BookPage December 2015

Page 1

AMERICA’S BOOK REVIEW

DISCOVER YOUR NEXT GREAT BOOK

DEC 2015


PaperbackPicks Rain on the Dead The latest from New York Times bestselling author Jack Higgins, featuring black ops specialist Sean Dillon.

Robert B. Parker’s The Bridge The latest in the Hitch & Cole series from the New York Times bestselling author of Robert B. Parker’s Ironhorse.

Glow

Every Crooked Path

The sizzling sequel to Glimmer from the New York Times bestselling author.

Special Agent Patrick Bowers returns in an electrifying prequel to the Bowers Chess series from national bestseller Steven James.

Make Me Stay

Trust No One

The latest steamy romance in the Hope series from New York Times bestselling author Jaci Burton.

New York Times bestselling author Jayne Ann Krentz delivers another masterpiece of romantic suspense— now in paperback.

Feature

of the

Month

“Another irresistible combination of sharply etched characters...and wonderfully written dialogue that snaps, crackles, and pops with the author’s distinctive wit.” —Booklist (starred review)

NEW IN HARDCOVER

Hot Pursuit

Blood Kiss

Stone Barrington takes to the skies in a new adventure from #1 New York Times bestselling author Stuart Woods.

The legacy of the Black Dagger Brotherhood continues in a spin-off series from the #1 New York Times bestselling author.

Madeline and Daphne were once as close as sisters—until a secret tore them apart. Now it might take them to their graves.


contents

DECEMBER 2015 B O O K PA G E . C O M

features

28

04 HOLIDAY CATALOG

Dean Koontz

The best-selling author spins a mindblowing psychological thriller with the stunning story of Ashley Bell.

Find the perfect gift for every book lover this holiday season

26 BEST OF 2015

Author photo © Joan Allen

Our editors pick the 50 best books of the year

27 KEVIN BARRY Irish island-hopping with John Lennon

43 CHRISTMAS PICTURE BOOKS Celebrate the season with six cheerful picture books

46 MARYANN COCCA-LEFFLER Meet the author-illustrator of A Homemade Together Christmas

columns 17 18 18 19 21 24

WELL READ AUDIO COOKING BOOK CLUBS WHODUNIT ROMANCE

It’s Time to Start Stocking Up on Sizzling Romances from Avon Books for the Winter Ahead!

Catalog art by Taylor Schena

gift books

reviews

30 32 33 34 36 37 38 39 40 44

41 FICTION

ART & PHOTOGRAPHY GUYS QUIRKY LITERARY NATURE ALICE IN WONDERLAND MAPS RELIGION HOLLYWOOD CHILDREN’S

top pick:

A Dictionary of Mutual Understanding by Jackie Copleton

also reviewed:

Like Family by Paolo Giordano Paradise City by Elizabeth Day The Edge of Lost by Kristina McMorris

42 NONFICTION top pick:

438 Days by Jonathan Franklin

also reviewed:

This Old Man by Roger Angell Life and Death in the Andes by Kim MacQuarrie

30

33

34

36

37

38

40

44

A M E R I C A’ S B O O K R E V I E W PUBLISHER Michael A. Zibart

ASSOCIATE EDITOR Cat Acree

CHILDREN’S BOOKS

SUBSCRIPTIONS

Allison Hammond

Elizabeth Grace Herbert

CONTRIBUTOR

ADVERTISING COMMUNICATIONS

ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER

ASSISTANT EDITOR

Julia Steele

Lily McLemore

Roger Bishop

EDITOR

ASSISTANT EDITOR

PRODUCTION MANAGER

Hilli Levin

Penny Childress

MANAGING EDITOR

CONTRIBUTING EDITOR

PRODUCTION INTERN

Trisha Ping

Sukey Howard

Sadie Birchfield

Lynn L. Green

Sada Stipe

MARKETING Mary Claire Zibart

CONTROLLER Sharon Kozy

EDITORIAL POLICY BookPage is a selection guide for new books. Our editors evaluate and select for review the best books published in a variety of categories. Only books we highly recommend are featured. BookPage is editorially independent and never accepts payment for editorial coverage.

SUBSCRIPTIONS Public libraries and bookstores can purchase BookPage in quantity. For information, visit BookPage.com or call 615.292.8926, ext. 34.

Individual subscriptions are available for $30 per year. Send payment to: BookPage Subscriptions 2143 Belcourt Avenue Nashville, TN 37212 Subscriptions are also available on Kindle and NOOK.

ADVERTISING To advertise in print, online or in our e-newsletters, visit BookPage .com or call 615.292.8926, ext. 19. All material © 2015 ProMotion, inc.

AvonRomance.com

3


Books are even better together Fill the holidays with entertaining activities, captivating adventures and great advice to share— American Girl books have it all! These engaging gifts delight girls and inspire fun friendship moments, too.

You’re You’reHere Herefor foraaReason Reason

$14.95–$29.95

Rudy’s Windy Christmas

Through gorgeous art and charming rhyme, New Through gorgeous art and charming rhyme, New York Times best-selling author Nancy Tillman York Times best-selling author Nancy Tillman reminds usus that not only are we loved, but we also reminds that not only are we loved, but we also matter—a beautiful gift for readers ofof allall ages. matter—a beautiful gift for readers ages.

The Full Moon at the Napping House

Santa sneakily feeds sprouts to Rudy during Christmas Eve dinner. Now Rudy can’t seem to stop releasing windy pops from his backside, leaving the other reindeer in stitches.

9781250056269

Feiwel Feiweland andFriends Friends $17.99 $17.99

This delightful companion to Audrey and Don Wood’s beloved classic The Napping House is the ideal book for restless little ones at bedtime (or anytime). 9780807571736

Albert Whitman $16.99

HMH $17.99

9780544308329 9781481449861

Color ColorDog Dog

From the #1#1 New York Times best-selling children’s From the New York Times best-selling children’s book creator Matthew Van Fleet comes this colorful book creator Matthew Van Fleet comes this colorful canine romp! Look for plenty ofof wagging and woofcanine romp! Look for plenty wagging and woofing asas aa parade ofof adorable pooches employ cleverly ing parade adorable pooches employ cleverly designed mechanics, pettable textures and even designed mechanics, pettable textures and even scratch-and-sniff patches toto introduce toddlers toto scratch-and-sniff patches introduce toddlers colors, textures and more. colors, textures and more.

Paula PaulaWiseman Wiseman $19.99 $19.99 9781481419307

9780761185697

An Invisible Thread Christmas Story

Polar

New York Times best-selling author Laura Schroff (An Invisible Thread) recounts the Christmas she spent with a boy she befriended after he asked her for change on the street.

In this stunning journey to the ends of the Earth using Photicular technology, National Geographic writer Carol Kaufmann brings the reader along on a voyage to the North and South Poles, and includes a lively and informative essay for each image.

Little Simon

$17.99

Workman

9781484724682

Olaf’s Night Before Christmas This beautifully illustrated picture book comes with a read-along CD narrated by Josh Gad, the voice of Olaf! Fans from all generations will delight in Olaf’s innocent and humorous account of “The Night Before Christmas.”

4

Disney

$12.99

$25.95


Spark their imaginations Tap into creativity this holiday with interactive books to engage budding LEGO® builders, engineers and Star Wars ™ fans.

DK

$19.99–$24.99

5 © 201

oup

GO Gr

The LE

© & TM 2015 LUCASFILM LTD. Used Under Authorization.

Hiawatha Hiawathaand andthe the Peacemaker Peacemaker

The Story of Diva and Flea

With two starred reWith two starred reviews, legendary singer views, legendary singer Robbie Robertson and Robbie Robertson and Caldecott Honor-winCaldecott Honor-winning illustrator David ning illustrator David Shannon bring this Shannon bring this journey toto life inin captijourney life captivating text and arresting vating text and arresting oiloil paintings. Includes aa paintings. Includes CD featuring aa new song CD featuring new song byby Robertson. Robertson.

From the award-winning and best-selling author Mo Willems comes a story of Diva, a small yet brave dog, and Flea, a curious streetwise cat, who develop an unexpected friendship in this unforgettable tale of discovery.

9781419712203

Abrams Abrams $19.95 $19.95

Disney-Hyperion $14.99

Waiting

9780062368430 9780062368430

Curiosity House: The Shrunken Head From New York Times best-selling author Lauren Oliver and mysterious relics collector H.C. Chester comes an entertaining middle grade mystery about four orphans with extraordinary abilities who set out to solve a string of scandalous murders.

The Caretaker’s Guide to Fablehaven

What are you waiting for? An owl, a puppy, a bear, a rabbit and a pig—all toys arranged on a child’s windowsill—wait for marvelous things to happen in this irresistible picture book by the New York Times best-selling and Caldecott Medalist Kevin Henkes.

Greenwillow $17.99

9781484722848

They existed only in your imagination—until now! Every dragon in the Fablehaven series has a name and special power, but this is the first-ever visual discovery with insider tips and know-how.

Shadow Mountain $24.99

9781629720913

Why? If you’ve got questions, we’ve got answers! Discover 1,111 facts about all kinds of topics, from super silly to sorta serious, plus cool top 10 lists, activities and more.

Usborne Christmas activities These engaging activity books from Usborne are full of fun ideas for young children. Painting, stickering, spotting, coloring and more will keep young hands and minds happily occupied during the holiday season!

National Geographic $19.99 9781426320965

Usborne

$6.99–$10.99

9780062270818

HarperCollins $16.99

childrens

5


Hello, Goodbye, and Everything in Between

Hot teen reads to keep you warm!

On the night before they leave for college, a young couple decides whether to break up or stay together in Jennifer E. Smith’s romantic novel.

In Awake, Scarlett’s on the run from a past she can’t remember. In The Heartbreakers, Stella never meant to fall for a rock star … much less a heartbreaker. In My Secret to Tell, there was blood on his hands. Does he have a secret to tell?

Sourcebooks Fire

Poppy $18.00

$9.99 each

9780316334426

Unforgiven

Everything, Everything

The #1 New York Times best-selling Fallen series picks up right at the end of Rapture, telling Cam’s story for the first time.

In this stunning debut, a girl who is literally allergic to the outside world falls in love with her new neighbor, and it challenges everything she’s ever known.

Delacorte $18.99

Delacorte $18.99 9780385742634

AUDIOBOOKS = GIFTS Grab the holidays by the book! Whether it’s a sweeping epic, a quirky contemporary or a romantic adventure— there’s a YA novel for everyone on your list this holiday season.

Harlequin Teen $17.99–$19.99

Listening Library audiobooks are the perfect gift for everyone on your list.

Listening Library $9.99–$60.00

6

9780553496642


Great gifts for music fans Hal Leonard Performing Arts Publishing Group offers the best in music history and biographies. Read about the Beatles’ gear or get lost in amazing images of Fender guitars. Dive into Neil Young’s history, survey photos of The Band or take a trip down memory lane with a vintage guitar collector. We have something for every music lover!

Hal Leonard

Find these and many other great titles at www.halleonardbooks.com

Whoniverse

This thoroughly updated bestseller covers more than a century of movie history and includes new entries about movies that span the globe, full-color images, 9780764167980 little known facts, key quotes, posters, trivia and more.

$29.99

Barron’s

9781579129859

Sinatra 100

1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

Discover all there is to know about the Doctor’s travels, in all 12 of his glorious incarnations. Find facts, trivia, timelines, photographs and more, from the Acteon Galaxy to the Wrarth Galaxy and beyond.

Barron’s

$24.99–$75.00

9780764167904

From his family’s vast archive comes a revelatory new pictorial of the greatest entertainer of the 20th century on his 100th birthday. Forewords by Tony Bennett and Steve Wynn and afterwords by his three children. The ultimate Sinatra gift book!

9780500517826

Thames & Hudson $60.00

$35.00

Bob Dylan All the Songs

Back to the Future

Harry Potter: The Character Vault

This is the most comprehensive account of Bob Dylan’s work, with the full story of every recording session, every album and every single released during his remarkable and illustrious 53-year career.

Go Back to the Future with Doc Brown and Marty McFly in this visually stunning look at the creation of one of the most beloved trilogies of all time.

This is a full-color, all-access fan pass to the key characters in all eight of the Harry Potter films in a keepsake collector’s edition filled with never-before-seen photographs and illustrations.

Black Dog & Leventhal $50.00

9780062419149

Harper Design $50.00

9780062407443

Harper Design $45.00

7


A Call to Arms Adventures continue in book #2 of Manticore Ascendant—the new military science fiction series adventure in the frontier past of Honor Harrington’s star kingdom.

Baen $26.00

Son of the Black Sword

Twain Twain&&Stanley Stanley Enter EnterParadise Paradise

The war in heaven nearly eradicated mankind, but then the gods sent Ramrowan. This is the first in a new epic fantasy saga from the creator of the Monster Hunter series.

This Thisfinal finalnovel novelfrom from Pulitzer PulitzerPrize-winning Prize-winning author authorOscar OscarHijuelos Hijuelosisis inspired inspiredbybythe thereal-life real-life friendship friendshipbetween between Mark MarkTwain Twainand andexplorexplorererSir SirHenry HenryMorton Morton Stanley. Stanley.

Baen $25.00

Grand GrandCentral Central $28.00 $28.00

9781476780863

9781476780856

Come Rain or Come Shine

9781455561490

The Wheel of Time Companion

Shadows of Self The world of Mistborn continues in the new novel from New York Times best-selling author Brandon Sanderson—and in The Bands of Mourning, coming Winter 2016.

The wedding millions of Mitford fans have waited for is finally here—and you’re invited.

Putnam $27.95

Discover the world of The Wheel of Time through Robert Jordan’s copious notes and learn more about the Westlands than you ever imagined.

Tor $27.99

Tor $39.99 9780765314611 9780765314611

9780765378552

9780399167454

The Invention of Wings

The TheGuilty Guilty Assassin AssassinWill WillRobie Robie must mustconfront confrontwhat what he’s he’stried triedtotoforget forgetfor for more morethan than2020years years ininthe thenew newnovel novelbyby #1#1best-selling best-sellingauthor author David DavidBaldacci. Baldacci.

The #1 New York Times bestseller follows the remarkable journeys of two unforgettable women—a slave in early 19th-century Charleston and a young white woman—who shape each other’s destinies.

Penguin $17.00

9780143121701

9781455586424

The Gilded Hour

X

The international best-selling author of Into the Wilderness returns with a lush historical novel following the story of two female doctors in 19th-century New York exploring the transcendent power of courage and love.

Sue Grafton’s darkest and most chilling novel yet features a remorseless serial killer who leaves no trace of his crimes.

Marian Wood $28.95

Berkley $26.95 9780425271810

8

Grand GrandCentral Central $28.00 $28.00

9780399163845 9780399163845


The Muralist

The Girl in the Spider’s Web

Entwining the lives of historical and fictional characters and moving between past and present, The Muralist plunges readers into pre-war politics and the plight of European refugees refused entrance into the United States.

Algonquin $26.95

9781616203573 9781616203573

Lisbeth Salander and Mikael Blomkvist return in the highly anticipated follow-up to Stieg Larsson’s The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest.

Sebastian Rudd defends people other lawyers won’t go near. Gritty, witty and impossible to put down, Rogue Lawyer showcases the master of the legal thriller at his very best.

Knopf $27.95

Doubleday $28.95

9780385354288

See Me

9780385539432

The Magic Strings of Frankie Presto

#1 New York Times best-selling author Nicholas Sparks returns with another classic story of second chances and love tested.

Welcome to Night Vale From the creators of the wildly popular “Welcome to Night Vale” podcast comes an imaginative debut novel. “Brilliant, hilarious, and wondrously strange.” —Ransom Riggs, New York Times best-selling author

#1 New York Times best-selling author Mitch Albom creates a magical story about the bands we join in life and how the power of talent changes our lives.

Grand Central $27.00

Harper $25.99

9780062294418

9781455520619

Harper Perennial $19.99

9780062351425

Carrying Albert Home

South Toward Home

This emotionally evocative story about a man, a woman and an alligator is a moving tribute to love from the author of the #1 New York Times best-selling memoir Rocket Boys.

“A delightful love letter to the South and . . . an apt reminder that the South is no literary backwater, but a world of letters all its own.” —Publishers Weekly

Morrow $25.99

ft s i g y literar

9780062325891 9780062325891

Ideal

Whether its college football or a simple family dinner, Rick Bragg explores enduring Southern truths and traditions in his first-ever essay collection: It’s humorous, touching and thoughtful. 9780451475558

Oxmoor House $27.95

Norton $25.95 9780393241112

The Natural World of Winniethe-Pooh

My Southern Journey

Philosopher Ayn Rand’s “lost” novel of beautiful, tormented actress Kay Gonda, who is on the lam after a murder accusation, is available in print for the first time. Also available in paperback.

New American Library $26.95

Rogue Lawyer

Take an extraordinary journey into the real landscapes that inspired the Hundred Acre Wood, the magical place where Pooh and his friends live and play. E.H. Shepard’s original illustrations are featured. 9780848746391

Timber Press $24.95

9781604695991

9


9781579656232

Do Unto Animals

Shake Cats

Catifyto toSatisfy Satisfy Catify

A “delightful, entertaining, and hugely important” (Jane Goodall, Ph.D) illustrated guide to the animals in our world—at home, in the backyard, on the farm—that offers insight into their secret lives and the kindest ways to live with them.

