Archive for the Books Category
So I’ve been wanting to do a link love post for my top ten droppers. I have ten "reject pile" books but by and large they are not a good fit for my top droppers. I need architects and real estate fans, parents and pre-schoolers, history buffs and green living types. What I have, mostly, is techies, blogging help and fashionistas. So rather than trying to do a list and dedicating a book to each of my top droppers, I am simply posting the book covers below. And just this once, rather than linking to the book’s Worldcat page, each book cover is linked to a top droppers blog. If the title or the cover catches your eye, please do visit Worldcat to locate the nearest library copy or use the Powell’s search box to purchase it. My sincerest thanks to my top droppers, and please Do click on the book covers to find out who they are, and look for a more substantive book review again tomorrow on The Thin Red Line.
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Tags: Entecard link love, Reject Pile, top droppers
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If you’ve come to fear that you spend Way too much time watching House Hunters on HGTV, if you’ve found yourself Zillow-ing everyone from your neighbors to a blind date or if you have spent so much on buying and upgrading your home that you are "house poor", you may well have developed a case of House Lust. And author Daniel McGinn will be the first to assure you that you are not alone. With the enthusiasm of a bit of his own "house lust", McGinn examines America’s fascination with our houses from almost every perspective. And McGinn doesn’t do any of it half-assed. From buying and rennovating his own home, to becoming an absentee landlord of a duplex in Pocatello, Idaho (a city he has never once even visited, let alone lived in) to obtaining his real estate agent license, just for the heck of it McGinn has lived it up to write it down.
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Tags: Book Reviews, Books, Daniel McGinn, Home Ownership, House Lust, real estate
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Back in 2002, while traveling to New Orleans for my father’s funeral, I first read The Practical Nomad by Edward Hasbrouck. Subtitled "how to travel around the world", this is The definitive guide to long term international travel. Hasbrouck, a San Francisco travel agent and highly experienced world traveler covers absolutely everything you need to know to travel around the world for six months to a year or more. One of Hasbrouck’s major themes is the educational benefit of international travel, and while the book is plump full of specific advice for all matter of travel details, it also talks a great deal about the First, Second, Third and Fourth "Worlds" and about the global North and South. Anyone not already well familiar with these concepts would do well to read this book even if they are not planning or hoping to someday plan a long international journey.
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Tags: Book Reviews, Books, Edward Hasbrouck, How To Travel Around The World, The Practical Nomad, travel
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Today, a review from my partner, Ron:
A Life in Smoke is an odd sort of book. In it the author documents her many attempts to quit smoking and a whole load of rationalizations as to why she took up smoking and continued to self sabotage all of her attempts to quit. Some as drastic as chaining her self up to keep from smoking.
Her feelings of letting her loved ones down by failing only further drag her down into self loathing and self pity. Quitting is hard, and there are more psychological addiction issues than physical ones. And she does touch on most of them, but it seems almost like an accident when she does.
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Tags: A Life In Smoke, Book Reviews, Books, Julia Hansen, Memoir, smoking
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There Are Monsters Everywhere, believes the young protagonist of this delightful Easy Picture Book from Mercer Mayer. And I am inclined to agree. While the boy in Mayer’s book believes that monsters are under the bed, in the bathroom and out by the trash cans, I myself have been more than a bit dis-concerted by such meanies as the Earthsuck monster (which seems to have sucked away all of our DSL connectivity for the past two days, to the point I have come to the library with my laptop just to be able to get online or the Heat Wave monster who made things right steamy around here (until a Thunderstorm monster rolled in and cleared him away). Mayer’s young hero sees a sign at school and signs up for karate classes and makes short work of his monsters with amazing kicks, punches and postures. I on the other hand am not so sure what to do about my remaining monsters. But cancelling Earthlink when our contract comes up in October is beginning to seem like a Good Idea. There Are Monsters Everywhere. Recommended.
