off your hard disk.
-
- THE HARD DISK SURVIVAL GUIDE will give you a systematic course of
- action for anytime your disk fails to boot, or throws an error of any
- kind. It'll tell you about computer viruses: what the most common
- varieties are, how they work, and what you can do about them (both to
- prevent infection, and to recover from it). Diagrams will show you how
- the mechanisms in your hard drive work. Hands-on exercises will have
- you viewing the FAT, the MBR, the DBR, and finding files wherever they
- may have been stored. Once you know how things work and what they look
- like when everything is OK, you're halfway there to fixing them when
- things go wrong. There is also a disk included, with valuable programs
- to help you care for your disk, examine its structure, and back up the
- important information. And throughout the entire volume, Mark Minasi
- gives specific information, suggestions, and advice, using brand names
- and model numbers--loads of data culled from years of fixing hard
- drives. Inside THE HARD DISK SURVIVAL GUIDE you'll find everything you
- need to know to take the best possible care of your programs and data.
- If you care about the information on your hard drive, this book is
- absolutely required reading, and should be kept close at hand for
- emergency first aid. Highly recommended.
-
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- MICROSOFT PRESS COMPUTER DICTIONARY
- The Comprehensive Standard for Business, School, Library, and Home
- (Microsoft Press, 1991, $19.95, ISBN 1-55615-231-0)
- review by Carl Ingram
-
- As almost everyone knows, your standard dictionary just doesn't cut it
- when it comes to modern-day specialized jargon, particularly the
- rapidly expanding world of high-technology vocabulary. That's why a
- good Computer Dictionary is so important today. Unfortunately most
- such volumes are woefully incomplete or are lightheartedly targeted at
- the "average" person (who is, for some reason, assumed to be barely
- literate). The MICROSOFT PRESS COMPUTER DICTIONARY sets a whole new
- standard for dictionary supplementation. It's serious, authoritative,
- and comprehensive. Written and reviewed by experts from the computer
- industry and the business and academic communities, the dictionary
- includes terms drawn from a wide variety of disciplines:
-
- Applications
- Communications
- Data and Data Storage
- Databases
- Desktop Publishing
- Electronics
- Hardware
- Chips, Cards, and Boards
- Computers
- Disks, Drives, and Other Media
- Keyboards
- Printers and Plotters
- Video
- Other Devices
- History
- Information Processing
- General Computing
- Input/Output
- Memory and Memory Management
- Networks
- Output
- Print
- Screen
- Programming
- Systems and Environments
-
- Entries include pronunciations where appropriate, clear and concise
- definitions, illustrations, and cross references. The MICROSOFT PRESS
- COMPUTER DICTIONARY is an important addition to your library at the
- office and/or at home. It will help the entire family understand the
- technology that is shaping the course of our lives more and more every
- day.
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- DESKTOP PUBLISHING BY DESIGN: Ventura Publisher Edition
- by Ronnie Shushan, Don Wright, Ricardo Birmele
- (Microsoft Press, 1991, $24.95, ISBN 1-55615-265-5)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- The production of printed material is gradually being taken out of the
- hands of professional printers and being done right there in the
- office. The combination of affordable computers, laser printers, and
- desktop publishing software has attracted many companies large and
- small, and more are joining them every week. But then there's always
- the awkward moment when the computers have been installed, the
- printers are plugged in and humming, and the software is safe and
- secure on the computer's hard disk. Now what? The salespeople told you
- that this was all you needed to turn out spiffy documents and
- newsletters with the touch of a button. Were they lying?
-
- Well, not exactly lying, maybe just a little misleading. Now you need
- someone with two kinds of knowledge: how to use the software you
- purchased and how to design good-looking documents. DESKTOP PUBLISHING
- BY DESIGN is what you need if you use Ventura Publisher. It's divided
- into three convenient sections to address all of your major questions.