The fur flies in this irresistible third installment in the best-selling Shake series by popular animal photographer Carli Davidson. This book features hysterical color photographs of more than 60 cats caught mid-shake.

The#1 #1New NewYork YorkTimes Times The best-sellingauthors authorsofof best-selling Catificationare areback! back! Catification JacksonGalaxy, Galaxy,star starofof Jackson AnimalPlanet’s Planet’shit hitshow show Animal “MyCat Catfrom fromHell,” Hell,” “My andKate KateBenjamin, Benjamin,cat cat and designwizard, wizard,teach teachcat cat design guardianshow howtotodesign design guardians theirhomes homesininways waysthat that their addresscommon commoncat cat address behavioralproblems. problems. behavioral

9780062351746

Artisan $19.95

Tarcher Tarcher $21.95 $21.95

Lonely Planet’s Wild World

The Dogist

Wildlife of the World Produced in association with the Smithsonian Institution, Wildlife of the World combines in-depth reference information with contemporary portrait photography that brings each continent’s most iconic animals up-close for a global look at the world’s wildlife.

9780399176999

Harper Design $17.99

The ultimate gift for dog lovers, this beautiful, funny and moving tribute to the beloved canines in our lives features 1,000 irresistible photographs from Elias Weiss Friedman (@TheDogist). 9781465438041

Artisan $24.95

Wild World brings our planet’s natural wonders to life with more than 300 expertly curated, breathtaking images celebrating the earth at its wildest. 9781579656713

Lonely Planet $39.99

9781743607480

DK $50.00

Preparing for the holidays? Listen to these audiobooks while you finish your shopping, wrap your presents, clean the house or prep in the kitchen. They make great gifts, too!

TryAudiobooks.com

Penguin Random House Audio $30.00–$45.00

10


The Toltec Art of Life and Death The beloved teacher of spiritual wisdom and author of the phenomenal New York Times and international bestseller The Four Agreements takes readers on a mystical Toltec-inspired personal journey.

A Rare Nativity In a unique twist on “The Twelve Days of Christmas,” a visual artist uses pieces of trash sent as a message of hate to build an unforgettable Nativity créche. 9781629720623

Shadow Mountain $17.99

HarperElixir $25.99

9780062390929 9780062390929

The Conquering Tide

ShouldBe BeDead Dead IIShould deeplymoving, moving, AAdeeply redemptivememoir memoir redemptive aboutBob BobBeckel’s Beckel’s about fascinatinglife lifeas asaa fascinating politicaloperative operativeand and political diplomat,his hisstruggle struggle diplomat, withalcohol alcoholand anddrugs, drugs, with andfinding findingfaith. faith. and USAToday Todaysyndicated syndicated USA columnistCal CalThomas Thomas columnist callsitit“thrilling “thrillingand and calls brutallyhonest.” honest.” brutally

The devastation of Pearl Harbor and the American victory at Midway were prelude to a greater challenge: rolling back the vast Empire of Japan, island by island.

Norton $35.00 9780393080643

Hachette Hachette $27.00 $27.00

9780316347754

The Last Season

The Big Book of Uncommon Knowledge

9781623365158 9781623365158

New from Bill O’Reilly

A son returns home to spend a special autumn with his 95-year-old dad, sharing the unique joys, disappointments and life lessons of Saturdays spent with their beloved Ole Miss Rebels.

This is a collection of the essential tips, tricks and advice every modern man needs to be stronger, fitter, richer, sexier, healthier and a whole lot smarter than the next guy.

Rodale $24.99

Knopf $24.95 9780385353021

Humans of New York: Stories Brandon Stanton is back with the follow-up to Humans of New York that his loyal followers have been waiting for! Humans of New York: Stories presents a whole new group of humans, complete with stories that delve deeper and surprise with greater candor.

St. Martin’s $29.99

From the best-selling authors of the Killing series, comes Killing Reagan. This epic account of the career of President Reagan tells the vivid story of his rise to power— and the forces of evil that conspired to bring him down.

Henry Holt $30.00

9781250058904

11


ThePioneer Pioneer The WomanCooks: Cooks: Woman Dinnertime Dinnertime

Savor the South The editors of Southern Living magazine bring you two books perfect for the holidays: Southern Living 50 Years, which celebrates not only 50 years of the iconic magazine, but all things southern, and The Southern Baker, which will have you baking like you’ve lived down South your whole life.

Oxmoor House $29.95–$40.00

9780062225245

Thebest-selling best-selling The authorand andFood FoodNetNetauthor workpersonality personalityatat work lastanswers answersthat thatageagelast oldquestion—“What’s question—“What’s old fordinner?”—by dinner?”—by for bringingtogether together bringing morethan than135 135recipes recipes more fordelicious deliciousmeals mealsthe the for wholefamily familywill willlove. love. whole

Morrow $29.99 $29.99 Morrow

The Food Lab

Dinner Solved!

J. Kenji López-Alt gives a grand tour of the science of cooking explored through popular American dishes and includes hundreds of easy to make recipes with over 1,000 full color images illustrating step-by-step instructions.

Here are 100 flavorful, family-friendly recipes with “fork in the road” variations for dishes to please adults and kids, vegetarians and carnivores or people who prefer mild flavor or crave spice. The result: no more dinner table strife and no more stressed-out cooks.

Norton

9780393081084

$49.95

Workman

The Southerner’s Cookbook

9780761181873

Kidsget getcreative creative Kids inthe thekitchen kitchen in

From the most award-winning wine writer in the English language, this best-selling, comprehensive guide has sold over half a million copies. Now in an updated second edition, it covers every significant wine region and grape variety.

Workman

This is the ultimate guide to all the world’s beers. This book is written for passionate beginners, who will love its “if you like X, try Y” feature; for intermediate beer lovers eager to go deeper; and for true geeks, who will find new information on every page.

Workman $19.95

12

Whetherstarting startingfrom fromscratch scratchwith withthe thebasics basicsoror Whether creatingaafull fullmeal mealfor forthe thefamily, family,Betty BettyCrocker Crocker creating KidsCook Cookwill willteach teachkids kidstotofeel feelcomfortable comfortable Kids thekitchen. kitchen.“Celebrity “Celebritychefs” chefs”Elmo, Elmo,Cookie Cookie ininthe Monsterand andthe thebeloved belovedSesame SesameStreet Streetgang gang Monster presentaanew newcollection collectionofofhealthful, healthful,fun funrecirecipresent pesininSesame SesameStreet StreetLet’s Let’sCook! Cook! pes

HMH HMH

$17.99- -$19.99 $19.99 $17.99

$24.95

The Beer Bible

Thug Kitchen Party Grub The authors of the #1 New York Times bestseller, Thug Kitchen, are back with the ultimate party guide—proving that eating healthy is possible, even at social events. 9780761168119

9780062242419 9780062242419

Harper Wave $37.50

$17.95

The Wine Bible

9780761180838

From Garden & Gun— the magazine that features the best of Southern cooking, dining, cocktails and customs—comes this guide to the traditions and innovations that define today’s Southern food culture.

Rodale $25.99

9781623366322


Flatiron Books: Something for everyone in your family!

Essential Emeril The celebrated chef goes back to basics, presenting over 130 recipes that defined his career, each updated for today’s home cooks, full of the flavor for which he is known and offering valuable tips and step-by-step photo tutorials to ensure flawless results.

Oxmoor House

Flatiron

$16.99–$35.00

$29.95

Bright Lights Paris A lush and beautiful photo-filled guide through the arrondissements of Paris by a fashion insider. Includes fabulous tips from celebrities, fashion designers, bloggers, chefs and more!

9780425280706 9780425280706

Berkley $24.95

This irresistible collection offers 101 original knitting projects for babies and toddlers—each using just a single skein of yarn! Each project comes with step-bystep instructions and a photograph of the finished piece.

9781612124803

Storey

Beekman Beekman 1802Style Style 1802

Lovable Livable Home

Thefabulous fabulousBeekBeekThe manBoys Boyspartner partner man withCountry CountryLiving Living with magazinetotodeliver deliver magazine homedesign designtips, tips, home tricksand andresources resources tricks forliving livingaamore morestylstylfor ish,comfortable comfortablelife. life. ish,

Sherry and John Petersik, authors of the best-selling Young House Love, are back with a real-world guide to transforming your home into a beautiful and meaningful space.

Rodale Rodale $40.00 $40.00

9781623365073

Parenting Is Easy

One-Skein Wonders for Babies

Artisan $27.50

$18.95

9780761185659

What better way is there to deal with the stress and strain of being a new parent than laughter? This book exploits the disconnect between preposterous stock-image photos and what happens in real life and will make every reader laugh out loud.

Workman $10.95

9781579656225

13


Gifts of of faith faith Gifts & inspiration inspiration & “This book is amazing.” – Steve Harvey on Destiny

Eve

The Man Minute

From the author of the 25-million copy bestseller The Shack comes a captivating new novel destined to be one of the most talked-about books of the decade.

This book and DVD combo from outdoorsman Jason Cruise offers a high-caliber tandem of biblical insights to draw men closer to God and show them a life that transcends complacent, run-ofthe mill manhood.

Howard $27.00 9781630587185 9781501101373

Joseph Prince teaches readers to rise above defeat with these five life-changing principles.

From America’s America’s #1 #1 From leadership expert, expert, leadership John Maxwell, Maxwell, the the John tie-in book book to to his his new new tie-in PBS Special. Special. PBS

Shiloh Run $16.99

“A remarkable book by a remarkable man.” –Rick Warren on Live, Love, Lead

New insights insights on on the the New power of of thoughts thoughts power by Joyce Joyce Meyer, Meyer, the the by best-selling author of best-selling author of Battlefield of of the the Mind. Mind. Battlefield

Check it twice! Brighten the season for every reader on your list The gift of reading lasts a lifetime. Capture the magic of the holiday season this year with heartwarming stories for every stocking hung by the chimney with care.

Thomas Nelson $9.99–$16.99

Joel Osteen, the #1 New York Times best-selling author empowers readers to say, “I am.”

Faith Words Words Faith $24.00 -- $27.00 $27.00 $24.00

14


Give a novel to entertain and inspire everyone on your list This Christmas give the gift of story to your loved ones. We have something for everyone from fans of historical fiction and romance to fans of mystery and suspense.

Visit Crazy4Fiction.com

Tyndale

$14.99–$15.99

Fight your battles the right way—through prayer. Equip you and your family with resources to build your very own prayer strategy with books inspired by the Kendrick Brothers’ new movie, War Room. From The Battle Plan for Prayer and Fervent, to Peter’s Perfect Prayer Place, Prayer Works and This Means War, you and your family will be provided with a battle plan for prayer.

www.warroommovieresources.com

B&H

$12.99 - $16.99

15


The perfect gift for the season

100 Illustrated Bible Verses

9780761185666

In this book, Bible verses—an enduring source of guidance, peace and rejuvenation—are given a very special treatment in colorful letterpress illustrations that bring each phrase to life in a fresh and meaningful way.

Workman $12.95

Give the gift of inspiration Give the children on your list the gift of inspiration this Christmas with these best-selling books from Zonderkidz.

Zonderkidz $16.99 - $29.99

Go back to the basics with your kids Begin your child’s own journey with God and inspire a lifetime love of the Bible with these wonderfully illustrated storybook Bibles!

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columns

WELL READ BY ROBERT WEIBEZAHL

Eustace Tilley & Co. Perhaps no other magazine engenders the kind of behind-thescenes fascination that The New Yorker does. This mystique can be attributed in large part to its impressive list of contributors—a virtual who’s-who of American letters—over its 90-year history, but also, I would wager, to the fact that so many of its staff have written memoirs. Quite simply,

there has been a lot written about The New Yorker. That glut of books has not deterred Thomas Vinciguerra, and in Cast of Characters (Norton, $27.95, 464 pages, ISBN 9780393240030) he provides a thorough and entertaining group portrait of the (mostly) men who shaped the magazine from its beginnings until the years just after World War II. The three highlighted in the book’s subtitle are Wolcott Gibbs, E.B. White and James Thurber, although the magazine’s founder, Harold Ross, gets as much space as the latter two. St. Clair McKelway and the venerable Katharine White also get their due, as do cartoonists Charles Addams and Peter Arno. Born in the bathroom gin-soaked Jazz Age, The New Yorker was to be, in Ross’ initial vision, a reflection of “metropolitan life” marked by “gaiety, wit and satire.” White would recall that, “The cast of characters in those early days was as shifty as the characters in a floating poker game. People drifted in and drifted out.” The magazine settled into itself a few years later, with those who would shape its unique personality on board. White was the stolid, understatedly brilliant writer of many of the finest entries in the Comments section. Thurber was a quirky genius. Gibbs was

a jack-ofall-trades, equally gifted as writer and editor. Reading Cast of Characters, it quickly becomes clear that the lion’s share of the book is about Gibbs, and arriving at the acknowledgements in the back of the book, one is not surprised to discover that Vinciguerra began this project as a straightforward biography of him alone. This emphasis is not unwelcome, for Gibbs is the least remembered of this triumvirate, and despite alcoholism (the occupational hazard for many a New Yorker staffer back then) and periods of despair, he was an indispensible contributor, not only as longtime theatre critic—a beat he detested—but also as a deft satirist. Vinciguerra chooses to narrate this decades-crossing story in chapters devoted to particular themes, Two new books which makes for some illuminate the awkward storied cast of repetition at The New Yorker. times. But he never fails to underscore the magazine’s cultural import, especially with the passage of time and the more serious tone it began to take on during the war. New Yorker staff writer Lillian Ross (no relation to Harold), who joined the magazine in 1945 and is still, at almost a century old, an occasional contributor, is little more than a footnote in Cast of Characters, but her own book, Reporting Always (Scribner, $27, 368 pages, ISBN 9781501116001) is a fine collection of some of her best writing. Ross, as current New Yorker editor David Remnick reminds us in the foreword, virtually invented the “nonfiction novel,” long before Truman Capote or Norman Mailer. The profiles gathered here, written by Ross from 1948 to 2005, singularly capture the essence of everyone from a 19-year-old Julie Andrews to Willie Mays, Robin Williams and Ernest Hemingway.

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The EDGE of LOST An epic journey from the Ireland coast to the immigrant enclaves of New York, from vaudeville circuit speakeasies to the prison island of Alcatraz, from family to solitude, and back again…

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columns

AUDIO

COOKING

BY SUKEY HOWARD

BY SYBIL PRATT

Good audios = great gifts

Gourmet gifts galore

Powerful, provocative and deeply disturbing, Ta-Nehisi Coates’ B ­ etween the World and Me (Random House Audio, $20, 3.5 hours, ISBN 9780451482211) should be mandatory listening. Coates reads his eloquent assessment of what it means to be black in a decidedly non-post-racial America, and it’s affecting to hear

If there’s a super-serious cook on your holiday gift list, NOPI: The Cookbook (Ten Speed, $40, 352 pages, ISBN 9781607746232), Yotam Ottolenghi and Ramael Scully’s ode to their latest restaurant in London’s West End, should be your pick. Though this is restaurant food—complex dishes designed to be made by a team of pros—the recipes here have been somewhat simplified so that the courageous home cook can take on the challenge and serve up a reasonable facsimile of a NOPI creation. Just make sure your lucky giftee invites you over for Scallops with Corn and Merguez Salsa and Sorrel Sauce or Baked Blue Cheese Cake with Pickled Beets and Honey. Curious cooks will be thrilled with J. Kenji López-Alt’s The Food Lab: Better Home Cooking Through Science (Norton, $49.95, 960 pages, ISBN 9780393081084). An MIT-trained nerd with a passion for food (a ferd?), López-Alt believes that only by understanding the scientific principles that underlie what ingredients do when exposed to different techniques will you become a freer, more fluent cook. This may be serious food science, but with more than 300 recipes and 1,000 step-by-step photos seasoned with the author’s charm, wit and clear, patient explanations, it’s revelatory fun. For lovers of la cucina Italiana, Lidia’s Mastering the Art of Italian Cuisine (Knopf, $37.50, 480 pages, ISBN 9780385349468) promises to

the controlled passion in his voice. Written as a cautionary letter to his 15-year-old son and wrapped in his recollections of growing up in Baltimore and going to Howard University, it’s also a meditation on the ingrained structural racism still present in our society. Early in The Story of the Lost Child (Blackstone Audio, $39.95, 18.5 hours, ISBN 9781504630122), the last of Elena Ferrante’s much admired Neapolitan novels, she describes Elena, her main character, as having “a natural ability to transform small private events into public reflection.” Ferrante has perfected that kind of transformation in these four brilliant novels that consider two women, their lifelong friendship and competition, their very different ways of dealing with what limits a woman and what frees her. It is read by Hillary Huber. Distinguished historian David McCullough has done it again. The Wright Brothers (Simon & Schuster Audio, $29.99, 10 hours, ISBN 9781442376083) is the fabulously detailed, always riveting story of how Wilbur and Orville Wright taught themselves to fly and

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changed the world forever. Drawing on the brothers’ diaries, letters and private family correspondence, McCullough recreates their extraordinary achievement in full color, and he narrates in an appealing, let-me-tellyou-a-story voice that enhances his flowing, elegant style. Elizabeth Alexander’s lyrically written, lyrically read The Light of the World (Hachette Audio, $26, 4 hours, ISBN 9781478904687) is an elegiac love letter to her husband, Ficre, their harmonious marriage and their two teenage sons. It’s a moving, often raw, often joyful memoir of their life together until his sudden death just after his 50th birthday. An Eritrean, a painter and a chef, he was cherished by family and friends. Acclaimed poet Alexander worked through her loss and longing with words, words that now let us share her journey.

