Holiday Books 2004
A Review By Charles King

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Tree Bride   |   Tijuana Straits  |  Dies the Fire  In the Night Room  Sunday Philosophy Club   Wife of Moon | Nobody Runs Forever
All I Did Was Ask  | Django  | Fall of Baghdad   First Crusade  | Jamlady Cookbook  Sinatra Treasures

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Since this is the time of the year when book reviewers sing hosannas to their chosen books of the season, year, etc., I would be remiss if I did not join the chorus. Please note that some of the books below are not newbies, but to my mind they are most definitely goodies. Have a great holiday!

Tree Bride
Tree Bride

Tijuana Straits
Tijuana Straits


 

Dies the Fire
Dies the Fire

In the Night Room
In the Night Room

 

 

The Sunday Philosophy Club
The Sunday Philosophy Club

Wife of Moon
Wife of Moon

 

 

 

Nobody Runs Forever
Nobody Runs Forever

 

 

 

All I Did Was Ask: Conversations with Writers, Actors, Musicians, and Artists
All I Did Was Ask: Conversations with Writers, Actors, Musicians, and Artists

Django: The Life and Music of a Gypsy Legend
Django: The Life and Music of a Gypsy Legend

 

 

The Fall of Baghdad
The Fall of Baghdad

First Crusade: A New History
First Crusade: A New History

 

 

 

The Jamlady Cookbook
The Jamlady Cookbook

Sinatra Treasures: Intimate Photos, Mementos, and Music from the Sinatra Family Collection
Sinatra Treasures: Intimate Photos, Mementos, and Music from the Sinatra Family Collection

 

 

