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Shelf Life |
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Brown: The Last Discovery of America |
This completes the authors trilogy examining American life through his own experience as a queer Catholic Indian Spaniard. Rodriguez, a Pacific News Service editor and essayist on PBSs NewsHour, reflects on the fast-blurring color lines of a society long fixated on racial and ethnic distinctions. Browning is his term for the mixed coupling that began when Native Americans encountered European and African arrivals and more recently burgeoned with Hispanic immigration. The author champions the obsolescence of racial typing but foresees that others may continue to strike out against melting-pot impurities.
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Man Walks into a Room
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In this debut novel, Columbia English professor Samson Greene cant
recognize his wife or remember his own name. Suffering from a cherry-sized
brain tumor, Greene has surgery to recover his memory, but it reinstates
only childhood recollections. Through friendships with a former student,
an ambitious doctor and an older man dying of cancer, Greene struggles
to discover his former self as he tries to forge a new life. |
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American Law in the Twentieth Century |
Friedman, a professor at Stanford Law School, chronicles
the rise of the welfare-regulatory state, the centralization of power
in the federal government, the law explosion, the rights revolution
and dozens of other trends. No topicfrom income tax to divorce to
the death penaltyescapes the authors wry worldview. Most 20th-century
presidents, he writes, were pygmies, intellectually and otherwise,
but then so were most Roman emperors. |
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Management Lessons from the E.R. |
Drawing on his experiences as a surgeon in Stanfords
emergency medicine division and as an executive and venture capitalist,
Auerbach posits that running a company calls for skills remarkably similar
to the requirements for successful doctoring. This is especially so in
times of crisis, when knowing how to deal with the unexpected before it
happens can make the difference between life and deathfor a patient
and a company. |
| Little
Casino Gilbert Sorrentino Coffee House Press, 2002 $14.95 |
Like a kaleidoscope twisting random
bits of colored glass into patterns, Sorrentino shapes an unconventional
novel from amorphous memories about the lives and loves of mid-20th-century
denizens of his hometown, Brooklyn. The narrator morphs into a saucy self-critic
in marginalia that weave in and out of his vignettes, peppered with literary
allusions and pop culture references. Sorrentino is an emeritus English
professor at Stanford. |
| Speed
Dating: The Smarter, Faster Way to Lasting Love Yaacov Deyo and Sue Deyo, 87 HarperResource, 2002 $18.95 |
The authors helped
start a dating service designed to ease the pain of finding a suitable mate;
here they show how a seven-minute encounter can reveal a potential partners
values and goals. The husband-and-wife team tells how to avoid the fatal
Shooting Star syndrome, dig for the elusive Buried Treasure relationship
and determine whether youve found the real deal. |
| Daughter of
Madrugada Frances M. Wood, 73 Delacorte, 2002 $15.95 |
Set in the 1840s,
the story chronicles the coming of age of Cesa de Haro, a spirited Mexican
girl whose family owns a vast rancho in upper California. When Mexico loses
the war with the United States, Americans come looking for gold and land.
The world of the proud de Haro family begins to disappear, and Cesa must
adapt to loss and change. This is Woods second novel for readers age
10 and up. |
| Entangled Edens:
Visions of the Amazon Candace Slater, MA 71, PhD 75 UC Press, 2002 $27.50 |
Slater, director
of UC-Berkeleys Townsend Center for the Humanities, spent 15 years
talking to people in the Amazon and came away convinced of glaring omissions
in most outsiders discussions of the region. To dwell on rainforest
flora and fauna and selected photogenic natives and ignore the
many other Amazon people and landscapes, she argues, serves neither ecological
nor human needs. |
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Bringing God Home: A Travelers Guide |
The author confesses that despite years of experience counseling parishioners, his own spiritual health was poor. In this candid account, the senior minister at All Souls Unitarian Church in Manhattan offers guidance based on his and others successful efforts to reconnect with God, often in the face of daunting personal problems. |