TOP PICK IN AUDIO You can look for grand themes and literary gestures in Jonathan Franzen’s new novel, Purity (Macmillan Audio, $49.99, 25 hours, ISBN 9781427262196), performed here by a trio of excellent narrators, or you can be swept into the intertwined plot lines that roil around the protagonists as they reveal themselves, their relationships, their very contemporary angst and their quest for identity. We meet young Pip (yes, a nod to Great Expectations), her wildly neurotic mother, the father she’s been searching for and a fabulous Assange-esque activist who leaks big secrets but harbors his own. Their backstories unfold with flashes of mordant wit as Franzen’s dissection of unhappy families reaches dazzling new heights.

serve up “everything you need to know to be a great Italian cook.” And matriarch Lidia Matticchio Bastianich and her daughter, Tanya Bastianich Manuali, keep their word. With 400 recipes from appetizers to desserts, plus in-depth info on Italian ingredients and cooking techniques, this is her most comprehensive Italian cookbook yet and the book every Lidia fan should have. Drawn to the more exotic? Yearning for crunchy, fragrant Fried Sesame Pork Tenderloin or lightly sauced Kung Pao Chicken as it’s served in Sichuan? Then Kian Lam Kho’s lusciously illustrated Phoe­ nix Claws and Jade Trees (Clarkson Potter, $35, 368 pages, ISBN 9780385344685) is just right. He has organized the book by cooking methods, rather than by region or ingredient, giving you the gastronomic essentials you need to master these exquisitely varied Chinese dishes—for everyday meals or for more elaborate feasts.

TOP PICK IN COOKBOOKS Hartwood (Artisan, $40, 304 pages, ISBN 9781579656201) is a trip—a glorious culinary adventure to the edge of the Yucatán jungle and the delicious edge of contemporary cuisine. Eric Werner and Mya Henry left their restaurant jobs in Manhattan to follow a dream that turned into a restaurant open to the tropical night, serving their unique take on dazzling, wood-fueled, Mexican-infused dishes. Beautifully photographed and compellingly written, Hart­ wood is their celebration of the “love project” they’ve created. You can make and savor these 88 recipes (almost all the ingredients are obtainable in the U.S.) or you can luxuriate in armchair cooking and dream along with Werner and Henry.


BOOK CLUBS BY JULIE HALE

Calling the tune Set in London during the late 1700s, Katharine Grant’s debut novel, The Marriage Recital (Picador, $16, 320 pages, ISBN 9781250071712), is a tale of money, matrimony and music. In this provocative period piece, four fathers—newly rich men hoping to acquire social cachet—scheme to marry their daughters off to

aristocratic husbands. They enlist a music master to train the girls at the pianoforte in preparation for a recital, at which potential husbands will be present. The fathers believe the combination of musical accomplishment, feminine charm and family fortune will draw suitors to their daughters. It’s a plan that seems foolproof, but when they purchase a pianoforte for the girls’ training from ill-tempered instrument maker Vittorio Cantabile, their scheme—and their daughters’ reputations—could be ruined. A gifted writer with a flair for detail and dialogue, Grant brings London’s ballrooms and back alleys to vivid life in this titillating story of seduction and corruption (published in hardcover under the title Sedition). It’s a glittering work of historical fiction that readers will find hard to resist.

UNDERNEATH THE HOOD Wayne Harrison’s accomplished debut novel, The Spark and the Drive (St. Martin’s Griffin, $15.99, 288 pages, ISBN 9781250076946), is a compelling coming-of-age story set in Connecticut in the 1980s. The narrator, 17-year-old Justin Bailey, forgoes college to work at Out of the Hole, a local auto shop. He finds comfort in the logic and consistency of car repair, which stand in stark contrast to his rocky

home life. His mother is an alcoholic, and his father left the family after coming out of the closet. The shop’s owner, Nick Campbell, is a crack mechanic, incredible driver and attentive husband to Mary Ann, his gorgeous wife. In them, Justin finds a surrogate family. When the couple lose their baby, life veers off course. Nick’s work suffers, and Mary Ann retreats into herself. Justin scrambles to help his boss, even as he fights a growing attraction for Mary Ann. An intense, passionate tale of love and loss, this is a book with the makings of an American classic. Harrison takes readers on an unforgettable ride.

TOP PICK FOR BOOK CLUBS Sara Gruen (Water for Elephants) delivers another hypnotic work of historical fiction with At the Water’s Edge (Spiegel & Grau, $16, 416 pages, ISBN 9780385523240). Set during World War II, the novel follows Madeline and Ellis Hyde, who flee the States and head to Scotland in the wake of a scandal. Ellis’ father, Colonel Hyde, refuses to give him a penny of the family’s money. Scheming with his friend Hank, Ellis decides to search for the Loch Ness monster, a quest wherein Colonel Hyde failed. In the Scottish Highlands, Hank, Ellis and Madeline encounter local villagers who view them as intruders. Madeline slowly comes to love her new home, befriending two local women. But as Ellis and Hank continue their search, new tensions surface, and she struggles to keep her bearings. A moving and suspenseful page-turner, this atmospheric novel is rich with authentic detail.

Warm up with Winter

Book Club Reads!

The Pocket Wife by Susan Crawford

“The Pocket Wife is haunting, gripping, and lyrical—a book you won’t want to put down. Susan Crawford is a bright new star.” — Deborah Crombie, New York Times bestselling author

What She Knew

by Gilly Macmillan

“What an amazing, gripping, beautifully written debut. What She Knew kept me up late into the night (and scared the life out of me).” —Liane Moriarty, New York Times bestselling author

Mademoiselle Chanel by C. W. Gortner

“Gortner’s imagining of the ultimate fashion icon is equal parts grit and glamour, painting a portrait of a woman who was hugely inspiring but by no means perfect.” —Glamour Magazine

One Step Too Far

by Tina Seskis

“Tina Seskis, if this novel is anything to go by, is one of the world’s leading experts at pulling the wool over readers’ eyes until the very end.” —Sophie Hannah, New York Times bestselling author of The Monogram Murders and The Carrier

@Morrow_PB

@bookclubgirl

William Morrow

Book Club Girl

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Also available as an audiobook. 20

SimonandSchuster.com


columns

WHODUNIT BY BRUCE TIERNEY

Following the trail of a Swedish serial killer Irene Huss, Violent Crimes Unit investigator and determined protagonist of Helene Tursten’s The Treacherous Net (Soho Crime, $26.95, 320 pages, ISBN 9781616954024), is not a happy bunny. People in Huss’ line of work rarely have a “happy bunny” existence, faced as they are with the relentless barrage of nastiness

“buying off people is the national pastime,” but things go pearshaped for Camara after he secures his latest client’s release by paying some money under the table. Her body is found in the muddy Niger River, and it becomes a race against time to neutralize the killers before they neutralize him. No matter how gritty a hardboiled

that humans can inflict upon one another—but the horribly scarred young girl found dead in the Göteborg forest pushes Huss to her limit. A second body is then found, thus raising the ugly specter of a serial killer preying on teenage girls. Complicating matters is the new head of the department, an opportunistic woman who uses her feminine wiles to great advantage in her career trajectory, while virtually sidelining Huss. But Huss is nobody’s fool, and she deftly maneuvers her way toward center stage, leading the investigation into the murky world of Internet chat rooms. If you like Scandinavian mysteries (and really, who doesn’t?), this will be right up your alley.

detective novel can be, it’ll always be grittier in the Sahara.

GOOD GOLLY, MISS MALI Bamako, the capital of the West African country Mali, ranks with Gaborone, Botswana (the setting for Alexander McCall Smith’s No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency novels), as one of the least likely places to pursue a career in private investigation. French ex-cop Soulemayne “Solo” Camara is doing exactly that in Laurent Guillaume’s English-​ language debut, White Leopard (Le French Book, $16.95, 238 pages, ISBN 9781939474506), albeit in the distinctly shady manner of a noir gumshoe. Shady behavior makes sense in a corrupt country where

STALIN’S INVESTIGATOR Inspector Pekkala has something of a checkered past: When we first met him in 2010’s Eye of the Red Tsar, he was a favorite investigator in the court of Tsar Nicholas II. He was imprisoned during the Russian Revolution, and now he’s once again employed in an investigative capacity, this time by former adversary Joseph Stalin. At the opening of Sam Eastland’s latest historical thriller, Red Icon (Opus, $28.95, 352 pages, ISBN 9781623160869), the year is 1944, and the German army is flagging in the face of crushing Soviet forces. A pair of soldiers take shelter in a church burial vault, where they find a priceless and long-missing Russian icon. It once belonged to a powerful radical sect called the Skoptsy; the members who weren’t slaughtered by the Bolsheviks escaped to the harsh forests of Siberia, where they await their chance to once again rise to prominence. They may not have to wait long, because they have the secret to a poisonous gas so deadly it could alter the course of the war. They want their icon back, and it matters little whether they use the lethal gas as a bargaining chip or as a weapon. Don’t worry if you’re not a history buff; if you admire the

writing of David Downing, Philip Kerr or Robert Harris, you’ll find lots to like in Red Icon.

TOP PICK IN MYSTERY A person who’s planning on making a living as a contract killer probably shouldn’t have an overactive conscience, like ne’er-do-well (and somewhat reluctant) criminal Iain Fraser in Denise Mina’s latest thriller, Blood, Salt, Water (Little, Brown, $26, 304 pages, ISBN 9780316380546). He’s convinced that somehow his victim lives on inside him, an unsettling presence to say the least. He tries to keep the truth of the girl’s death locked away, but he’s spiraling, obsessing over her blood on his hands (which, in his mind at least, resists even the strongest scrubbing) and the mile-deep waters of Loch Lomond, where he deposited her body. Meanwhile, the corpses are piling up in the quiet Victorian sea-

side town of Helensburgh, and it’s a sure bet that Glasgow Detective Inspector Alex Morrow will be relentless in her pursuit of the truth. On hand is a diverse and finely drawn cast of characters: an entrepreneurial heiress with a distinctly larcenous streak; an underworld kingpin who runs his fiefdom every bit as efficiently from inside his prison cell as he ever did when he was out on the street; and a strange yet somehow fragile woman who has returned home after half a lifetime in America, just in time to rekindle a tenuous relationship with a killer. Secrets won’t stay hidden; as Fraser’s mother often said, “Salt water lifts blood, only salt water.” And Loch Lomond is filled to the brim . . . with fresh water.

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLING AUTHOR

The Original Heartbreakers returns with an aloof millionaire bad boy and a rowdy Southern belle who rocks his world… Available now in print and ebook

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THE MUST-READ THRILLER OF THE YEAR “You won’t want to put it down except to contemplate its thought-provoking twists.”

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“Ashley Bell might be Dean Koontz’s finest and most personal novel yet.”

—BENJAMIN PERCY, author of The Dead Lands

“Koontz’s novel cuts between the fantastical and the believable to dissect evil, explore the power of imagination, and probe the parameters of consciousness.” —Kirkus Reviews

“GORGEOUS. . . . It’s gripping stuff, but Koontz doesn’t stop there, adding a series of flashbacks regarding the alchemy of creativity and the fuel of trauma, and that’s before the twist that upends everything.” —Booklist www.DeanKoontz.com

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ROMANCE B Y C H R I S T I E R I D G WAY

Ringing in the holidays with love

T

here’s no better time for romance than the holidays. These five romance novels are the perfect fit for a chilly night, a cozy fire and a mug of warm cider. Wrap yourself up in a blanket and enjoy these tales of Christmas love, celebrations and cheer!

The past touches the present in A Knights Bridge Christmas (Mira, $17.99, 256 pages, ISBN 9780778317593), part of the Swift River Valley series by Carla Neggers. Librarian, widow and single mother Clare Morgan has just moved to the small New England town of Knights Bridge when she meets bigcity ER doctor Logan Farrell in the town’s assisted living facility. He strikes her as arrogant and impatient, but she sees another side of him when he visits with his grandmother. The elderly woman insists her grandson decorate her empty home near the town center for Christmas one final time. The handsome doctor enlists Clare’s help, and soon the pair—and Clare’s adorable 6-yearold—are transforming the home into a holiday showcase. While decorating the house, the memories of the love his grandparents shared opens Logan’s eyes to a new kind of life, but he must convince cautious Clare to stay by his side. The season works in his favor, and soon the bright holiday lights and the old stories of his grandparents’ marriage foster a vision of a shared future for the couple. Recipes spice up this tender, kisses-only story of love remembered and love beginning to grow.

UNDER THE MISTLETOE The holidays heat up with Jessica Lemmon’s latest installment in her Second Chance series, A Bad Boy for Christmas (Forever, $5.99, 416 pages, ISBN 9781455558100). Event planner Faith Garrett is still reeling from a cheating ex and a broken engagement as the Christmas

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season approaches in the lakeside town of Evergreen Cove. She’s now determined to live her life as a single, independent woman—her

keeper for the Callahan family. The three Callahan brothers are busy running their Christmas tree farm, and their prickly aunt needs

mother even says the females in their family are cursed to never marry—but that doesn’t mean she can’t ogle sexy former soldier and current landscaper Connor McClain. However, when Faith thinks someone is trying to break into her apartment, he’s there to help. When she’s faced with spending Thanksgiving alone, he’s there, too. Soon, he’s also in her bed, and though they tell themselves that they’re simply living in the moment, a future together looks so very appealing. But Connor has baggage of his own, and Faith still isn’t sure she can offer her heart to another man. Will a snowbound Christmas snuggled in bed convince them that they belong together? This story is as spicy and sweet as peppermint candy.

Eden’s help after an injury. Eden and her son slip seamlessly into life in Summer Harbor—the seasonal festivities delight them both, as does Beau Callahan. But Eden can’t trust men—or her own judgment when it comes to men—and while the attraction feels real, she knows it can’t dissolve a lurking danger in her life. Beau believes he’s found his forever love, but there are obstacles standing in the way. Faith is woven subtly through this sweet romance novel that addresses serious issues and provides a deep, satisfying seasonal read.

AN UNEXPECTED GIFT A desperate woman and her young son find a safe haven in Falling Like Snowflakes (Thomas Nelson, $12.99, 352 pages, ISBN 9780718023713) by Denise Hunter, the first in her Summer Harbor series. Eden Martelli runs out of luck in rural Maine when her car breaks down in beautiful Summer Harbor and her cash is stolen. She’s at the end of her rope by the time she scores a job as the house-

SNOW ANGEL Lily Everett spins a tale of holiday magic in Home for Christmas (St. Martin’s, $7.99, 304 pages, ISBN 9781250074041), part of her Sanctuary Island series. National hero and wounded Army Ranger Owen Shepard travels to Sanctuary Island to connect with Caitlin, the young daughter he’s never met. Food magazine columnist Libby Leeds is there too, and a publicity stunt brings them together so famed home cook Libby can create the perfect Christmas meal for the pair at her family home. There are only a couple of problems: Libby doesn’t know how to cook, and she’s been estranged from most of

her relatives since childhood. The heartwarming world she’s created in her columns is just wishful thinking. But she’s determined to save her job and her reputation by making this holiday season one to remember. Obstacles are everywhere, including a fake marriage, an inconvenient attraction and a wary child, but between gingerbread houses and snow angels, Owen and Caitlin find their way to each other. Everett’s latest is a charming, feelgood tale that’s perfect for enjoying with a plate of Christmas goodies.

TOP PICK IN ROMANCE Susan Mallery returns to the charming small town of Fool’s Gold for the holidays in Marry Me at Christmas (HQN, $17.99, 336 pages, ISBN 9780373788507). Bridal boutique owner Madeline Krug is persuaded to take on the planning of a small wedding for the sister of action movie star Jonny Blaze. Though she’s willing to help the town’s newest celebrity resident plan the wedding, she’s determined to at least pretend she’s not starstruck. But as she gets to know Jonny better, she realizes that he’s more of a regular guy than a Hollywood hotshot—which doesn’t take away one iota of his attractiveness. She’s convinced that the infatuation is one-sided, but then Jonny reveals that he’s equally smitten. However, he thinks his life in the spotlight is something he should save Madeline from, and he vows to resist her charms—until a winter storm strands them together. But can there be a future for them beyond these snowbound hours? The holiday season proves all things are possible in this engaging story that keeps the steam behind closed doors but the emotion up-close and personal. Mallery has delivered another winner!


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best of 2015

BOOKPAGE TOP 50

Our editors pick the year’s best books

I

s there anything more personal than selecting a favorite book? OK, the answer is obviously yes, but for a true book lover, maybe not by much. Releases from seasoned pros as well as exciting new voices made for a competitive, thrilling 2015—and a “best” list that we’re proud of. Read on for some highlights.

#1 A LITTLE LIFE

Hanya Yanagihara’s second novel was something of a dark horse contender for the top spot in a year studded with releases from heavyweights like Atwood, Smiley and Franzen. Yet this emotional tour de force of a book, which centers on a decades-long friendship, stole—and subsequently stomped on—our hearts. Read it and weep.

