
Saturday, October 31, 2009
The Strangest Man:

From : The Globe and Mail
Photo :
The Hidden Life of Paul Dirac, Mystic of the Atom, by Graham Farmelo, Basic Books, 539 pages, $37.95.
Dirac's contributions to the birth and development of quantum physics in the period between the two world wars were many and fundamental. He was the first to bring together quantum physics and relativity. The famous Dirac equation – “achingly beautiful,” according to one physicist – describes the behaviour of every electron, proton and neutron that ever existed. The equation predicted the existence of antimatter, which was subsequently observed by experimentalists.
Friday, October 30, 2009
WORSE THAN WAR

From : Public Affairs
Photo : http://www.publicaffairsbooks.com/
Genocide, Eliminationism, and the Ongoing Assault on HumanityDANIEL JONAH GOLDHAGE
A paradigm-changing investigation into the phenomenon of genocide and mass killing, by the author of the number one international bestseller Hitler's Willing Executioners .
Daniel Jonah Goldhagen's books are events. They stir passionate public debate among political and civic leaders, scholars, and the general public because they compel people to rethink the most powerful conventional wisdoms and stubborn moral problems of the day. Worse Than War gets to the heart of the phenomenon, genocide, that has caused more deaths in the modern world than military conflict. In doing so, it challenges fundamental things we thought we knew about human beings, society, and politics.
More............
Bookyards Editor: For more books on war go here...
My Life as It is

From : The Telegraph
Photo :www.telegraph.co.uk
Seasonal Suicide Notes: My Life as It is Lived by Roger Lewis: review
Sinclair McKay finds humour and pathos in Roger Lewis' collection of Christmas round robins, Seasonal Suicide Notes .
Sinclair McKay finds humour and pathos in Roger Lewis' collection of Christmas round robins, Seasonal Suicide Notes .
The slithering noise of a Christmas round-robin envelope being pushed through one’s letterbox never makes the soul jump with joy. All that closely typed family news, chronicled in such unsparing, jaunty detail, and in such an irritating font. By way of contrast, the Roger Lewis version is something you do not want to end.
Last 24 hours
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Harlot's progress

From : Economist . com
Photo : Thomas Rowlandson
The Secret History of Georgian London: How the Wages of Sin Shaped the Capital. By Dan Cruickshank. Random House: 688 pages; £25.
AS MANY as one in five young women were prostitutes in 18th-century London. The Covent Garden that tourists frequent today was the centre of a vast sex trade strewn across hundreds of brothels and so-called coffee houses. Fornication in public was common and even children were routinely treated for venereal disease. A German visitor observed a nation that had overstepped all others “in immorality and addiction to debauchery”.
Last 24 hours
1. Martin Amis's problem is not Katie Price, but women
2. Why has John Le Carré left his publisher out in the cold?
3. Sandi Toksvig's top 10 unsung heroines
4. Philip Roth predicts novel will be minority cult within 25 years
5. The digested read: Superfreakonomics, by Steven D Levitt & Stephen J Dubner Digested read
1. Martin Amis's problem is not Katie Price, but women
2. Why has John Le Carré left his publisher out in the cold?
3. Sandi Toksvig's top 10 unsung heroines
4. Philip Roth predicts novel will be minority cult within 25 years
5. The digested read: Superfreakonomics, by Steven D Levitt & Stephen J Dubner Digested read
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Understanding India’s past

From : The Hindu
Photo : http://www.hindu.com/
ANCIENT INDIA — New Research: Edited by Upinder Singh and Nayanjot Lahiri; Oxford University Press, YMCA Library Building, Jai Singh Road, New Delhi-110001.The history of modern scholarship in understanding India’s past is more than two centuries old. There have been many publications by pioneers and doyens in the field. What distinguishes this book is that those who have contributed to it are young, standing on the first step of their research career. All the articles show good academic maturity and meticulousness in gathering data, correlating them into a theoretical framework and, above all, presenting them in a language that is devoid of jargon. That there is an odd man out among the contributors should warm the hearts of gender activists. If the contributors deserve all encouragement in their endeavour, the editors need to be commended for guiding these young scholars in the right direction.
Bookyards Editor: For more history books go here...
The Weakest Link

From : The Powell`s Books
Photo : Colin Tudge
The Link: Uncovering Our Earliest Ancestor.
Recent events cause me to wonder whether we are in the midst of an arms race being waged by various scientists and their marketing gurus over how best to communicate results to the lay public. A case in point is the commotion over the Eocene primate skeleton known as Ida. At roughly 47 million years old, Ida is a remarkably complete specimen of a juvenile female primate from the Messel Pit, a UNESCO World Heritage site in Germany, near Frankfurt. Variously hailed as "the Holy Grail of paleontology," "the eighth wonder of the world" and a "Rosetta stone" for reconstructing our distant ancestry, the fossil made its public debut at a gala event at the American Museum of Natural History in New York on May 19, 2009. A press conference at the museum coincided precisely with the online publication of a technical paper describing the fossil in the journal PLoS One. By the time the press conference had ended, a glitzy Web site promoting the fossil had gone live, a television documentary was being advertised on the History Channel, and thousands of copies of The Link, a book describing the discovery, had been distributed to retail outlets worldwide.
Last 24 hours
1. The digested read: Superfreakonomics, by Steven D Levitt & Stephen J Dubner Digested read
2. Stephen King writes debut comic book
3. Video: Madeleine Bunting rediscovers the land of her father
4. Philip Roth predicts novel will be minority cult within 25 years
5. Maurice Sendak tells parents worried by Wild Things to 'go to hell'
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
A New Electronic Reader, the Nook, Enters the Market

From ; The New York Times
Photo : Shannon Stapleton / Reuters
As widely expected, Barnes & Noble unveiled its Nook electronic reading device at a splashy news conference on Tuesday to generally positive views from the publishing community, and offered some details about its whispered-about lending capabilities.
As much as anything, publishers seemed relieved that Barnes & Noble, which operates the nation’s largest chain of bookstores, had produced a credible alternative to Amazon’s Kindle. The Nook, priced at $259, went on sale Tuesday afternoon at nook.com, at a price that matched the latest edition of the Kindle. The Nook will ship starting in late November.
Amazon currently dominates the market for electronic readers. Estimates vary, but according to the Codex Group, a consultant to the publishing industry, Amazon has sold about 945,000 units, compared with 525,000 units of the Sony Reader.
Amazon currently dominates the market for electronic readers. Estimates vary, but according to the Codex Group, a consultant to the publishing industry, Amazon has sold about 945,000 units, compared with 525,000 units of the Sony Reader.
Becoming Americans

From : The Christian Science Montitor
Photo :
Selections from 85 immigrants tell what it means to become an American.
In 1979, the Library of America began its great task: making the works of America’s essential writers available in compact, durable, uniform editions that would remain in print. This would seem to be enough for one press to handle, but in 1998 the LOA went on to publish “Writing New York,” the first in a separate series of special anthologies.
The latest of these anthologies is not just by American writers. It is about what it is like to become an American writer – or at least, since many of the authors here were not primarily writers – what it is like to become an American.
The latest of these anthologies is not just by American writers. It is about what it is like to become an American writer – or at least, since many of the authors here were not primarily writers – what it is like to become an American.
Beyond the Grave

