Crime and Drugs on Trip City Street, by Timothy Louis Baker

January 12th, 2010

Crime and Drugs on Trip City, by Timothy Louis BakerCrime and Drugs on Trip City Street
By Timothy Louis Baker
Strategic Book Publishing 2009
103 pages
$21.50

 Reviewed by Randall Radic

Not too long ago, Cormac McCarthy wrote The Road.  It was a great book and McCarthy is a genius.  In 2006, Vintage Books – which is a part of the Random House empire – published McCarthy’s The Sunset Limited.  The publisher described The Sunset Limited as “a novel in dramatic form.”  Translation:  it was written in dialogue as if for the theater.  Whatever one cared to call it, the technique was effective.  Especially in the hands of someone as gifted as Cormac McCarthy. 

Timothy Louis Baker did just the opposite in his new novel.  It’s called Crime and Drugs on Trip City Street.  And to all intents and purposes Baker has – in effect – taken a dramatic screenplay and turned it into a novel.  And like McCarthy, Baker is neat-handed as he weaves a story of domestic terrorists plotting to take over the government. 

The terrorists finance their conspiracy by means of a continual criminal enterprise – the manufacture, distribution and sale of illegal substances.  Drugs.  To reveal much more of the story would spoil it.  So what happens and how it all turns out won’t be mentioned.  However, the plot is tightly wrapped and rockets along to an explosive ending.

If you want something to compare it to, think Reservoir Dogs, the bloody, intricate and action-packed movie made by Tarantino some years ago.  Which means that Crime and Drugs on Trip City Street would make a hecka-good movie.  In fact, the reviewer suggests Jean Claude Van Damme, Christopher Lambert and Rutger Hauer would be perfect as the principal bad guys.  Ridley Scott or Tarantino or Rodriguez could direct, adding their personal chromatic touches to an already dark story.  The interplay between directorial coloration and thematic blackness would produce a subtle turbulence. 

Baker’s growth as a writer is evident in Crime and Drugs.  He’s gone from the charm of miscellaneous stream-of-consciousness to the sharper images of a more traditional style of writing.  And his ear for dialogue is skillfully displayed in this latest effort.  Which means it’s an easy book to read, because it resonates with action and a linguistic sartorial flair.  Which means it’s all dressed up and it has someplace to go.  

On the Read-O-Meter, which ranges from one star (pitiful) to five stars (startling), Crime and Drugs on Trip City Street comes in at 5 stars.

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New York Times Bestsellers: January 10, 2010

January 10th, 2010

Hardcover Fiction

1. THE LOST SYMBOL, by Dan Brown
2. THE HELP, by Kathryn Stockett
3. I, ALEX CROSS, by James Patterson
4. SIZZLE, by Julie Garwood
5. FIRED UP, by Jayne Ann Krentz

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Hardcover Nonfiction

1. HAVE A LITTLE FAITH, by Mitch Albom
2. GOING ROGUE, by Sarah Palin
3. WHAT THE DOG SAW, by Malcolm Gladwell
4. SUPERFREAKONOMICS, by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner
5. STONES INTO SCHOOLS, by Greg Mortenson

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Trade Fiction

1. THE LOVELY BONES, by Alice Sebold
2. THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO, by Stieg Larsson
3. PUSH, by Sapphire
4. THE PIANO TEACHER, by Janice Y.K. Lee
5. THE SHACK, by William P. Young

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Mass-Market Fiction

1. STREET GAME, by Christine Feehan
2. DEAR JOHN, by Nicholas Sparks
3. THE LOVELY BONES, by Alice Sebold
4. THE DEVIL’S PUNCHBOWL, by Greg Iles
5. SHADES OF MIDNIGHT, by Lara Adrian

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Nonfiction

1. THE BLIND SIDE, by Michael Lewis
2. THREE CUPS OF TEA, by Greg Mortenson and David Oliver Relin
3. FREAKONOMICS, by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner
4. ARE YOU THERE, VODKA? IT’S ME, CHELSEA, by Chelsea Handler
5. BLINK, by Malcolm Gladwell