#2 GOLD FAME CITRUS

#8 EILEEN

In Ottessa Moshfegh’s fearless, brilliant debut, a woman looks back on one bizarre week that changed her life. Eileen, a 24-yearold secretary at a boy’s prison, is deeply depressed and insecure. But when the glittering new hire Rebecca takes her under her wing, Eileen sees a chance for happiness. However, Rebecca has ulterior motives, which are slowly revealed as this eerie page-turner progresses.

The only debut novel in the running for the 2015 National Book Award in fiction, Angela Flournoy’s exceptional novel follows the 13 Turner siblings as they argue and reconnect over the fate of their Detroit family home. This highly relatable family is haunted by plenty of demons and regrets as their lives unfold in the ever-evolving Motor City.

#5 HOLD STILL

#27 SWEET CARESS

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Jennine Capó Crucet’s sharp, authentic debut is the coming-of-age tale of Cuban-American Lizet, who leaves her family in Miami for a prestigious Northeastern university, only to return home to an immigration battle inspired by the true story of Elián González. Crucet’s novel explores the “double vision” of growing up in two cultures while still allowing for flashes of humor.

GIRL ON #14 THE TURNER HOUSE #35 THE THE TRAIN

The dusty, mystical allure of the American West quickly turns sour in prize-winning author Claire Vaye Watkins’ haunting first novel, which follows her award-winning short story collection, Battleborn. Young lovers Luz and Ray have their California dreams violently shattered, so they hatch a plan to escape the relentless onslaught of the Amargosa Dune Sea in search of a greener, better life for their adopted daughter. Like her photography, Sally Mann’s self-portrait is evocative, richly revealing and at times disturbing. From her rebellious youth to the shocking drama of her in-laws (who died in a murder-suicide), she mines every painful and tender fragment of her past to create a memoir unlike any other— riveting in its candor and illuminating in its portrayal of an artist’s search for truth.

YOUR HOME #34 MAKE AMONG STRANGERS

William Boyd’s beautifully constructed historical novel is perfect for those who savor an immersive read. Readers follow Amory Clay from her birth in 1908 through her passionate first-person account of her peripatetic life as a photojournalist. Boyd incorporates numorous found photographs into the text, amplifying his masterful ability to weave a story that you want to be true.

Secrets, secrets are no fun—unless you’re talking about the layers of deception in British author Paula Hawkins’ twisted whodunit. Thriller fans’ insatiable appetites for domestic dramas and unreliable narrators reached new heights with this year’s runaway bestseller, which has sold more than 3.5 million copies in the U.S. alone.

#41 UNDERMAJORDOMO MINOR Patrick deWitt’s second novel, The Sisters Brothers, put an original twist on the classic gunslinger sagas of the West. His anticipated follow-up is a delightfully fractured fairy tale starring a hapless hero who gets in over his head at the castle of a mysterious baron. Whimsical, smart and stylish, this is a charmer of a coming-of-age story.

1. A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara 2. Gold Fame Citrus by Claire Vaye Watkins 3. Best Boy by Eli Gottlieb 4. Fates and Furies by Lauren Groff 5. Hold Still by Sally Mann 6. Girl at War by Sara Nović 7. Purity by Jonathan Franzen 8. Eileen by Ottessa Moshfegh 9. Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates 10. City on Fire by Garth Risk Hallberg 11. A God in Ruins by Kate Atkinson 12. Our Souls at Night by Kent Haruf 13. The Witches by Stacy Schiff 14. The Turner House by Angela Flournoy 15. Delicious Foods by James Hannaham 16. Blackout by Sarah Hepola 17. The Fair Fight by Anna Freeman 18. The Heart Goes Last by Margaret Atwood 19. On the Move by Oliver Sacks 20. The Incarnations by Susan Barker 21. Get in Trouble by Kelly Link 22. Rosemary by Kate Clifford Larson 23. A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler 24. Circling the Sun by Paula McLain 25. The Secret Chord by Geraldine Brooks 26. Dietland by Sarai Walker 27. Sweet Caress by William Boyd 28. Kitchens of the Great Midwest by J. Ryan Stradal 29. Slade House by David Mitchell 30. The Buried Giant by Kazuo Ishiguro 31. Ghettoside by Jill Leovy 32. Big Magic by Elizabeth Gilbert 33. The Wright Brothers by David McCullough 34. Make Your Home Among Strangers by Jennine Capó Crucet 35. The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins 36. Dead Wake by Erik Larson 37. Custer’s Trials by T.J. Stiles 38. The Truth According to Us by Annie Barrows 39. After You by Jojo Moyes 40. The Mark and the Void by Paul Murray 41. Undermajordomo Minor by Patrick deWitt 42. Once in a Great City by David Maraniss 43. How the Music Got Free by Stephen Witt 44. Golden Age by Jane Smiley 45. Born with Teeth by Kate Mulgrew 46. Emma and Otto and Russell and James by Etta Hooper 47. The Blondes by Emily Schultz 48. Two Years Eight Months and TwentyEight Nights by Salman Rushdie 49. Russian Tattoo by Elena Gorokhova 50. Girl Waits with Gun by Amy Stewart Visit BookPage.com/bestof2015 for more best books coverage.


interviews

KEVIN BARRY BY BECKY OHLSEN

On the road with John Lennon

“I

’m in a swamp in County Sligo,” Kevin Barry tells me over the phone. The Irish author has lived in at least a dozen places, from his childhood home of Limerick to Spain to Santa Barbara, but he’s settled now in an old police station built in the 1840s, known as the Barracks. Sadly, he says, it doesn’t appear to be haunted.

If it were, he’d surely know. Barry, whose first novel, City of Bohane, won the prestigious IMPAC Dublin Literary Award, is highly attuned to what he calls the “strange reverberations” that linger in towns and landscapes. His new novel, ­Beatlebone, navigates a world of ghosts and echoes and spooky floating patches of emotion. It’s a musical fever dream of a book that sounds weirder than it is; Barry’s perfectly honed storytelling voice sweeps readers happily through decades and across rough seas. The wounded hero of Beatle­ bone is John Lennon, who, in this version, has fled New York domesticity in 1978 and run away to Ireland to spend three days alone on the island he bought a decade earlier. He hopes to do a bit of scream therapy and maybe try to write again. But he has to dodge the press, and on top of that, he’s not at all sure how to find his island. Enter Cornelius O’Grady, local driver, fixer, mentor—and decidedly more than he seems. How did Barry happen upon this odd tale? “My bicycle led me

BEATLEBONE

By Kevin Barry

Doubleday, $24.95, 320 pages, ISBN 9780385540292, audio, eBook available

LITERARY FICTION

directly to this story,” he says. He’d heard there was an island in Clew Bay that Lennon owned. His favorite Beatle’s connection to Ireland continued to fascinate Barry, even after he’d mentioned it in a story or two. “It wouldn’t let me be!” he says. “It kept coming back at me.” He was “snoozing on the sofa one day” after a bike ride and, startled awake, suddenly realized he should write a novel around it. “I was immediately terrified,” Barry says. “It’s a very risky thing to take such an iconic figure and set him down in one of your sto“It's a very ries.” He worked risky thing carefully and with devotion. to take such “When it came an iconic to the Beatles, I figure and set was always very him down in much Church of John, ” he says. one of your The risk paid stories.” off; Lennon is a fully convincing yet still original character, none the worse for having been borrowed from real life. Barry says early readers of the book have told him the first thing they do is start Googling to see how much of what they’re reading really happened. “I love to work right out on the edge of believability,” he says, “where the reader is going, no way. Come on. Well . . . maybe.” Some of the wondering is put to rest in a section two-thirds of the way through the book, in which Barry steps forward and tells how he came to write the novel. “I always knew I was going to put an essay bang in the middle of the book,” he says. At its heart, Beatlebone is about what it takes to make a record, to write a book, to create something. “I wanted to put my own strug-

gle in there as kind of a mirror.” Naturally, Barry visited Lennon’s island while working on the book, in pursuit of those strange reverberations. He tells me the same thing Lennon’s driver, Cornelius, says in Beatlebone: that stories and feelings linger not in people but in places. You might be out for a walk and “a sense of elation would come over you,” Cornelius says. That patch of happiness could have been floating around the field for the last 10 years. Or for the last 350 years. Because of love that was felt there or a child playing or an old friend who was found again. Whatever it was, it caused a great happy feeling and it was left there in the field. Of course, you could as easily find a floating sadness or fear. “I hope this is sounding very hippie-ish,” Barry says, laughing. Beatle Island, properly called Dorinish, is empty now, apart from nesting terns and their massive eggs and the stories that linger. But the barren isle was once home to one of the earliest organized communes. In 1971, Lennon arranged for a group of New Agers to camp out on his island as an experiment; they stayed about a year and a half. They were part of a trend starting in the ’60s of hippies coming to Ireland, partly because it was cheap to get a cottage along the coast. (“It’s not now,” Barry says.) “I find it a really interesting time,” he says. The “gray, monolithic” country was opening up to new ideas. “It’s weird and lovely to think that John was involved in that.” Did Barry try some scream therapy while he was on the island? “Oh for sure, you’ve got to!” he says. “I was determined to be very

method with this book. But,” he adds with a laugh, “there didn’t seem to be very much in there.” The book took him four years to finish, and you can tell by his tone they were long years. “The first year,” he says, “there was an awful lot of watching YouTube,” trying to perfect Lennon’s voice from old video clips. “When the book started to become delightful to me was when I gave John a sidekick,” he says. This would be Cornelius the driver, who has “oodles of roguish charm— we’re never quite sure what he’s up to,” Barry says, adding, after a pause: “He’s kind of me.” Among the book’s greatest pleasures are the long conversations between Lennon and Cornelius— which Barry admits took a tremendous amount of work to get right. “They have to feel really light and natural on the page,” which meant endless revisions. He acted out the voices, pen in hand, making notes as he read, going over the dialogue hundreds of times. With Cornelius in place, Barry says, “I started to realize it was the most old-fashioned kind of novel in the world—essentially it’s Don Quixote.” A man goes on a quest, the nature of which is basically irrelevant—it doesn’t really matter if they get to the island. The important stuff is what happens to them along the way.

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cover story

DEAN KOONTZ

A sharp-edged heroine fighting fate

T

he premise of Dean Koontz’s mesmerizing new psychological thriller, Ashley Bell, is compelling but not complex: When doctors inform 22-year-old Southern California surfer girl and budding novelist Bibi Blair that inoperable brain cancer will shorten her life to a matter of months, she replies, “We’ll see.”

Bibi’s fate seems sealed until a mystery man with a golden retriever (Koontz and his beloved Trixie?) appears at her hospital bedside in the middle of the night and quotes a snippet of Henry David Thoreau in passing: “If one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams, and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with a success unexpected in common hours.” The incident sparks a miraculous recovery. Bibi’s subsequent meeting with a fortune-telling masseuse convinces her that she’s been spared specifically to save the life of someone else, someone named Ashley Bell. Strap in and hold on as this determined surfer “walks the board” to suss out the whos, hows and whys of her improbable reprieve. So far, all that sounds like classic Koontz, right? But through an equally unlikely turn of events in the crafting of Ashley Bell, what readers can now savor is arguably the most stunning, flat-out crazy

ASHLEY BELL

By Dean Koontz

Bantam, $28, 576 pages, ISBN 9780345545961 Audio, eBook available

SUSPENSE

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reading experience yet from a writer who specializes in surprises. If you’ve ever wondered how much fun it would be to feel a book unfold in real time along with its characters, you need to read Ashley Bell right now. Koontz’s wild ride began with a friend who had been diagnosed with gliomatosis cerebri, a Readers will rare, fatal brain savor the cancer. After most stunning reading a letter from his pal, experience who had alyet from a ready outlived writer who his doctor’s one-year specializes in prediction by surprises. a year, Koontz wondered, “Wouldn’t it be nice to write a story in which somebody is doomed to this but isn’t doomed to it after all?” To take his personal feelings out of play, he cast a surfer girl in the lead, while setting the story in his hometown of Newport Beach. “The moment I heard her character say, ‘We’ll see’ in my head, Bibi became nearly complete to me,” Koontz recalls. “I realized she would be somebody who almost likes the sharp edges of life and leans into them.” Koontz was initially stumped by the tougher task of figuring out how Bibi might escape the medically inevitable until the answer absolutely “hammered and prosecuted” him, to use surfer speak. “The big reveal in the book came to me, and I was like a child; I was basically jumping up and down in my chair!” Koontz says. “And I thought, this is going to be a wonderful thing for people to get to, but how do you make it real? I couldn’t wait to start it.” It’s no big reveal that there will be no big reveal here. When a writ-

er has managed to catch this kind of lightning in a bottle, every reader should experience the full jolt. Chapter by chapter, Koontz watched as Ashley Bell coalesced around an existential, philosophical difference between Bibi and her hippie parents, Murph and Nancy. “It’s the idea of free will versus fate; Bibi believes she will make her own life, and her parents believe that fate determines what happens. Then it becomes perfectly natural for her to use her free will to find her way through this,” he says. “But I also realized that it was going to be about deception, self-deception and imagination.” Especially imagination. Along the way, Koontz salts Bibi’s journey with a sweeping assortment of characters, some of whom threaten to shoplift the narrative and take it home. They include Bibi’s fiancé, Pax, a Navy SEAL on his last covert mission; her childhood bestie Pogo, who’s something of a surfer Yoda; hospital security guard Chubb Coy, a stalking Mr. Toad menace who quotes Jack London and Thornton Wilder; and a parade of horrific Wrong People who threaten to end her journey at every turn. Koontz takes particular delight in skewering literary academia with the character of Solange St. Croix, a spiteful doyenne whose utter disdain for Bibi’s writing gifts makes her the meanest witch in the faculty lounge. For Koontz, who wrote his own way out of a career as a Pennsylvania English teacher

© JOAN ALLEN

I N T E R V I E W B Y J AY M AC D O N A L D

decades ago, it’s not academia per se that’s troubling; it’s the limiting perspective. “I’m not sure it’s a good thing that so many writers are going to school to become writers. When I became a writer, people like John D. MacDonald and a lot of writers I admired never went to school to be writers; it was just something they wanted to do because they loved books. I’ve often wondered if, over time, the writing programs will lead to a homogenous kind of fiction that isn’t very healthy,” he explains. His own love of wordplay is apparent in Koontz’s clever twist on the fortune-teller trope. His muddled medium, a loopy New Age masseuse named Calida Butterfly, uses a divination technique called Scrabblemancy, in which Bibi draws Scrabble tiles from a silver bowl. Naturally, one of the phrases they spell out is “Ashley Bell.” “I didn’t want Calida to have a Ouija board or a crystal ball or anything we’ve seen before. Then it occurred to me that all magic and all forms of belief are based on words—the idea that words


have power and were at the root of everything that came to be,” he recalls. “Scrabblemancy makes more sense than having a little pointer on a board full of letters.” To ground firmly in the hereand-now what might otherwise seem an ethereal journey, Koontz conjured one Birkenau Terezin, a neo-Nazi cult leader whose corporate minions terrorize Bibi. “In my lifetime, I’m watching anti-Semitism return to the world stage in a major, very spooky way. I think it’s a bigger issue now in many places in the world than it was in the 1930s or ’40s,” Koontz says. “So it seemed logical, if you were going to reach for a villain in a book like this, Terezin would be the guy who is very suitable to our time. And the book wants to be very contemporary. I made every effort to keep everything in it very much of this period we’re living through without beating a lot of drums about it.” Once Koontz caught a whiff of the uncharted magical reality he was creating in Ashley Bell, the question of the big twist began to weigh on him. Was he concerned that some readers wouldn’t make the leap to the third act? “In any story where there are big surprises, I always feel the reader has to be able to go back and say, my God, it was right in front of me all the time! That makes it fair. But in this case, I realized that’s not going to be enough,” he says. “With this book, the reveal is not just an intellectual thing; it’s an emotional thing. That way, when the reader starts reading it and is trying to get their head around it, they have a feeling that it makes sense. The two together make this thing go down in a way I don’t know that it would have otherwise.” For once, Koontz, as the author, is sharing a surprise usually reserved for his readers. “This book is about imagination; I think that’s what allows it to feel like it’s almost unfolding in real time as you’re reading it,” he says. “Bringing those many threads together gradually came easier than I would have ever imagined. The characters allowed me to do it. They showed me the way and it was exhilarating.”

The Smallest Act of Courage Can Change Everything… The haunting new novel from the author of the National Bestseller, What She Left Behind... In a turn-of-the-century coal town , grief, poverty and crushing child labor conditions erupt as one brave woman strives to fight injustice and heal her past .

“Wiseman weaves a story of intrigue, terror, and love.” —Jewish Book World on The Plum Tree

“Screams with authenticity, depth, and understanding.” —The New York Journal of Books on What She Left Behind

Also AvAilAble

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gifts

ART & PHOTOGRAPHY BY ALICE CARY

Capturing moments in time

D

iscover the glorious Renaissance days of Florence, peek at Picasso’s paintbrushes or catch Mick Jagger poised between boyhood and manhood. Whether you’re a serious art scholar or a casual admirer, these books offer something for everyone.