- Section 1 is a crash course in the design of printed material: what
- fonts are and how to pick one; how to create a grid, the basic
- structure of your page; and general advice on how to handle the design
- and printing process. Section 2 is called "A Design Portfolio". Here
- you will find concrete ideas and suggestions for the creation of
- various promotional pieces (flyers, posters, folders, brochures),
- periodicals (newsletters, journals, magazines), and printed material
- that is basically data (catalogs, data sheets, financial documents,
- forms). Then, Section 3 takes you by the hand and works step-by-step
- through seven printing projects, from a simple certificate to more
- complex pieces that use photographs, multiple columns, and other more
- advanced elements. You don't have to know all about Ventura, just
- follow the explicit instructions in DESKTOP PUBLISHING BY DESIGN, and
- you'll be producing terrific documents in a matter of hours.
-
- Lavishly illustrated throughout, DESKTOP PUBLISHING BY DESIGN is a
- tutorial on page design, a tutorial on Ventura Publisher, and a
- convenient reference book for both. An earlier edition focused on
- Aldus PageMaker. Highly recommended.
-
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- PC MAGAZINE: TURBO PASCAL 6.0 TECHNIQUES AND UTILITIES (w/disk)
- by Neil J. Rubenking
- (Ziff-Davis, August 1991, $39.95, ISBN 1-56276-010-6)
- review by Drew Bartorillo
-
- PC MAGAZINE: TURBO PASCAL 6.0 TECHNIQUES AND UTILITIES is by far the
- most comprehensive Turbo Pascal 6.0 book we have seen to date.
- TECHNIQUES is written by Neil J. Rubenking, long-time expert in the
- Turbo Pascal field and author of the famous "Pianoman" program. In his
- TECHNIQUES book, Rubenking reveals methods to unleash the total power
- of Turbo Pascal. Included are insider's tips on using the built-in
- Assembler, Turbo Debugger, Turbo Profiler, Turbo Vision, and the
- third-party library: Object Professional from Turbo Power Software.
- This is the first book we have seen that gives tips on using the
- Object Professional library, by far the most powerful tool available
- to the Turbo Pascal programmer. Included with the book is a disk that
- includes hundreds of Turbo Pascal utilities and routines. All the
- source code presented in the book is available on the included disk,
- arranged according to the chapters in the book. If you only have room
- for one book in your Turbo Pascal library, this is unquestionably the
- one to have. Included in the book are the following topics:
-
- * BASM, the Built-in Assembler
- * Object-oriented Programming
- * Turbo Vision
- * Object Professional
- * Developing Efficient Programming Techniques
- * Working With Large Programs
- * Power Routines for Input/Output
- * Power Routines for String Handling
- * Power Routines for Program Flow Control
- * Power Data Structures
- * Power BASM Routines
- * Power Routines for File Operations
- * Power Routines for Mathematical Operations
- * Power Routines for Low-Level System Access
- * Power Routines for Graphical Applications
- * Power Routines for Turbo Vision
-
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- THE HOME OFFICE COMPUTER BOOK
- by Steve Rimmer
- (Sybex, 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-89588-797-5)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- As traffic gets worse, suburban living areas get farther from city
- office buildings, technology advances and becomes more affordable,
- more and more people are deciding to work at home. Companies begin to
- realize that employees don't have to be physically present to be
- productive, and working from home is generally cheaper for both
- employee and employer. Also, advanced technology increases the
- opportunities for self-employed work at home.
-
- Working at home sounds wonderful to many, but there's usually a hurdle
- to overcome--the technology that makes all this possible must be
- selected, purchased, and used. What do you do if you can't tell a
- computer from a laser printer? Computer-happy friends usually aren't a
- good source of advice--all you'll get is a firm recommendation for
- whatever hardware or software they happen to use. No, you need to make
- good, economically sound decisions for practical reasons. You need to
- find out what's out there, separate what you'll need from what you
- won't need, and learn how to use it, preferably without spending the
- next 2 years doing it. THE HOME OFFICE COMPUTER BOOK is what you need.
-
- The first two chapter get you started--you'll learn how to choose the
- best computer for your needs, and how to pick a printer. In slightly
- over 80 pages you'll find out about: IBM, Macintosh, memory, disk
- drives, monitors, laptops, "grey market", dot matrix, daisywheel,
- inkjet, laser printers. Then there are chapters to help you deal with
- the software your computer will use. Separate chapters will introduce
- you to "The Operating System" and "Microsoft Windows". You'll find out
- what they are and what they can do for you. Other chapters introduce
- the major types of software that your business may require: "Word
- Processing", "Desktop Publishing and Graphics", "Spreadsheets", and
- "Database Management". You'll learn what these types of software do,
- what features may be important to you, and you'll find out about some
- of the more famous examples of such software. "Disk Utilities" talks
- about some accessory programs you might need, and "Shareware"
- discusses a great source of software that your local computer store
- may not mention.