FICTION


The collision of cultures has been and will be an issue that continues to touch all our lives, and San Francisco author Bharati Mukherjee has offered particularly astute observations on the subject in her fiction and essays. Her latest novel, The Tree Bride (Hyperion, $23.95), begins with a routine doctor’s visit, when Calcutta-born Tara Chatterjee decides to trace the story of her great-great aunt, Tara Lata who at the age of five was married to a tree. Chatterjee’s journey of discovery reveals surprises about her family and her ancestral village that change her life indelibly. The Tree Bride offers rich helpings of Mukherjee’s singular prose and superb story telling skills.
 Kem Nunn’s newest novel, Tijuana Straits (Scribner, $25.00) provides an unflinching look at an area many prefer to avoid; the ragged borderland between California and Mexico. The action begins when Fahey, an ex-con and once-renowned surfer, rescues Magdalena, an injured Mexican environmentalist who has fled Tijuana. A trio of killers follow Magdalena north to stop her efforts on behalf of the thousands of Mexican peasants who work in the country’s maquilladoras, the pollution-spewing border factories owned by foreign corporations. But the killers find that in Fahey, Magdalena has found a friend and protector who understands their world all too well. Tijuana Straits is a remarkable novel by an author whose style melds driving narrative and dark lyricism.
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A different sort of darkness permeates S. M. Stirling’s new novel Dies the Fire (Roc, $23.95). After an intense electrical storm causes the world’s electrical devices – and firearms – to cease working, humanity is left groping, quite literally, in the dark. Many people band together out of desire or necessity, to create self-sustaining communities and alliances. But others see the disaster as an opportunity to press their own agendas for consolidating power and wealth. While Dies the Fire follows a long tradition of apocalyptic fantasy and science fiction, Stirling brings some new ingredients to the mix. His focus on how people struggle to find their way from lonely high tech reliance to community-based efforts is particularly interesting. Overall, Dies the Fire is a ride well-worth the admission price.  Peter Straub’s In the Night Room (Random House, $21.95) offers a very different sort of ride, and one not for the squeamish. The novel follows the surreal paths of two novelist protagonists; Willy Patrick and Timothy Underhill. Both are dealing with the intense remnants of personal loss and apparent visitations from the dead. When the two finally meet, the awful similarities of their experiences lead them to join together to confront the darkness that surrounds them. Overall, In the Night Room demonstrates Straub’s gift for crafting bone-chilling suspense out of common materials, a skill he shares with his friend and occasional co-author, Stephen King.
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Darkness may be Peter Straub’s natural element, but light is that of Alexander McCall Smith, best known for his No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency mysteries. The Sunday Philosophy Club (Pantheon, $19.95) begins the author’s new series featuring Isabel Dalhousie, the Scottish-American editor of the esteemed Review of Applied Ethics. In this maiden voyage, Isabel witnesses a young man’s apparent suicide which takes on a more sinister aspect as Isabel looks into it. The Scottish setting (Edinburgh) and characters could hardly be less like the Botswana of Precious Ramotswe, but similarities do abound. Smith’s books are essentially modern cozies that focus as much attention on the personal lives of his ‘detectives’ as they do on the game afoot, and pursue a relaxed, informal narrative style. Overall, The Sunday Philosophy Club looks like another winner for the author’s myriad fans.  Along with the rise of ‘regional’ U.S. mysteries, the past decade or so has been a boom time for mysteries following Native American themes. Tony Hillerman is the acknowledged master here, but others including Peter Bowen, Dana Stabenow, and Margaret Cole are also standouts. Cole’s tenth novel, Wife of Moon (Berkeley, $22.95) focuses on the detecting duo of Arapahoe lawyer Vicky Holden and Father John O’Malley, a Catholic priest on the Wind River reservation. The novel’s action begins nearly a century ago, when an event staged by photographer Edwin Curtis ends tragically. When Curtis’s photographs are displayed at the reservation’s museum, a descendent of the tribal chief depicted in the photos is murdered, and the curator vanishes. Wife of Moon presses Holden and O’Malley into service as informal investigators, but the novel also provides some closure for the pair’s often uneasy relationship. Where Cole takes the series from here remains to be seen, but she is a talented enough writer to make any destination entertaining.
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Hardboiled mysteries are anything but cozy, but their steady charms can be found in Richard Stark’s novels. Stark (a nom de plume of Donald E. Westlake) wrote a few well-regarded novels in the early 60s featuring professional thief Parker, then went to ground as readers turned to lighter fare. Fortunately, Stark, Parker, and the hard boiled market have returned in force. Stark’s latest Parker novel, Nobody Runs Forever (Mysterious, $23.95) takes up where the previous Breakout, left off. Parker is organizing a bank job in rural Massachusetts, but complications arise including a nervous partner, a two-timing wife, an inquisitive cop, and a greedy bounty hunter. The problem is that the payout is sweet enough to justify some managed risk, a process perfectly suited for Parker’s skills. How the job works and works out forms the heart of Nobody Runs Forever and provides the set-up for the next Parker novel. If you are a fan of truly exceptional hardboiled mysteries, look no farther than Stark and Parker.
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NON-FICTION


