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Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’

Review: The Kindly Ones by Jonathan Littell

March 15, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Uncategorized

My review of The Kindly Ones appeared on the Internet Review of books. Below is the opening paragraph: 

THE KINDLY ONES 
By Jonathan Littell (translated from the French by Charlotte Mandell) 
992 pp. Harper $29.95

Oh my human brothers, let me tell you how it happened. I am not your brother, you’ll retort, and I don’t want to know. And it is certainly true that this is a bleak story, but an edifying one too, a real morality play, I assure you. You might find it a bit long — a lot of things happened, after all—but perhaps you’re not in too much of a hurry; with a little luck you’ll have some to spare. Toccata, The Kindly Ones

This intriguing opening paragraph is how Jonathan Littell in his controversial behemothThe Kindly Ones lures readers into the abysmal world of Dr. Maximilien Aue, the book’s narrator. Aue, an unrepentant Nazi bureaucrat, takes his audience on a journey back through history to the most miserable places— Babi Yar, Stalingrad, and Auschwitz—and reflects about his past as a young man before the war and as an SS officer, reasoning with his readers that if he was able to commit atrocities in the name of country and duty, weren’t they capable as well?

To read more click here.

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Ack! Which Book Should I Read?

March 13, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Uncategorized


I have a 13 books to choose.  Which one will be next?

  • Lucky Girl: A Memoir, Mai-Ling Hopgood. I didn’t request this one, but Algonquin Books sent it to me. Ms. Hopgood was one of the first wave of Asian adoptees to arrive in America, faces her past when her Chinese birth family requests a reunion after more than two decades. I’m not very keen on memoirs, but this does seem interesting that her birth family wanted to meet her.
  • Siren’s Feast: An Edible Odyssey, Nancy Mehagian. This is another memoir. 
  •  A Mad Desire to Dance, Elie Wiesel. I have a soft spot for Elie Wiesel. Everytime I look at his photograph and stare into his sad eyes, my heart does a little flip. I’ve only read Night and Dawn so I thought I would venture to read more of his books.  This one is about a European expat living in New York who suffers from a profound sense of desperation  and loss and his relationship with his psychiatrist. 
  • Three books from Palgrave Macmillan all on Spain:

Franco and the Axis Stigma, David Winegate Pike

Republicanism and Anticlerical Nationalism in Spain, Enrique A. Sanabria
Roosevelt and Franco during the Second World War, Joan Maria Thomas
  • From the great publicists (Lauren, Susan, and Sarah) at Oxforford University Press:

After Hitler: Recivilizing Germans, 1945-1995, Konrad Jarausch

Fleeing Hitler: France 1940, Hanna Diamond
The Day Wall Street Exploded: A Story of America in its First Age of Terrorism,                     Beverly Gage
  • Target Patton: The Plot to Assassinate General George S. Patton, Robert K. Wilcox
  • Etta, Gerald Koplon. This is historical fiction. It intrgued me because it’s about Etta Place, The Sundance Kid’s girlfriend. Not much is know about her and I’m curious of how he’s handled this.
  • The Last Dickens, Matthew Pearl
  • Drood, Dan Morris 
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Hooked on Scandinavian Crime Fiction

February 23, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Uncategorized

In between reviews, I like to read fun books. These are the ones that don’t feel like work. You read them for the pure enjoyment of entertainment. While I was laid up with the flu and struggling to write three reviews, I listened to the audio version of Steig Larsson’s The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. Oh boy, I was hooked and I was so taken in with his book that I knew I had to read more. Unfortunately, I discovered that Larsson only wrote three books–the Millennium Trilogy–in 2004, he died of a heart attack. 

After combing through several blogs, I discovered that his second novel, The Girl who Played with Fire, already out in the UK, would be avaiblable in the US by July. I had to get an advanced copy. I needed to know more about Lisbeth Salander and what made her tick. 
The book arrived on Saturday. I started reading at 3:00 pm and didn’t go to sleep until 3:00 am. Suffice it to say, I couldn’t put it down. And yes, reviews for both books are upcoming. 
I’m behind on Stuffed, but that comes later this week. I promise.  
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Review: War is Beautiful by James Neugass

February 15, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Uncategorized


This is a minor interruption in the scheduled book reviews. My review of War is Beautiful by James Neugass, appeared in the February issue of The Internet Review of Books. Below is the first paragraph of the review:

WAR IS BEAUTIFUL: 
An American Ambulance Driver in the Spanish Civil War
 
By James Neugass (Edited by Peter N. Carroll and Peter Glazer) 
314 pp. The New Press $26.95

About 15,000 books have been written about the Spanish Civil War. Of those, only about a dozen are memoirs published by American volunteers of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade. The most notable include Alvah Bessie’s Men in Battle, Harry Fisher’s Comrades: Tales of a Brigadista in the Spanish Civil War and James Yate’s Mississippi to Madrid: Memoir of a Black American in the Abraham Lincoln Brigade. The newest entry in this category is James Neugass’s War is Beautiful: An American Ambulance Driver in the Spanish Civil War, edited by Peter N. Carroll and Peter Glazer, scholars and board members of the ; Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archives (ALBA), and published 60 years after Neugass’s death. To read the complete review, click here.


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Upcoming: Stuffed by Hank Cardello

February 07, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Uncategorized

The obesity problem in the U.S. is one topic that I’ve been following with interest for a long time. The latest book that tackles the subject is from former food marketer Hank Cardello who provides us with an insider’s look at who’s (really) making America fat.