Tags: Book Reviews, Books, Easy Picture Books, Mercer Mayer, There Are Monsters Everywhere
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Sub-titled "How I Stopped Worrying About What To Do With The Rest Of My Life & Started Driving a Yellow Cab", Melissa Plaut’s Hack is an easy and charming memoir on the life of a New York City cab driver. With wit and understatement, Plaut relates her tale of deciding "as an adventure" to try driving a cab for a living for while, filling out the forms, taking the test, obtaining her hack license and driving for a medium sized taxi firm in New York City. From dealing with agressive and obnoxious drivers to competing with other hacks for fares, Plaut does a good job of capturing the romance of life behind the wheel. She also manages quite matter-of-factly to out herself as a lesbian and reminds her friend, on a late night taxi ride home from The Hole, that taxi drivers always listen in on conversations, so the cab is Not a great place to dish an entire evening’s worth of people. All in all a pleasant and informative read. Recommended.
Tags: Book Reviews, Books, Hack, Melissa Plaut, Memoir, Non-Fiction, Taxicab
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Happy Wednesday, everybody! It’s time once again for an Easy Picture Books roundup and today’s lot were all written by a couple of Davids. First off is David McPhail, whose Pigs Aplenty, Pigs Galore is a richly colorful delight. Late one evening, the author sat reading in his favorite chair and thought he heard some noise coming from the kitchen and cautiously stepped through the kitchen door, whence he slipped on a banana peel and fell smack dab into a whole big pile of pigs. Pigs here, there and everywhere making and eating all kinds of food, wearing all sorts of outfits, all cleverly illustrated with the cutest pigs. Pigs apltenty, pigs galore! Highly Recommended.
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Tags: Book Reviews, Books, David Mc Phail, David Shannon, Easy Picture Books, No David, Pigs Aplenty Pigs Galore, The Rain Came Down
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Today’s book is one I honestly hope you will never need to consult. Though if you ever find yourself needing a book like this, I can unreservedly recommend Jari Holland Buck’s Hospital Stay Handbook. Subtitled "a guide to becoming a patient advocate for your loved ones", Buck begins by telling the story of her husband’s seven and a half month hospitalization for pancreatitis, a condition which struck quite suddenly and which the doctors were never able to determine the cause of.
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Tags: Book Reviews, Books, health care, Hospital Stay Handbook, Jari Holland Buck, patient advocacy
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Happy Wednesday! Time for another Easy Picture Books roundup and I have three really cute ones for you today. A Bear And His Boy caught my attention last week and proved to be utterly delightful. One morning a very ‘type A’ bear with a hugely jam packed schedule wakes up to find that there is a boy on his head. The bear and the boy proceed through their busy, busy day. In the end the boy persuades the bear to stop for awhile and smell the lilacs. Sean Bryan’s cleverly rhymed text and Tom Murphy’s simple, delightful illustrations make A Bear And His Boy a must read for the pre-school set. Highly Recommended.
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Tags: Book Reviews, Books, Easy Picture Books
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Just in case $4.xx/gallon gas and the seemingly interminable and insurmountable problems in Junior’s Iraq weren’t causing you enough headaches, Andrei Lankov– a professor of Korean history and politics at the Australian National University has written a distinctive and eye opening book about the realities of daily life in North Korea. I have to confess that apart from occasionally shelving the Korean collection at the library and having once upon a time watched the television show M*A*S*H to the point of total immersion, I know very little about either of the Koreas. And precious little scholarship exists about current day North Korea, despite the heavy coverage of Pyongyang’s nuclear arms program and the vague and ultimately empty threats from Washington. So this 2007 trade paperback caught my eye at the circulation and I brought it home and learned a bit about North Korea.
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Tags: Andrei Lankov, Book Reviews, Books, daily life in North Korea, Non-Fiction, North Korea, North of the DMZ
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Starting off the new week with a Ron Review, one of my partner Ron’s occasional takes on a book I probably would not have selected.
Welcome to Your Brain by Sandra Aamodt and Sam Wang is a witty and well written tour through the human brain. They explore modern myths such as that we only use 10% of our brains, (we actually use it all). They also refute the myth that Alcohol and Pot kill brain cells. The authors cover the basic anatomy of the brain. How and why it does what it does and that occasionally it will lie to you in order to do what you need to do during the day.
