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Book Blurbs
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Having Everything
by John L' Heureux, professor of English
Atlantic Monthly Press, 1999; $24 (fiction).
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As
the title suggests, protagonist Philip Tate seems to have it
all. He is handsome, the father of two lovely children
attending prestigious colleges, and he's married to a smart,
beautiful (and, oh yes, alcoholic) woman. On the night of
his appointment to a chair in psychiatry at Harvard Medical
School, a position that puts him in the running for dean,
Tate revisits a boyhood compulsion to break into other
people's houses. He enters the home of a new colleague and
encounters the man's drunken wife. Tate's actions send his
family's world spinning into chaos. The novel explores what
could make a man jeopardize his success -- and why having
everything sometimes isn't enough.
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The Real Deal: The History and Future of
Social Security,
by Sylvester J. Schieber and John B. Shoven, '62, PhD
'69
Yale University Press, 1999; $18.95 (economics/U.S.
history).
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Two
economists explain what's wrong with America's social
security system and how they would fix it. As long as the
labor force expanded and wages grew, they observe, one
generation's retirement could easily be underwritten by
those still in the workforce. Indeed, the government was
able to pay successive generations far more in benefits than
they had put in. But, like a pyramid scheme, the system will
collapse when withdrawals routinely exceed contributions.
This is expected as baby boomers retire. Schieber, a
Washington, D.C., consultant, and Shoven, a Stanford
economics professor, have a solution: require individuals to
contribute to their own private retirement savings accounts
while doubling those nest eggs with matching federal dollars
and giving account holders considerable say in how the funds
are invested.
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Turtle Island: Tales of the Algonquian
Nations,
by Jane Louise Curry, MA '62, PhD '69
Simon & Schuster, 1999; $17 (children's folklore).
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The
crow is black because he selflessly carried fire to Earth.
After the Great Flood, land formed again from the shell of a
huge turtle. Deer have short tails because they were kicked
in the rear by a hunter avenging his sister's kidnapping.
Those are three of the legends in this collection for
children, gathered from the storytelling traditions of the
Lenapé, Cheyenne, Shawnee and other American Indian
tribes that lived along the Atlantic coast and as far west
as Montana. The 27 tales include creation stories,
cautionary fables, and legends of heroes and tricksters, all
told in a simple, engaging style and illustrated with
black-and-white drawings by James Watts.
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Women Who Stay with Men Who Stray
by Debbie Then, MA '81, MA '83, PhD '86
Hyperion, 1999; $23.95 (marriage).
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Some
wives resign themselves to it; some wage war against it;
some take their own lovers; some simply split. A cheating
husband can be a woman's worst nightmare, yet most men see
male infidelity as no big deal, laments social psychologist
Then in this straight-shooting self-help book for women. A
consultant specializing in women's self-images and
relationships, she gathered hundreds of anecdotes from wives
and husbands to explore why men cheat, why so many women put
up with it and what wives can -- and can't -- do about it.
(For instance, they can't change the man's behavior, she
insists.) This is not a how-to book for rebuilding a
marriage. On the contrary, the author counsels, "Life is too
valuable to waste on a philandering husband."
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