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Hardcover Advice

1. MASTERING THE ART OF FRENCH COOKING, VOL. 1, by Julia Child, Simone Beck and Louisette Bertholle
2. THE HAPPINESS PROJECT, by Gretchen Rubin
3. THE 4-HOUR WORKWEEK, by Timothy Ferriss
4. IT’S YOUR TIME, by Joel Osteen
5. THE PIONEER WOMAN COOKS, by Ree Drummond

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Advice

1. FLAT BELLY DIET!, by Liz Vaccariello and Cynthia Sass
2. FOOD RULES, by Michael Pollan
3. START OVER, FINISH RICH, by David Bach
4. WHAT TO EXPECT WHEN YOU’RE EXPECTING, by Heidi Murkoff and Sharon Mazel
5. SKINNY BITCH, by Rory Freedman and Kim Barnouin

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Children’s Books

1. SPLENDIFEROUS CHRISTMAS, by Jane O’Connor
2. LEGO STAR WARS, by Simon Beecroft
3. THE CHRISTMAS SWEATER, adapted by Chris Schoebinger from the story by Glenn Beck
4. THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS, by Clement C. Moore
5. WADDLE!, written and illustrated by Rufus Butler Seder

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Graphic Books

1. THE BOOK OF GENESIS: ILLUSTRATED, by R. Crumb
2. WOLVERINE: OLD MAN LOGAN, by Mark Millar and Steve McNiven
3. BATMAN: BATTLE FOR THE COWL, by Tony Daniel
4. THE WONDERFUL WIZARD OF OZ, by Eric Shanower and Skottie Young
5. BATMAN: WHATEVER HAPPENED TO THE CAPED CRUSADER?, by Neil Gaiman and others

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Gourmet Today, edited by Ruth Reichl

January 3rd, 2010

Gourmet Today, edited by Ruth ReichlGourmet Today: More than 1000 All-New Recipes for the Contemporary Kitchen
Edited by Ruth Reichl
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2009
1,009 pages
$40.00

When the news broke that the magazine Gourmet Today was going kaput I was heartbroken. This was one cooking magazine that I always meant to subscribe, but never got around to it. For 2010, I vowed that I would give myself this relatively inexpensive gift and then, well, Gourmet Today is no more.

However, I was easily consoled that Ruth Reichl, the editor-in-chief, had just put out a 1000+ page cookbook and even at the pricey $40 I thought I would get it and add it to the cookbook collection. The recipes in the magazine never let me down and I doubted the cookbook would, but prior to buying it I was able to preview it thanks to my wonderful local library. As soon as I opened it and went directly to the dessert section, I knew that I had to have this book. 

Apart from the sweets section what makes this cookbook so good? Well, if you’re like me at all and wonder why a recipe calls for sea salt, table salt, and kosher salt, Reichl provides a great sidebar about the differences right from the very get-go, and now I have all three. It’s information of this nature that makes reading a cookbook fun, interesting, and, hopefully, makes one a better cook.

Typically, I like to review a cookbook after I try three recipes and then give it my stamp of approval, but so far I’ve tried only one. Here, at chez moi, we’re trying to eat less meat and more vegetables and soy products. The one recipe we’ve tried so far was Grilled Tofu Sauteed with Asian Greens. It’s a simple dish to prepare. The only labor-intensive part of the recipe is making sure that you’ve pressed all the moisture out of the firm tofu (keep a full roll of paper towels on hand, you’ll need at least half a roll).

The first time I made this, I didn’t have enough paper towels and the tofu was a little springy. The second time, I followed the directions to the letter and the tofu seemed to better absorb the marinade’s flavor, plus it had more of a consistency or bulk to it.

What’s next on the menu? Tough question. There are too many recipes and I want to try them all. Maybe sometime this week, we’ll have Wuxi Spareribs, Hunan Scallion Pancakes, and Vietnamese Fried Spring Rolls.