-
- THE HOME OFFICE COMPUTER BOOK also devotes space to a very important
- topic: Telecommunications and FAX. These chapters are concerned with
- how your computer contacts the outside world, which is often critical
- for a home business. How will you get the reports to your boss? How
- will you deliver the typeset material to the printer? How will you
- stay in touch with your clients? What software and what hardware will
- you need? What kinds of computer communications are possible?
-
- THE HOME OFFICE COMPUTER BOOK is a terrific way for the computer
- novice to develop near-instant sophistication in the field of
- business-related technology. Easy to understand, better than relying
- on outside advice, THE HOME OFFICE COMPUTER BOOK is a very efficient
- tool for making the best decisions for creating your own work
- environment in your home.
-
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- THE EASY VENTURA BOOK (with Training Disk)
- A Self-Paced Introduction to Xerox Ventura Publisher
- by Rick Altman
- (Peachpit Press, 1990, $29.95, ISBN 0-938151-19-3)
- review by Carl Ingram
-
- THE EASY VENTURA BOOK was developed, tested and refined over years in
- classes that Rick Altman taught on using Ventura Publisher. This
- origin is obvious throughout: the material is arranged in logical
- sequence, each acquired skill being used to develop the next;
- everything is explained adequately with no awkward jumps of subject;
- and emphasis is always on DOING, not on reading. Actually, Rick Altman
- has put himself out of a job, because you don't need a teacher once
- you have THE EASY VENTURA BOOK.
-
- And THE EASY VENTURA BOOK really is easy, a remarkable accomplishment
- given the complexity of Xerox's Ventura Publisher. Directions are
- clearly given in numbered steps, so even if you've never seen Ventura
- Publisher you'll have no trouble following the chapters/lessons. The
- student will learn about frames, files, text, and graphics; how to
- create a flier or an article; the extras included in the EMS version
- of Ventura Publisher; and how to prepare text files use in desktop
- published documents. There are four special projects for you to try
- your hand at: a letter, a resume, a logo, and a magazine article. Two
- final chapters/lessons cover a few more advanced subjects and give
- general advice on keeping your head above water with a megamonster
- program like Ventura Publisher. THE EASY VENTURA BOOK should be on
- hand at any computer installation that uses Ventura Publisher, for
- training new people and refresher courses for individual subjects. If
- you can't find THE EASY VENTURA BOOK locally, contact the publisher
- at: Peachpit Press, 2414 Sixth Street, Berkeley, CA 94710,
- 800/283-9444, 415/548-4393, FAX: 415/548-5991.
-
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- PC MAGAZINE GUIDE TO 1-2-3 Release 2.3
- by Stephen Cobb
- (Ziff-Davis, August 1991, $27.95, ISBN 1-56276-012-2)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- Years of classroom teaching and corporate consulting have enabled
- Stephen Cobb to assemble this unique collection of tried and tested
- learning techniques. In this self-paced tutorial, Cobb's easy-to-read
- style enables novice users to learn the features of Lotus 1-2-3
- Release 2.3 quickly and easily. Experienced 1-2-3 users can use this
- book as a comprehensive guide to Release 2.3's new features, and as a
- reference to the many features of 1-2-3.
-
- PC MAGAZINE GUIDE TO 1-2-3 RELEASE 2.3 offers authoritative guidance
- on the complete range of Release 2.3 features, including...
-
- * The new WYSIWYG (what-you-see-is-what-you-get) graphical environment
- with live on-screen formatting
- * Release 2.3's new graph types, including 3-D effect graphs with
- annotation capabilities
- * Creating advanced macros to automate often-performed tasks
- * Running Release 2.3 on everything from an XT to a 486 computer,
- without sacrificing power or speed
- * Using files created in previous versions of 1-2-3 as well as in
- other spreadsheet programs
- * Spreadsheet formatting and publishing capabilities with full mouse
- support
-
- Hundreds of illustrations, numerous business-oriented examples, and
- expert tips make PC MAGAZINE GUIDE TO 1-2-3 RELEASE 2.3 the best way
- to learn Lotus 1-2-3 Release 2.3.