From : The Wall Street Journal
Photo : Historical Picture Archive/Corbis
How visions of what awaits us after death have changed across the ages.
'O you who are still on earth and pass this stone, you who love life and hate death, make offerings of fruit, fowl and meats to Osiris on behalf of the child buried here." This anonymous utterance from beyond the grave, inscribed on an Egyptian funeral stone some time between 2050 B.C. and 1650 B.C., is one of the more haunting testimonies included in "After Lives: A Guide to Heaven Hell, and Purgatory." British scholar John Casey's wide-ranging study shows the many ways in which mankind has tried to make sense of life after death.
Behind Closed Doors

From : The Guardian book shop
Photo : http://www.guardianbookshop.co.uk/
Vickery unlocks the homes of English men and women, from the mansion of Anne Dormer in the 1680s to the dreary London lodgings of Anthony Trollope in the 1830s.
Delves into fifty archives, to reveal the role of house and home in power and status during the Georgian period.Reveals the homes of Georgian England to examine the lives of the people who lived there. This work introduces us to men and women from all walks of life: gentlewoman Anne Dormer in her stately Oxfordshire mansion; bachelor clerk and future novelist Anthony Trollope in his dreary London lodgings; and, servants with a locking box to call their own.
MORE......
Bookyards Editor: For more COMMENTARY book , Bookyards section is here.
Last 24 hours
1. Malcolm Gladwell: 'I'm interested in the slightly dumb and obvious, not the deeply weird and obscure'
2. Philip Roth predicts novel will be minority cult within 25 years
3. McEwan's new novel will feature media hate figure
4. The digested read: Superfreakonomics, by Steven D Levitt & Stephen J Dubner Digested read
5. John Galsworthy hot, James Joyce not . . .
Monday, October 26, 2009
Behind the Iron Curtain

From : The Washington Post
Photo : Simon & Schuster
ENEMIES OF THE PEOPLE
My Family's Journey to America
By Kati Marton The family about which Kati Marton writes is her own. A moderately well-known and exceedingly well-connected print and broadcast journalist in New York, she is a native Hungarian who lived the first eight years of her life in a country under the repressive communist rule of the dictator Matyas Rakosi. She was born in 1949, the daughter of a prominent Hungarian journalist, the Associated Press correspondent Endre Marton, and his wife, Ilona, also a journalist. They were brave people who paid for their courage by being sent to prison, leaving their two young daughters to live with a family "willing to take us in for a certain monthly sum."
By Kati Marton The family about which Kati Marton writes is her own. A moderately well-known and exceedingly well-connected print and broadcast journalist in New York, she is a native Hungarian who lived the first eight years of her life in a country under the repressive communist rule of the dictator Matyas Rakosi. She was born in 1949, the daughter of a prominent Hungarian journalist, the Associated Press correspondent Endre Marton, and his wife, Ilona, also a journalist. They were brave people who paid for their courage by being sent to prison, leaving their two young daughters to live with a family "willing to take us in for a certain monthly sum."
House of Wittgenstein

From : The Guardian Book Shop
Photo : http://www.guardianbookshop.co.uk/
Photo : http://www.guardianbookshop.co.uk/
The story of one of the most talented and eccentric families in European history: the domineering paternal influence of Karl Wittgenstein lead to 3 of his children committing suicide, one becoming a world-famous pianist (using only his left hand) and another being regarded as one of the greatest philosophers of the 20th century.
More..........
Last 24 hours
1. Malcolm Gladwell: 'I'm interested in the slightly dumb and obvious, not the deeply weird and obscure'
2. Nabokov's posthumous novel Laura
3. Superfreakonomics by Steven D Levitt and Stephen J Dubner Book review
4. Maurice Sendak tells parents worried by Wild Things to 'go to hell'
5. What the Dog Saw by Malcolm Gladwell Book review
Sunday, October 25, 2009
Feed the world
From : Ft .com
Photo : Reuters
A drought-hit paddy field on the outskirts of Chongqing, China – one of the countries fuelling demand for greater meat and dairy productionThe End of Food: The Coming Crisis in the World Food IndustryBy Paul RobertsBloomsbury £12.99, 390 pagesFT Bookshop price: £11.99
The Food WarsBy Walden BelloVerso £7.99, 186 pagesFT Bookshop price: £6.39
The Constant Economy: How to Create a Stable SocietyBy Zac GoldsmithAtlantic £16.99, 200 pagesFT Bookshop price: £13.59
The Environmental Food Crisis: The Environment’s Role in Averting Future Food CrisesEdited by Christian NellemannUN Environment Programme, 104 pages (free)
The Feeding of the Nine Billion: Global Food Security for the 21st CenturyBy Alex EvansChatham House, 59 pages (free)
Modern methods are so much better than the old ways,” growled Frank Gervais, an 80-year-old farmer I worked for in my teens in a remote part of southern France. “C’est mieux!” he repeated in his broad accent, wagging his finger to rebuke me for my romanticised notions of pre-industrial farming, before tractors emptied the fields of labourers.
MORE........
Bookyards Editor: For more E-books go here...
Saturday, October 24, 2009
A Soldier First

From : Harper Collins Canada
Photo :
Photo :
Bullets, Bureaucrats and the Politics of War .
In the summer of 2008, General Rick Hillier retired as Chief of the Defence staff of the Canadian Forces. You could almost hear the sigh of relief in Ottawa as Canada’s most popular, and most controversial, military leader since the second World War left a role in which he’d been as frank, unpredictable and resolutely apolitical as any of his predecessors.
Friday, October 23, 2009
The Book of Dead Philosophers

From : Powell's Books
Photo : www.powells.com
The Book of Dead Philosophersby Simon Critchley
In December 2007, at the annual World Congress on Anti-Aging Medicine in Las Vegas, Suzanne Somers, the actress and bestselling author of Ageless: The Naked Truth About Bioidentical Hormones, delivered a rhapsodic keynote speech in praise of hormone replacement therapy. "I go to these parties sometimes with all these successful men who've really achieved in their careers," she told the enthusiastic, middle-aged crowd. "Seventies, eighties, and they're out of gas. They're just so out of gas! They all sit there, they're drooping -- their face, their body's drooping -- they've all got deep belly fat, they're all kind of grumpy.... And I look at them and I think, 'This out of gas doesn't have to be!' You know this. I know this. It's hormones
Welcome to the real Narnia

From : Time on LINE
Photo : entertainment.timesonline.co.uk
The hidden medieval message at the heart of C. S. Lewis's classic Chronicles
Our age is dominated by Saturn, and it is time to rediscover Jupiter. It is safe to say that few if any of the millions who have read C. S. Lewis’s Chronicles of Narnia would have summarized their message in those terms, taken from medieval planetary lore. Michael Ward, who with Planet Narnia has established himself not only as the foremost living Lewis scholar, but also as a brilliant writer in his own right, well knows that in advancing such an argument he risks being lumped with Dan Brown and other so-called discoverers of hidden codes. But his cumulative case for reading the Narnia books in terms of the planets (a brief preliminary account of which was given in the TLS of April 25, 2003) is overwhelming. These stories and their author deserve to be taken far more seriously in literary, cultural and philosophical terms than has hitherto been supposed.
Last 24 hours
1. Maurice Sendak tells parents worried by Wild Things to 'go to hell'
2. Spoof biographies look to spoil Sarah Palin's book launch
3. Misremembering Jack Kerouac
4. New film Where the Wild Things Are sends parents into a 'rumpus'
5. Poem of the week: The Waste Land by TS Eliot Carol Rumens
1. Maurice Sendak tells parents worried by Wild Things to 'go to hell'
2. Spoof biographies look to spoil Sarah Palin's book launch
3. Misremembering Jack Kerouac
4. New film Where the Wild Things Are sends parents into a 'rumpus'
5. Poem of the week: The Waste Land by TS Eliot Carol Rumens
Thursday, October 22, 2009
The Dogs Have Eyes -- And the Nose Knows