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New York Times Bestsellers: January 3, 2010

January 3rd, 2010

Hardcover Fiction

1. THE LOST SYMBOL, by Dan Brown
2. I, ALEX CROSS, by James Patterson
3. UNDER THE DOME, by Stephen King
4. THE HELP, by Kathryn Stockett
5. PIRATE LATITUDES, by Michael Crichton

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Hardcover Nonfiction

1. GOING ROGUE, by Sarah Palin
2. HAVE A LITTLE FAITH, by Mitch Albom
3. ARGUING WITH IDIOTS, written and edited by Glenn Beck, Kevin Balfe and others
4. TRUE COMPASS, by Edward M. Kennedy
5. OPEN, by Andre Agassi

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Trade Fiction

1. THE SHACK, by William P. Young
2. PUSH, by Sapphire
3. THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO, by Stieg Larsson
4. THE LOVELY BONES, by Alice Sebold
5. THE ART OF RACING IN THE RAIN, by Garth Stein

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Mass-Market Fiction

1. DEAR JOHN, by Nicholas Sparks
2. THE ASSOCIATE, by John Grisham
3. THE LOVELY BONES, by Alice Sebold
4. CROSS COUNTRY, by James Patterson
5. ARCTIC DRIFT, by Clive Cussler and Dirk Cussler

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Nonfiction

1. THE BLIND SIDE, by Michael Lewis
2. THREE CUPS OF TEA, by Greg Mortenson and David Oliver Relin
3. FREAKONOMICS, by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner
4. BLINK, by Malcolm Gladwell
5. I HOPE THEY SERVE BEER IN HELL, by Tucker Max

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Hardcover Advice

1. MASTERING THE ART OF FRENCH COOKING, VOL. 1, by Julia Child, Simone Beck and Louisette Bertholle
2. GUINNESS WORLD RECORDS 2010, edited by Craig Glenday
3. IT’S YOUR TIME, by Joel Osteen
4. THE PIONEER WOMAN COOKS, by Ree Drummond
5. THE LAST LECTURE, by Randy Pausch with Jeffrey Zaslow

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Advice

1. MORE DINERS, DRIVE-INS AND DIVES, by Guy Fieri with Ann Volkwein
2. NEW MOON, by Mark Cotta Vaz
3. DINERS, DRIVE-INS AND DIVES, by Guy Fieri with Ann Volkwein
4. RACHAEL RAY’S BOOK OF 10, by Rachael Ray
5. THE LOVE DARE, by Stephen and Alex Kendrick with Lawrence Kimbrough

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Children’s Books

1. SPLENDIFEROUS CHRISTMAS, by Jane O’Connor
2. THE CHRISTMAS SWEATER, adapted by Chris Schoebinger from the story by Glenn Beck
3. THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS, by Clement C. Moore
4. LEGO STAR WARS, by Simon Beecroft
5. WADDLE!, written and illustrated by Rufus Butler Seder

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Graphic Books

1. THE BOOK OF GENESIS: ILLUSTRATED, by R. Crumb
2. ASTERIOS POLYP, by David Mazzucchelli
3. THE WONDERFUL WIZARD OF OZ, by Eric Shanower and Skottie Young
4. WOLVERINE: OLD MAN LOGAN, by Mark Millar and Steve McNiven
5. PRIDE AND PREJUDICE, by Nancy Butler and Hugo Petrus

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New York Times Bestsellers: December 13, 2009

December 13th, 2009

Hardcover Fiction

1. U IS FOR UNDERTOW, by Sue Grafton
2. THE LOST SYMBOL, by Dan Brown
3. I, ALEX CROSS, by James Patterson
4. UNDER THE DOME, by Stephen King
5. THE HELP, by Kathryn Stockett

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Hardcover Nonfiction

1. GOING ROGUE, by Sarah Palin
2. STONES INTO SCHOOLS, by Greg Mortenson
3. HAVE A LITTLE FAITH, by Mitch Albom
4. OPEN, by Andre Agassi
5. TRUE COMPASS, by Edward M. Kennedy

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Trade Fiction

1. PUSH, by Sapphire
2. THE SHACK, by William P. Young
3. THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO, by Stieg Larsson
4. THE PIANO TEACHER, by Janice Y.K. Lee
5. THE ART OF RACING IN THE RAIN, by Garth Stein