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Tags: Book Reviews, Books, Non-Fiction, Ron Reviews, Sam Wang, Sandra Aamodt, Welcome To Your Brain, Why You Lose Your Car Keys But Never Forget How To Driv
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Yikes. How did I manage to let a whole week pass without doing a single blog post? It’s certainly not that I didn’t read any noteworthy books this past week. But somehow or other I let the whole week go by without posting so much as a book cover. And everything about this first book is late. I am late getting around to reading it, the library branch where I work was a full year late getting around to offering this particular title and I had not previously read any of Christopher Buckley’s much-praised earlier works.
Boomsday is the story of Cassandra Devine, the young Yale hopeful who learns that her father has invested her tuition money in a dot.com start-up and therefore must serve in the Army in order to earn her way to school, is a comic delight. As Cassandra’s brief stint in the service throws her into the arms of a lecherous Congressman who speeds Cassandra’s way into a power broker position at a hot K Street firm in Washington DC, where Cassandra will go on to offer a ‘modest proposal’ that the Baby Boomer generation agree to "voluntarily discorporate" by age eighty in return for some eye-popping tax benefits. Leading on a shadowy league of activists via her blog at cassandra.net Cassandra and her Congress Critter actually get the darned thing passed, though with so many typically Boomer perks thrown in (i.e. tax exemptions for purchase of Sedgways) that the onerous burden Cassandra had hoped to lift from her own generation is as burdensome as ever. Absolutely laugh-out-loud funny, a Real Treat. Not to be missed.
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Tags: Armchair Travel, Book Reviews, Books, Boomsday, Christopher Buckley, Debbie, Don Freeman, Easy Picture Books, Fiction, G Brian Karas, Harter, Laya Steinberg, Non-Fiction, Oh No Gotta Go, Quiet There's a Canary in the Library, Ryokan Japan's Finest Spas and Inns, Short Takes, Susan Middleton Elya, Thesaurus Rex
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I had thought about doing another top ten droppers link love post this weekend, but given that I only have one book I consider at all suitable– cool colors for modern living is another great color book that I unreservedly recommend to Aerten Art who is, I think my number Three dropper this week. On the other hand, I do have 5 other great books, none of which I would particularly want to "tag" to any of my other droppers, great though both the droppers and the books are. These are all fairly controversial and so clearly fit the "interesting and unusual" portions of my tag line that I feel I just Have to blog about these books.
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Tags: Book Reviews, Books, Short Takes
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It seems as though I have always been a fan of Lawrence Block’s mysteries, discovering in high school his series of "Burglar Who" books (such as The Burglar Who Liked To Quote Kipling) featuring Bernie Rhodenbarr, the memorable used book dealer who moonlighted as a professional thief. And I have previously read a number of the later books featuring recovering alcoholic private investigator Matthew Scudder. So when I came upon this just recently released special twenty-fifth anniversary edition of the fifth Scudder novel, which was first published back in 1982 (the year I graduated High School, yikes). As the author explains in an after word this novel is particularly important in that it is the first in the series where the character begins confronting his own problems with alcohol and stops drinking for the first time.
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Tags: Book Reviews, Books, Eight Million Ways To Die, Fiction, Lawrence Block, Mystery
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And a Happy Wednesday to you! It’s time for another Easy Picture Book roundup and I have some great ones for you today. First off, is Betsy Everitt’s Mean Soup. A child is in a very bad mood until his mother puts a pot of water on to boil and together they stir all of their anger into the Mean Soup. A cute suggestion on dealing with anger, though the illustrations were not all they might be. The book is beautifully colored and very striking. Recommended.
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Tags: Betsy Everitt, Book Reviews, Books, Don't Forget Winona, Dorothee de Monfreid, Easy Picture Books, I'd Really Like To Eat A Child, Jeanne Whitehouse Peterson, Kimberly Bulcken Root, Mean Soup, Sylviane Donnio
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Happy Tuesday! The first book up today, I’m sorry to say is definitely Not a winner. I only managed to read the introduction and part of the first chapter of Nancy DeVille’s Death By Supermarket and was more than turned-off enough by the very strident and accusative tone to simply dismiss it. Ron, however, read most of it and said that many if not most of the academic studies DeVille cites have been dis-credited or dis-proven. Clearly, Nancy DeVille is a woman with a mission to demonize the supermarket and packaged foods industries. While these industries may well deserve scrutiny and criticism, this book is of little value to anyone. Not Recommended.