-
- **************************
-
- RICHIE ASHBURN'S PHILLIES TRIVIA
- by Richie Ashburn
- (Running Press, 1983, $7.95, ISBN 0-89471-219-5)
- review by Drew Bartorillo
-
- A. Which Phillies pitcher struck out the most opposing batters in
- one season in the national League?
- B. Who is the only Phillies player to hit two home runs in one
- inning?
- C. Who is the youngest player ever to play for the Phillies?
- D. Which Phillies pitcher has hit the most home runs in one season?
- E. Which Phillies player collected the most hits in World Series
- play during his career?
-
- This is just a sampling of the over 300 trivia questions about the
- Philadelphia Phillies in RICHIE ASHBURN'S TRIVIA. The book is by
- Richie Ashburn, one of the 1950 National League pennant winning Whiz
- Kids and hitter extraordinaire. He is presently the radio and TV
- announcer for the Philadelphia Phillies and writes a baseball column
- for the Philadelphia Daily News. RICHIE ASHBURN'S TRIVIA contains the
- records, the home runs and the players who carried the Phillies
- through victory and defeat, from the team's beginnings in 1883
- straight up through the present. The book is also packed with vintage
- photos from the Phillies' own files. If you're an avid baseball fan
- and especially if you're a native Philadelphian (I'm both), you'll
- find this book offers hours of fantastic browsing. As I read through
- RICHIE ASHBURN'S TRIVIA I found myself constantly thinking, "Is that
- right?" or "I never knew that!" and wholeheartedly recommend it.
-
- Oh, the answers to the previous trivia questions are:
- A. Steve Carlton
- B. Andy Seminick
- C. Putsy Caballero
- D. Rick Wise
- E. Larry Bowa
- **************************
-
- LED ZEPPELIN: HEAVEN AND HELL
- An Illustrated History
- by Charles R. Cross & Erik Flannigan, with photographs by Neal Preston
- (Harmony Books, 1991, $25, ISBN 0-517-58308-9)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- There were other great bands in the 1970s: The Beatles, the Rolling
- Stones, the Who. But the group that generated more excitement than any
- other, for me, was Led Zeppelin. With only 9 albums (plus a
- soundtrack), very little advertising or promotion, and even less
- contemporary critical acclaim, Led Zeppelin became one of the most
- popular bands in rock history. And the years since they broke up have
- only added to their popularity: critics now acknowledge them as
- seminal musical artists, they have more fanzines devoted to them today
- than the Beatles, and rumors of a reunion performance are enough to
- induce commercial frenzy. So far, however, Led Zeppelin has skipped
- the nostalgia trip, calling it quits with class and dignity when their
- drummer Bonzo (John Bonham) died.
-
- Oversized and printed on glossy paper, the enormous quantity of
- glorious color and black-and-white photographs in LED ZEPPELIN: HEAVEN
- AND HELL are what draw your eye first. There are "action" shots from
- stage performances, concert posters, studio portraits, and candid
- behind-the-scenes pictures, most of which have never been published
- before. Not surprisingly, most of the pictures feature the two
- best-known members of the band: lead singer Robert Plant and guitarist
- Jimmy Page. Flipping through the pages you are treated to the
- extraordinary stage presence and photogenic qualities of Plant and the
- chameleon nature of Page, the intensity of performing versus the quiet
- off-stage individual.