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Mass-Market Fiction

1. BORN OF ICE, by Sherrilyn Kenyon
2. DEAR JOHN, by Nicholas Sparks
3. THE ASSOCIATE, by John Grisham
4. ARCTIC DRIFT, by Clive Cussler and Dirk Cussler
5. 7TH HEAVEN, by James Patterson and Maxine Paetro

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Nonfiction

1. THE BLIND SIDE, by Michael Lewis
2. THREE CUPS OF TEA, by Greg Mortenson and David Oliver Relin
3. FREAKONOMICS, by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner
4. THE GLASS CASTLE, by Jeannette Walls
5. GLENN BECK’S ‘COMMON SENSE’, by Glenn Beck

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Hardcover Advice

1. GUINNESS WORLD RECORDS 2010, edited by Craig Glenday
2. THE PIONEER WOMAN COOKS, by Ree Drummond
3. IT’S YOUR TIME, by Joel Osteen
4. DIVINE SOUL MIND BODY HEALING AND TRANSMISSION SYSTEM, by Zhi Gang Sha
5. GOOD EATS, by Alton Brown

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Advice

1. MORE DINERS, DRIVE-INS AND DIVES, by Guy Fieri with Ann Volkwein
2. NEW MOON, by Mark Cotta Vaz
3. DINERS, DRIVE-INS AND DIVES, by Guy Fieri with Ann Volkwein
4. THE FIVE LOVE LANGUAGES, by Gary Chapman
5. RACHAEL RAY’S BOOK OF 10, by Rachael Ray

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Children’s Books

1. SPLENDIFEROUS CHRISTMAS, by Jane O’Connor
2. THE CHRISTMAS SWEATER, adapted by Chris Schoebinger from the story by Glenn Beck
3. LEGO STAR WARS, by Simon Beecroft
4. SKIPPYJON JONES, LOST IN SPICE, by Judy Schachner
5. NUBS, by Brian Dennis, Mary Nethery and Kirby Larson

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Graphic Books

1. THE BOOK OF GENESIS: ILLUSTRATED, by R. Crumb
2. BATMAN: BATTLE FOR THE COWL, by Tony Daniel
3. WOLVERINE: OLD MAN LOGAN, by Mark Millar and Steve McNiven
4. PRIDE AND PREJUDICE, by Nancy Butler and Hugo Petrus
5. THE WONDERFUL WIZARD OF OZ, by Eric Shanower and Skottie Young

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The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets’ Nest

December 8th, 2009

The Who Kicked the Hornets' Nest, by Steig LarssonThe Girl Who Kicked the Hornets’ Nest (Millennium Trilogy, 3)
By Stieg Larsson
Quercus
602 pages

Note: American release of the book is scheduled for May 2010.

Lisbeth Salander fans who can’t wait for the American publication of the final installment of the Steig Larsson’s Millennium trilogy can order the book via Amazon.uk or the Book Depository, and for a few dollars more readers can find out what happens to her and Millennium’s publisher Mikael Blomkvist.

In the second book, The Girl Who Played with Fire, Larsson played a cruel joke on readers, leaving them with a horrible cliff hanger that some (including this reviewer) thought a page was missing. The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets’ Nest immediately follows up with Salander and the evil Alexander Zalachenko flown in by helicopter to the hospital. Salander, with bullets in her hip, shoulder, and head, is barely alive and is rushed into surgery. From there the story evolves more of Blomkvist’s attempts to proves Salander’s innocence, who is  still suspected of the murders of two Millennium journalists.

However, this story is more about a covert operation run by Säpo, the Swedish secret police, and how Salander inadvertently  became a victim of the Swedish welfare system in order to hide and protect Säpo’s secrets. In this last tome, Larsson spends more time with the inner workings of Säpo and its bureaucrats—characters who seem to be stuck in an antiquated cold war mode. It’s in these sections that slows book’s pace, but to speed up the story, Larsson includes a subplot concerning Erika Berger, the editor-in-chief of Millennium and Blomkvist’s occasional lover. In the second volume, Berger has accepted the editor-in-chief job at Svenska Morgon-Posten. Right from the very start, she is seen as the enemy by many of the old-time staffers, who make life difficult for the forward thinking editor, but as days go by Berger begins to question about having left  Millennium for this new job. Life becomes even more complicated for her when she starts receiving sexually explicit emails.