From : The Washintgon Post
Photo : dawghousedogdaycare.wordpress.com
INSIDE OF A DOG
What Dogs See,
Smell, and Know
By Alexandra Horowitz
Scribner. 353 pp. $27
What Dogs See,
Smell, and Know
By Alexandra Horowitz
Scribner. 353 pp. $27
Americans this year will spend $45 billion on veterinary antidepressants, canine hip replacements and doggie spa days. Pet spending has nearly tripled in 15 years, with dogs taking up the lion's share. As the animals have made the physical move from backyard doghouses to ergonomic indoor puppy beds, they've undergone an even more significant philosophical evolution: Man's best friend has become what marketing types now call America's "fur baby
The Descent of Man

From : Powell`s Books
Photo : http://www.powells.com/
Darwin's Sacred Cause: How a Hatred of Slavery Shaped Darwin's Views on Human EvolutionWho can divine the intentions of the human heart, the motives that guide behavior? Some of the reasons for our actions lie on the surface of consciousness, whereas others are more deeply embedded in the recesses of the mind. Recovering motives and intentions is a principal job of the historian. For without some attribution of mental attitudes, actions cannot be characterized and decisions assessed. The same overt behavior, after all, might be described as "mailing a letter" or "fomenting a revolution." The recovery of intentions is crucial for the historian's narrative.In the case of Charles Darwin, perhaps the most important question is, What led him to formulate his theory of the modification and common descent of species? Scholars have settled more or less securely on the answer, arguing that since he was quite aware of the transmutational views of his grandfather, Erasmus Darwin, and those of Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, Darwin would have had his eyes opened to the variability of species on his five-year Beagle voyage. After he returned to England in 1836, he consulted with John Gould, ornithologist at the British Museum, about three types of Galapagos mockingbirds. They were not, as the young naturalist had initially assumed, varieties of a single species that had adapted to local environments but true and good species. Frank Sulloway, some years ago, convinced most of the scholarly community that Darwin's experience with Gould ignited a mind packed with possibility.
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Is Barnes & Noble's Nook a Kindle killer?
From Crave/CNET:
While information on Barnes & Noble's new e-book reader, the Nook, has been trickling out for several days, the company unveiled the new $259 device on its Web site Tuesday a few hours before the official launch event in New York.
As previously reported, the Nook, billed as the first Android-powered e-book reader, features not only a 6-inch E-ink screen but a color touch screen that allows you to navigate content and also can turn into a virtual keyboard for searches.
Read more ....
Monday, October 19, 2009
What To Cook In Cold Weather

From : The Atlantic
Photo : Maria Robledo
To try wild mushroom ragù macaroni.
One of my favorite cooking strategies is to a make a big batch of something that I can use as a mutable base to improvise appealing dishes with whatever I have on hand. In cooler months, that something often is a wild mushroom ragù, a rich, hearty, meaty, stew-like sauce made from an abundance of mushrooms cooked with plum tomatoes, onions, and red wine--no meat. It's an ideal sauce for when you need to serve both meat-eaters and vegetarians. Freezable, it allows you to forge wonderful dishes, even when your life gets wild and you don't have a moment to spare.The ragù is easy to make. Use any of the cultivated "wild" mushrooms available--shiitake, cremini, oyster, portobello--along with a few dried porcini mushrooms to beef up the flavor. Saute some chopped onion and garlic, add the mushrooms, tomatoes, and wine, and cook them all together until you have a very thick sauce. Freeze it in 1- or 2-cup containers, to draw upon at a moment's notice.
More.............
Bookyards Editor: For more cooking books go here...
Last 24 hours
1. The Heene family aren't the first balloon-based hoaxers: Edgar Allan Poe did it in 1844
2. Nasa's LCROSS lunar mission uses Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
3. New film Where the Wild Things Are sends parents into a 'rumpus'
4. The demons that drove John Cheever
5. Stop the bean-counters ruling the fiction roost
The Poisonwood Bible
From : The Christian Scienc Monitor
Photo : HarperCollins
A Baptist minister brings his version of salvation – and his family – to the simmering Congo of the 1960s.
In her newest novel, Barbara Kingsolver takes the kind of artistic risks only a beginner - or a genius - would dare take.There are problems in this big book, but I once knew a ceramics teacher who told his students, “A perfectly centered pot is a dead pot.” Despite its uneven quality, The Poisonwood Bible is a vessel that holds our attention and some powerful ideas.
The story rotates through a series of monologues by the wife and four daughters of a ferocious Baptist preacher from Bethlehem, Ga., who’s determined to bring his version of salvation to the incendiary Congo in 1960.
The arrogance of Western missionaries is hardly news, but Price’s blinding pride makes for a story that’s often comic despite its tragedy.
More.............
Bookyards Editor: For more books on religion go here...
Photo : HarperCollins
A Baptist minister brings his version of salvation – and his family – to the simmering Congo of the 1960s.
In her newest novel, Barbara Kingsolver takes the kind of artistic risks only a beginner - or a genius - would dare take.There are problems in this big book, but I once knew a ceramics teacher who told his students, “A perfectly centered pot is a dead pot.” Despite its uneven quality, The Poisonwood Bible is a vessel that holds our attention and some powerful ideas.
The story rotates through a series of monologues by the wife and four daughters of a ferocious Baptist preacher from Bethlehem, Ga., who’s determined to bring his version of salvation to the incendiary Congo in 1960.
The arrogance of Western missionaries is hardly news, but Price’s blinding pride makes for a story that’s often comic despite its tragedy.
More.............
Bookyards Editor: For more books on religion go here...
Romantic heroes: here's to you, Mr Rochester

From : The Telograph
Photo: AP http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
Mills and Boon, readers have voted Charlotte Bronte's unloveable Mr Rochester the most romantic character in literature. Novelist Penny Vincenzi is also taken by his "savage complexity".
He was the second man I fell in love with, was Mr. Rochester. The first was Rhett Butler but that was only because I met him first. Dashing, charming and incredibly sexy as Butler is, Mr. Rochester – and his great dane, Pilot – walked into my life, and blew him out of the water forever.
So it comes as no surprise to me that when surveyed by Mills and Boon, the nation's readers voted Charlotte Bronte's Mr Rochester the most romantic character in literature. The true hero, you see, has to have more than charm and dash. Those things are all very well, and fine for having a flirtation with, but if he is to get a real hold of your heart, then he must hurt it a bit, make it bruise and bleed.
More.............
Bookyards Editor: For more novels e- books
1. New film Where the Wild Things Are sends parents into a 'rumpus'
2. The demons that drove John Cheever
3. Nasa's LCROSS lunar mission uses Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
4. Tails of the unexpected
5. Stop the bean-counters ruling the fiction roost
Sunday, October 18, 2009
The Bear Against The Cockrel

