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Book Blurbs
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Legacy and Destiny
by J. Michael Reidenbach, '67, and Dana K. Drenkowski
Corinthian Books, 1999; $24.95 (fiction).
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This
political thriller's heroine is the first woman to run for
the U.S. presidency. Elizabeth Armstrong steps into the race
that her husband, Peter, had planned to enter before he was
killed in a plane crash. She's a seasoned politician who
served as governor of New Hampshire before giving up her
career to support Peter's aspirations. But her campaign
takes a terrifying turn when it becomes clear the plane
crash was no accident -- and Peter's closest colleague is
not above suspicion. The authors' experience in law,
politics and aviation lends credibility to a twisting plot
that includes an assassination attempt, a hostage-taking
drug cartel and a fuel gauge that registers half-full when
the tank is empty.
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Fixed for Life: The True Saga of How Tom
Became Sally
by Irene Preiss, MA '68
toExcel Press, 1999; $14.95 (autobiography).
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When
Preiss was a young boy, his mother told friends he should
have been a girl, since she already had a son. Preiss, who
had a sex-change operation at age 62, agrees. In this
memoir, she chronicles her journey from naval officer and
father of three to Seattle schoolmarm. Preiss's first wife,
frightened by her husband's desire to wear her nightgown,
labels him gay. Switching back and forth between male and
female identities makes it difficult for Preiss to get a
job. And Preiss must leave a happy second marriage to live
permanently as a woman. But the book is balanced with
lighter anecdotes: shopping for dresses as a 6-foot-tall
man, taking lessons in female behavior at a Los Altos
modeling studio and discovering the joy of woman-to-woman
friendships.
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Reflections on a Ravaged Century
by Robert Conquest
Norton, 2000; $26.95 (history).
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From
the Holocaust to Stalin's prison camps to the Khmer Rouge's
killing fields, the 20th century was indisputably a
catastrophic period. A senior research fellow at the Hoover
Institution, Conquest blames the carnage, murder and
brutality on a handful of powerful and absolutist
ideologies, from Marxism to National Socialism, that
promised to solve all of humanity's problems. Where did
these ideologies come from? How did they mesmerize so many
people? In part, Conquest argues, laziness and impatience
led to infatuation with easy, cure-all theories. A longtime
critic of totalitarianism who has seen his views vindicated,
Conquest has his own vision of Utopia. It is, by definition,
messy and imperfect: a pluralist society characterized by
debate, compromise and constant adjustment.
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Now Hear This: The Life of Hugh S.
Knowles, Acoustical Engineer and Entrepreneur
by Susan Goodwillie, '63
The Francis Press, 1999; $24 (biography).
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When
Hugh Knowles was an undergraduate at Columbia in the 1920s,
one of his professors predicted that he would become a "high
cheese radio engineer." Sure enough, Knowles went on to take
his place among the visionary mid-20th-century engineers who
turned the era's electronic breakthroughs into consumer
products. This biography is one in a series devoted to the
lives of influential unknowns. It tracks Knowles (1904-1988)
through his early success as a designer of speakers (he was
nicknamed "Mr. Loudspeaker"), radios and sound equipment for
film projectors. But his period of greatest achievement came
in the 1950s, '60s and '70s, when he took advantage of
evolving transistor technology to invent a miniaturized
microphone that led to modern hearing aids.
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