There is more meat to the story and Berger has an out thanks to a story that Millennium plans to publish concerning the newspaper’s chairman of the board, but overall this secondary story seems gratuitous and really doesn’t add much to the overall plot of proving Salander innocent.

And that’s Blomkvist’s mission—to prove that his friend is not a murderer and to show that she’s been a victim of an illegal government conspiracy. Blomkvist convinces his sister–a woman’s rights lawyer with little trial experience under her belt–to help Salander with her defense. It’s in these scenes that feature Lisbeth that Larsson’s writing shines and  keeps readers turning the pages. Once again, he outdoes himself into bringing this fabulous character to life.

Although this final installment of the Millennium trilogy has sections that seem unnecessarily long, and some readers might be confused with the who’s who of Säpo’s cast of characters, it’s the ending that’s important. Larsson, before he died suddenly, had started a fourth volume and originally had planned a ten book series about Millennium. The question for most readers was whether Larsson would satisfactorily resolve the Salander and Blomkvist broken relationship. Without offering any spoilers, readers will be pleased with it how it concludes and it will leave them more than satisfied and  perhaps smiling.

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New York Times Bestsellers: December 6, 2009

December 6th, 2009

Hardcover Fiction

1. I, ALEX CROSS, by James Patterson
2. PIRATE LATITUDES, by Michael Crichton
3. THE LOST SYMBOL, by Dan Brown
4. UNDER THE DOME, by Stephen King
5. BREATHLESS, by Dean Koontz

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Hardcover Nonfiction

1. GOING ROGUE, by Sarah Palin
2. HAVE A LITTLE FAITH, by Mitch Albom
3. OPEN, by Andre Agassi
4. SUPERFREAKONOMICS, by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner
5. ARGUING WITH IDIOTS, written and edited by Glenn Beck, Kevin Balfe and others

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Trade Fiction

1. PUSH, by Sapphire
2. THE PIANO TEACHER, by Janice Y.K. Lee
3. THE SHACK, by William P. Young
4. THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO, by Stieg Larsson
5. BED OF ROSES, by Nora Roberts

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Mass-Market Fiction

1. DEAR JOHN, by Nicholas Sparks
2. LAVENDER MORNING, by Jude Deveraux
3. THE ASSOCIATE, by John Grisham
4. THE LOST, by J.D. Robb, Patricia Gaffney, Mary Blayney and Ruth Ryan Langan
5. CRUEL INTENT, by J.A. Jance

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Nonfiction

1. THE BLIND SIDE, by Michael Lewis
2. THREE CUPS OF TEA, by Greg Mortenson and David Oliver Relin
3. FREAKONOMICS, by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner
4. THE GLASS CASTLE, by Jeannette Walls
5. I HOPE THEY SERVE BEER IN HELL, by Tucker Max

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Hardcover Advice

1. GUINNESS WORLD RECORDS 2010, edited by Craig Glenday
2. IT’S YOUR TIME, by Joel Osteen
3. DIVINE SOUL MIND BODY HEALING AND TRANSMISSION SYSTEM, by Zhi Gang Sha
4. THE PIONEER WOMAN COOKS, by Ree Drummond
5. GOOD EATS, by Alton Brown

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Advice

1. NEW MOON, by Mark Cotta Vaz
2. MORE DINERS, DRIVE-INS AND DIVES, by Guy Fieri with Ann Volkwein
3. WHAT TO EXPECT WHEN YOU’RE EXPECTING, by Heidi Murkoff and Sharon Mazel
4. THE FIVE LOVE LANGUAGES, by Gary Chapman
5. THE LOVE DARE, by Stephen and Alex Kendrick with Lawrence Kimbrough

