Showing posts with label Harper Paperbacks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harper Paperbacks. Show all posts

1/22/2010

Review of Why Don't Cats Like to Swim?: An Imponderables Book (Imponderables Books) (Paperback)

This is the first of the Imponderables series of books.For people like me who love to accumulate useless but fascinating information it is a wonderful book.It asks the questions (Why do we itch, why are there holes in Swiss cheese, why does an X stand for a kiss, etc....)and then proceeds to answer them.If you ever wanted to be a know-it-all (or want your know-it-all to at least have the right answers) then read this book and become the authority on useless information with your family and friends.Much more fascinating than trivia books (after all you might want to know why cashews are not sold in their shells but who really cares who the runner up for the 1998 Ms America was?).
Each piece is a short question and answer so that you could pick it up and read one in a minute or two, but if you are like me then once you have read one you have to keep on reading the next and then the next until you have consumed an hour or more of fascinating reading.

Product Description

Why does an "X" stand for a kiss?
Which fruits are in Juicy Fruit® gum?
Why do people cry at happy endings?
Why do you never see baby pigeons?

Pop-culture guru David Feldman demystifies these topics and so much more in Why Don't Cats Like to Swim? -- the unchallenged source of answers to civilization's most perplexing questions. Part of the Imponderables® series, Feldman's book arms readers with information about everyday life -- from science, history, and politics to sports, television, and radio -- that encyclopedias, dictionaries, and almanacs just don't have. Where else will you learn what makes women open their mouths when applying mascara?



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12/16/2009

Review of May Contain Nuts: A Very Loose Canon of American Humor (Paperback)

I flipped though it and bought it on a whim.It is the best thing I have ever done for myself.This book is amazing!!! It's not just wonderful because it is a great pick-me-up... but it's also brilliant in the writing.Many of the things could be performance pieces or hit a wide audiance. Just read it you won't go wrong! Highly recommended

Product Description
Nutritiousness aside, May Contain Nuts provides 100% of the daily recommended amount of that essential life-enhancer, laughter. With more than 70 contributors and 150 shots from the loose canon of American humor, it's a stellar edition with plenty of real stars from stage and screen(writing):

Seinfeld's Peter Mehlman, Hairspray's Mark O'Donnell, Ed's Michael Ian Black and the world's most famous drive-in movie critic, Joe Bob Briggs

Plus, there's Roy Blount Jr. on how to travel "Southern" outside the South; summer recipes from our man in the kitchen, Henry Alford; Firesign Theatre's Phil Austin's yuletide "Tale of the Old Detective"; P. J. O'Rourke's not-so-intimate "Diary of a Country Gentleman"; Daniel Radosh's "PowerPoint Anthology of Literature"; and Tom Gliatto's helpful overview of today's thriving cabaret scene. With umpteen illustrations, many perplexing charts, and our first centerfold ever, this volume is party-sized for your reading pleasure.

New in This Issue

  • a comprehensive teacher's guide
  • a food section (including a transcript from Van Gogh's early cooking show)
  • up-to-the-minute newscrawl
  • a preview of the new all Law & Order Network
  • "Blues for Advanced Beginners"
  • Ingenious and iffy tributes to Orson Welles, Dale Earnhardt, Beck, John Edwards, and Celine Dion


About the Author
The editor of More Mirth of a Nation: The Best Contemporary Humor, Michael J. Rosen has been called the unofficial organizer of the National Humor Writer's Union, a pretty good idea for an organization that could offer all kinds of benefits to its struggling members (currently numbering more than 300 who have never been published in The New Yorker or aired on NPR). He has been called other things as well, like in third grade, and then in seventh grade especially, by certain older kids known as "hoods," who made his life miserable, specifically during gym class, lunch period and after school. Later, much later, the Washington Post called him a "fidosopher" because of his extensive publications on dogs, dog training, and dog-besotted people. The New York Times called him an example of creative philanthropy in their special "Giving" section for persuading "writers, artists, photographers and illustrators to contribute their time and talents to books" that benefit Share Our Strength's anti-hunger efforts and animal-welfare causes. As an author of a couple dozen books for children, he's been called...okay, enough with the calling business.