-
- As great as the photographs are, they are easily outmatched by the
- text. The opening chapter by Charles R. Cross is the finest single
- piece of rock journalism I've ever read. Cross generates an excitement
- in prose the equal of what Led Zeppelin could do with sound. The rest
- of the volume contains a fine example of music criticism by Jimmy
- Guterman, a fabulous long interview with the notoriously media-shy
- Jimmy Page, and a guide to collecting Led Zeppelin music and
- associational items (including bootleg tapes and CDs). The last two
- sections of the book, however, are my favorite. The first is an
- album-by-album, song-by-song discussion of each piece of Led Zeppelin
- music, with notes about how the piece was recorded and any other
- interesting tidbits connected with the album or song. The last section
- is an incredible list of Led Zeppelin's performances and other career
- highlights, also with any interesting notes. As Led Zeppelin was
- possibly the hardest working band in history, doing more--and
- longer--live performances per year, this list is very long. But it
- gives the Led Zeppelin fan a terrific timeline/history of the group.
-
- LED ZEPPELIN: HEAVEN AND HELL is easily the finest volume of rock
- journalism I've ever had the pleasure to read. It captures the
- excitement of the band, and provides an encyclopedic amount of
- information for the fan and collector--all without resorting to lurid
- sex-and-drugs tales typical of most rock 'n' roll books. This book is
- for the rock aficionado, and is a worthy record of one of the greatest
- groups in rock history. Highly recommended.
-
- **************************
-
- THE *NEW* THREE MINUTE MEDITATOR
- by David Harp
- (New Harbinger, 1990, $9.95, ISBN 0-934986-95-9)
-
- VISUALIZATION FOR CHANGE
- by Patrick Fanning
- (New Harbinger, 1988, $10.95, ISBN 0-934986-51-7)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- These two books from New Harbinger are very good examples of a rare
- commodity: texts that teach a self-help technique without a large,
- complicated and esoteric "context". For instance, meditation books are
- frequently centered around an Eastern philosophy or religion, and
- visualization--a very hot topic lately--is often presented in a
- context of New Age mysticism. Eastern religions and New Age mysticism
- are great if that's what you're interested in, but meditation and
- visualization are techniques that can benefit ANYBODY and needn't be
- considered as a component of a larger issue.
-
- THE NEW THREE MINUTE MEDITATOR gives you a simple introduction to the
- subject of meditation in a rational manner that is easy to grasp and
- easy to put into practice. The author doesn't require you to change
- your religion, live in a monastery, or do other violence to your
- preferred lifestyle. You can begin meditating in small, nonthreatening
- steps, which makes the most sense anyway. The best advertisement for
- meditation is meditation, but who's going to turn their life upside
- down just because some writer you don't even know says it would be
- good for you? David Harp doesn't ask you to take his word for
- anything, just to give meditation a small chance. If you've always
- wondered what meditation is all about, but aren't quite ready to give
- up all your worldly possessions and go sit on a mountaintop, THE NEW
- THREE MINUTE MEDITATOR is exactly what you need.
-
- Patrick Fanning's VISUALIZATION FOR CHANGE is a complete guide to what
- has become a very popular subject--How to use the powers of your mind
- to help you enhance your life rather than hold you back. To begin
- with, it is generally accepted wisdom that your mind affects your life
- in ways most people never begin to appreciate. Many physicians have
- written books about the power of positive thinking to help you recover
- from medical or physical problems, and look at all the self-hypnosis
- and "mind power" books on the library shelf. We all know how our mind
- can turn on us. Remember the time you got up to give a presentation in
- front of all the department heads, and you discovered that somehow you
- had forgotten how to breathe? Getting your mind on your side is an
- important step on the road to happiness and serenity, and that's where
- visualization comes in. I'll leave the tutorial to Fanning because he
- does such a great job of it, but I can personally attest to the
- techniques of visualization being both powerful and fun to practice.
-
- In addition to teaching the basics of visualization, Fanning gives
- specific advice in separate chapters devoted to: weight control,
- nonsmoking, creativity and problem solving, setting and achieving
- goals, improved learning and sports performance, stress reduction,
- self-esteem, insomnia, depression, anxiety, anger, and shyness. One
- entire section is devoted to the subject of healing and pain control.
- Finally, Fanning provides a brief history of the visualization
- techniques and discusses visualization aids as well as further reading
- material. VISUALIZATION FOR CHANGE is a terrific no-nonsense guide to
- a very interesting subject.
-
- You can get either (or both) of the above books from New Harbinger by
- sending the list price, plus $1.50, to: New Harbinger Publications,
- Department B-3, 5674 Shattuck Avenue, Oakland, CA 94609. Be sure to
- ask for a complete catalog of all the books they offer.