From : Literary Review
Photo : www.squidoo.com
Russia Against Napoleon: The Battle for Europe, 1807 to 1814Dominic Lieven (Allen Lane/The Penguin Press 617pp .
Readers familiar with Tolstoy's War and Peace will possibly remember a dramatic incident that occurs in the wake of the French invasion of Russia. Alone at her estate of Bleak Hills following the death of her father, Princess Marya finds herself in the direct path of the oncoming French army. Desperate to escape, she orders the peasants who farm the estate to provide transport for her so she can pack up her belongings and flee to Moscow, and tries to persuade them to evacuate their villages and follow her example. However, her pleas have no effect - on the contrary, the peasants turn rebellious - and the princess is only rescued by the fortuitous arrival of the dashing young cavalry officer Nikolai Rostov. Given that one of the chief themes of War and Peace is the heroism of the Russian people in the face of Napoleon, the vignette is a troubling one that positively demands discussion, and yet, until the publication of this book, subjecting such contradictions to the spotlight of academic discussion has proved almost impossible for any author without a knowledge of Russian and access to the Russian archives.
Saturday, October 17, 2009
The Next Asia

From : F T.COM
Photo : livefromsingapore.wordpress.com
The Next Asia: Opportunities and Challenges for a New Globalisation.
Stephen Roach, Morgan Stanley’s perennial bear, had long predicted a terrible reckoning for a supercharged US economy, hopped up on private consumption and propped up by savings-surplus countries willing to fund US debt. When, finally, in 2007, Morgan Stanley sent him to live in his beloved Asia, about which he had always been bullish, his thoughts on that region quickly turned gloomier, too.
In The Next Asia, a collection of essays on the region’s place in the world, Roach could not fairly be described as bearish. “Don’t get me wrong,” he says at one point in a typically down-to-earth interjection. “I am a long-standing optimist on Asia.”
In The Next Asia, a collection of essays on the region’s place in the world, Roach could not fairly be described as bearish. “Don’t get me wrong,” he says at one point in a typically down-to-earth interjection. “I am a long-standing optimist on Asia.”
Friday, October 16, 2009
Leaked Barnes & Noble e-Reader Is A Powerful Multitouch Hybrid
From Popular Science:
Take a Kindle, and put a multitouch screen where the keyboard and navigation buttons go, and you've got the Barnes & Noble e-reader.
We're still a week away from Barnes & Noble's big e-reader announcement, but we've know they've had something cooking for a while now. And today, our pals at Gizmodo hit the mother load: leaked shots of a forthcoming dual-screen device that is three-quarters e-ink and one-quarter (wait for it) color multitouch.
Read more ....
'Nine Dragons' by Michael Connelly

From : Los Angeles Times
Photo : http://www.latimes.com/
The author's latest plunges Harry Bosch -- and his devoted fans -- to thrilling, new depths as a case sends the detective to China when his daughter's life is threatened.
If you're planning on buying "Nine Dragons," Michael Connelly's latest Harry Bosch novel, be careful where you read it.Deeply engrossed in an advance copy on a recent flight, jotting notes in the margins as I do when reviewing, I inadvertently exposed the cover to the passenger next to me and to a female flight attendant, prompting the man to pull out his smart phone to show me the Connelly books he'd read and the flight attendant to say, "If you want to leave that behind, I will take very good care of it."
Bookyards Editor: For more e-book go here...
Last 24 hours
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Mountain of data, missing vision

From : The Hindu
Photo : http://www.hindu.com/
Overall, the book is a highly useful compilation of valuable information .
This book deals with the contested terrain of higher education in India. The National Knowledge Commission says higher education faces a “quiet crisis,” while a former Human Resource Development Minister called it “a sick child.” It is uniformly recognised that there is need for a major paradigm shift in education as a whole, including in higher education.
The recent reports of the National Knowledge Commission and the Yashpal Committee, the 11th Five-Year Plan providing a nine-fold increase in outlay for higher education, and the United Progressive Alliance government seeking to focus on public-private-partnership and on opening the country to foreign universities, — all these together constitute the immediate context for the heightened pitch of ongoing debate.
The recent reports of the National Knowledge Commission and the Yashpal Committee, the 11th Five-Year Plan providing a nine-fold increase in outlay for higher education, and the United Progressive Alliance government seeking to focus on public-private-partnership and on opening the country to foreign universities, — all these together constitute the immediate context for the heightened pitch of ongoing debate.
A Man for All Tasks and Times

From : The Wall Street Journal
Photo : Henry Holt,
Although less famous than his great-great-grandnephew Oliver, Thomas Cromwell is well-known, thanks to the enduring fascination of Henry VIII and the Tudor court.
By MARTIN RUBIN
Although less famous than his great-great-grandnephew Oliver, Thomas Cromwell is well-known, thanks to the enduring fascination of Henry VIII and the Tudor court. Cromwell is of course a memorable villain in the play and movie "A Man for All Seasons" —the royal minister who, cruelly advancing Henry's break with Rome, hounds Thomas More for a loyalty oath that he will not give. Cromwell naturally figured in "King Henry VIII and His Six Wives" (1972), the popular Masterpiece Theater version of these events, and he reappears these days, as dry and determined as ever, in the over-heated HBO series "The Tudors." But for all the portraits of this 16th- century power broker in print and on screen—not to mention in the history books, where he is a central figure in the history of Protestant triumphalism— Cromwell has never before appeared as he does in Hilary Mantel's dense, finely wrought "Wolf Hall," the winner of this year's Man Booker Prize in Britain.
Although less famous than his great-great-grandnephew Oliver, Thomas Cromwell is well-known, thanks to the enduring fascination of Henry VIII and the Tudor court. Cromwell is of course a memorable villain in the play and movie "A Man for All Seasons" —the royal minister who, cruelly advancing Henry's break with Rome, hounds Thomas More for a loyalty oath that he will not give. Cromwell naturally figured in "King Henry VIII and His Six Wives" (1972), the popular Masterpiece Theater version of these events, and he reappears these days, as dry and determined as ever, in the over-heated HBO series "The Tudors." But for all the portraits of this 16th- century power broker in print and on screen—not to mention in the history books, where he is a central figure in the history of Protestant triumphalism— Cromwell has never before appeared as he does in Hilary Mantel's dense, finely wrought "Wolf Hall," the winner of this year's Man Booker Prize in Britain.
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
The Pity of War

From : The Atlantic
Photo : Marc Yankus
Many years ago, I went to the Central Lobby of the Houses of Parliament in London to keep an appointment with the almost picturesquely reactionary .
Conservative politician Alan Clark. He was the son of Kenneth (later Lord) Clark—the art historian and author of the Civilisation series—and the heir to Saltwood Castle, in Kent. He was also the author of a 1961 book, The Donkeys, which was a history of the British General Staff in the First World War. The title came from a famous comment that had supposedly been made at that epoch by a German military strategist. Told by the highly impressed Quartermaster General Ludendorff that “these British soldiers fight like lions,” General Max Hoffmann had responded: “Yes, but lions led by donkeys.”
More.............
Bookyards Editor: For more books on war go here...
Last 24 hours
1. Charlie Higson: the truth about boys, girls, zombies, vampires and sex
2. Nasa's LCROSS lunar mission uses Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
3. Pass notes No 2,664: Fantastic Mr Fox
4. Pauline Melville's top 10 revolutionary tales
5. Adult content warning: beware fairy stories
Charles Dickens