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Tags: Book Reviews, Books, Death By Supermarket, Fiction, Hitomi Kanehara, Nancy DeVille, Snakes and Earrings
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Happy Weekend! For those of you who are off from work, I thought I would pop in and post about the most interesting book that I came across at work yesterday. Bruce Bickel and Stan Jantz have written an un-apologetic rant against Christians they describe as "very much like the Pharisees of Jesus’ day". This new 2008 original trade paperback release caught my eye while shelving this afternoon and after just a quick glimpse I just knew I would have to blog about it right away.
Bickel and Jantz who have written over 50 books together, many of then Christian themed have decided it’s time for real Christians to stand up and condemn the outrageous behavior of their more colorful Christian counterparts, such as the Rev. Fred Phelps (the "Got Hates Fags" Folks) and others who clearly seem to lose sight of Jesus’ message of love and compassion for your fellor humans, rather than a humorousless doctrinaire existence of rigid, inflexible rules. I’m Fine With God…It’s Christians I Can’t Stand comes Highly Recommended.
Hope everyone has a fantastic weekend and I will be back in this space on Monday night to share more books that have recently crossed The Thin Red Line.
Tags: Book Reviews, Books, Bruce Bickel, Friday, I'm Fine With God...It's Christians I Can't Stand, Non-Fiction, Stan Jantz
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Today’s architectural books are a far cry from my usual eye candy selections. Both The Concrete House by Pieter A VanderWerf and The Rammed Earth House by David Easton are detailed and practical manuals for those interested in pursuing either of these very earth-friendly and efficient building types. While the writing style of each book is a bit different with The Concrete House taking on a questions and answers style that definitely lends readability and provides answers to all sorts of questions.
This "conversational" style works very effectively for VanderWerf who does a great job of selling "Insulating Concrete Forms" which are highly insulating foam bricks designed to have concrete pored into them, thus creating a highly energy efficient home which can be finished in almost any architectural style. These homes are highly resistant to weather related disasters highly energy efficient. The only drawback seems to be that it is somewhat more expensive than conventional building at this time (though this may change if the construction method becomes more commonly used). A useful and important book for anyone contemplating a new home building project. Recommended.
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Tags: Book Reviews, Books, Cynthia Wright, David Easton, Home Construction, Home Ownership, Pieter A VanderWerf, The Concrete House, The Rammed Earth House
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I fear my techie friends will be disappointed to learn that this post has Absolutely Nothing Whatsoever to do with Digital Subscriber Lines or my (somewhat) High(er) Speed Internet connection. The parents of pre-schoolers among my readership will be thrilled to learn that I am finally getting around to posting another Easy Picture Books Roundup!
D is for dragon and is also for Carmen Agra Deedy, author of a delightful book titled The Library Dragon. When Sunrise Elementary School seeks a "thick-skinned" new librarian, just about everyone is shocked that the new hire turns out to be a real dragon. But when a child who lost her glasses wanders into the library and begins reading a book out loud, the children gather round for story time and Miss Lotta’s scales fall off revealing her to be a wonderful children’s librarian. Highly Recommended.
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Tags: Benjamin Lacombe, Book Reviews, Books, Carmen Agra Deedy, Cherry and Olive, Easy Picture Book Roundup, Jon Scieszka, Lane Smith, The Library Dragon, The True Story Of The Three Little Pigs
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Pass the egg rolls! Jennifer 8 Lee, a first generation Chinese American (her middle name, the numeral eight, connotes prosperity in Chinese) has written a rollicking fun book about everyone’s favorite cuisine. Starting with an odd Powerball drawing that saw a huge number of second place winners which turned out to have been selected from a fortune cookie Lee dives into the topic of American-style Chinese restaurants with gusto and explores a number of issues most diners probably never considered.
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Tags: Adventures In the World of Chinese Food, Book Reviews, Books, Jennifer 8 Lee, The Fortune Cookie Chronicles
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