-
- **************************
-
- BIBLIOHOLISM: The Literary Addiction
- by Tom Raabe
- (Fulcrum Pub., 1991, $8.95, ISBN 1-55591-080-7)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- * Are you unable to walk through a mall without stopping at a
- bookstore?
- * Have you ever bought the same book twice without knowing it?
- * Have you ever been fired from a job, or reprimanded, for reading?
- * When you watch TV, do you always have a book in your lap for slow
- parts and commercials?
-
- Yes. Yes. Yes. Of course. Don't you? But let me begin properly: Hi. My
- name is Cindy, and I'm a biblioholic. You know what I'm talking about,
- don't you? It starts out small--an occasional trip to the library,
- maybe a paperback book now and then. Pretty soon you're buying a
- cheaper car so you can pay for your book habit. Your credit cards have
- maxed out, and all the charges are to Waldenbooks, B. Dalton, Crown
- Books, The Strand Bookstore, etc.
-
- Books and reading, of course, are both socially acceptable and even
- have a certain intellectual snob quality. So you know you really have
- a problem when you find that you have to lie about your book habit,
- just so you don't sound dangerously psychotic. Spend some time with
- BIBLIOHOLISM, however, and you'll see that you're not alone. Tom Raabe
- has the disease just as bad, probably worse, than you do, and his good
- cheer is infectious.
-
- BIBLIOHOLISM begins by defining the problem, discussing the major
- symptoms and signs of progression. Raabe talks about the buying habits
- of biblioholics and how they manage to sneak the books into the house.
- Both collecting and lending of books are considered, while the most
- helpful section gives hints on reading in restaurants, on the toilet,
- in bed, while traveling, at work, and even at other people's houses.
- The book ends with a brief overview of cures. BIBLIOHOLISM is an
- absolute delight, a very funny guide to a very enjoyable disease.
-
- **************************
-
- PARAPSYCHOLOGY: THE CONTROVERSIAL SCIENCE
- by Richard S. Broughton, Ph.D.
- (Ballantine, 1991, $22, ISBN 0-345-35638-1)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- Parapsychology must be the most interesting and the most frustrating
- subject in the world. It's the most interesting because it's frontier
- territory, we're still just trying to survey the boundaries of the
- subject. Also, it's such an important topic. The ramifications of ESP
- and psychokinesis cross many disciplines and are simply mind-boggling.
- It's the most frustrating subject because most people approach
- parapsychology as either Believers or Nonbelievers. Both groups are
- composed of some very nice people with many worthwhile things to say,
- but none of them are really open-minded about the subject.
-
- We've needed a book like PARAPSYCHOLOGY: THE CONTROVERSIAL SCIENCE for
- a long time. Dr. Broughton is Director of Research at the Institute of
- Parapsychology, and here he gives the layperson a comprehensive
- introduction to his field of expertise. He discusses the history and
- the evolution of parapsychology research and defines its boundaries.
- He considers whether or not parapsychology should be accepted as a
- scientific discipline and explains what can and can't be proved in the
- laboratory.
-
- In short, PARAPSYCHOLOGY: THE CONTROVERSIAL SCIENCE is the book that
- sensible people have been waiting for. Dr. Broughton brings the
- subject up to date with an examination of recent developments in
- Soviet and Chinese psi research, and a look at U.S. government
- parapsychology programs. You'll learn that psi ability is already
- being used in criminal investigations, healing, and even archaeology.
- A very interesting and readable book.
-
- **************************
-
- STREAMLINING YOUR LIFE
- A 5-Point Plan for Uncomplicated Living
- by Stephanie Culp
- (Writer's Digest, August 1991, $11.95, ISBN 0-89879-462-5)
- review by Janet Peters
-
- How do you know if you need this book? According to Stephanie Culp,
- these are some of the major symptoms:
-
- * You've had it with life in the fast lane.
- * You like the fast lane; you'd like to go faster!
- * You're spending more time taking care of the "stuff" in your life
- than you are taking care of yourself.
- * You're not getting what you want out of life.
- * You're tired of jam-packed days where nothing seems to get done.
