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In the dawning light of a late-summer morning, the people of lower Manhattan stand hushed, staring up in disbelief at the Twin Towers. It is August 1974, and a mysterious tightrope walker is running, dancing, leaping between the towers, suspended a quarter mile above the ground. In the streets below, a slew of ordinary lives become extraordinary in Colum McCann’s stunningly intricate portrait of a city and its people. Winner of the 2009 National Book Award.
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Also in Paperback...THE BELIEVERS (Zoe Heller, HarperCollins $14.99)
The first half, I thought, was alternately interesting and repetitious, although easy to read and contained some wonderful recipes. By the second half, all the "characters"....long time friends and chefs, etc....., are introduced and wonderfully described.......and the history of this woman and her restaurant comes into full bloom. This story just shows the amazing impact that one person, totally determined, can have not only on our own culture and eating habits, but of those throughout the world. Alice Waters is a force of nature, just as surely as the wind and the rain. As the book says, she is romantic, impractical, eccentric, and brilliant in the making of a food revolution. Anyone who loves to cook, with good, fresh food, would love this book. Nancy should run a trip to Berkeley so we could all eat at Chez Panisse once in our lifetimes.
A wonderful memoir that takes the reader into his life during the fifties in Oxford, where he was studying for three years as a Rhodes Scholar, then into the beginnings of his more than fifty year teaching career at Duke University. It's an intriguing glimpse into a world and era unseen by most of us. And Reynolds's prose is delightful. I loved every word of it. -- Mari Lu
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From Scott...
I'm reading ROOTS for the first time. I know there was controversy concerning whether Haley had written a genuine history, or a novel. Frankly, I don't much care one way or another. Certainly I remember the impact the book had at the time it was published, and the even greater cultural force of the mini-series on television. Whether Haley's book if historical biography plain, or "merely" historical fiction does not, in a sense, matter. I believe there are three great events that define us as Americans, and with which we must and should continue to grapple: The Revolution, the Native American genocide, and African slavery. What Haley accomplished was putting third of these front and center for a huge audience for the first time in our history. The basic truth of Kunta Kinte's experience is more important, to me, than whether he actually lived or not. He lives.