From : The Guardian
Photo : guardian.co.uk
An exploration of his personal and emotional life, his high-profile public activities, extensive travel, charitable works, amateur theatricals and astonishing productivity. Slater's account places each of Dickens' novels in context, and looks at the world that created them. Illustrated with many rare images.
A biography that reveals Dickens the man through the profession in which he excelled. Drawing on a study of this prodigiously brilliant figure, it explores the personal and emotional life, the high-profile public activities, the relentless travel, the charitable works, the amateur theatricals and the astonishing productivity.
More ............
Bookyards Editor: For more works on Charles Dickens , Bookyards section is here.
Photo : guardian.co.uk
An exploration of his personal and emotional life, his high-profile public activities, extensive travel, charitable works, amateur theatricals and astonishing productivity. Slater's account places each of Dickens' novels in context, and looks at the world that created them. Illustrated with many rare images.
A biography that reveals Dickens the man through the profession in which he excelled. Drawing on a study of this prodigiously brilliant figure, it explores the personal and emotional life, the high-profile public activities, the relentless travel, the charitable works, the amateur theatricals and the astonishing productivity.
More ............
Bookyards Editor: For more works on Charles Dickens , Bookyards section is here.
'The Magician's Elephant'

From : The Los Angeles Times
Photo : http://www.latimes.com
Newbery Medal winner Kate DiCamillo has made a specialty of chronicling animal protagonists who overcome unfortunate circumstances to become better versions of themselves.
Whether she's writing about a big-eared mouse who defies familial expectations in "The Tale of Despereaux" or a haughty rabbit who learns humility and the true meaning of love in "The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane," her stories are masterful middle-reader gems that inspire, educate and entrance.With her latest book, "The Magician's Elephant," DiCamillo again delivers an elegant and imaginative story, this time centered on a pachyderm mistakenly conjured by a magician in a trick gone wildly wrong.
'The Evolution of God'

From : Los Angeles Times
Photo : David Zentz
Faith and Belief: 'The Evolution of God' by Robert Wright and 'The Case for God' by Karen Armstrong
How religion tamed the human species; how a form of theological expression from the Middle Ages could help us recover our understanding of God.
How religion tamed the human species; how a form of theological expression from the Middle Ages could help us recover our understanding of God.
Until the discovery of DNA's double helix by James Watson and Francis Crick, prehistory was entirely the province of paleontologists and archaeologists. "But in the past few years," Nicholas Wade wrote in his 2006 book, "Before the Dawn: Recovering the Lost History of Our Ancestors" (a work praised by Watson himself, among many others), "an extraordinary new archive has become available to those who study human evolution, human nature and history. It is the record encoded in the DNA of the human genome and in the versions of it carried by the world's population."In the lost history whose DNA-aided recovery Wade chronicles, one of the most interesting chapters covers "gracilization" -- that is, "a worldwide thinning of the human skull" starting around 40,000 years ago. Why was it that, millenniums before the agricultural revolution, our ancestors became progressively lighter-boned and smaller? A crucial clue: The fossil record and contemporary breeding experiments alike confirm that domestication, whether accidental -- as in the evolution of the dog from the wolf -- or deliberate, induces pedomorphism, or the retention of juvenile features into adulthood. "Gracilization . . . occurred because early modern humans were becoming tamer," Wade writes. "And who, exactly, was domesticating them? The answer is obvious: people were domesticating themselves. In each society the violent and aggressive males somehow ended up with a lesser chance of breeding. This process started some 50,000 years ago, and, in [primatologist Richard] Wrangham's view, it is still in full spate."
The Coming E-Reader Wars

Investing In The e-Reader Battle? Bet On Barnes & Noble -- Wall Street Journal
Crazy? That's what Wall Street thinks—analysts love Amazon, but have little to say about its competitor. But that's why buying Barnes & Noble may be a smart move. Some of the best profits come from going against the crowd.
Everybody loves Amazon's booming stock, which has doubled so far this year. But that run-up in value has made it dangerously expensive. By contrast, few adore Barnes & Noble shares, so they've been left for dead. When you run the numbers, the stock looks remarkably cheap.
Read more ....
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
On economic reforms

From : The Hindu
Photo :http://www.hindu.com
The book is a fitting tribute to Prof. Bagchi’s contribution to social sciences .
POST-REFORM DEVELOPMENT IN ASIA — Essays for Amiya Kumar Bagchi: Edited by Manoj Kumar Sanyal, Mandira Sanyal, and Shahina Amin; Orient Blackswan Pvt. Ltd. 3-6-752, Himayatnagar, Hyderabad-500029. Rs. 695.
Economic reforms have influenced the development strategies in recent decades. There have been some improvements in economic growth and other indicators in the post-reform period.
However, there are concerns regarding poverty reduction, quantity and quality of employment generation, human development, and inequalities in the economy and society — rural-urban, man-woman and so on. It is known that economic growth is only one of the means or instruments for achieving the end — the well-being and freedoms of the people.
Economic reforms have influenced the development strategies in recent decades. There have been some improvements in economic growth and other indicators in the post-reform period.
However, there are concerns regarding poverty reduction, quantity and quality of employment generation, human development, and inequalities in the economy and society — rural-urban, man-woman and so on. It is known that economic growth is only one of the means or instruments for achieving the end — the well-being and freedoms of the people.
Monday, October 12, 2009
Let the Great World Spin

From : FT.COM
Photo : Colum Mc CANN
No modern city has a greater capacity for self-mythology than New York. “Only in New York” is the common reaction to those events that galvanise New Yorkers’ sense of identity – the city-wide blackouts, the stricken twin towers.
New York had a way of doing that,” says one of the characters in Colum McCann’s fifth novel, Let the Great World Spin. “Every now and then the city shook its soul out. It assailed you with an image, or a day, or a crime, or a terror, or a beauty so difficult to wrap your mind around that you had to shake your head in disbelief.”
One of those New York moments happened on August 7 1974. As New Yorkers were beginning their day, a black-clad acrobat stepped on to the steel cable he had secretly rigged between the north and south towers of the World Trade Center. He walked between them, suspended 400m above the ground. He kneeled. He waved. Finally he turned himself in.
The true story of Philippe Petit’s astounding tightrope walk is the pivot for the narratives that balance and collide in McCann’s impressive book. It is the central event connecting a very New Yorkish assortment of characters – a fallen Irish priest, a rowdy gaggle of prostitutes, a bereaved judge and his wife, a couple of coked-up artists, a Guatemalan nurse.
New York is the shore on which the world’s survivors wash up. Dublin-born John A. Corrigan is one of them. “He couldn’t be an ordinary priest – it wasn’t the life for him; he was ill-defined for it, he needed more space for his doubt.” And so he has ended up on a Bronx housing project, caring for a group of sweet-talking streetwalkers.
Among the women he has adopted are hooker Tillie – “her face a playground of mascara” – and her daughter Jazzlyn – with a figure “like a failed sunflower”.
McCann performs exquisite acts of ventriloquism.
One of those New York moments happened on August 7 1974. As New Yorkers were beginning their day, a black-clad acrobat stepped on to the steel cable he had secretly rigged between the north and south towers of the World Trade Center. He walked between them, suspended 400m above the ground. He kneeled. He waved. Finally he turned himself in.
The true story of Philippe Petit’s astounding tightrope walk is the pivot for the narratives that balance and collide in McCann’s impressive book. It is the central event connecting a very New Yorkish assortment of characters – a fallen Irish priest, a rowdy gaggle of prostitutes, a bereaved judge and his wife, a couple of coked-up artists, a Guatemalan nurse.
New York is the shore on which the world’s survivors wash up. Dublin-born John A. Corrigan is one of them. “He couldn’t be an ordinary priest – it wasn’t the life for him; he was ill-defined for it, he needed more space for his doubt.” And so he has ended up on a Bronx housing project, caring for a group of sweet-talking streetwalkers.
Among the women he has adopted are hooker Tillie – “her face a playground of mascara” – and her daughter Jazzlyn – with a figure “like a failed sunflower”.
McCann performs exquisite acts of ventriloquism.
J.G. Ballard