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Children’s Books

1. SPLENDIFEROUS CHRISTMAS, by Jane O’Connor
2. LEGO STAR WARS, by Simon Beecroft
3. NUBS, by Brian Dennis, Mary Nethery and Kirby Larson
4. THE CHRISTMAS SWEATER, adapted by Chris Schoebinger from the story by Glenn Beck
5. THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS, by Clement C. Moore

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Graphic Books

1. THE BOOK OF GENESIS: ILLUSTRATED, by R. Crumb
2. BATMAN: BATTLE FOR THE COWL, by Tony Daniel
3. GREEN LANTERN CORPS: EMERALD ECLIPSE, by Peter J. Tomasi and Patrick Gleason
4. WOLVERINE: OLD MAN LOGAN, by Mark Millar and Steve McNiven
5. GREEN LANTERN: AGENT ORANGE, by Geoff Johns and Philip Tan

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Pure Simple Cooking: Effortless Meals Everday, by Diana Henry

November 29th, 2009

Pure Simple Cooking; Effortless Meals Everyday, by Diana HenryPure Simple Cooking: Effortless Meals Every Day
By Diana Henry, photography by Jonathan Lovekin
Ten Speed Press, 2007
192 pages
$21.95 

Yes, the cookbook reviews are back and with one little treasure that we discovered at our local library: Diana Henry’s Pure Simple Cooking

The title says it all. There’s no doubt that you will love how easy the recipes are to prepare, how tasty they are, and how beautiful the finished meal looks.

After testing out four recipes, I knew that this book was a keeper and I had to get my very own. So off I went to Amazon, bought it and I’m expecting my copy to arrive in the mail any day now. In the meantime, I am hoarding the library’s copy.

What’s to like about Pure Simple Cooking? Is it Jonathan Lovekin’s photography? Oh yes, and everything I made looks just like his photographs! This is a great feat for me because whenever I make something from a recipe it tastes good, but it always lacks the pretty factor.

For those not familiar with Diana Henry she is the food columnist for Britain’s Sunday Telegraph and the author of five cookbooks. In addition she co-hosts a popular UK television show and was also named Cookery Writer of the Year in 2007. Not too shabby, eh?

Pure Simple Cooking consists of 13 chapters that cover chicken, chops, sausages, leg of lamb, fish, pasta, greens and herbs and a good variety of the seasonal fruits and vegetables.  For the most part, it appears that Ms. Henry’s palate is inspired by cuisines of the Mediterranean, North Africa, and the Levant and that is fine here at chez moi since we do have a predilection to those types of recipes.

If you like sausage, specifically Spanish chorizo, then you’re in luck. Ms. Henry section on sausages has a handful of recipes that include this savory and smoky sausage. The one recipe that I we tried Spanish Sweet Pototato with Chorizo, Peppers and Fried Egg.  This was the perfect meal for a coldish night and because we had so much of it leftover, I discovered that it’s just as good for breakfast as it is for dinner.

Our actual first venture was an evening that we really wanted something light, but savory and healthy. I’m a big zucchini fan and so we decided that Zucchini with Ricotta, Mint and Basil would be the perfect dish. The mild flavor of the zucchini along with ricotta salata were perfectly combined along with a drizzle of olive oil and the juice of a lemon. Paired with some crusty bread the meal left you feeling more than satisfied. 

We’re big pasta eaters and so far we’ve repeated one dish: Trofie with Shrimp, Feta, Parsley and Lemon. Trofie is essentially gemilli—tight and thinner corkscrew pasta. The pairing of the shrimp and feta make a great combination and play off each other in a delightful way. There’s also enough garlic in the recipe to give it some bite, but it doesn’t overwhelm or upstage the feta’s flavor.

As someone with a notorious sweet tooth and a penchant for brûlée, I couldn’t resist the Summer Berry Brûlé. Easy as pie to make this dessert only required cream, Greek yogurt, berries and sugar. Combining the yogurt with the cream gave the dessert a wonderful consistency and cut down (a tad) the richness of the two ingredients. To get the sugary sheet that all brûlées share the only thing you need to do is to carmelize the sugar. One thing to note: make sure your broiler is very hot; if it isn’t you’ll have cream/yogurt soup.