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Review: Nothing to Fear: FDR’s Inner Circle and the Hundred Days That Created Modern America by Adam Cohen

February 06, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Uncategorized

Nothing to Fear: FDR’s Inner Circle and the Hundred Days That Created Modern America
Adam Cohen
The Penguin Press
372 pages
$29.95
In an open letter to then President-elect Obama, economist Paul Krugman wrote concerning the economy, “The last president to face a similar mess was Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and you can learn a lot from his example. That doesn’t mean, however, that you should do everything FDR did. On the contrary, you have to take care to emulate his successes, but avoid repeating his mistakes.” To understand what Krugman was writing about pick up a copy of Nothing to Fear: FDR’s Inner Circle and the Hundred Day that Created America. In this timely narrative, Adam Cohen brilliantly brings to life Roosevelt’s first Hundred Days. 
Cohen right off the bat sets the dismal economic scene when Roosevelt took office: Stock market prices since the 1929 crash had plummeted 85 percent. Manufacturing had come to a standstill; between one-quarter and one-third of the workforce were unemployed. In rural areas, farm income had fallen from $6.7 billion in 1929 to $2.3 billion in 1932. Crop prices were so low that farmers couldn’t afford to cover their expenses. 
And then there was the financial industry. Banks were among the most eager participants in the speculative stock-buying rage during the 1920s. After the crash, banks found themselves with total assets that were worth less than what they owed their depositors. Between 1930 and 1932, 773 national banks, 3,604 state banks, with more than $2.7 billion in assets failed. 
To tackle and resolve the country’s economic issues, Roosevelt leaned heavily on his advisors–an inner circle of five men and one woman. Cohen provides fascinating biographies of these individuals who persuaded the president to embrace progressive programs. 
Some readers might hesitate to read an account of the New Deal, but fear not, Nothing to Fear reads like a brisk and well-plotted novel with both good guys (and gal) and not so great guys. Cohen’s admirable portrait of Frances Perkins, the first woman to hold a cabinet position, and her gritty determination to sway the president to back large-scale public work programs moves at a swift pace. 
Cohen also examines the relationships between the participants within that circle, notably the conflicts of Perkins, Henry Wallace, the secretary of agriculture, and Harry Hopkins, who ran the $500 million relief program, had with Lewis Douglas, the director of the budget. Douglas, a conservative ideologue who advocated spending cuts, was a curious choice to play a large role in the New Deal, but he appealed to the president’s fiscal conservative nature. 
Two different schools of thought in American politics existed between the Perkins group and Douglas. Hopkins, Perkins, and Wallace–committed liberals–argued that government should take an active role in improving the lives of workers, the poor, the unemployed, and farmers. Douglas argued for the free market, low taxes, and small government.  In his introduction, Cohen neatly sums up the first Hundred Days:
While the public story line of the Hundred Days was about how Roosevelt, through his eloquent public statements and legislative initiatives rallied a desperate nation, behind the scenes his advisers were battling over what shape the New Deal would take. Perkins, Wallace, and Hopkins worked with members of Congress, farm leaders, union officials, and other progressives to promote their agenda. Douglas worked with business leaders and other conservatives to pull Roosevelt in the opposite direction. In the first month of the Hundred Days, through the passage of the Economy Act, Douglas’s side prevailed. For the rest of the Hundred Days, Perkins’s side did. While Douglas won the early battles, Perkins, Wallace, and Hopkins won the war.   
Nothing to Fear is a remarkable book and suggested reading to anyone with an interest in history and economics, but the members of The White House Economic Recovery Advisory Board should also have a copy as well. Perhaps they can get some insights and tap into Perkins, Wallace, and Hopkins bold determination and get America out of the mess it’s in. 
 
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News: From the New York Observer: PW’s Sara Nelson Saw Book Crowd As Coolest On Earth

February 04, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Uncategorized

I came across this interview with Sara Nelson, the former editor in chief of Publishers Weekly that I thought was interesting: 



PW‘s Sara Nelson Saw Book Crowd As Coolest On Earth

Laid-Off Editor Says, ‘ No Highs Match Falling in Love’




“I think these people are rock stars, I always did,” Sara Nelson said. “I think they’re cool. I’m much more interested in hearing about what’s going on in Sonny Mehta’s head than I am in George Clooney’s.”

This was Friday afternoon, and Ms. Nelson, 52, was in her office at Publishers Weekly, where until the end of last week she was editor in chief. Surrounded by boxes of books that she’d been packing since being told the previous Monday morning that she was being laid off, Ms. Nelson was battling an unforgiving cold, sneezing and sniffling emphatically.

To read the rest of the article click here.

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Upcoming: Nothing to Fear by Adam Cohen

January 31, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Uncategorized

I never suspected that I would get inundated by ARCs, but I have small stack that is quickly growing. And although I did promise that I would review several books on the Spanish Civil War, I have to put those reviews off for a bit because in today’s post, I received Adam Cohen’s Nothing to Fear: FDR’s Inner Circle and the Hundred Day that Created America.  A very timely book, and it is next in line for review. 

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Some Housekeeping

January 31, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Uncategorized

A couple of friends noticed I was copying and pasting full articles from other publications, which isn’t kosher, even with an acknowledgement to the source.  I’ve corrected this error.  Moving forward, I will offer the first paragraph of the article with a link that will take readers directly to the publications’ sites. 

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Want it? Win a Copy of A Reliable Wife

January 30, 2009 By: Rebeca Category: Uncategorized

As promised, I am giving away a copy of Robert Goolrick’s A Reliable Wife. I changed the rules from a previous post and simplified them: You have to subscribe and follow the site and leave a compelling comment of why you want this book. I’ll have a drawing by the end of next week. Please leave your email address so I can contact you and get your mailing information. 

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