From : Powell`s Books
Photo : Harper's Magazine
A Man of Extinction: J.G. Ballard's Distinctive Cast of MindA review by Nicholas Fraser .
For a long time, the spirit of pinched traditionalism pervaded postwar British culture. Writers such as Angus Wilson and C. P. Snow vied with one another to reproduce old-fashioned narratives, upholding the values of gentility via the tired means of drawing-room comedies or novels of manners. In the tabloid press, violence was freely described, but it remained localized, confined to gory particulars. Something must have appeared attractive about this culture of self-imposed restraint, but it was hard for writers to confront with any confidence the contemporary condition of the human race.
More........
Bookyards Editor: For E- Books , Bookyards section is here.
Last 24 hours
1. How Waterstone's killed bookselling
2. The first world war in fiction quiz
3. Kim Stanley Robinson: science fiction's realist
4. Charlie Brooker in conversation with Marina Hyde
5. Why writers define the first world war
Sunday, October 11, 2009
The British aptitude for espionage says a lot about our national character – for good and ill

From : The time on line
Photo : Ben Macintyre
Spying, lying and the black arts of subterfuge, nobody does it better.
MI6 started with a mistake. One hundred years ago today, a Navy commander named Mansfield Cumming turned up for his first day at work as head of the foreign section of the newly formed Secret Service Bureau — the organisation that would become the Secret Intelligence Service, better known as MI6. “Went to the office and remained all day but saw no one, nor was there anything to do,” Cumming wrote in his diary. He had accidentally started work a week early. MI6 would not be born until October 10.
In a way, the inauspicious start was fitting. On the surface, there was nothing to mark out Commander Cumming as a pioneering spy. He was a martyr to seasickness, making a career in the Navy an odd choice. One of his legs was amputated after a car accident, and for the rest of his life he offered a variety of outrageous lies to explain the loss of the limb. If he became bored in a meeting, he would reach for a letter-opener, and stab his artificial leg.
But Cumming would go on to run the most famous secret service in the world, controlling strategic intelligence, espionage and counter-espionage outside Britain and throughout the Empire (the Security Service, MI5, deals with intelligence inside the UK).
Cumming signed memos with a single initial, “C”, in green ink. The head of MI6 has been known as C (now standing for Chief) ever since. The original C embodied many of the qualities essential to the Great British Spy: inspired amateurism, profound eccentricity, and a willingness to spin a good yarn that might, or might not, bear any relation to the truth.
In a way, the inauspicious start was fitting. On the surface, there was nothing to mark out Commander Cumming as a pioneering spy. He was a martyr to seasickness, making a career in the Navy an odd choice. One of his legs was amputated after a car accident, and for the rest of his life he offered a variety of outrageous lies to explain the loss of the limb. If he became bored in a meeting, he would reach for a letter-opener, and stab his artificial leg.
But Cumming would go on to run the most famous secret service in the world, controlling strategic intelligence, espionage and counter-espionage outside Britain and throughout the Empire (the Security Service, MI5, deals with intelligence inside the UK).
Cumming signed memos with a single initial, “C”, in green ink. The head of MI6 has been known as C (now standing for Chief) ever since. The original C embodied many of the qualities essential to the Great British Spy: inspired amateurism, profound eccentricity, and a willingness to spin a good yarn that might, or might not, bear any relation to the truth.
Saturday, October 10, 2009
Word Has It That eReaders Will Open The Next Chapter

From Times Online:
Microsoft and Apple are about to follow the tablet trend.
TRAVELLING between airports has given analyst Jon Peddie lots of time to study tech trends. There was the rise of the mobile, laptops, the iPod, the BlackBerry and the iPhone.
Now Peddie, who runs California-based Jon Peddie Research, sees another change coming: the rise of the eReader.
Laptops are becoming less popular, he reckons, and even netbooks are fading. The new must-have is an eReader.
Read more ....
Barnes & Noble To Launch Android-Based Kindle Killer?

From Channel News:
Amazon (NSDQ:AMZN)'s Kindle might have a new e-reader enemy from a familiar source: Barnes & Noble.
Barnes & Noble is reportedly preparing to unveil an e-reader device to compete with Amazon's Kindle and the rapidly expanding field of e-readers. The book retailer is already a force in e-books thanks to its three-month-old eBookstore, but according to reports is prepping an e-reader of its own that will run on Google's Android operating system.
Read more ....
Race to a standoff

From : The boston .com
Photo : John Hersey
How an American officer pushed to build weapons of mass destruction to keep peace with the USSR.
One by one, the hidden extremities of the Cold War are coming to light. We now know that the United States and the Soviet Union stumbled much closer to nuclear war during the 1962 Cuban missile crisis than American leaders understood at the time, because the Soviets did in fact have operational land- and submarine-based nuclear weapons in and around Cuba, which a US attack would have triggered. In 1983 an annual NATO field exercise called Able Archer similarly almost frightened the Soviets into launching a preemptive first strike. A 1954 scheme to hit the USSR preventively with everything in the US nuclear arsenal, killing tens of millions of Soviet civilians, worked all the way up to President Eisenhower, who fortunately dismissed it out of hand as unworthy and insane.
Neil Sheehan chronicles a more slow-motion near-disaster in his first major book since “A Bright Shining Lie,’’ which won the National Book Award and Pulitzer Prize. (I was one of the National Book Award judges.) “A Fiery Peace in the Cold War’’ tells a neglected story: the race between the Soviet Union and the United States to field nuclear-armed ballistic missiles to forestall a potential nuclear Pearl Harbor by ensuring a wary standoff backed by the threat of nuclear retaliation. His new book is a mixed bag.
Using a familiar but effective narrative strategy, Sheehan threads his story through the exemplary life and work of a US Air Force officer, Bernard Schriever, a tall, handsome, inspired but methodical German-American test and bomber pilot and aeronautical engineer. Schriever worked at the center of the contentious effort within the 1950s US military to field a fleet of intercontinental ballistic missiles against the wishes of Curtis LeMay, the Strategic Air Command general who favored manned bombers.
Schriever, born in Bremen in 1910, grew up fatherless in Texas, golfed his way through engineering college, and won his wings as an Army Air Corps pilot at Randolph Field in 1933. After three years and three months in the Pacific during World War II, Schriever came home to a military air organization rewarded for its success with status as a separate branch of service, the US Air Force, and with a leader, Hap Arnold, determined to harness science to air power to improve the nation’s defense. An émigré Hungarian who contributed much to US military security in those years, Theodore von Kármán, wrote in a 1945 report Arnold had commissioned that “only a constant inquisitive attitude toward science and a ceaseless and swift adaptation to new developments can maintain the security of this nation through world air supremacy.’’ In January 1946, Arnold gave Schriever the job of following von Kármán’s dictum.
Using a familiar but effective narrative strategy, Sheehan threads his story through the exemplary life and work of a US Air Force officer, Bernard Schriever, a tall, handsome, inspired but methodical German-American test and bomber pilot and aeronautical engineer. Schriever worked at the center of the contentious effort within the 1950s US military to field a fleet of intercontinental ballistic missiles against the wishes of Curtis LeMay, the Strategic Air Command general who favored manned bombers.
Schriever, born in Bremen in 1910, grew up fatherless in Texas, golfed his way through engineering college, and won his wings as an Army Air Corps pilot at Randolph Field in 1933. After three years and three months in the Pacific during World War II, Schriever came home to a military air organization rewarded for its success with status as a separate branch of service, the US Air Force, and with a leader, Hap Arnold, determined to harness science to air power to improve the nation’s defense. An émigré Hungarian who contributed much to US military security in those years, Theodore von Kármán, wrote in a 1945 report Arnold had commissioned that “only a constant inquisitive attitude toward science and a ceaseless and swift adaptation to new developments can maintain the security of this nation through world air supremacy.’’ In January 1946, Arnold gave Schriever the job of following von Kármán’s dictum.
Friday, October 09, 2009
Sarah Thornton - an apology