For nearly twenty years, he served as literary director at the Thurber House, a cultural center in the restored home of James Thurber. Garrison Keillor, bless his heart, called it (sorry) "the capital of American humor." While there, Rosen helped to create The Thurber Prize for American Humor, a national book award for humor writing, and edited four anthologies of Thurber's previously unpublished and uncollected work, most recently The Dog Department: James Thurber on Hounds, Scotties and Talking Poodles, happily published by HarperCollins as well.

In his capacity as editor for this biennial, Rosen reads manuscripts year round, beseeching and beleaguering the nation's most renowned and well-published authors, and fending off the rants and screeds from folks who've discovered the ease of self-publishing on the web. Last summer, Rosen edited a lovely book, 101 Damnations: The Humorists' Tour of Personal Hells; while some critics (all right, one rather outspoken friend) considered this a book of complaints, Rosen has argued that humor, like voting and picketing and returning an appliance that "worked" all of four months before requiring a repair that costs twice the purchase price, humor is about the desire for change. It's responding to the way things are compared to the way you'd like things to be. And it's a much more convivial response than pouting or cornering unsuspecting guests at dinner parties.

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12/10/2009

Review of Remind Me Again Why I Need a Man: A Novel (Paperback)

A friend of mine recommended I read this book as she had just started it. Being frustrated with the dating scene I figured why not. I had a few days off between semesters, so I bought the book. It's hilarious. You want to know what is going to happen next and it's interesting. The biggest draw back is that the book could've used a different editor. There are a few typos in it, but not enough that it makes you want to stop reading. So if you're interested in a book to pass the time that will make you laugh, I would suggest giving it a read.

Product Description

Amelia Lockwood doesn't mean to sound greedy. She's got a fabulous career in television, a posh apartment, and four fiercely loyal and wickedly funny friends. The only thing she's missing is a husband. So she swallows her pride, signs up for dating boot camp, and enlists the help of a professional-an acidic New Yorker with a black belt in "tongue fu"-who'll help Amelia apply proven business-marketing principles to finding her dream man. Amelia's first assignment is to track down all the lovers she's ever lost-from the guy who dumped her during Live Aid to her most painfully recent ex, he-whose-name-shall-forever-remain-unspoken-because her future happiness depends on her tackling lesson number one: If you can't learn from your past, how will you ever move forward?



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11/17/2009

Review of The King's Gold: An Old World Novel of Adventure (The Red Lion) (Paperback)

I got this book last Saturday and finished it on Sunday having put it down only to sleep.The plot is very quick, with lots of turns and puzzles, all of which make sense when you look back.The settings are beautifully described historical sites in Europe and South America.But the best part is the characters and their dialogue.The Washington Post just gave it a rave review calling the heroine "Indiana Jane," but it is much, much better than the Indiana Jones series.[...]



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11/02/2009

Review of High Steel: The Daring Men Who Built the World's Greatest Skyline, 1881 to the Present (Paperback)

Rasenberger brings awareness to the little known and aknowledged trade of Iron Workers.This is an excellent book for those who are in the trade and those who want a close to real life view of who Ironworkers are and what their life was and is like.The book gives a pretty accurate history of the trade going back to the early Bridgeman to the current International Associates of Bridge, Structrual, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers.Being a 3rd generation Iron Worker I found this a very pleasureable read and recommend it to anyone who wants to know more about what it is that we do as we build America on Beam at a time.

Product Description
HIGH STEEL does for the world of ironworkers - the brave men who scale the beams of skyscrapers hundreds of feet in the air - what THE PERFECT STORM did for deep sea fishing and RIVETHEAD did for assembly line workers. From the early days of steel construction in Chicago, through the great boom years of New York city ironwork, and up through the present, High Steel follows the trajectory of careers inextricably linked to both great accomplishment and catastrophic disaster. The personal stories reveal the lives of ironworkers and the dangers they face as they walk across the windswept, swaying summits of tomorrow's skyscrapers, balanced on steel girders sometimes only six inches wide. Rasenberger explores both the greatest accomplishments of ironwork - the vaulting bridges and towers that define America's skyline - and the deadliest disasters, such as the Quebec Bridge Collapse of 1907, when 75 ironworkers, including 33 Mohawk Indians, fell to their deaths. HIGH STEEL is an accessible, thrilling, and vertiginous portrait of the lives of some of our most brave yet unrecognized men.

