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Fictionista, Foodie, Feline-lover

Thursday, November 3, 2016

The Ghost by Robert Harris

Robert Harris wrote Fatherland, a "what if" novel that wrapped a thriller plot around the premise that the Nazis won WWII. He also wrote Enigma (about the code-breaking machine), and Archangel, a thriller set in present-day Russia. He's also written a lesser-known non-fiction book called Selling Hitler, which was about the so-called "Hitler Diaries." Harris' novels always have a political subtext, and one of his best, The Ghost, was turned into a movie called The Ghost Writer, directed by Roman Polanski. It's about "power, politics, and murder." Great stuff and just the thing to be reading four days out from the most important election so far in the millennium.

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

The Best and the Brightest--David Halberstam's dissection of a disastrous foreign policy

I was a huge fan of writer David Halberstam. I admired his prose so much I even read his book The Breaks of the Game, and I am not a fan of sports writing. (A great writer can make any subject riveting.) The Best and the Brightest is his examination of the way John F. Kennedy's cadre of intellectual advisors ("the best and the brightest") came up with a misbegotten foreign policy that led us into the Vietnam War. (Read it in tandem with The Pentagon Papers or John Paul Vance's A Bright Shining Lie.) The book feels particularly relevant to this election cycle because the personalities involved were all so very, very sure they knew more about things than people who actually had experience about things and against all advice, rushed into terrible, terrible policies.

My favorite book by Halberstam is probably The Reckoning, though. This is from the blurb: Told with panoramic detail and gripping insight, The Reckoning is the inside story of automakers Ford and Nissan—and the collapse of America’s industrial supremacy.  The book was originally published in 1986, but 30 years later, it still feels prescient as we look at the collapse of cities like Detroit.

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

An Election Day Reading List from Charles Pierce

This is a list of 15 books that includes everything from Robert Caro's monumental biography of LBJ to Twilight of the Presidency, one of the scariest books you'll ever read.Written in 1970, here's what the blurb says:

Former special assistant to President Lyndon B. Johnson, George Reedy, examines the growing isolation of the president from the country's citizens, the air of unreality, and the virtually unchecked power that works to corrupt any man who holds the office of the President.  

check out the full list here.

A Week of Political Books: All the Single Ladies by Rebecca Traister

We're one week out from what will be an historic election, no matter which way it turns out. America will never be the same no matter which candidate wins. I've got a whole reading list that includes Hillbilly Elegy and The Man Without a Face. II pulled that last book off the Guardian's list of ten must-read books about Vladimir Putin. Check out the list here.)  The book I've just finished is Rebecca Traister's All The Single Ladies.

This is the review excerpted on the book's Amazon page:

The New York Times bestselling investigation into the sexual, economic, and emotional lives of women is “an informative and thought-provoking book for anyone—not just the single ladies—who want to gain a greater understanding of this pivotal moment in the history of the United States” (The New York Times Book Review).  

It's an important book, I think.

New from Alexandra Sokoloff

The latest (number 4) in her "Huntress" FBI series is out. Yay. Check it out on her site.

Monday, October 31, 2016

In Celebration of Women--Edna Lewis

This book came up in, of all things, a search for "gargoyles." The cover is wonderful, isn't it? This is an illustrated biography of the chef and natural food advocate Edna Lewis (with recipes) and it's filled with lovely illustrations and a kind of crazy quilt of folk tales and received wisdom that gives the impression of being in the middle of a family reunion. For foodies. And feminists. And people who love illustrations.