As we wait for our copy to arrive, we’re already checking off what we want to try next. I’m already eyeing the Roast Lamb with Prosciutto and Garlic while my husband is making noises about Lamb Stuffed with Goat Cheese, Tomatoes, and Basil.

Tonight’s menu is the leftover Trofie, but maybe tomorrow’s dinner will be one of the lamb dishes.

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New York Times Bestsellers: November 29, 2009

November 29th, 2009

Hardcover Fiction

1. I, ALEX CROSS, by James Patterson
2. UNDER THE DOME, by Stephen King
3. THE LOST SYMBOL, by Dan Brown
4. FORD COUNTY, by John Grisham
5. THE HELP, by Kathryn Stockett

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Hardcover Nonfiction

1. GOING ROGUE, by Sarah Palin
2. OPEN, by Andre Agassi
3. HAVE A LITTLE FAITH, by Mitch Albom
4. ARGUING WITH IDIOTS, written and edited by Glenn Beck, Kevin Balfe and others
5. A SIMPLE CHRISTMAS, by Mike Huckabee

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Trade Fiction

1. PUSH, by Sapphire
2. BED OF ROSES, by Nora Roberts
3. THE SHACK, by William P. Young
4. THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO, by Stieg Larsson
5. OLIVE KITTERIDGE, by Elizabeth Strout

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Mass-Market Fiction

1. THE ASSOCIATE, by John Grisham
2. LAVENDER MORNING, by Jude Deveraux
3. CROSS COUNTRY, by James Patterson
4. YOUR HEART BELONGS TO ME, by Dean Koontz
5. TOM CLANCY’S SPLINTER CELL: CONVICTION, by David Michaels

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Nonfiction

1. THE BLIND SIDE, by Michael Lewis
2. FREAKONOMICS, by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner
3. THREE CUPS OF TEA, by Greg Mortenson and David Oliver Relin
4. THE GLASS CASTLE, by Jeannette Walls
5. BLINK, by Malcolm Gladwell

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Hardcover Advice

1. IT’S YOUR TIME, by Joel Osteen
2. DIVINE SOUL MIND BODY HEALING AND TRANSMISSION SYSTEM, by Zhi Gang Sha
3. GUINNESS WORLD RECORDS 2010, edited by Craig Glenday
4. THE PIONEER WOMAN COOKS, by Ree Drummond
5. KNOCKOUT, by Suzanne Somers

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Paperback Advice

1. NEW MOON, by Mark Cotta Vaz
2. WHAT TO EXPECT WHEN YOU’RE EXPECTING, by Heidi Murkoff and Sharon Mazel
3. MORE DINERS, DRIVE-INS AND DIVES, by Guy Fieri with Ann Volkwein
4. THE FIVE LOVE LANGUAGES, by Gary Chapman
5. RACHAEL RAY’S BOOK OF 10, by Rachael Ray

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Children’s Books

1. SPLENDIFEROUS CHRISTMAS, by Jane O’Connor
2. THE CHRISTMAS SWEATER, adapted by Chris Schoebinger from the story by Glenn Beck
3. LEGO STAR WARS, by Simon Beecroft
4. NUBS, by Brian Dennis, Mary Nethery and Kirby Larson
5. THE LION AND THE MOUSE, by Jerry Pinkney

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Graphic Books

1. THE BOOK OF GENESIS: ILLUSTRATED, by R. Crumb
2. GREEN LANTERN: AGENT ORANGE, by Geoff Johns and Philip Tan
3. ABSOLUTE JUSTICE, by Jim Krueger, Alex Ross and Doug Braithwaite
4. THE WONDERFUL WIZARD OF OZ, by Eric Shanower and Skottie Young
5. PRIDE AND PREJUDICE, by Nancy Butler and Hugo Petrus

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The Sartorialist, by Scott Schuman

November 16th, 2009

The Sartorialist by Scott SchumanThe Sartorialist
By Scott Schuman
Penguin Books
512 pages
$25.00

Reviewed by Randall Radic

 “The clothes make the man.”  An old, old adage, which, depending upon the amount of chemical-electrical activity in your prefrontal cortex, might be true.  For beautiful clothes, or a beautiful person caparisoned in beautiful clothes, reflect achievement and affluence.  Yet withal, clothing is highly personal, thus it also reflects taste. 

