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Online Extra...
Books for Grownups April 2007
By the Editors of Publishers Weekly and AARP The Magazine
What Our Generation Wants to Read
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No more aimless browsing at the bookstore. AARP The Magazine and Publishers Weekly have teamed up to let you know about the latest fiction, nonfiction, and how-to books of interest to you. Once you've checked out the selections below, visit Publishers Weekly's
fiction and nonfiction pages for reviews, author Q&As, and more.
FICTION
Boomsday
by Christopher Buckley (Twelve, $24.99)
A vicious satire by the Jonathan Swift of our generation, this tale of a
twentysomething blogger's modest proposal for baby boomers may scare
you—not that there's anything wrong with that. It's all in good
fun. We think.
Breakable You
by Brian Morton (Harvest Books, $14)
What would you do if your biggest rival's unpublished masterwork fell into
your hands? Morton's flailing late-midlife novelist tries to decide.
Brothers
by Da Chen (Three Rivers Press, $14.95)
Anyone who grew up on
The Prince and the Pauper will appreciate this contemporary Chinese
version, about two half-brothers, one legitimate and privileged, the other
raised in a harrowing orphanage. A good old-fashioned read about the changing
nature of a country that many say is poised to take over the world.
The Stories of Mary Gordon
by Mary Gordon (Pantheon, $26)
Gordon is the quintessential baby boomer, ruminating on desire, aging, and
death. Short on laughs, maybe, but long on insight and good writing.
The Last of Her Kind
by Sigrid Nunez (Picador, $14)
Two very different young women who meet as roommates at Barnard in the 1960s
go on to very different lives. Nunez captures the era of university takeovers,
the Vietnam War, and the fight for civil rights, all the while reminding us of
the selves we were, or wanted to be.
NONFICTION
Graceland: An Interactive Pop-Up Tour
by Chuck Murphy with a foreword by Priscilla Presley (Quirk Books, $40)
For fans without the ways or means to get to Memphis, pop-up master Murphy
provides a scream-worthy up-close-and-personal desktop tour of Elvis
Presley's famous Graceland estate in this brilliantly low-tech 3-D volume,
overstuffed with photos, mementos, and intricate replicas of the King's
domain. There's even a pair of removable shades, but, alas, no
jumpsuit.
The Echoing Green: The Untold Story of Bobby Thomson, Ralph Branca and the Shot
Heard Round the World
by Joshua Prager (Pantheon, $26.95)
Prager paints a marvelous portrait of New York City baseball—see:
The Boys of Summer and
Summer of '49—and brings back to life one genuine piece of
Americana. Bring your own peanuts and Crackerjacks.
LBJ: Architect of American Ambition
by Randall B. Woods (Free Press, $35)
Hell, no, we wouldn't go—to hear anything positive about the
president who escalated the war in Vietnam. But according to historian Randall
Wood's prodigious research, we'd be wrong to miss this portrait of
Johnson, a man less cynical, less self-serving, and more tragic than often
described. Makes you think twice about dividing the world into Good Guys and
Bad Guys.
This Is Your Brain on Music: The Science of a Human Obsession
by Daniel Levitin (Plume, $15)
For a generation that made rock the soundtrack of their lives, Levitin, a
former rock musician and studio producer turned neuroscientist, explains why
songs get into our heads and hearts, and stay there, 30 years on.
Falling Through the Earth
by Danielle Trussoni (Picador, $14)
We've heard plenty lately from men who spent time in Vietnam, but this
memoir by the daughter of one particularly troubled guy gives pause to anybody
who thinks horror ends at armistice.
HOW-TO
The Longevity Bible: 8 Essential Strategies for Keeping Your Mind Sharp and
Your Body Young
by Gary Small and Gigi Vorgan (Hyperion, $14)
The authors take a holistic approach to body and brain fitness, and offer
eight essentials (positive outlook, mental and physical exercise, acceptance of
change are three) in this manual for a better, longer life—which is what
we ultimately all want and look forward to, right?
Our Bodies, Ourselves: Menopause
by The Boston Women's Healthbook Collective (Touchstone, $15)
We might not have cared then, but now? There's barely a woman of our
certain age without questions and concerns about what our mothers called the
change of life.
Portfolio Life: The New Path to Work, Purpose and Passion After 50
by David Corbett with Richard Higgins (Jossey-Bass, $24.95)
Here's what work looks like at 50: reprioritized, rejiggered, rethought.
You follow?
The 36-Hour Day: A Family Guide to Caring for Persons with Alzheimer Disease,
Related Dementing Illnesses, and Memory Loss in Later Life (4th
Edition)
by Nancy L. Mace and Peter V. Rabins (The Johns Hopkins University Press,
$15.95)
This classic handbook to caring for an aging parent with Alzheimer's or
another form of dementia has been updated to incorporate the latest research.
This book features concrete, practical tips and comprehensive information on
home care, nursing homes, and alternative arrangements.
French Women for All Seasons: A Year of Secrets, Recipes, and
Pleasure
by Mireille Guiliano (Knopf, $24.95)
Guiliano serves up second helpings of her popular approach to healthy living
in this gracious outing (following 2005's
French Women Don't Get Fat). The trick: seasonality, local produce,
and personal style. Everything in moderation is this New York City-based
Frenchwoman's secret to staying slim and bien dans ta peau.
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