Florence: The Paintings & Frescoes, 1250-1743 (Black Dog & Leventhal, $75, 708 pages, ISBN 9781631910012) is an art lover’s dream come true—a collection of nearly 2,000 images that includes every painting and fresco on display in the Uffizi, the Galleria Palatina of the Pitti Palace, the Accademia and the Duomo, and works from 28 additional museums and churches. Arranged chronologically, the masterpieces are accompanied by seven comprehensive essays by art historian Ross King, as well as shorter discussions by art history professor Anja Grebe of the University of Freiburg in Germany. It’s fascinating to see these treasures of the Western world collected in one volume, with page after page of magnificence, including the works of Uccello, da Vinci, Correggio, Titian, Michelangelo and more. You won’t have a better tour unless you visit the city itself—and even then, reading this book first would be worthwhile.

PORTRAITS OF A CENTURY Near the end of photographer Cecil Beaton’s life, Sotheby’s acquired 100,000 of his photographs and negatives. Editor Mark

Holborn sifted through this vast studio archive to create the truly monumental Beaton Photographs (Abrams, $100, 356 pages, ISBN 9781419717833). The deservedly weighty volume is not only an amazing record of a brilliant career, it’s a history lesson as well, beginning with 1920s portraits of Beaton’s sisters at the beach and stretching into the ’60s and ’70s, with mesmerizing photos of Mick Jagger, Andy Warhol and Tom Wolfe. In between, this photographer of remarkable range captured the royal family, Fred Astaire, Truman Capote, Grace Kelly, Judy Garland, Elizabeth Taylor and more. Particularly fascinating are his shots of London ruins during World War II (sometimes with a model in their midst) and portraits of Pablo Picasso in his studio. As Annie Leibovitz writes in her introduction, Beaton “was a journalist, an artist, a set and costume designer, a memoirist, a historian, an actor. All of this went into his portraits. How can one not be impressed with what he accomplished?”

EVERYDAY DRAMAS

When Brandon Stanton started photographing strangers on the streets of New York Copyright © 2015 Brandon Stanton. From Humans of New York: Stories, City in 2010, reprinted with permission from St. Martin’s. he was certainly onto something. He follows up his best-selling first book with the similarly titled Hu­ mans of New York: Stories (St. Martin’s, $29.99, 432 pages,

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ISBN 9781250058904). It follows the same format, with a variety of anonymous photographs accompanied by the subjects’ own words, offering intriguing glimpses into the worlds of strangers: young, old, parents, children, rich, homeless. These “stories” never stray from Stanton’s winning format of anonymity and brevity. For instance, one woman discusses the stark contrast between her sister’s manic and depressive episodes, admitting that she envies her sister’s freedom during the mania: “I’d almost like to join her and run around the city if only she could keep it from spinning out of control.” These longer stories contrast nicely with one-liners, such as the photo of a man’s wrist encircled by a hospital bracelet. “They told me I was fine,” the man says. This is people-watching at its best, without the guilt of being discovered.

WORDS ABOUT PICTURES British novelist Julian Barnes didn’t start out as an art lover, but over the years he evolved into one, as revealed in Keeping an Eye Open: Essays on Art (Knopf, $30, 288 pages, ISBN 9781101874783). Each of the 17 essays in this collection explores an individual artist, ranging from Géricault and Delacroix to Magritte and Barnes’ personal friend, British abstract painter Howard Hodgkin. Barnes often muses on the relationship between viewing art and discussing it: “Braque thought the ideal state would be reached when we said nothing at all in front of a painting. But we are very far from reaching that ideal state. . . . Put us in front of a picture and we chatter, each in our different way.” He writes about art in a perceptive and

often humorous way. He contrasts how Manet told his models to be natural, talk, laugh and move, while Cezanne demanded “guardsmanlike” stillness. As a result, Cezanne’s portraits are like still lifes, unintended “to catch a mood, a passing glance, a fugitive moment which releases the sitter’s personality out towards the spectator.” Art enthusiasts will find Barnes’ artistic journey edifying and enjoyable.

CRASH COURSE IN ART Art historian Robert Cumming acts as an efficient museum guide in Art: A Visual History (DK, $30, 416 pages, ISBN 9781465436610), an updated version of the previously released Eyewitness Companion: Art. While working in London’s Tate Gallery, Cumming learned that museumgoers want answers to three questions: “What should I look for?”; “What is going on?”; and “How was it made?” This handy compendium concisely answers these questions about more than 650 artists, arranged chronologically and interspersed with short discussions of Western art periods and movements. Key works are listed for each artist, which is uniquely helpful for those wanting to investigate further. As with all DK books, the visuals are striking; the volume’s sturdy slipcase, shaped like an artist’s palette, adds to the appeal. Art can be used as a refresher course for rusty art lovers, as well as a comprehensive starting point for serious beginners.


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gifts

GUYS BY MARTIN BRADY

Books for the well-read gentleman

S

ports heroes, military giants, one handsome movie star and savory recipes to satisfy even the burliest man’s appetite—these are the hooks that drive this holiday season’s selection of gift books for guys.

Best known for his novel Forrest Gump, Winston Groom is also a well-published historian. His latest project, The Generals: Patton, MacArthur, Marshall, and the Winning of World War II (National Geographic, $30, 496 pages, ISBN 9781426215490), is a multi-tiered yet wholly accessible examination of the intertwined careers of

three brilliant American soldiers: George Marshall, George Patton and Douglas MacArthur. All three were born in the 1880s, gained critical experience in World War I and became key players in World War II. Groom outlines each man’s personal life and military exploits with special focus on the Second World War, where Marshall excelled as an army administrator, Patton as a fiery commander of forces on the European front and MacArthur as an inspirational leader in the Pacific theater. Groom balances the strictly biographical data with well-researched historical accounts, and along the way he offers invaluable perspectives on the world politics that critically influenced his subjects’ lives.

PIGGING OUT Accomplished author and competitive hunter Jennifer L.S.

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Pearsall serves up Praise the Pig: Loin to Belly, Shoulder to Ham— Pork-​Inspired Recipes for Every Meal (Skyhorse, $19.99, 232 pages, ISBN 9781634504355), a comprehensive collection of more than 50 pork recipes. Pearsall’s culinary celebration begins with a thorough overview of pork cuts and styles of preparation and cooking

(roasting, smoking, etc.), plus an excellent discussion of bacon brands and pork-savvy kitchen tips. Then come the recipes, with inviting full-color photos, starting with Chili-Rubbed, Salsa-Braised Chops with Spiced Rice, moving to Roasted Pork Tenderloin Chili and ending with Connecticut Clam Chowder. In between are hearty sandwiches, soups (porkestrone!), breakfast dishes, puddings, mac and cheese variations and appetizers to die for, including a Bacon and Roasted Corn Salsa that demands the immediate gathering of ingredients. No self-respecting pork lover could ever refuse this book of porcine delights.

MAN BEHIND THE MUSTACHE Man’s man Burt Reynolds has had a hit-or-miss acting career. Yet his life has certainly been eventful, as his new memoir, But Enough

About Me (Putnam, $27.95, 320 pages, ISBN 9780399173547), clearly attests. Penned with veteran author Jon Winokur, Reynolds’ book is frankly revealing but rarely mean-spirited. For example, Burt’s short-lived marriages to Judy Carne and Loni Anderson were admittedly rocky, but he always takes the high road when he can. More enlightening are his reminiscences of his close friendships with Bette Davis and Dinah Shore, both women of substance whom Burt cherished. Coverage here is chronologically ordered, from Reynolds’ youthful days as a Florida football star to his early acting adventures in New York City to his arrival in California in the 1950s, where small television roles eventually led to feature films, including the critically acclaimed Deliverance (1972) and Boogie Nights (1997), for which he received an Oscar nomination. The enduring Reynolds turns 80 in February, and his surprisingly entertaining show-biz retrospective should find a wide audience.

HEAVYWEIGHT HERO Journalist Davis Miller’s obsession with Muhammad Ali has spanned from his childhood to the present day, and his book Approaching Ali: A Reclamation in Three Acts (Liveright, $27.95,

240 pages, ISBN 9781631491153) represents the culmination of that relationship. The heavyweight champ first inspired Miller when he was a sickly, depressed child. As a teen, Miller had an opportunity to spar with The Greatest, an event that spawned a short news account for Sports Illustrated and helped point him toward a writing career. In this latest testament to his hero, Miller blends new material on his more recent experiences with Ali with reworked excerpts from his previous writings, presenting what he believes to be “the all-time most intimate and quietly startling portrait of Ali’s day-by-day life, as well as the only deeply detailed look at his enormously rich years after boxing.” Ali, now 74 and courageously battling Parkinson’s disease, remains one of the great figures of 20th-century sports, and this profile finds the boxer’s playful good nature and magnanimous personal spirit intact.

TALLYING THE SCORE Veteran sportswriter Gary Myers recounts the careers of the game’s marquee quarterbacks in Brady vs Manning: The Untold Story of the Rivalry That Transformed the NFL (Crown Archetype, $26, 272 pages, ISBN 9780804139373). Myers successfully achieves a dual biography of these iconic figures, focusing not only on what the pair have meant to the National Football League but also what they’ve meant to each other. The relationship between Tom Brady and Peyton Manning emerges here as one of keen mutual respect—both on and off the field—despite the differing nature of their media personas. When Myers isn’t connecting the dots of the Brady-Manning friendship, he serves up thorough profiles of their separate lives, including their college football careers and their arrival on the pro scene: Manning as the coveted #1 draft pick of the Indianapolis Colts in 1998 and Brady as an unheralded 6th-round pick of the New England Patriots in 2000. There are no shocking revelations here, just good information, solid quotes from important football folks and interesting viewpoints on two important athletes.


QUIRKY BY LINDA M. CASTELLITTO

Thinking out of the (gift) box

I

t’s always fun to give a gift that’s truly memorable (in a good way, of course), and this trio of books won’t steer you wrong. Ordinary is overrated!

Jane Austen’s books have been adapted, reimagined and mashed up in seemingly every possible way—until A Guinea Pig Pride & Prejudice (Bloomsbury, $13, 56 pages, ISBN 9781632862426), in which writer Alex Goodwin and set designer Tess Gammell join forces to offer an entirely new, adorably hilarious take on the classic story. As in the original, there’s all manner of matchmaking and dissembling afoot— but the feet here are tiny, and they belong to nine guinea pigs who make this photographic retelling most compelling indeed. Gaze into Elizabeth’s shiny black eyes and ponder their effect on Mr. Darcy; feel the tension as Darcy and Mr. Bingley have a rounded-nose-to-rounded-nose stare-down; sigh at Lady Catherine’s displeased moue and towering lavender hat! This affectionate, quietly dramatic homage is the perfect gift for Austen-philes, Austen-newbies, guinea-pig aficionados and anyone who appreciates a tale well told.

ALL ABOUT YOU Most of us know about IQ tests, BMI charts, Myers-Briggs types and Rorschach blots, but those who want to more thoroughly plumb their own depths will be thrilled with The Test Book (Norton, $17.95, 208 pages, ISBN 9780393247046). It’s got 64 self-assessments in five sections: personality, health, career, lifestyle and beliefs. After all, as authors Mikael Krogerus and Roman Tschäppeler write, “When it comes down to it, people care about two things:

understanding themselves and being understood by others.” These tests will help you reach those lofty goals, whether you’re the sort to read front to back (including the interesting introduction about the history of personality tests) or just jump in at random with tests like “Am I crazy?”or “How strong am I?” or “Who should I employ?” or “Is it love?” This book is the perfect gift for people who are inquisitive, competitive, contemplative or perhaps just want to entertain with something besides Pictionary at their next party.

Happy Holidays from the

NO. 1 LADIES’ DETECTIVE AGENCY NEW IN HARDCOVER

IN PAPERBACK AND EBOOK

OFF-KILTER COMICS Like many cartoonists, Reza Farazmand got his start in college, via UC San Diego’s student newspaper. These days, he has a popular web comic, which is at the heart of Poorly Drawn Lines: Good Ideas and Amazing Stories (Plume, $18, 208 pages, ISBN 9780147515421). It contains strips old and new, plus a few short stories and essays; those not immune to existential crises will enjoy think pieces like “Maybe There’s More to Life Than Standing Behind Babies at IKEA.” The comic’s outlandish characters run the gamut: There are chatty mountains, profane ants, a silently judgmental bird who prefers not to whistle and a dude who over-identifies with his beard. Comic fans will dig it, as will those who enjoy funny art but can’t commit to graphic novels and anyone who’s ever wondered if owls feel pressured by stereotypes (and feel compelled to memorize Wikipedia entries on the sly).

“Enchanting... an inspiration to us all.” —the new york times book review

“Wit, charm, and intrigue in equal doses.” —richmond times-dispatch

AlexanderMcCallSmith.com pantheon

anchor

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gifts

LITERARY BY JULIE HALE

Sweet holiday selections for serious readers

M

erry and bright: that’s the forecast for bibliophiles this holiday season. Inspired gift ideas for lovers of literature are as plentiful as snowflakes in December. Our top recommendations are featured here.

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle introduced Sherlock Holmes to the world in 1887 in A Study in Scarlet, a novel for which he earned £25— not even peanuts compared to the bucks being generated by the lucrative sleuth today. Somehow, a century and a quarter after his debut, the detective has become an entertainment-industry titan as the star of a successful movie franchise and two popular TV series. Doyle’s detective is undoubtedly having a moment, so the timing couldn’t be better for The Sherlock Holmes Book (DK, $25, 352 pages, ISBN 9781465438492), a handsomely illustrated volume that provides background on every case Holmes ever faced, starting with A Study in Scarlet and ending with The Adventure of Shoscombe Old Place. Each case is accompanied by an easy-to-follow flowchart, which breaks down the deductive process Holmes used to crack it. In-depth character profiles, a Doyle biography and fascinating chapters on forensic science make this the ultimate Sherlock scrapbook. It’s a must-have for devotees of the great detective.

BIBLIOPHILE’S TRAVEL GUIDE Perfect for the armchair traveler or the reader who enjoys hitting the road, Shelley Fisher Fishkin’s Writing America: Literary Land­ marks from Walden Pond to Wounded Knee (Rutgers University Press, $34.95, 400 pages, ISBN 9780813575971) is a meticulously researched, beautifully written survey of the nation’s most beloved literary sites. From the Walt Whitman Birthplace in Huntington Station, New York, to the Sinclair Lewis Boyhood Home in Sauk

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Centre, Minnesota, the dream destinations of every book lover are included in this fascinating tour. Along with stops at familiar spots like Hannibal, Missouri, and Walden Pond, the narrative includes visits to South Dakota’s Pine Ridge Reservation and sites in South Texas. Fishkin considers the storytelling traditions of these and other parts of the country, highlighting the great writers native to each, and the result is a vivid mosaic of the cultures, voices and geographies that inform America’s literary inheritance. Packed with photographs, this book features more than 150 National Register historic sites. It’s the ultimate trip advisor for lovers of literature and history.

posite effect. DeGraff’s depictions defamiliarize well-known works, uncovering facets the reader never imagined. In his treatment of Hamlet, he tracks the path of the prince’s madness as it contaminates the palace of Elsinore. Inspired by the social factors at play in Pride and Prejudice, he maps the novel as a series of precarious catwalks between family estates. In all, DeGraff charts 30 narratives. He’s a genius at identifying and connecting a work’s key coordinates, then using them as the basis for remarkable visualizations. Each of his colorful, ingenious maps is accompanied by an introductory essay. With Plotted, he guides literature lovers off the beaten path and into newly charted territory.

CHARTING THE CLASSICS

THE MARCH CLAN REVISITED

In Plotted: A Literary Atlas (Pulp, $24.99, 160 pages, ISBN 9781936976867), Andrew DeGraff interprets classic narratives as maps. Not the Google kind, mind you. DeGraff isn’t a conventional cartographer, he’s an artist, and his maps—subjective, frequently surreal topographic renderings of narratives both epic (Moby-Dick) and miniature (“A Good Man Is Hard to Find”)—rather than orienting the viewer, often have the op-

There’s comfort to be found in the pages of a classic. A tried-andtrue title holds out the promise of pleasure to a reader and never fails to keep the contract. Case in point: Little Women by Louisa May Alcott—surely one of the most reread works in all of American literature. The story of the March sisters, first published in 1868-69, receives the royal treatment in The Annotated Little Women (Norton, $39.95, 736 pages, ISBN 9780393072198),

a deluxe edition of the novel filled with rare photographs, illustrations and other Alcott-related memorabilia. This lavish volume features notes and an introduction by John Matteson, who won a Pulitzer Prize for Eden’s Outcasts: The Story of Louisa May Alcott and Her Father. Matteson offers insights into the author’s creative life and provides context for the novel, finding new dimensions in the familiar classic. Arriving in time for Christmas—the same holiday the Marches celebrate so memorably in the opening chapters of Little Women—this treasure trove of a book is the perfect gift for bibliophiles who fancy old favorites.

VINTAGE KEYS We may be living in an age of featherweight laptops and magic tablets, but the typewriter—that clunky classic—remains the most literary device of all. It’s an icon of the writing life, the truest emblem of an author (nothing says “vagabond novelist” like an Olivetti or Underwood). Journalist Tony Allan honors the PC’s stately precursor in Typewriter: The History, The Machines, The Writers (Shelter Harbor, $12.95, 96 pages, ISBN 9781627950343). Providing a compact overview of the instrument’s evolution, Allan’s quirky volume is filled with typewriter trivia, retro posters and ads, vintage photos of classic machines and quotes—now golden—from those who pecked their way to fame (including, of course, Ernest Hemingway: “There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed.”). With a foreword by Paul Schweitzer, owner of the Gramercy Typewriter Company, this uncommon little stocking stuffer is the sort of thing literary types live for.