From : The Telegraph
Photo : Art World by Sarah Thornton
In her review of 'Seven Days in the Art World' by Sarah Thornton (Nov 1, 2008) Lynn Barber took issue with Dr Thornton’s assertion that she (Ms Barber) was among the 250 people who had been interviewed for the book, either face to face or by telephone.
In fact, Ms Barber did have a pre-arranged telephone interview with Dr Thornton two years earlier which lasted over 30 minutes.
We and Ms Barber therefore now accept that it would be wrong to suggest that Dr Thornton made a false or dishonest claim to have interviewed Ms Barber and apologise to Dr Thornton for any distress caused by any contrary impression the review may have given.
We and Ms Barber therefore now accept that it would be wrong to suggest that Dr Thornton made a false or dishonest claim to have interviewed Ms Barber and apologise to Dr Thornton for any distress caused by any contrary impression the review may have given.
In addition, the review commented on Dr Thornton’s use of a practice known as “reflexive ethnography” which Ms Barber equated to “copy approval”.
Dr Thornton points out that she did not give interviewees the right to alter any material she had written about them and that she always maintained complete editorial control of the final product and used the feedback provided by her subjects entirely as she saw fit.
Dr Thornton points out that she did not give interviewees the right to alter any material she had written about them and that she always maintained complete editorial control of the final product and used the feedback provided by her subjects entirely as she saw fit.
Last 24 hours
1. Pooh sequel returns Christopher Robin to Hundred Acre Wood
2. Spider-Man turns back clock and winds up fans
3. After 90 years, Pooh returns to Hundred Acre Wood in sequel
4. Not the Booker prize: vote for the winner
5. Does the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy still answer the ultimate question?
BEHIND THE MYTH

From : www.literaryreview.co.uk
Photo : http://www.kremlinaires.com/
Trotsky: A Biography.
Trotsky has always been something of an icon for the intelligentsia, and it is not hard to see why. He fitted the perception that dissenting intellectuals like to have of themselves. Highly cultured, locked in struggle with a repressive establishment, a gifted writer who was also a man of action, he seemed to embody the ideal of truth speaking to power. The manner of his death solidified this perception, which has shaped accounts of his life ever since.
Trotsky was a charismatic leader whose appeal extended across the political spectrum. When Trotsky was on the run from Stalin, H L Mencken offered to give him his own library (Trotsky refused because he did not want to be indebted to a reactionary). The Bishop of Birmingham signed a petition on Trotsky's behalf, and he was invited to become rector of Edinburgh University. Maynard Keynes tried to secure asylum for him in England, a campaign supported even by the power-worshipping Stalin-lover Beatrice Webb. Literary notables like Lionel Trilling, Edmund Wilson and Mary McCarthy joined the chorus of adulation. A hero-martyr in the cause of humanity, Trotsky deserved the support of every right-thinking person.
This has never been a terribly plausible view of the man who welcomed the ruthless crushing of the Kronstadt workers and sailors when they demanded a more pluralist system of government in 1921, and who defended the systematic use of terror against opponents of the Soviet state until his dying day. Introducing a system of hostage-taking in the Civil War and consistently supporting the trial and execution of dissidents (Mensheviks, Social Revolutionaries, liberal Kadets, nationalists and others), Trotsky never hesitated to endorse repression against those who stood in the way of communist power. This much has long been clear, but the full extent of Trotsky's role in building Soviet totalitarianism has not been detailed - until now.
Rigorously researched, covering Trotsky's education and upbringing, his life as an émigré before the revolution, his time as a military leader, his losing battle with Stalin, his women, his life as an exile and his assassination, Robert Service's new biography discloses a man very different from the one celebrated by bien pensants. The author of distinguished biographies of Lenin and Stalin, Service is eminently qualified to set Trotsky in his historical context. Here Service surpasses himself, and produces a life that is genuinely revelatory. Trotsky's lifelong effort to distance himself from his Jewish background - 'The workers are dearer to me than all the Jews,' Service reports him saying - is carefully and sensitively examined. There is an interesting discussion of Trotsky's attempt to fashion a distinctive philosophical position for himself (despite having a commendably unorthodox interest in Freud, he was no more successful than Lenin in this regard). The book is rich in telling detail. The young Trotsky liked to dominate the independent-minded women revolutionaries in his circle, and to this end studied carefully Schopenhauer's The Art of Controversy, a guide to debating tricks. Trotsky was 'an intellectual bully', Service writes, who 'relished wounding his opponents'. None of this is flattering to Trotsky, but Service is always scrupulously balanced. The result is a powerfully demystifying biography of one of the most heavily mythologised figures of twentieth-century history.
Trotsky was a charismatic leader whose appeal extended across the political spectrum. When Trotsky was on the run from Stalin, H L Mencken offered to give him his own library (Trotsky refused because he did not want to be indebted to a reactionary). The Bishop of Birmingham signed a petition on Trotsky's behalf, and he was invited to become rector of Edinburgh University. Maynard Keynes tried to secure asylum for him in England, a campaign supported even by the power-worshipping Stalin-lover Beatrice Webb. Literary notables like Lionel Trilling, Edmund Wilson and Mary McCarthy joined the chorus of adulation. A hero-martyr in the cause of humanity, Trotsky deserved the support of every right-thinking person.
This has never been a terribly plausible view of the man who welcomed the ruthless crushing of the Kronstadt workers and sailors when they demanded a more pluralist system of government in 1921, and who defended the systematic use of terror against opponents of the Soviet state until his dying day. Introducing a system of hostage-taking in the Civil War and consistently supporting the trial and execution of dissidents (Mensheviks, Social Revolutionaries, liberal Kadets, nationalists and others), Trotsky never hesitated to endorse repression against those who stood in the way of communist power. This much has long been clear, but the full extent of Trotsky's role in building Soviet totalitarianism has not been detailed - until now.
Rigorously researched, covering Trotsky's education and upbringing, his life as an émigré before the revolution, his time as a military leader, his losing battle with Stalin, his women, his life as an exile and his assassination, Robert Service's new biography discloses a man very different from the one celebrated by bien pensants. The author of distinguished biographies of Lenin and Stalin, Service is eminently qualified to set Trotsky in his historical context. Here Service surpasses himself, and produces a life that is genuinely revelatory. Trotsky's lifelong effort to distance himself from his Jewish background - 'The workers are dearer to me than all the Jews,' Service reports him saying - is carefully and sensitively examined. There is an interesting discussion of Trotsky's attempt to fashion a distinctive philosophical position for himself (despite having a commendably unorthodox interest in Freud, he was no more successful than Lenin in this regard). The book is rich in telling detail. The young Trotsky liked to dominate the independent-minded women revolutionaries in his circle, and to this end studied carefully Schopenhauer's The Art of Controversy, a guide to debating tricks. Trotsky was 'an intellectual bully', Service writes, who 'relished wounding his opponents'. None of this is flattering to Trotsky, but Service is always scrupulously balanced. The result is a powerfully demystifying biography of one of the most heavily mythologised figures of twentieth-century history.
PCs Are Best For E-Reading, Microsoft's Ballmer Says
From The Reuters:
ROTTERDAM, Netherlands (Reuters) - Microsoft has no plans to develop a digital book reader to compete with the fast-growing popularity of Amazon's Kindle or a device that rival Apple is reportedly developing.
Chief Executive Steve Ballmer said Microsoft had no need for its own e-reader, since it already supplies the software that runs the most popular device for electronic reading.
"We have a device for reading. It's the most popular device in the world. It's the PC," Ballmer said on Thursday on the sidelines of television show recording at Erasmus University in the Netherlands.
Read more ....
Thursday, October 08, 2009
In E-Books, It’s An Army Vs. Google
From The New York Times:SAN FRANCISCO — Whenever it can, Google likes to have programmers solve its problems. But now it faces a dispute that even its ranks of lawyers and lobbyists are finding hard to smooth over.
A broad array of authors, academics, librarians and public interest groups are fighting the company’s plan to create a huge digital library and bookstore. Their complaints reached the ears of regulators at the Justice Department, which last month helped derail the plan by asking a court to reject the class-action settlement that spawned it.
Read more ....
Where Men Win Glory

