AltWeeklies Wire

'The Carbon-Free Home' Explains How to Really Go Greennew

The Hrens' 320-page book categorizes shows how, on a budget, they stopped contributing to global warming and resource depletion, and also saved money.
Pittsburgh City Paper  |  Bill O'Driscoll  |  06-16-2008  |  Nonfiction

Sloane Crosley: A Sorta Normal Memoiristnew

Often compared in a good way to that lovable crew of screw-up self-memorializers -- David Sedaris, Sarah Vowell and Augusten Burroughs -- Crosley manages to set herself apart with her mild normality
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Alli Katz  |  06-16-2008  |  Nonfiction

Looking for 400 Photos of Supersized Stiffies?new

The Big Penis Book, the follow-up to Taschen's 2006 hit The Big Book of Breasts, also edited by Dian Hanson, and boasts more than 400 photos of some startlingly major tent poles, including rare pics of "the 13-and-only" John Holmes.
Orlando Weekly  |  Liz Langley  |  06-12-2008  |  Nonfiction

Mike Edison Walks Alonenew

On his death bed, Edison probably won't lament that he didn't do this or he didn't go there. His leap-then-look approach to life leaves no time for hemming-and-hawing, and even the title of his new memoir reads like bang-bang-bang.
Boston Phoenix  |  Amy Finch  |  06-12-2008  |  Nonfiction

David Milne Dissects the Life of Walt Rostow, Who Never Examined His Role in Terrible Violencenew

Walt Rostow's advice as LBJ's chief advisor led to aggressive military action Vietnam, culminating in massive bombings that left the taint of death and failure on LBJ's presidency.
The Texas Observer  |  Thomas Palaima  |  06-11-2008  |  Nonfiction

Photo Tome Sheds Light on a Dark Scenenew

Photographer Peter Beste has compiled seven years of capturing fake blood and real shit, inverted crosses and mixed messages that reveal Norwegian black metal bands to be the Ramones of death metal: simple and conceptual, an expression of acceptance and rejection, cartoonish and dead serious.
Metro Times  |  Tony Ware  |  06-10-2008  |  Nonfiction

Finding Herself in Cajun Countrynew

Journalist Rheta Grimsley Johnson writes a long love letter to her adoptive home in Louisiana's Cajun Country.
The Memphis Flyer  |  John Branston  |  06-06-2008  |  Nonfiction

Two New Books Rummage Through the Rubble of No Wave New Yorknew

With its loose aesthetic boundaries, abbreviated timeline, and incestuous collaborations, the No Wave years are ripe for the kind of anthropological studies offered by two recent illustrated histories, Marc Masters' No Wave (Black Dog, 205 pages, $29.95) and Thurston Moore and Byron Coley's No Wave: Post-Punk. Underground. New York 1976-1980 (Abrams Image).
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  MAX GOLDBERG  |  06-04-2008  |  Nonfiction

'U.S. vs. Them' Explores the Paranoid Style in U.S. Foreign Policynew

In a new book on American foreign policy, New Republic editor J. Peter Scoblic spends a couple of hundred pages reviewing the historical record of Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush, and the current Bush presidency before getting to the real nub of the issue, in which he is succinctly correct: Conservatism, he writes, "although it has a clear intellectual pedigree, operates on a deep psychological level as well."
Artvoice  |  Staff  |  06-02-2008  |  Nonfiction

Cokie Roberts Looks Back on the Women Who Shaped Americanew

Without the patriotism of women on the home front, Roberts says, the colonies could well have lost the Revolutionary War.
Shepherd Express  |  Rex Rutkoski  |  05-30-2008  |  Nonfiction

'Nixonland' Underlines the Real Lesson of 1968

Today that lesson teaches that we should seek a president who can heal the still-festering wounds of race and class, who can lead us out of war and who can move us past the political purgatory Perlstein calls Nixonland. But by invoking that sad chapter in our history, Hillary Clinton has cast herself in the Dick Nixon role.
The Inlander  |  Ted S. McGregor Jr.  |  05-29-2008  |  Nonfiction

'The Greatest Game' is Filled with Buckner-esque Errorsnew

It's the 30th anniversary of the '78 season and the Yankees are in the cellar again, so comparisons are inevitable. But Richard Bradley's recent book on the '78 Sox season finale, lacks ... well almost everything.
Boston Phoenix  |  George Kimball  |  05-29-2008  |  Nonfiction

Siblings Different as Apples and Orangesnew

In Apples and Oranges, a memoir of sibling discord within her own family, Marie Brenner applies her skills as an investigative reporter to trying to fathom and repair her strained relationship with Carl. Jumping about in space and time, her memoir challenges the reader to find design amid absences and missed connections.
San Antonio Current  |  Steven G. Kellman  |  05-28-2008  |  Nonfiction

'Loose Girl' isn't Satisfyingnew

Rather than a compelling tale of modern sexuality, Loose Girl is a milquetoast rendering of crappy sex and icky moments.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Liz Spikol  |  05-27-2008  |  Nonfiction

Steven Kurutz Goes Behind the Scenes with Tribute Bandsnew

Like a Rolling Stone concerns itself largely with Kurutz's experience touring with two Stones tribute bands, Sticky Fingers and Canada's own Blushing Brides. The dramatic core of the book is the bitter and bizarre rivalry between two aging Mick-divas, Fingers' frontman Glen Carroll (pictured on the cover of the book) and Montreal-born Maurice Raymond.
Montreal Mirror  |  Juliet Waters  |  05-23-2008  |  Nonfiction

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