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gifts

NATURE BY ALICE CARY

The peace of wild things

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here might be water on Mars, but we still only have one home, and it’s constantly surprising us. These imaginative books offer a lively look at our world—and beyond.

Thunder & Lightning: Weather Past, Present, Future (Random House, $35, 272 pages, ISBN 9780812993172) brims with information so intriguing that it begs to be read in one lengthy sitting. It’s a visual treat, featuring Lauren Redniss’ arresting, atmospheric artwork, plus an original typeface she calls Qaneq LR, after the Inuktitut word for “falling snow.” Every aspect of this creation has been carefully considered by Redniss, a Guggenheim fellow and finalist for the National Book Award for her vivid biography of Marie and Pierre Curie, Radioactive. Redniss reports extensively, beginning with a mind-boggling stop at a Vermont cemetery where coffins, bodies and bones were washed away by Hurricane Irene’s floods. She discusses weather staples such as rain, fog, wind and cold, finding unexpected treats for each topic and weaving together seemingly disparate strands, such as a conversation with endurance swimmer Diana Nyad and a visit with a wind engineer at Saudi Arabia’s Grand Mosque. This is hardly an ordinary weather book. Like a tornado, Thunder &

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Lighting will blow you away.

happily jumps in, knowing HUNDRED ACRE WOOD they’re a sign A.A. Milne would have been of healthy pleased as punch with The Natural seas. In 2007 World of Winnie-the-Pooh: A he left acWalk Through the Forest That ademia to Inspired the Hundred Acre Wood actively help Young blacktip reef sharks in the lagoon of Millennium Atoll. (Timber Press, $24.95, 308 pages, protect the Copyright © 2015 Enric Sala. From Pristine Seas, ISBN 9781604695991). Landscape ocean, founding reprinted with permission from National Geographic. designer and historian Kathryn an organization Aalto combines historical photothat shares its graphs with biography to explore name with his book, Pristine Seas: field created by the 2011 Japanese the places that inspired Milne and Journeys to the Ocean’s Last Wild tsunami. Venture farther into space his artistic partner, E.H. Shepard. Places (National Geographic, $40, and see stars being born amid Throughout his books, Milne 272 pages, ISBN 9781426216114). Milky Way dust, an intergalactic recreated many of the wonders he It’s a gorgeous pictorial tour of 10 “dance” performed by two faraway experienced as a boy, “hunting but- diverse ocean spots that remain galaxies and a taffy-like strip that’s terflies along the coast, bicycling untouched by human activity, the supernova remnants from an across many shires, and climbing ranging from Arctic waters to coral exploded star. Detailed captions peaks in Wales.” The Hundred Acre reefs, where vibrant colors abound explain the science behind these Wood is based on Ashdown Forest, in seemingly ethereal ways. unimaginable sights. “a landscape of sweeping heathOn an atoll south of Hawaii, Sala As Bill Nye remarks in the book’s land and atmospheric woodlands encounters a twinspot grouper preface, “The views amaze and thirty miles south of London.” In with fangs “like an underwater astonish us; the images themselves 1925, Milne and his wife bought vampire” who surprised him by are artwork.” Cotchford Farm as a country tugging at his ponytail. Sala and haven on the edge of the forest. his team discover that pristine seas OVER HERE, BIRDWATCHER (The property was later bought by Nextinction (Bloomsbury, $50, feature an inverted food chain, Rolling Stones founder Brian Jones, with an abundance of predators 224 pages, ISBN 9781472911681) who eventually drowned in its is a colorful, zany follow-up to like sharks, polar bears, seals and pool.) Every March, people gather crocodiles, which thrive when safe Extinct Boids, a collaboration at a nearby bridge for the World between filmmaker and bird lover from fishermen and hunters. Poohsticks Championship, a Ceri Levy and gonzo artist Ralph Sala’s writing is snappy and game from The House at Pooh informative, while the photos offer Steadman. Dubbing themselves Corner that involves racing “Gonzovationists,” Steadman and glorious, magical glimpses into Levy focus on the 192 critically twigs downstream. underwater worlds seen by so few. endangered birds on the IUCN Red You’ll yearn for a real walking SNAPS FROM SPACE List, all of which can be saved. As tour of this enchanted forest. with their first book, this one feaYou won’t see photographs PROTECTING THE SEA tures both the aforementioned real like the ones in Earth and Space: When oceanographer Enric as well as some imagined species. Photographs from the Archives All of Steadman’s avian caricaSala sees swarms of sharks, he of NASA (Chronicle, $40, 176 tures ooze personality and attipages, ISBN 9781452134352) tude, while Levy’s descriptions are anywhere else. Photographsimilarly lively. Accompanying the ing space, known as stellar astrophotography, is the result large illustrations are side panof collaboration among NASA’s els filled with their emails, diary entries and phone conversations many engineers, scientists about the birds and the making of and artists. Tour the universe the book. Nextinction is a memowith more than 100 brilliantly rable, unique book that manages colored photos, starting with scenes of Earth, such as a satel- to infuse fun and fancy into a very serious subject. lite view of the massive debris


ALICE IN WONDERLAND BY JULIE HALE

A long, strange trip: 150 years of ‘Alice’

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t’s a story that never goes out of style: Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll’s chronicle of an inquisitive girl lost in a parallel world of talking animals and pompous royals, is a tale unlike any other—one that celebrates the complexities of language, the singular genius of children and the absurdity that lurks just beneath the surface of reality.

In honor of the novel’s 150th anniversary, we’ve rounded up a trio of new ­Alice-related titles, all of which prove that Wonderland still has mysteries well worth exploring.

DECONSTRUCTING ‘ALICE’ David Day combines the expertise of an academic with the

fervor of a true Alice enthusiast in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland Decoded (Doubleday Canada, $40, 320 pages, ISBN 9780385682268). In a remarkable act of literary excavation, Day exposes the historical references, classical allusions and subtly disguised symbols that he thinks Carroll embedded in the tale of Wonderland as lessons for his protégé, Alice Liddell. Day believes Carroll included these elements to round out the narrow education Alice would’ve received as a female in the Victorian age. It’s an intriguing theory, and he supports it impressively throughout Decoded. The volume includes Carroll’s novel in full, supplemented by Day’s observations as he painstakingly traces the various themes—music and philosophy, mathematics and poetry—that run through Carroll’s narrative, proving along the way that Alice, even as it celebrates the absurd, exhibits airtight logic. Richly illustrated, this is a book Alice addicts will find irresistible.

A WONDERLAND HANDBOOK No reader should plunge into Wonderland without taking Martin

Gardner along as guide. The celebrated Carroll expert published The Annotated Alice in 1960 to great acclaim and popularity— more than a million copies are currently in print. In the intervening decades, Gardner, who died in 2010, continued to pick at the riddles of Wonderland—the numerical enigmas and verbal brainteasers that make the text so perplexing—and his findings are shared in The Annotated Alice: 150th Anniversary Deluxe Edition (Norton, $39.95, 432 pages, ISBN 9780393245431). This comprehensive volume collects all of Gardner’s notes, his correspondence with Carroll critics and his introductions to previous Alice-related works. Filled with breathtaking illustrations by a wide range of artists, including Beatrix Potter and Salvador Dalí, the book offers invaluable insights into the Victorian mores, literary movements and real-life elements that inform Alice’s adventure, including all manner of Carroll arcana (it seems the writer, like the White Rabbit, had a fixation on gloves). For the latest in Alice analysis, Gardner’s your man.

using Carroll’s story as a springboard for his own inventive novel. Maguire casts Alice’s friend Ada (who is mentioned briefly in Carroll’s narrative) as a leading character. When Alice disappears down the rabbit hole, Ada pursues her. In Wonderland, she encounters the usual suspects (including the pipe-smoking Caterpillar and unsettling Cheshire Cat), as well as a number of new—and equally eccentric—inhabitants. Meanwhile, back in the rational world, Charles Darwin, Walter Pater and other ­Victorian-era

The Nursery Alice (1890) from The Annotated Alice: 150th Anniversary Deluxe Edition. personages provide a rich contrast to Ada’s surreal adventures. The blend of fact and fiction results in a magical addition to the literature of Wonderland. Maguire and Alice: It’s a pairing Carroll himself would’ve consecrated.

is back in Wyoming with a new tale of love born in Big Sky Country!

DOWN THE RABBIT HOLE As he proved in Wicked and Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister, Gregory Maguire is a wiz when it comes to taking a fresh angle on a classic tale and spinning it into a fully formed story—one that lives up to its distinguished lineage. In his new book, After Alice (Morrow, $26.99, 288 pages, ISBN 9780060548957), he works his customary magic,

Available now in print and ebook.

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www.HQNBooks.com

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MAPS BY SHEILA M. TRASK

Stunning maps tell humanity’s story

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ho among us hasn’t used Google Maps to get a detailed aerial survey of our neighborhood, right down to the tricycle in the driveway? We no longer need anything as old-fashioned as a map to navigate our world. Or do we? We may think we’re getting the whole story with our digital access to up-to-the-minute street scenes, but no satellite image delivers the artistic elegance and historical context of the maps reproduced in these four gorgeous collections. tor that shapes the settlement of the city to this day. Black’s maps URBAN SPACES range from bird’s-eye views and panoramas Jeremy Black, University of Exeter history professor and author to skyline profiles and of more than 80 books, sheds a dif- schematics, giving ferent kind of light on humankind’s readers multiple visual history as it is reflected in our map- perspectives along with his ample and authoritative text making ventures. In Metropolis: describing each map in its historiMapping the City (Conway, $50, cal context. 224 pages, ISBN 9781844862207), Black focuses on a single subject of cartography: the cityscape. Noting THE COURSE OF WAR that as civilization developed, so Focusing the historical lens did the human desire to control even more closely than Black are and organize the rapid pace of Richard H. Brown and Paul E. change, Black suggests that maps Cohen in Revolution: Mapping the are perhaps the perfect tool for Road to American Independence, urban planning, allowing people to 1755-1783 (Norton, $75, 160 pages, measure, navigate, plan and proISBN 9780393060324). This unique tect their newly organized cities. A collection illuminates the battles— mapmaker’s vision could affect an physical and political—that deentire culture, as evidenced by exfined America’s fight for indepenamples like side-by-side planning dence. Brown and Cohen carefully maps of New York City in 1815 and curated this collection, scouring 1867. The former shows a relatively sources from the King George III featureless grid of streets, while the collection at the British Library to latter allows the lush, green space the archives of Revolutionary War of Central Park to dominate, a facmap printer William Faden and previously undiscovered family A “Map of Video Websites” from Vargic’s Miscellany of Curious Maps, courtesy of Martin Vargic. collections. Many of the maps are published here for the first time, with full-page reproductions and enlarged insets providing astonishingly detailed accounts of each battle. The 1777 “Plan of New York Island,” for instance, allows readers to see the “carefully placed British forces, twenty-one-thousand strong,” as they “attacked the poorly organized and ill-equipped rebels.” The authors’ lively commentary runs throughout the book, but as they take pains to note, the maps are the focus. Where other history books might use maps to support the narrative, Revolution uses narrative to sup-

If you think of maps as antiquated and utilitarian, maybe even boring, prepare to reconsider. Map: Exploring the World (Phaidon, $59.95, 352 pages, ISBN 9780714869445), an attention-grabbing collection of more than 300 maps, brings the art of cartography to life with meticulously reproduced, full-color maps ranging from a Catalan atlas manuscript on parchment to modern digital data maps that trace airline flight paths with light trails. The editors play with the expectation that maps are historical documents, and thus should be presented from earliest to latest. Instead, they follow a gold-highlighted 1547 map of Java la Grande from the Vallard Atlas with a 1997 painting of the sacred Baltaltjara site by Australian aboriginal artist Estelle Hogan. Turn the page and you’re in the Hundred Acre Wood with Winnie-the-Pooh, courtesy of Ernest H. Shepard’s 1926 drawing. A new scene unfolds on each page, accompanied by just enough text to give context, while encouraging

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readers to make their own connections between art and history.

port the maps themselves.

A MAPMAKER’S WORDPLAY The maps are the narrative in the wildly original Vargic’s Miscellany of Curious Maps: Mapping the Modern World (Harper Design, $35, 128 pages, ISBN 9780062389220), in which 17-year-old Slovakian artist Martin Vargic reimagines our planet not just geographically, but culturally, too. Famous for his viral “Map of the Internet,” which remapped the world in terms of website popularity (countries like Facebook and Google dominate North America, for example), Vargic takes his near-obsessive attention to detail to new heights with atlas-style maps that contain vast alternative vocabularies for describing the globe, with thousands of words in each entry. Vargic’s meticulousness was not always obvious when huge pieces like his “Map of Stereotypes” made their way around the Internet. Here, though, full-page, two-page and even foldout maps, along with insets, allow us to see every word he has imposed upon our previously well-ordered vision of the globe. Do you recognize the island relabeled with words like Cigars, Vintage Cars and Uncle Fidel? Would you sail on the Jack Sparrow sea? There’s a sly sense of humor to everything Vargic does, which lets us laugh at ourselves a bit while we contemplate the larger truths he’s telling.


RELIGION BY HEATHER SEGGEL

Many paths to God

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everal new books on religion and spirituality look at faith and God with both fresh and traditional views. From irreverent humor to pure devotion, these books follow Dorothy Day’s edict to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.

The Bible is a holy text but also a revered work of literature; as such, it is open to consideration and interpretation by all. In The Good Book: Writers Reflect on Favorite Bible Passages (Simon & Schuster, $27, 320 pages, ISBN 9781476789965), editor Andrew Blauner collects musings that run the spectrum from irreverent to heartbreaking. Lois Lowry’s tale of family love and a tragic loss that has parallels to the Book of Ruth is absolutely wrenching, while Reverend Al Sharpton’s take on the Book of Psalms connects it to the lamentation over black lives lost today and ends with a bracing, “No justice. No peace.” Daniel Menaker mines the Book of Jonah for humor in a manner that must be read to be believed (a sample: “In truth I was much relieved later to learn that Jonah hath not gone, yea, all the way through the whale, if you knoweth what I mean.”). An introduction by Adam Gopnik, the inclusion of a poem by Robert Pinsky and a short story by Colm Tóibín break up the march of the essays. If one piece sings God’s praises, the next may well argue that He doesn’t exist. This is substantive reading that casts the Good Book in a new light.

OLD STORY, NEW TWIST Another fresh vision of a central religious text comes in artist Sandow Birk’s American Qur’an (Liveright, $100, 464 pages, ISBN

9781631490187). This illuminated rendering of Islam’s holy text— which took 9 years to complete—is hand-lettered in an angular style reminiscent of graffiti, with each passage superimposed over a scene painted by Birk and bordered in ornate blue, red and gold accents. It’s gorgeous, and will most likely be controversial. Some of the paintings depict people, which in Islam can be considered a form of idolatry. Yet Birk’s goal was never to rewrite the Qur’an, but to make connections between the text and the daily lives of Americans; without seeing representations of ourselves, that connection would likely remain tenuous at best. Scenes at a funeral or a beach feel inhabited and abandoned at the same time, and an aerial view of a city looks like a tweedy New Yorker cover but for the block of text in its midst. Religious scholar Reza Aslan writes in the introduction about how, lacking a central authority like the Vatican, Islam is not the same from one place to the next. “Religion is water and culture is the vessel; Islam takes the shape of whatever culture it encounters.” Whether this American view helps to foster understanding remains

to be seen; it is, however, a stunning work of art.

TINY BEAUTIFUL THINGS This Moment Is Full of Wonders: The Zen Callig­ raphy of Thich Nhat Hanh (Chronicle, $16.95, 116 pages, ISBN 9781452151557) captures the Buddhist author and meditation teacher’s brushwork, much of which contains Reprinted from American Qur’an, artwork by simple messages that grow in Sandow Birk. Copyright © 2016 by Sandow Birk. meaning with consideration. With permission of the publisher, Liveright Publishing “You have enough” is surCorporation. All rights reserved. rounded by a circle that’s just slightly open at the bottom, as if to allow a little more in or out as material for deep reflection. needed. A single panel with just the LIFE-CHANGING LESSONS word “Look” on it, is followed by a panel reading, “Look deeply,” with Finally, all this talk about religion the second word much smaller and can make a person itchy. Complaced below the first as an almost mandment this and thou shalt literal instruction. These beautiful not that, but how do you put all messages, rendered with care and a these lessons into action? Lori spirit of play, offer a gentle path to Deschene’s got you covered, with focus and contemplation. For their a little help from her friends in the sparse design and construction, Tiny Buddha community. Tiny they’re remarkably rich. Buddha’s 365 Tiny Love Challeng­ Two pocket-sized volumes, es (HarperOne, $19.99, 496 pages, The Illuminated Book of Psalms ISBN 9780062385857) offers daily (Black Dog & Leventhal, $24.99, suggestions for a more friendly, 256 pages, ISBN 9781631910043) loving and socially connected and The Illuminated Life of Christ life. Ideas include making a small (Black Dog & Leventhal, $24.99, 224 sacrifice for someone else (such as pages, ISBN 9781631910036), pair giving up your spot in a slow-movBible verses with classic paintings ing line), people-watching with that were either directly inspired or the intent to compliment everyone strongly influenced by them. The rather than judge them and passLife of Christ follows the gospels, ing along praise instead of gossip. and the paintings are by turns There are questions for reflection, lush and romantic, then suddenly a cue to review at the end of the stark and frightening, bringing the day and illustrative stories of the story home with power; a renderbig results that can come from ing of the ascension that depicts small actions. two feet disappearing up into the While they’re not Buddhist per ceiling would almost be funny, se, these practices put a practical were it not for the fear and wonder spin on spiritual ideas, beginning on the faces of the witnesses. The with self-care and carrying it forflexible cloth binding, end paward into the world, from friends pers and ribbon bookmark make and family to strangers. Take these these beautiful keepsakes, and the challenges and help create more juxtaposition of art and text offers for yourself and those around you.

