NEWS

The Early Word: New Books for the Week of March 18, 2007

Written by Gordon Hauptfleisch
Published March 21, 2007

You won't find a lot of new books on the bookstore shelves this week. Maybe March will be going out like a lamb... 

FICTION:

Then We Came to the End by Joshua Ferris

Anyone currently undergoing the nine-to-five workaday monotony interspersed as it is with gossip, office romance, pranks, and coffee break after coffee break — or who has escaped such routine and left with "visceral, rich memories of dull, interminable hours" — should find many resonating moments, droll and emotional, in Then We Came. The coworkers in the struggling Chicago ad agency central to Joshua Ferris’ incisive and wickedly amusing novel wait one-by-one to be cordially invited to clear their desks to “walk Spanish down the hall” in a ghoulish procession that seems absurdly apt for the dot-bomb end of the '90s boom: "We’d watch the singled-out walk the long carpet with the Office Coordinator leading the way" - heading to a fate akin to a date with Ol’ Sparky. As the narrator goes on to describe, "A few minutes later we’d see the lights dim for the voltage drop and we’d hear the electricity sizzle and the smell of cooked flesh would waft out into the insulated spaces." 

Burning Bright by Tracy Chevalier

For a Few Demons More (Rachel Morgan, Book 5) by Kim Harrison

Grotesque by Natsuo Kirino, Translated by Rebecca Copeland

Invisible Prey by John Sandford 

NONFICTION:

Cultural Amnesia: Necessary Memories from History and the Arts by Clive James

With seemingly everyone from Beatrix Potter to Franz Karfa represented in this treasure trove of 110 incisive and provocative biographical essays by British critic James, Cultural Amnesia illuminates and occasionally disparages the careers of many of the greatest philosophers, artists, musicians, and writers of the twentieth century. Whether savaging jazz musician John Coltrane's penchant for "subjecting some helpless standard to ritual murder" or rebuking French apologists for communism, including Jean-Paul Sartre, who "could sound as if he was talking about everything while saying nothing," James aims to please, or provoke. Whichever the occasion demands.

How to Raise an American: 1776 Fun and Easy Tools, Tips, and Activities to Help Your Child Love This Country by Myrna Blyth, Chriss Winston

The Cigarette Century: The Rise, Fall, and Deadly Persistence of the Product That Defined America by Allan M. Brandt

No Retreat, No Surrender: One American's Fight by Tom DeLay, Stephen Mansfield

Religious Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know--And Doesn't by Stephen Prothero

This Is Not the Life I Ordered: 50 Ways to Keep Your Head Above Water When Life Keeps Dragging You Down by Deborah Collins Stephens, Michealene Cristini Risley, Jackie Speier, Jan Yanehiro

The Clinton Crack-Up: The Boy President's Life After the White House by R. Emmett Tyrrell

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at PhotobucketGordon "Von Zipper" Hauptfleisch is a Blogcritics Books Editor, free lance writer, and book reviewer for the San Diego Union Tribune. He's also an enigmatic visionary of unfathomable secrets and many a guise, or at least he plays one in his delusions of grandeur. His mandate also includes weird bugs. In a previous life he was a leprous horse thief.
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The Early Word: New Books for the Week of March 18, 2007
Published: March 21, 2007
Type: News
Section: Books
Filed Under: Books: Literature and Fiction, Books: News, Books: Nonfiction
Part of a feature: The Early Word: Non-Fiction
Writer: Gordon Hauptfleisch
Gordon Hauptfleisch's BC Writer page
Gordon Hauptfleisch's personal site
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