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Book Blurbs
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The Monterey Bay Shoreline Guide
by Jerry Emory, '79
University of California Press, 1999; $16.95 (natural
history/California and the West).
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The
author hiked or cycled through almost every public section
of the spectacular Pacific shoreline between Point
Año Nuevo (home to a raucous elephant seal colony)
and Point Sur, 120 miles to the south. He drove along
coastal roads in his aging pickup, logging more than 2,500
miles in search of historic towns, redwood forests,
pick-your-own-produce farms and remote wineries. The result
is an eclectic and eye-opening reference -- more field guide
than standard travel book -- on the area's natural and
cultural history. Generously illustrated with color photos
of the region and drawings of local plants and animals, the
book also provides maps, directions to "secret" places,
useful phone numbers, websites and a detailed index. Emory,
who lives in Mill Valley, Calif., co-authored Bay Area
Backroads (1999) and has written several children's
books.
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The Flower in the Skull
by Kathleen Alcalá, '76
Harcourt Brace/Harvest Books, 1999; $12 (fiction).
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Three
women from successive generations spin a bitter tale of
struggle and survival in this novel written by a Mexican
American and set in the American Southwest. The story begins
in the 1870s when Mexican soldiers destroy an Indian
village, forcing an Opata girl to flee into the Sonoran
Desert. She wanders north -- alone, dazed and starving -- to
Tucson, Ariz., where she manages to build a life as a
housekeeper and nanny. As decades pass, the narration shifts
to her illegitimate daughter and finally to a granddaughter
living in present-day Los Angeles, who rediscovers ancestral
mysteries when she researches the long-lost Opata tribe.
Alcalá has written two other books and won the
Western States Book Award for fiction this year.
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How to Raise Kids Without Going
Broke
by Peter Finch, '82, and Delia Marshall
Avon Books, 1999; $14 (parenting/personal
finance).
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You
are a new parent, gazing at your baby, dreaming of the
future. "Then reality hits: this little bundle is going to
cost you a small fortune. How are you ever going to pay for
it?" So begins this guide by the editors of
SmartMoney magazine. Sprinkled with stories of real
families, the 350-page primer covers basics such as
questions to ask when picking a child-care provider and how
to save money for college. Each chapter includes helpful
worksheets, and there are charts comparing the cost of
essentials and extras in different cities. There is a
section on "blended families" and another on teaching your
kids about money.
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World's Fairs and the End of Progress:
An Insider's View
by Alfred Heller, '50
World's Fair Inc., 1999; $24.95 (pop
culture/history).
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From
London's Crystal Palace in 1851 to the Oceanarium of Lisbon
in 1998, world's fairs have always been about imagining an
idealized future. This tour of the great expos documents how
those dreams have changed over the last 150 years: the zeal
for progress at any cost has given way to a concern for
ecological preservation. The author attended his first
world's fair in 1939 -- the Golden Gate International
Exhibition, on Treasure Island in San Francisco Bay. From
1981 to 1995, he was publisher and editor of World's Fair, a
quarterly trade journal. He closes the book with his own
proposal for a 2015 world's fair in San Francisco that would
"celebrate a new, earth-friendly culture."
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