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HOLLYWOOD B Y PAT H . B R O E S K E

Heading to Hollywood for the holidays

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n unstoppable film franchise. A luminous Golden Age star. A beloved oddball actor. This season’s standout entertainment-themed books run the gamut from design to drama, from stand-up to the stage.

Whatever your take on the Bond films—including the vastly differing opinions on which actor is the best Bond—the franchise’s production value is not up for debate. The large-format Bond by Design (DK, $50, 320 pages, ISBN 9781465437907) salutes the behind-the-scenes artists—including renowned production design-

is consistent is the quality and attention to detail. No wonder Bond is the most successful franchise in film history, with the 24th entry, Spectre, now in theaters and thoroughly represented in this elaborate collection.

A HOLLYWOOD LEGEND

Though she won three Academy Awards, Swedish actress Ingrid Bergman is best known for her role opposite Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca. Published to commemorate the centenary of her birth, the lavish and loving Ingrid Berg­ man: A Life in Pictures Photo of Bill Murray in Caddyshack  from The Big Bad Book of Bill Murray, (Chronicle, reprinted courtesy of the Everett Collection. $50, 528 pages, ISBN 9781452149554) takes readers ers Ken Adam, Syd Cain and Peter on a journey through her career, Lamont—and features a copious display of artwork, sets, costumes including her downward spiral and triumphant encore. and embellishments, making this With daughter Isabella Rosselhefty tome a must-have for 007 lini serving as co-editor, this book fans and devotees of production boasts more than 350 photos— design. some from Bergman’s private With many sections written collection—an introduction by her by Meg Simmonds, the archivist co-star and friend Liv Ullmann, for the Bond empire’s produca lengthy Bergman interview and tion company, the book moves texts by various acquaintances. film by film, featuring storyboard Her highly controversial liaison sequences, costume illustrations, with Italian filmmaker Roberto gadgetry ruminations and more. Styles vary from artist to artist. Adam, whose Bond career dates back to the 1962 debut title, Dr. No, liked to work with a Flo-master felt tip pen. Jump ahead many decades, and the artists embrace digital design; what

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Rossellini is detailed alongside the image that sparked the media frenzy: Bergman and Rossellini, who were both married to other people, walking hand in hand on the Amalfi coast. Published by Life magazine, the photo established Bergman’s reputation as a loose woman. When she became pregnant with Rossellini’s child and delivered the baby prior to their marriage, she became a Hollywood pariah. Beauty, talent, choices and sacrifice—they’re all on display here in Bergman’s intriguing story, all of it captured by the camera.

THE CULT OF BILL Whether he’s battling gophers, ghosts or zombies, Bill Murray is the quirky king of offbeat humor. As Robert Schnakenberg puts it in The Big Bad Book of Bill Murray (Quirk, $22.95, 272 pages, ISBN 9781594748011), his on-screen persona is that of “the sardonic slacker-trickster who charms his way out of precarious situations.” Topics are arranged alphabetically: Under “cats,” we learn that he’s allergic to them; under “Chase, Cornelius ‘Chevy,’ ” we hear about his rocky relationship with his fellow “Saturday Night Live” alum, including their fistfight prior to a February 1978 taping. His movies are all featured, as are the roles he turned down (like porn producer Jack Horner, subsequently played by Burt Reynolds, in Boogie Nights). As the book observes, the

beloved Murray is a complicated guy. (See the listing under “Ramis, Harold,” about his two-decade estrangement from his former pal and director.) Comedians usually are.

MAKE ’EM LAUGH Speaking of comics, more than a century of stand-up gets the spotlight in The Comedians: Drunks, Thieves, Scoundrels, and the History of American ­Comedy (Grove, $28, 432 pages, ISBN 9780802123985). Author Kliph N ­ esteroff, a former stand-up comic, conducted more than 200 interviews for a book that manages to be both encyclopedic and hugely entertaining. Did you know that the term “stand-up comic” was invented by the Mob, which owned the early clubs? Or that it was Redd Foxx, of TV’s “Sanford and Son,” who triggered the comedy album boom in the 1960s? Nesteroff takes us through the history of stand-up, with vivid stop-offs in burlesque, radio, early television, Vegas and the talk show circuit. Of course, comedy has a dark side. Nesteroff uses Robin Williams to remind us that the funniest guy in the room is sometimes hiding a world of pain.

BROADWAY’S BEST Celebratory and jam-packed with facts and great imagery, ­Musicals: The Definitive ­Illustrated Story (DK, $40, 360 pages, ISBN 9781465438867) focuses on more than 140 great musicals of stage and screen from the past century. The enduring classics are all accounted for, from Show Boat to The Phantom of the Opera, from Jesus Christ Superstar to Hair. Lush production photos, fascinating essays and facts about the genre’s geniuses, including Agnes de Mille, Jerome Robbins and Bob Fosse, make this a choice coffee-table tome. There’s much to sing about here, in what could easily become a favored reference work.


reviews T PI OP CK

FICTION

A DICTIONARY OF MUTUAL UNDERSTANDING

A reunion raises questions REVIEW BY HALEY HERFURTH

Decades after fleeing Japan and building a new life in America, Amaterasu Takahashi is confronted by a missing piece of her past. Badly scarred and bearing a trove of family secrets, a man arrives on her doorstep claiming to be her grandson, Hideo, who died in the bombing at Nagasaki along with his mother, Yuko. Ama spent countless hours searching for them amid the rubble and in hospitals. She doesn’t believe the man at the door. Still, he carries a collection of private, sealed letters that contain not only the story of Hideo’s survival and how he came to find her in the States, but also the secrets of a seemingly ordinary family, opening up wounds Ama had long tried to pretend were healed. As the story moves between past and present, Ama confronts feelings of guilt and grief over her losses, as well as hope that the future might hold more By Jackie Copleton than loneliness. Penguin, $16, 304 pages In her debut novel, journalist Jackie Copleton—who lived in Nagasaki ISBN 9780143128250, audio, eBook available for two years—manages to sensitively portray Japanese culture as well as the utter horror and devastation of August 9, 1945, from an angle DEBUT FICTION often unexplored in Western writing. Characterized by heartache, memories and promise, A Dictionary of Mutual Understanding is a gripping narrative about family and loss that will appeal to readers of historical and literary fiction.

LIKE FAMILY By Paolo Giordano Translated by Anne Milano Appel

Pamela Dorman $22, 160 pages ISBN 9780525428763 Audio, eBook available LITERARY FICTION

Brief encounters can have as great an impact as a lifelong relationship. Similarly, a short work of fiction can resonate more deeply than longer volumes. That’s the case with Like Family, the elegiac new novella by Paolo Giordano. In this deceptively simple tale of a widowed nanny who, we learn on the first page, has died, Giordano shows us how lives can intersect in profound and unexpected ways. The unnamed 35-year-old narrator is a physicist who isn’t sure whether his university contract, soon to expire, will be renewed. His wife, Nora, is an interior designer. When Nora is bedridden due to a difficult pregnancy, the couple

hires a childless, elderly woman known as Mrs. A. After their son, Emanuele, is born, the couple asks Mrs. A to stay on as a nanny and housekeeper. A fastidious woman who, each morning, rewashes the dishes the narrator had washed the night before, she becomes so much a part of their family that she accompanies them on Emanuele’s first day of school. After eight years in the family’s employment, however, Mrs. A calls one morning to resign. The reason she cites is that she’s tired. But a subsequent diagnosis reveals the real reason: She has stage four lung cancer. The obvious meaning of the book’s title is that Mrs. A is like a member of the family, just as she thinks of Emanuele as the grandson she and her late husband never had. But the book also asks us to consider what constitutes a family. This poignant work points out that there is no one way to define a family, and that, in any definition, the primary ingredient is the ability to love. —MICHAEL MAGRAS

PARADISE CITY By Elizabeth Day

Bloomsbury $27, 368 pages ISBN 9781620408360 Audio, eBook available LITERARY FICTION

Paradise City, which opens with a quote from the Guns N’ Roses song praising the virtues of a place full of possibilities, is a compassionate but upbeat look at four interlocking lives in contemporary London. The novel is both thoughtful and witty, unafraid of tackling big subjects (sexual assault, political asylum) even as it finds joy in small human connections. The story weaves together four perspectives, beginning with selfmade millionaire Sir Howard Pink and Ugandan political refugee Beatrice Kizza. When Pink assaults Kizza in his hotel room, it sets off a chain of events that draws in journalist Esme Reade. On the

outskirts of the city, a quiet widow uncovers something in her neighbor’s garden that has unexpected consequences for Pink. Filled with the kind of precise detail that makes a story come alive, Paradise City is most persuasive in its depiction of newspaper politics, drawn from author Elizabeth Day’s work as a journalist. When Reade describes the feeling of an interview going her way, there is a vibrancy there rooted in personal experience. Paradise City resolves a little too tidily, but is an intelligent, well-­ written novel with depth and heart. —LAUREN BUFFERD

THE EDGE OF LOST By Kristina McMorris

Kensington $15, 352 pages ISBN 9780758281180 Audio, eBook available HISTORICAL FICTION

Kristina McMorris evokes such a strong sense of place that to open her books feels less like reading and more like traveling. Her absorbing new novel, The Edge of Lost, opens on Alcatraz Island in 1937, where, on a foggy night, the warden’s 10-year-old daughter has gone missing. An inmate is hiding information about where she is. We are quickly zipped back to 1919 Dublin, meeting Shanley Keagan, a 12-year-old orphan whose vicious Uncle Will forces him to perform in pubs for spare change. Shan grabs an opportunity to get on a ship to America. How those two storylines intersect is at the heart of this epic, deeply felt tale of struggle and second chances, where Shan goes from a boy with dreams of Broadway to an inmate who “waited for the steel bars to slam.” McMorris was inspired in part by the children who grew up on Alcatraz Island while their parents were employed at the infamous prison. But Alcatraz is just one of many places in The Edge of Lost, a transporting piece of historical fiction. —AMY SCRIBNER

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NONFICTION

T PI OP CK

LIFE AND DEATH IN THE ANDES By Kim MacQuarrie

438 DAYS

Simon & Schuster $32.50, 448 pages ISBN 9781439168899 Audio, eBook available

Alone at sea

LATIN AMERICA

REVIEW BY HENRY L. CARRIGAN JR.

“His name was Salvador and he arrived with bloody feet.” From the opening sentence of Jonathan Franklin’s 438 Days: An Extraordinary True Story of Survival at Sea, this riveting adventure has us in its grip, spellbound and eager to know more about the mysterious Salvador Alvarenga. We learn that Alvarenga arrived in the Mexican coastal village of Costa Azul in the fall of 2008 looking to start a new life and leave behind his troubles in El Salvador. With bravado and tenacity, Alvarenga worked his way up, first taking menial jobs and gaining the villagers’ trust, and eventually captaining his own boat and earning a reputation as the best fisherman in the village. On November 17, 2012, Alvarenga set out with an untested mate, By Jonathan Franklin Cordoba, hoping to outrun a possible Norteno—a violent storm capable Atria, $26, 288 pages of producing hurricane-strength winds. After a successful haul on the ISBN 9781501116292, eBook available fishing grounds, the pair headed home, but within 20 miles of shore, their boat encountered the Norteno. To avoid capsizing in rough seas, NATURE they jettisoned almost all of their supplies; their engine failed, and by the time the winds had calmed, the two were floating far from shore at the mercy of fickle weather and the currents of the Pacific Ocean. Franklin, who spent a year interviewing Alvarenga, meticulously recounts the day-to-day lives of these mariners and their attempts to survive. Although Cordoba died in early 2013, the resourceful Alvarenga fought on, devising ways to catch fish, turtles and birds, and constructing a makeshift rain barrel out of plastic bottles found in the ocean. He repaired his tattered clothing with a fish fin fashioned into a needle. By the time he washed ashore on one of the atolls in the Marshall Islands on January 29, 2014, Alvarenga had survived longer at sea in a small boat than anyone previously recorded. His story of resilience, ingenuity and grit is an unforgettable true-life adventure. aging, received the 2014 prize for best essay from the American Society of Magazine Editors. By Roger Angell “Getting old is the second Doubleday biggest surprise of my life, but the $26.95, 320 pages first, by a mile, is our unceasing ISBN 9780385541138 need for deep attachment and Audio, eBook available intimate love,” Angell writes. “We ESSAYS oldies yearn daily and hourly for conversation and a renewed domesticity, for company at the movies or while visiting a museum, Roger Angell, now 94, has had an for someone close by in the car extraordinary life. A longtime fiction when coming home at night.” Some of my favorite selections editor of The New Yorker and one of the best-ever writers on baseball, he are about writers. Angell reflects is the only writer elected to both the on the 20,000 or so manuscripts he American Academy of Arts and Let- has rejected over the years and adters and the Baseball Hall of Fame. dresses many misunderstandings about fiction, pointing out that His wonderful new collection, This there is no one way to write a story Old Man: All in Pieces, is, he says, a grab bag, a portrait of his brain at or to edit one for publication. He notes that his fellow fiction editors this point in his life. The title piece, were very much alike in their pasa moving and personal account of

THIS OLD MAN

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sion for their work, but each went about the job differently. His own approach is to constantly ask tough questions about such things as clarity and tone, and, at the end, to ponder “Is it good enough? And is it any good at all?” In a postlude he writes, “[E]diting, I think remains a mystery to the world. Sometimes it even mystified me.” “Writing is hard,” he says, “even for authors who do it all the time.” He remembers his stepfather, E.B. White, rarely being satisfied with what he had written, sometimes commenting after sending his copy to The New Yorker: “It isn’t good enough. I wish it were better.” Angell need not worry about his own writing in this eloquent collection. It shares and illuminates and entertains in a variety of ways and is a reader’s delight.

Using the wildly diverse 4,300mile South American mountain chain as a backdrop, filmmaker and writer Kim MacQuarrie revisits the triumphs and depredations of such varied figures in the region as Charles Darwin, Che Guevara, drug cartel chief Pablo Escobar, Machu Picchu “discoverer” Hiram Bingham and the ever-mythic Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. But MacQuarrie is no hit-andrun chronicler cherry-picking fables. He immerses himself in the territory he’s been exploring since the late 1980s, when he first journeyed to Peru to interview imprisoned members of the Shining Path guerrilla movement. His account of how Shining Path leader Abimael Guzmán was finally run to ground is both a rousing good yarn and a case study in political error. The author shows that Guevara’s undoing was an instance of revolutionary fervor overriding common sense. He brings fresh details to the narrative by tracking down the teacher who fed and conversed with Guevara in the hours before a Bolivian soldier executed him. Although famous names provide much of the material in Life and Death in the Andes, they occupy only a part of MacQuarrie’s attention. He also delves into local cultures, explaining, for example, how an American helped found a thriving cooperative that rekindled interest in traditional Peruvian weaving. He retraces Darwin’s steps on the Galápagos Islands and travels to the tip of the continent to meet the last speaker of the once flourishing Yamana Indian language, destroyed by the ravages of colonialism. MacQuarrie is a master storyteller whose cinematic eye always shines through.

—ROGER BISHOP

—EDWARD MORRIS


children’s

CHRISTMAS BY JULIE HALE

Festive picture books celebrate the season

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here’s no topping the sense of excitement that comes with the countdown to Christmas. And there’s no better way to celebrate the season than snuggling up with a holiday story. Surprise the little reader in your life with one of the delightful books featured below, and let the countdown begin! Duck and the rest of the barnyard rascals get caught in a Christmas jam in Doreen Cronin’s hilarious Click, Clack, Ho! Ho! Ho! (Atheneum, $17.99, 40 pages, ISBN

9781442496736). Spruced up for Christmas Eve with a sprig of holly in his hat, Farmer Brown is hanging stockings by the fire. All is merry, bright and quiet, until he hears noises on the roof. Must be Santa, right? Wrong! It’s Duck, stirring up Christmas mischief. He’s hoping to deliver a gift to Farmer Brown in the style of Saint Nick. But upon seeing Santa in the sky, Duck dives into the chimney and gets stuck. Sheep, goats, cat and cows come to the rescue, but they get trapped, too. Luckily, Santa’s on hand to set them free, and soon they’re making merry around Farmer Brown’s tree. Betsy Lewin brings the Christmas revelry to life in spirited watercolor illustrations. As usual, Duck and

friends deliver big fun.