- * Your relationships leave a lot to be desired.
- * You want to make each moment count.
-
- What the author provides is a lot of good sense in a small package.
- She explains her 5-point plan that helps to:
-
- * adjust one's attitude (how much "having it all" is really
- important?)
- * prioritize and plan goals and objectives
- * eliminate excess
- * organize what's important
- * create simple systems that will help things take care of themselves
-
- Stephanie Culp's plan is NOT just a lot more busy-work for the
- obsessive-compulsive. You probably know most of the principles she
- outlines here, but you just haven't put them all together before.
- STREAMLINING YOUR LIFE is a lot of good sound advice presented
- logically and coherently for the person whose life needs a bit of
- fine-tuning. Recommended.
-
- **************************
-
- ONE IS THE LONELIEST NUMBER
- On the Road and Behind the Scenes with the Legendary Band
- Three Dog Night
- by Jimmy Greenspoon with Mark Bego
- (Pharos Books, September 1991, $18.95, ISBN 0-88687-647-8)
- review by Janet Peters
-
- "One", "Joy to the World", "Mama Told Me Not To Come"--who can forget
- the greatest hits of Three Dog Night? The seven-member band had 20
- back-to-back Top Forty singles (including 7 million-sellers) and 12
- consecutive Top Twenty "Gold" albums. The success came at a price,
- though, at least for their keyboard player Jimmy Greenspoon: eight
- years of his life were lost to heroin addiction. But the story has a
- happy ending because--unlike popular artists like Janis Joplin, Jimi
- Hendrix, and Keith Moon--Jimmy Greenspoon managed to end his drug
- dependency and lived to talk about it.
-
- ONE IS THE LONELIEST NUMBER is the story of Jimmy Greenspoon and Three
- Dog Night, as wild and wooly as any rock biography as you're liable to
- come across. Jimmy Greenspoon still plays keyboard for Three Dog
- Night, and lives in Tucson, Arizona, with his wife Karen.
-
- **************************
-
- THE BOOMER BIBLE: A Testament For Our Times
- by R.F. Laird
- (Workman, September 1991, $14.95, ISBN 1-56305-075-7)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- The old Bible having become seriously dated, we have needed a document
- that speaks more clearly to us in late 20th century. For that reason,
- various peoples have caused to appear a book known as THE BOOMER
- BIBLE, a bizarre work that is funny, fascinating, shocking,
- irritating, puzzling, and insulting--sometimes all at once. It is also
- quite a test of your store of historical and literary knowledge. For
- example, let me quote from the The Book of Chuck:
-
- Chapter 1
-
- There was a VIP named
- Chuck, who took a beagle
- somewhere on an expedition,
- 2 And changed the world.
- 3 When he came back, he told
- everybody that they were all
- wrong about a few things.
-
- A careful reader will already have noticed that The Book of Chuck is
- about Charles Darwin. Or let me give you an example from The Pnotes, a
- book devoted entirely to limericks:
-
- Pnote 23
-
- This girl from Tennessee,
- 1 Had a limp and a menagerie,
- 3 Made of glass,
- 4 Poor lovestruck lass,
- 5 She lost it before Act III.
-
- Can you tell what literary work this poem is about? THE BOOMER BIBLE
- doesn't stop with setting down the received wisdom of the world. There
- is also a section of prayers (actually for Boomers they're called
- "brayers", as in "Let us bray") and platitudes, a marriage ceremony,
- toasts, even a section of hymns (with written music).
-
- THE BOOMER BIBLE is ridiculous, atrocious, hilarious, and offensive.
- To give you an example of the latter, the story of Japan is related in
- The Book of Nips, the story of France is told in The Book of Frogs,
- etc. There is also a great deal of material about film and television,
- subjects woefully untapped in the "other" Bible. In short, THE BOOMER
- BIBLE is an extraordinary creation of nonsense, its appeal dependent
- on the reader's taste for nonsense. I love it.