Terry Gross of NPR’s Fresh Air is a tiny dynamo whose informed questions and informal style have made her a renowned interviewer. Gross’s skills are shown off to good effect in All I Did Was Ask (Hyperion, $24.95) a collection of Fresh Air interviews with writers, actors, musicians, and artists. The conversations range from friendly, even goofy chats with movie and rock stars to intense conversations with serious artists and writers. Most of the discussions are friendly enough, but those with Broadway legend Uta Hagen and Kiss bass/tongue meister Gene Simmons go south for entirely different reasons. If you are a regular Fresh Air listener, you may have heard most of these interviews, given the show’s tendency to replay ‘classic’ episodes. However, though All I Did Was Ask does not offer any new material beyond short intros, it offers an informative look at some singular people and the radio host who spent time with them.  Modern popular music thrives on legendary figures, from seminal blues and jazz players like Robert Johnson and Charlie Parker to the hosts of rock stars who have ended up in early graves. But Django Reinhardt occupies a special place in this pantheon as an individual who overcame singular handicaps to become one of music’s most influential guitarists. Michael Dregni’s new Django (Oxford, $35.00) captures Reinhardt’s extraordinary life, from his youth in Gypsy camps and the nearly fatal caravan fire that maimed his left hand to his embrace of American jazz and pioneering work with the Quintette du Hot Club du France. More interesting in ways are Reinhardt’s later years, when he experimented with styles ranging from big band jazz and bebop to symphonic compositions. In most every way, Dregni gets it right, marrying scholarly detail with a fan’s love of Reinhardt’s music and accomplishments. If you are any kind of jazz aficionado, Django will be a treat.
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War journalism demands both a scholar’s devotion to accuracy and a willingness to directly witness conflict. But the requirements of war often knowingly disable journalists’ need to know for the rationale of military security. That has been especially true during the recent war in Iraq, when the U.S. military systematically restricted access to any and every kind of information. Despite these strictures, some reporters, including Jon Lee Anderson, a staff writer with the New Yorker, have succeeded admirably in exploring the heart of the Iraq conflict. Anderson’s new The Fall of Baghdad (Penguin, $24.95) follows a diverse group of Iraqis, examining their day to day lives under Saddam’s brutal dictatorship through the war’s commencement, to its conclusion and aftermath. By examining world shaking and world shattering events through the eyes of ordinary people caught in the crossfire, Anderson has done a service to everyone. The Fall of Baghdad is one of 2004’s most important books. When President Bush referred to the U.S. war on terror as a ‘crusade’, the passionate response throughout the Arab world offered some measure of how that term and those events are still remembered. But what exactly were the Crusades? Thomas Asbridge’s new book, The First Crusade (Oxford, $35.00) examines the roots and events of these events in particular detail, from Pope Urban II’s call to arms 1095 (which mobilized over 100,000 volunteers) through the pitched battles that led to the fall of Jerusalem in 1099 and the slaughter of thousands on Muslim men, women, and children. The reverberations of those events have lasted for generations and still color relations between Christians and Muslims. The best histories consider the effects of past on the present day, and offer a clear view of the path that led from there to here. The First Crusade qualifies as one of those histories that provides a measure of insight we would be wise to consider and foolish to ignore.
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The world abounds with guilty pleasures for lovers of sweets, but they would do well to make the acquaintance of Beverley Ellen Schoonmaker Alfeld, author of The Jamlady Cookbook (Pelican, $35.00) and an authority on the creation and care of preserved treats. Alfeld’s book stands as both a scientific and culinary treatise on an increasingly obscure subject. Making jams, jellies, and preserves was once a common summer chore, but cheap, commercial products have replaced such homemade goodies for most families. Is there any reason to rescue this art? Not if Smucker’s grape jelly represents the apogee of your desires. But anyone who has tasted them knows the difference between homemade jams, jellies, and preserves and store bought replacements. The Jamlady Cookbook focuses on demystifying the preparation process and distilling a lifetime’s worth of kitchen wisdom into a single volume. If you love homemade jams and preserves or aspire to make them like a pro, The Jamlady Cookbook belongs in your kitchen. Frank Sinatra may once have qualified as a guilty pleasure, but the recent celebrations of his music on Broadway and television made 2004 one of the singer’s biggest years. In part, this reflects a shift in musical taste, but it is also the result of focused efforts by Sinatra’s family to ensure his spot in the pantheon of American music. The Sinatra Treasures (Bullfinch, $45.00) reproduces photos, mementoes, and music from the singer’s family’s private collection. The book features over 200 color and black and white photographs, more than half of which were previously unpublished. It also offers a 60 minute CD of rare and unreleased interviews and recordings, as well as 30 facsimiles of family memorabilia including scrapbook pages, fan newsletters, radio show transcripts, and personal correspondence. Overall, it is a lovely piece of work, but is The Sinatra Treasures for everyone? Not really, but for any true Sinatra fans the book offers a unique, once unimaginable trip down memory lane.
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