REUNITED FOR THE HOLIDAYS With Over the River & Through the Wood (Sterling, $14.95, 32 pages, ISBN 9781454910244), Linda Ashman offers an inspired update of Lydia Maria Child’s beloved 1844 poem. In this contemporary take on the classic, a group of widespread relatives—all very different—reunite for a seasonal celebration. Summoned by Grandma and Grandpa (“Come to our house for the holidays—and bring your favorite pie!”), the family members make the journey from various corners of the country by train, car, plane and ferry. When unexpected obstacles delay the travelers, a surprise sleigh ride saves the day. Brimming with holiday cheer, Ashman’s festive tale pays tribute to the modern family in all its varied configurations, and Kim Smith’s dynamic digital illustrations make this a holiday journey worth taking.

GIFT-GIVING AT ITS BEST In David Biedrzycki’s Me and My Dragon: Christmas Spirit (Charlesbridge, $17.95, 40 pages, ISBN 9781580896221), the boyand-beast team are preparing for the holidays. Lacking the funds to buy Christmas gifts, they take on odd (very, very odd) jobs for cash. Dragon’s fire-breathing abilities prove lucrative: He broils up menu items at the Burger Barn and toasts marshmallows, which his enterprising little partner sells for 50 cents. But when it’s time to go shopping, the boy has a change of heart, and he donates his money to a worthy cause. As for Dragon,

he contributes homemade cookies (although his baking skills are questionable). Biedrzycki’s clever digital illustrations are crammed with Christmas goodness—snowy sidewalks, costumed carolers and two happy friends.

MEDIEVAL MERRIMENT Filled with holiday witticisms, The Knights Before Christmas (Holt, $16.99, 32 pages, ISBN 9780805099324) is a clever send-up of Clement Clarke Moore’s classic poem, “A Visit from St. Nicholas.” Joan Holub’s playful adaptation features three bumbling noblemen—Brave Knight, Silent Knight and Polite Knight—who are guarding the king’s castle on Christmas Eve. Peace reigns, but not for long: A clatter on the drawbridge signals the arrival of Santa. Mistaking the jolly old elf for an invader, the knights set out to repel him, swords drawn and flourished. But Santa has gifts that he’s determined to deliver, and he launches a special attack on the castle—with sugarplums and chewing gum. Packed with Christmas wisecracks and colorful digital illustrations by Scott Magoon, this is a very merry olde Yuletide tale.

NEIGHBORHOOD CHEER “Sesame Street” alum Sonia

Manzano tells a big-city Christmas story in Miracle on 133rd Street (Atheneum, $17.99, 48 pages, ISBN 9780689878879). In their cramped apartment, José and his parents celebrate the holidays, although they pine for their native Puerto Rico. When Mami discovers the stove’s too small for her roast, José has a solution: cook the roast at the neighborhood pizzeria. As José and Papi embark on this tasty mission, they encounter cranky grownups and quarreling kids, none of whom seem happy about the holidays. But on their return trip, a bit of Christmas enchantment occurs, and the tempting aroma of the cooked roast works like magic. Marjorie Priceman’s whimsical illustrations, with swirling eddies of color, are perfect for this tale that will make readers believe in the power of Christmas.

CLASSIC COME TO LIFE No Christmas would be complete without a few rounds of “Jingle Bells,” the timeless sleighride tune composed by James Lord Pierpont in 1857. In Jingle Bells: A Magical Cut-Paper Edition (Candlewick, $19.99, 12 pages, ISBN 9780763678210), artist Niroot Putta­pipat brings the holiday gem to vivid life through precise cutpaper montages. A pair of sweethearts—shown in dramatic, dark silhouette against a snow-filled backdrop—takes off on a sleigh ride through a 19th-century winter wonderland. Song lyrics run along the bottom of each spread, and at the end of the ride, there’s a popup surprise the little ones will love. A sing-along is definitely in order!

Copyright © 2015 David Biedrzycki. From Me and My Dragon: Christmas Spirit, reprinted with permission from Charlesbridge.

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gifts

CHILDREN'S BY ALICE CARY

Treasured books to wrap in brightly colored paper

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ake a fresh look at some age-old classics, or stash away some ideas for family fun. It’s a bumper year for children’s gift books, and the stars of this year’s crop include something new for Harry Potter fans, a Star Wars extravaganza and an ingenious offering from David Macaulay for budding engineers. There’s something extra special about passing along your favorite books to a new generation of young readers. Classic children’s tales really are gifts that keep on giving. Whether you’re a longtime Harry Potter fan or are introducing a new reader to the series, check out the superbly illustrated edition of J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone (Arthur A. Levine, $39.99, 256 pages, ISBN 9780545790352, ages 8 and up). Award-winning British illustrator Jim Kay has created more than 100 illustrations for this gorgeous book, full of colorful visualizations of Harry’s first adventure. Kay didn’t have an easy task, as so many fans already have fully formed images of these beloved characters and scenes. Never fear: His art glimmers with all the excitement, joy, mystery and thrills of this magical tale. Rowling has given her approval, saying she loves “his interpretation of Harry Potter’s world,” which “moved me profoundly.” This special edition features an attractive layout with text that’s easy on the eyes, a bonus for young and old alike, making it perfect for reading aloud. Avid Potter fans will want—no, need—to add this book to their collections. Another classic tale gets a redo with Gillian Cross’ retelling of Homer’s The Iliad (Candlewick, $19.99, 160 pages, ISBN 9780763678326, ages 8 to 12), with striking illustrations by Neil Packer. The duo previously collaborated on The Odyssey, and both books make an excellent introduction for middle schoolers discovering these ancient tales for the first time. Cross’ text is riveting, elegant and accessible, bringing epic battle scenes to life: “The Greeks threw huge rocks down onto them, but the Trojans replied by hurling bigger stones at the wall. They

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flew like snow in blizzard, clanging against helmets and shields and covering the ground.” Packer’s artwork is contemporary, colorful, dramatic and just right for luring

book’s epilogue, Leupin infused his illustrations with humor and a magical glow, and most importantly, he made sure that when “danger threatens . . . children are not just

in a preteen audience. A helpful introduction, an informative afterword and a reference spread showing the names and faces of major characters and their allegiances are also included. Tales from the Brothers Grimm (NorthSouth, $29.95, 160 pages, ISBN 9780735842281, ages 4 to 8) features the artwork of famed Swiss poster designer Herbert Leupin. After taking the advertising world by storm in the 1940s, the late graphic artist began illustrating fairy tales. Leupin’s legacy is given new life here, and his illustrations are indeed poster-worthy. These nine fairy tales include classics like “Hansel and Gretel” and “Snow White,” along with less familiar choices such as “Hans in Luck” and “The Wolf and the Seven Little Kids.” As noted in the

afraid but also have something to laugh at.” Leupin’s creations burst with personality and color, and children as well as adults will delight in these offerings.

MOVIE NIGHT MADNESS Star Wars fans eagerly awaiting the release of The Force Awakens will want to get their hands on Star Wars: Absolutely Everything You Need to Know (DK, $19.99, 200 pages, ISBN 9781465437853, ages 8 to 12). This is a book made for perusing and quizzing fellow enthusiasts, with graphics galore and numerous statistics, quotes, questions and trivia. Do you know what a nerf herder is, or the name of Hondo’s favorite ship? My favorites are the “Peek behind the scenes” tidbits, such as the fact that Han Solo was a big green alien

in the original rough draft. Who knew that a termite infestation in George Lucas’ house inspired the buzzing swarm of Geonosians, and that he brought in specimens for his art designers? An index helps readers keep track of all of these facts and figures. Planning a family movie night can be challenging, but things just got easier with 101 Movies to See Before You Grow Up: Be Your Own Movie Critic—The MustSee Movie List for Kids (Walter Foster Jr., $12.95, 144 pages, ISBN 9781633220430, ages 8 to 12). Instead of trying to strongarm your kids into watching an old favorite of yours, just hand them this book and let them decide. Suzette Valle’s interactive guide is aimed at third- to seventh-graders, but there’s something for everyone in a wide range of categories that includes everything from classics like It’s a Wonderful Life and Toy Story  to discussion-provoking choices like Life Is Beautiful and Super Size Me. Each page-long entry contains a synopsis, rating and run time, a variety of fun facts and space for viewers to make notes about their own reactions to the film. (A few classics, like The Wizard of Oz and The Sound of Music, get two-page spreads.) Natasha Hellegouarch’s illustrations and graphics add just the right touch of color and fun.

LESSONS THEY’LL LOVE David Macaulay, celebrated for his best-selling The Way Things Work, has created a unique exploratory adventure in How Machines Work: Zoo Break! (DK, $19.99, 32 pages, ISBN 9781465440129, ages 7 to 10). First, it’s a story about two animals, Sloth and Sengi (a little elephant shrew), trying to break out of the zoo. More than that, however, it’s an interactive pop-up book that brings six simple machines to life in a wonderful way: wedge, wheel and axle, lever, inclined plane, screw and pulley. Sloth and Sengi try to put these simple machines to work, and the book succeeds grandly as both


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gifts a fun story and an educational experience just right for the STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) curriculum. Macaulay is a Caldecott Medal winner and a MacArthur Fellow, and his trademark humorous illustrations hold everything together with spreads that are equally intriguing and enlightening. A glossary at the end helps solidify the scientific concepts, while the madcap ending is perfectly pulled off. Kids of all ages will enjoy SENSEation­ al Illusions (DK, $19.99, 32 pages, ISBN 9781465438294, ages 8 to 12), an engaging book filled with quick and quirky activities to test your senses, as well as simple scientific explanations for each. Readers will find a variety of optical illusions, including a large pop-up sculpture with three hidden animals waiting to be found. There are scratchand-sniff quizzes and directions for easy taste tests that require only simple ingredients. Experiments involving touch and balance include two mazes to be completed with one finger at the ready and both eyes closed, as well as a maze full of booby traps to be navigated by three small ball bearings (included). Chockfull of fun, it can be enjoyed solo or with buddies. Either way, it’s sure to be a hit.

ON-THE-GO FUN Planning a road trip? Bring along The 50 States (Wide Eyed Editions, $30, 112 pages, ISBN 9781847807113, ages 7 to 10), a large book of fact-filled maps that allows young geographers to get lost in the many details. A twopage spread for each state includes

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CHILDREN'S the map, an introductory overview, a chart of key facts (capital, largest city, etc.) and a timetable of memorable moments in history. Also included are brief mentions of famous people from each state, from familiar faces to contemporary notables. Alabama’s pages spotlight Rosa Parks and Helen Keller, as well as track-and-field athlete Carl Lewis and actress Octavia Spencer. Author Gabrielle Balkan’s research and writing draws readers in with a fun mash-up of history, geography and pop culture, while Sol Linero’s illustrations make every spread a delight. I even learned a few new tidbits about my beloved West Virginia. If you need to occupy a preschooler or an early-elementary student, grab a copy of Making Faces!: Star in Your Own Works of Art (Thames & Hudson, $17.95, 64 pages, ISBN 9780500650523, ages 3 and up) by Jacky Bahbout and illustrated by Momoko Kudo. This large, placemat-sized drawing pad has a simple, silly concept: Each page has a hole in the middle and contains drawings and a theme (party time, clown, soccer player, dragon, etc.) to which young artists can add their own details. The page titled “Moose on the loose!!!” encourages youngsters to draw their own antlers and add extra trees to the forest. Once complete, kids can tear out the page, put their face in the hole and pose for a photo. This is a great choice when waiting for restaurant meals and appointments, a creative alternative to video and phone distractions. Send the photo to Grandma and everybody’s happy!

meet  MARYANN COCCA-LEFFLER

the title of your Q: What’s new book?

would you describe Q: How the book?

has been the biggest influence on your work? Q: Who

was your favorite subject in school? Why? Q: What

Q: Who was your childhood hero?

books did you enjoy as a child? Q: What

one thing would you like to learn to do? Q: What

message would you like to send to young readers? Q: What

A HOMEMADE TOGETHER CHRISTMAS Maryann Cocca-Leffler is the author-illustrator of more than 50 children’s books. In A Homemade Together Christmas (Albert Whitman, $16.99, 32 pages, ISBN 9780807533666, ages 4 to 7), a sweet family of pigs discovers that spending time together is the greatest Christmas present of all. Cocca-Leffler lives in New Hampshire with her husband and two daughters.


A perfect gift for everyone on your holiday list F RO M M AC M I L L A N C H I L D R E N ’ S P U B L I S H I N G G RO U P

Available in picture and board book formats

Available in picture and board book formats

Your baby’s first word will be “Dada” . . . if you take JIMMY FALLON’s advice from this #1 New York Times bestseller!

Swim along with MR. FISH on his holiday shopping quest!

Bestselling author NANCY TILLMAN shows that the most magical gift of the season is time spent with loved ones.

When the blizzard just won’t stop, can TRACTOR MAC save the day?

Newbery Medal winner KATHERINE APPLEGATE’s latest New York Times bestseller is an unforgettable story about family, friendship, and resilience.

H “FULL OF HEART and replete with challenging ciphers for readers to decode.” —Publishers Weekly, starred review

The HIGHLY ANTICIPATED follow–up to The Girl Who Could Fly is finally here!

Six dangerous outcasts. One impossible heist. Return to the Grishaverse in Leigh Bardugo’s

The final book in Marissa Meyer’s New York Times–bestselling LUNAR CHRONICLES.

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#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER.

Imprints of Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group mackids.com Farrar Straus Giroux

Henry Holt

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WORDNOOK

BY THE EDITORS OF MERRIAM-WEBSTER

STRANGE BEDFELLOWS

Dear Editor: I read an article that called one of the Republican presidential candidates a mugwump, saying he was independent politically. Where did this strange word come from? N. P. Danville, Kentucky In 1884, many Republicans rejected their party’s presidential nominee, James G. Blaine, and instead supported the Democratic candidate, Grover Cleveland. Republicans who remained loyal to their party accused the bolters of a supercilious attitude and nicknamed them mugwumps. The word had previously been used as a jesting, slightly derogatory term for someone who considered himself important. The name given to Republican dissidents in 1884 later came to be used for anyone who took an independent attitude toward political issues; in the 20th century it was jocularly defined as

someone who sits on the political fence “with his ‘mug’ on one side and his ‘wump’ on the other.” Despite appearances, the word is not a compound with mug but a loan into colonial American English from Massachuset, the now-extinct language of the Algonquian-speaking Indians of eastern Massachusetts. In a 17th-century translation of the Bible into Massachuset, missionary John Eliot used mugquomp to mean “lord” or “chief.”

SPELL CHECK

Dear Editor: I have heard the word schism pronounced three different ways: as if it starts with “sk,” with “sh,” and with just “s.” Why are there so many variations? R. B. Reading, Pennsylvania

English spelling, whereby words formerly spelled as they were pronounced (like oner, douten, indite and receite) were given extra letters to match their ancestral forms in Latin and Greek (yielding honor, doubt, indict and receipt). The modern spelling of Middle English scisme is a product of this reform, as is the modern confusion over its pronunciation. The \ski-zem\ variant is a spelling pronunciation; the \shi-zem\ variant is another spelling pronunciation following the conventions of modern French or German; and the \si-zem\ variant retains the original Middle English and Middle French sound. Some people insist the original \si-zem\ alone is correct, but many educated speakers today use the fully acceptable spelling pronunciation \ski-zem\.

with the bell that rings the end of a class. But my friend insists it’s a boxing term. Which is right? C. T. Bakersfield, California

DOWN FOR THE COUNT

Send correspondence regarding Word Nook to:

NOvember

During the Renaissance, with its rebirth of classical learning, a “silent” revolution took place in

Dear Editor: I always thought that the expression saved by the bell had to do

While the class bell theory is a popular one, made more so by the early ’90s television sitcom of that name, your friend is right: Saved by the bell comes from the vocabulary of boxing. In boxing, when a fighter is knocked down by an opponent, the referee begins a count of 10. If the boxer cannot stand up by the end of the count, the fight is lost. However, if during the count the bell rings, signaling the end of the round, the boxer has until the beginning of the next round to get up. Sometimes this additional time is enough to recover, and thus the boxer is saved by the bell.

Language Research Service P.O. Box 281 Springfield, MA 01102

Test Your Mental Mettle with Puzzles from The Little Book of Big Word Puzzles MAKE THE CONNECTION

DIFFICULTY: COMPLETION:

TIME:___________

MISSING DEFINITIONS FINDER

DIFFICULTY: COMPLETION:

TIME:___________

Using the clues below, find and circle the words concealed in the letter grid.

Fill in the boxes with common two-word phrases with the help of the clues below. The last word in each pair will be the first word in the following pair.

1 Fine physical condition 2 Lose weight, exercise, start to eat right, etc. 3 New York City, to Miami 4 Belgium border 5 Member of the pipefish family 6 Biting insect 7 Be full of hope or elation 8 Optimistic expectations

workman.com

ac·cel·er·ate verb \ik-`se-lə-ˌrāt\ to move ________ : to gain ________ ben·e·fi·cial adjective \ˌbe-nə-ˈfi-shəl\ producing ________ or helpful results or ________ erupt verb \i-ˈrəpt\ to send out ________, ash, ________, etc., in a sudden explosion lei·sure noun \ˈlē-zhər, ˈle-, ˈlā-\ ________ when you are not ________ ob·sta·cle noun \ˈäb-sti-kəl, -ˌsti-\ something that ________ your ________ so·lar adjective \ˈsō-lər, -ˌlär\ produced by or using the sun’s ________ or ________ Workman is a registered trademark of Workman Publishing Co., Inc.


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