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Online Extra...
Books for Grownups June 2007
By the Editors of Publishers Weekly and AARP The Magazine
What Our Generation Wants to Read
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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
Exclusive Offer for AARP Members
Click here for discounts at Borders.com. 10% off list price paperbacks, 35% off list price AARP titles, and, for a limited time, 10% off list price hardcover books.
Not a member? Join now.
Sylvia: A Novel
by Leonard Michaels (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $13)
You can almost see the black turtlenecks and smell the smoke in this newly
re-released novel about a couple in 1960s Greenwich Village. It's a
harrowing look into a dark night of the soul by the late author of
The Men's Club.
The Best Place to Be
by Lesley Dormen (Simon & Schuster, $22)
Eight linked stories about a New Yorker who's been through just about
everything but doesn't feel as if she's "arrived" until she
turns 50.
Love and War in California: A Novel
by Oakley Hall (St. Martin's Press, $24.95)
A good, old-fashioned novel about a guy who comes of age at Pearl
Harbor—and manages to live through most of the global and personal
upheavals of the last half of the 20th century.
The King of Colored Town
by Darryl Wimberley (The Toby Press, $24.95)
In Civil Rights-era Florida, a black high-school junior takes as her first
lover a man equal parts trouble and heart. Guess which wins out?
The Back Nine
by Billy Mott (Knopf, $24.95)
The author moonlights as a caddy—and his novel about a return to the
links after 20 years is a literary hole-in-one.
NONFICTION
When She Was White
by Judith Stone (Miramax, $23.95)
The true story of a woman who was born "white" but
re-"classifed" as "coloured" in South Africa and how she
and her family were torn apart first by apartheid, and then by its
dismantling.
The Violin Maker: Finding a Centuries-Old Tradition in a Brooklyn
Workshop
by John Marchese (HarperCollins, $24.95)
Can you improve on perfection? Well, you can try to match it, which is what one
celebrated Brooklyn violinmaker attempts when he sets out to create an
instrument equal to the Stradivarius.
The Feminine Mistake: Are We Giving Up Too Much?
by Leslie Bennetts (Hyperion/Voice, $24.95)
This one struck a chord with boomer women, probably because Bennetts
doesn't hold back: choosing to leave the work force to raise a family is
your choice, she says, but you always pay for that choice, literally and
otherwise.
The Gentle Subversive: Rachel Carson, Silent Spring, and the Rise of the
Environmental Movement
by Mark Hamilton Lytle (Oxford University Press)
Believe it or not, some people cared about the environment before Al Gore did.
Carson was an antipesticide pest on behalf of the living things she loved so
dearly. This is her story.
The Encyclopedia of Sixties Cool: A Celebration of the Grooviest People,
Events, and Artifacts of the 1960s
by Chris Strodder (Santa Monica Press, $24.95)
A kind of old-fashioned MySpace of our generation, this is a
compendium of more than 250 profiles of actors, musicians, writers,
politicians, athletes, and others who defined a—or is it
"the"?—decade.
SELF-HELP/LIFESTYLE
Vegetable Harvest
by Patricia Wells (Morrow, $34.95)
It's all about the veggies—even if you're going to eat meat or
fish. That's the message behind this recipe- and charm-filled cookbook by
the renowned author of
The Provence Cookbook, among many others.
Ending the Tobacco Holocaust
by Dr. Michael Rabinoff (Elite Books, $24.95)
We hardly need another reason to quit, or stay off, cigarettes, but this
meticulously researched book provides many: from an exposé of the way
cigarettes are pushed to children overseas, to the causality between smoking
and mental illness.
Walking on Eggshells: Navigating the Delicate Relationship Between Adult Children and Parents
by Jane Isay (Doubleday/Flying Dolphin Press, $23.95)
The title just about says it all and reminds us of the adage: Little children,
little problems. Big children…well, you know.
Health Care Half Truths: Too Many Myths, Not Enough Reality
by Arthur Garson Jr. and Carolyn L. Englehard (Rowman & Littlefield,
$24.95)
A much-needed dose of realism about the need for health-care reform—and,
surprisingly, a quick and engaging read.
The Citizen-Powered Energy Handbook
by Greg Pahl (Chelsea Green, $21.95)
The future, she is here: solar roof panels, backyard wind turbines, and biofuel
stills—they're not just for environmental geeks any more.
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