Beautiful clothes have an indirect impact upon physical beauty.  Clothing serves to enhance and influence beauty.  And the bizarre thing is this:  clothing evokes feelings of beauty rather than defining or pointing to beauty.  That is, beautiful clothing arouses feelings of beauty both in the observed and the observer.  Or try putting it this way:  beautiful clothes give action to beauty, which means that for many simply being beautiful is not enough — for beauty, in and of itself  is quite static, from some perspectives.  Thus beauty, in its erotic pursuit of esteem, seeks to place itself in evidence, i.e., give itself action, for esteem is awarded only on the basis of evidence.  In this sense, then, the artful display of beauty is an achievement — an achievement which itself is a form of beauty. 

What we’re talking about then is the beautiful display of the beautiful.  Beauty within beauty — beauty surrounded by beautiful taste and beautiful fashion — all presented beautifully.

Texture, color and light.  These elements aid beauty in acquiring status.  To that end, St. Thomas Aquinas asserted that beauty abides in the realm of the transcendental; and that beauty is “good” because it affects that perfervid ambience that mankind has designated ‘the soul.’  Indeed, St. Thomas went so far as to actually define beauty:  “Beauty is the splendour of form shining on the proportioned parts of matter.”  Saint Augustine said of beauty, “unity is the form of all beauty …. If beauty delights the mind, it is because beauty is essentially a certain excellence or perfection in the proportion of things.”  In other words, to these acknowledged men of holiness, we enjoy beauty because we like and admire unity, order, and brightness or clarity of color.  St. Thomas listed four qualities of beauty:

1.  perfection of proportion.
2.  integrity, and unity of form.
3.  brightness and clarity in color.
4.  degree of splendour — something luminous in itself.

And according to St. Thomas, deciding that an image or a person is beautiful has its provenance in judgment, not in intuition, and involves “a dialogue” with beauty.  Beauty, then, is what pleases when it is seen.  And to touch beauty is apotheotic, an ascension to God.  For the truly beautiful is ‘whole,’ or ‘complete’ in all its parts and proportions.

The French have termed this ‘completeness’ elegance — that which is gracefully refined and luxuriously attired.  And the term includes, but is not limited to:  line, grace in movement, and a harmony between person, costume and environment.

In other words, the dialogue between beauty and mankind is found in clothing.

Scott Schuman’s book – The Sartorialist – presents in photographs what the reviewer has attempted to present in the above paragraphs – the action that beautiful clothes give to beauty.  Some of the photos depict clothing of the most bizarre and disparate type, but the effect when viewed as a whole is wonderful and may truly be designated as “sartorial elegance.” 

The photos were taken in locations all over the world.  And they demonstrate the distinctiveness of nationality and ethnic taste.  In the end, though, as one flips through the pages, the reader is led to a singular conclusion:  sartorial beauty is a universal concept.  No one person or ethnic group or nation has a monopoly on elegance.  In fact, the photos prove that elegance has many faces:  conservative, outlandish, somber, and colorful.  And many times elegance is most pronounced when displayed with unabashed extravagance. 

When perusing The Sartorialist, do yourself and favor and pay particular attention to the shoes being worn.  The evidence is obvious to even the most myopic – shoes can make or break one’s fashion statement.  As can hats, scarves, and handkerchiefs.  

The Sartorialist is a gem of a book.  It is without peer.  For it provides a glimpse of just how important clothes are in human interactions.  Wearing just the right dress, a woman can shout, “Here I am!” without even opening her mouth.  And for a man, the perfect hat can speak volumes about his masculinity, his personality.

On the Lookyloo-O-Meter, which ranges from 1 star (squint in pain) to 5 stars (gaze in rapture), The Sartorialist beholds 5 elegant stars.  Don’t miss this one.  Simply having it on your coffee table will let everyone know how elegant you really are.

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