-
- **************************
-
- THE PLEASURES OF WATCHING BIRDS
- by Lola Oberman
- (Walker, 1991, $22.95, ISBN 0-8027-1166-9)
- review by Carol Sheffert
-
- Lola Oberman is an officer of the Maryland Ornithological Society and
- an active member of the Audubon Naturalist Society. She leads field
- trips for both organizations, has a monthly column in AUDUBON
- NATURALIST NEWS and is a frequent contributor to BIRD WATCHER'S
- DIGEST. THE PLEASURES OF WATCHING BIRDS is a collection of short
- essays about birds and bird watchers. Like a bird watcher's photo
- album in prose, the reader is treated to dozens of stories about birds
- and bird people Lola Oberman has met. Just this morning I reread "The
- Song of the Bluejay" as the title bird was responsible for waking me
- up on this otherwise lazy Saturday morning. It's lovely to talk to
- someone else who appreciates birds, and THE PLEASURES OF WATCHING
- BIRDS consists of several dozen conversations with a fellow birder;
- one who not only pursues her hobby with enthusiasm but can communicate
- her excitement to others. Very enjoyable.
-
- **************************
-
- THE MULCH BOOK: A Complete Guide for Gardeners
- by Stu Campbell; revised and updated by Donna Moore
- (Storey Communications, May 1991, $8.95, ISBN 0-88266-659-2)
- review by Janet Peters
-
- When you're first starting out in gardening, what you need is one of
- those large all-around books that explain everything. Not that you'll
- learn everything, but you'll need to know a little bit about a lot of
- things, which is what those books are good at. Once you've relaxed
- about the basics, you can start to take a closer look at certain
- subjects of interest. One of the most important subjects for any
- gardener is mulch. Do you really need a mulch on your garden? What can
- a mulch do for you? If you decide to mulch, what kind of mulch should
- you use? How thickly should it be spread?
-
- Most gardeners are attracted to mulch in the beginning because they
- get tired of weeding. A good thick mulch will cut WAY down on the weed
- population. After a while, though, the subject gets more complex. You
- start to hear rumors that the right kind of mulch can improve your
- garden's soil, save water, and insulate the soil against extremes of
- temperature. You might also hear rumors that mulch is a breeding
- ground for slugs, insects, and rodents, that it prevents the soil from
- breathing, or that the wrong mulch can upset the chemistry of your
- soil. Perhaps you've even heard talk that the pine bark mulch sold by
- your local gardening store isn't the only mulch possibility.
-
- THE MULCH BOOK sorts out all the these mulch questions. The pros and
- cons are carefully considered, all the latest types of mulch are
- discussed, and there are many tips for getting the most from mulch,
- with specific chapters on mulch use with fruits, vegetables, and
- ornamentals. Once you've read the book you can just rely on the Quick
- Reference Chart in the back that lists 46 different types of mulches
- with data columns for: Appearance, Insulation Value, Relative Cost,
- Thickness, Weed Control, Water Penetration, Soil Moisture Retention,
- Decomposition Speed, and Comments. Mulch may not be the most
- fascinating subject, but it's a very important one for gardeners. THE
- MULCH BOOK is the single best source of mulch information that I've
- ever seen. Recommended.
-
- **************************
-
- Preview of the holiday season:
-
- A CHRISTMAS CAROL
- by Charles Dickens
- audio cassette read by Sir John Gielgud
- (Bantam Audio, 1987, $9.99, ISBN 0-553-45146-4)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- I don't know about you, but I couldn't make it through the Christmas
- season without one or two renditions of Charles Dickens' most popular
- Yuletide story. The several movie adaptations are nice at certain
- times (some are nicer than others, of course), but there are many
- times when a movie isn't quite what's needed. Like when everyone's
- busy Decking your Halls, or you're in the car on the way to Grandma's
- house for a Christmas dinner, or maybe the holidays are running you
- ragged and you just need a bit of a rest. Wouldn't it be nice to have
- someone read A CHRISTMAS CAROL to you? And wouldn't it be just perfect
- if he had a perfect British speaking voice? Bantam Audio's cassette
- tape of A CHRISTMAS CAROL is perfect for starting your own family
- tradition. It's a convenient 1-hour adaptation of the Dickens classic,
- and, most importantly, it's read by Sir John Gielgud--an enjoyable way
- to get in the holiday mood. God bless us everyone!
-
- **************************
-
-