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10/31/2009

Review of Bart Simpson's Guide to Life: A Wee Handbook for the Perplexed (Hardcover)

Good advice from the little brat Bart Simpson. There's tons of funny things like Love=Hate unless they really hate. How to get out of doing chores. How to get more money from your parents. lies your parents tell you"If you tell me I promise I won't get mad. It is one of the bestSimpsons books I have ever read! How to make your parents go crazy"Say are we there yet every 10 seconds". Barts dream room, andeven if you don't like bart simpson there's things like Lisa's dream houseHomer's Beauty Secrets and Marge's Beauty Secrets. It also has how to cheat"If you get caught don't say my name". What do parents think?Don't know then read! There is even Zesty Prayers "Now I lay me downto sleep. I pray my bladder doesn't leak. If I should pee before I wake, Ipray the Lord to dry my lake". There's even Nutritional Informationand Ingredients on the back. So give a hoot ask your parents to buy BartSimpson's Guide to Life. If they don't let you yell and scream intill youlose all your breath and pass out on the floor. You won't be missinganything good I'll be here reading the old people's newspaper, so go, NOW!

Product Description
Starved for the whole truth, man?

Take a bite out of this bitsy but beefy package, brimming with flavorized morsels of wit, wisdom and worldly knowledge brought to you by the one and only Bartholomew J. Simpson -- get the hard-knocks facts of life from the guy who's seen it all, heard it all, done it all and denies it all.

(The "J" stands for "Jo-Jo"...)

About the Author

Matt Groening, the creator and executive producer of the Emmy Award-winning series "The Simpsons," the "Life in Hell" cartoon series, and the animated Fox tv series "Futurama", is the man responsible for bringing animation to prime time.

In addition, Groening formed Bongo Comics Group in 1993 and currently serves as publisher of their four comic books -- Simpsons Comics, Itchy & Scratchy Comics, Bartman, and Radioactive Man.

Groening lives in Los Angeles, CA.

www.thesimpsons.com

The SimpsonsTM & © Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. All rights reserved.

FuturamaTM & © Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. All rights reserved.



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10/28/2009

Review of Christietown: A Novel About Vintage Clothing, Romance, Mystery, and Agatha Christie (Cece Caruso Mysteries) (Paperback)

Cece Caruso's latest project is a biography of Agatha Christie.Unfortunately, her publisher seems to think it needs more work.Specifically, Cece is told to beef up the section on Agatha Christie's mysterious disappearance during December of 1926.She has a little over a week to rework that section and get it back.

As if Cece doesn't already have enough on her plate.She's supposed to be planning her wedding to Detective Peter Gambino and a baby shower for her daughter.Her ex-husband and his new fiancee are in town for that last event, causing more conflict in Cece's life.Additionally, she's in charge of the opening day festivities for Christietown.

Christietown is a retirement community based around the works of the famed mystery author.The subdivision resembles a small English town complete with Vicarage and Pub.

Unfortunately, the play doesn't go well when the woman set to play Miss Marple disappears only to turn up murdered by poison.Is someone going too far with the Christie theme?Why was the woman murder?

This is another book that will please Cece's many fans.Cece and her family and friends are always fun to spend time around, and this book is no exception.The main mystery seems a bit slow at times due to the various sub-plots, but for those who love the characters, this isn't an issue at all.Along the way, we get snippets that offer one theory on what really happened during Agatha's real life disappearance.

Cece never fails to entertain, and this book is no exception.

Product Description

A new suspense-themed housing tract on the edge of the Mojave Desert is about to open, and who better to help promote the Cotswold-cozy development than mystery biographer extraordinaire Cece Caruso? For the grand opening weekend, Cece is staging a play featuring the beloved sleuth Miss Marple. Of course, everything goes wrong, including a leading lady who ends up dead.

All is not well in Christietown; its secrets are as complicated as the truth behind Agatha Christie's real-life disappearance. The developer, an Englishman who claims to be Dame Agatha's descendent, has ruthless investors breathing down his neck. Meanwhile, Cece's got a wedding to plan, a baby shower to give, and an ex-husband who shows up on her doorstep with his fiancée and future mother-in-law. And when another body surfaces, the intrepid amateur sleuth knows she must play the famed detective for real-or suffer the same mysterious fate.



About the Author

Susan Kandel is a former art critic for the Los Angeles Times. She has taught at New York University and UCLA, and served as the editor of the international journal artext. She lives with her family in West Hollywood, California.



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