From : Christian Science Monitor
Photo :http://features.csmonitor.com
An exploration of the life and death of football star and US Army enlistee Pat Tillman.
Many Americans who watched the 9/11 attacks from afar insisted their lives would never be the same after that day, that they could never go back to the way things were before Al Qaeda killed 3,000 people at the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Few, if any, lived up to that vow with the conviction of Pat Tillman.
An outstanding defensive back on a lousy NFL team, in 2002 Tillman chose enlistment in the US Army over a $3.6 million contract. He became an Army ranger with his brother, Kevin. They saw limited action in Iraq and later went to Afghanistan.
It was in remote Khost Province, near the Pakistani border, where Pat Tillman died in April 2004, the victim of friendly fire. Those details alone would make Tillman’s story ideal for Jon Krakauer, whose nonfiction bestsellers include “Into the Wild” and “Into Thin Air.” What happened after Tillman’s death, combined with a soldier’s story that is at once unique and universal, provides a perfect foundation for exploring the response of the United States to 9/11. Add Tillman’s rugged intellectual curiosity and independence, as well as his penchant for testing the outer limits of his physical endurance, and you have the perfect protagonist.
In Where Men Win Glory, Krakauer weaves Tillman’s story into the larger American war on terror, with predictable but no less disturbing conclusions. Krakauer reveals how political and military leaders let Tillman’s family – and the rest of the nation – believe his death came at the hands of the Taliban, not his own platoon. Tillman died just as the first reports on the Abu Ghraib prison scandal were breaking and as bloody fighting raged in Fallujah, where the burned corpses of four American contractors were dragged through the streets. Tillman’s death, Krakauer asserts, offered a handy diversion.
More...........
Bookyards Editor: For more sports books, Bookyards section is here.
Last 24 hours
1. Pooh sequel returns Christopher Robin to Hundred Acre Wood
2. Spider-Man turns back clock and winds up fans
3. After 90 years, Pooh returns to Hundred Acre Wood in sequel
4. Not the Booker prize: vote for the winner
5. Does the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy still answer the ultimate question?
Wednesday, October 07, 2009
My Book Is Mine, Not Google's -- A Commentary
From New Scientist:
NEXT week details of a plan that could shape the future of books and publishing in the digital age will be spelled out in a New York courtroom. The plan is complex but, in a nutshell, search engine giant Google intends to scan and make available perhaps a million or more books that are out of print but still in copyright.
Google has the support of the Authors Guild and the Association of American Publishers, but it faces formidable opposition. Some 400 legal objections have been filed, and the US Department of Justice has serious concerns. The dispute was due to be resolved in court next week, but at the last minute Google and its partners asked for the case to be adjourned so they could make revisions. A hearing will still take place, but only to inform the parties concerned how Google intends to proceed.
Read more ....
Elizabeth’s Women

From : Time on Line
The Hidden Story of the Virgin Queen by Tracy Borman.
The clichés surrounding Elizabeth I are tediously predictable. How timely, then, that Tracy Borman in Elizabeth’s Women sets out to do something new and re-create the queen’s own private world and the women who patrolled it. Access to the ruler was essential for ambitious courtiers, and it was Elizabeth’s 30 or so women attendants who controlled entry to her inner sanctum — the privy chamber. Many (like the indomitable Kate Ashley) were the queen’s former servants when she had been a princess, or her relatives and childhood friends. Others were the wives or daughters of nobles or privy councillors. They were courtiers as much as the men, and a privileged few, besides serving the queen’s meals, managing her wardrobe and jewels, and nursing her while she was ill, were her riding and sleeping companions. Elizabeth was afraid of the dark: she could not rest unless one of her women slept by the door of her bedchamber. With them she shared her hopes, fears and (with Dorothy Stafford shortly before the execution of Mary, Queen of Scots) even her worst nightmares.
Nobody knew Elizabeth better, the more so since these women often held their offices for years: it was death, rather than resignation, dismissal or (contrary to myth) marriage that ended their tenure. Until lately, historians discounted them in favour of the men. That they had their uses as information brokers was acknowledged, but Sir Walter Raleigh was thought to have got it right when he remarked: “Like witches they could do hurt but could do no good.” Recent work on the Tudor court, however, has overturned old assumptions. Borman knows that nothing of importance could occur in politics without some involvement from the privy chamber, and, as foreign ambassadors learnt to their cost, Elizabeth’s women often had a role to play, even in royal marriage negotiations.
But if a revelatory “hidden” history is ripe for the picking, Borman disappointingly doesn’t pull it off. Although she writes fluently, her research is too rushed. She draws heavily on earlier biographies and scarcely taps gold mines such as the letters of Mary Shelton, the only one of Elizabeth’s privy-chamber women to have left a significant archive. Two-thirds of the book is about the well-known events of the period: the life and death of Anne Boleyn, Elizabeth’s tribulations as a princess, her rivalry with her sister Mary Tudor, with the Grey sisters and Mary, Queen of Scots, and her tempestuous relationships with Robert Dudley’s lovers and Bess of Hardwick.
Nobody knew Elizabeth better, the more so since these women often held their offices for years: it was death, rather than resignation, dismissal or (contrary to myth) marriage that ended their tenure. Until lately, historians discounted them in favour of the men. That they had their uses as information brokers was acknowledged, but Sir Walter Raleigh was thought to have got it right when he remarked: “Like witches they could do hurt but could do no good.” Recent work on the Tudor court, however, has overturned old assumptions. Borman knows that nothing of importance could occur in politics without some involvement from the privy chamber, and, as foreign ambassadors learnt to their cost, Elizabeth’s women often had a role to play, even in royal marriage negotiations.
But if a revelatory “hidden” history is ripe for the picking, Borman disappointingly doesn’t pull it off. Although she writes fluently, her research is too rushed. She draws heavily on earlier biographies and scarcely taps gold mines such as the letters of Mary Shelton, the only one of Elizabeth’s privy-chamber women to have left a significant archive. Two-thirds of the book is about the well-known events of the period: the life and death of Anne Boleyn, Elizabeth’s tribulations as a princess, her rivalry with her sister Mary Tudor, with the Grey sisters and Mary, Queen of Scots, and her tempestuous relationships with Robert Dudley’s lovers and Bess of Hardwick.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)




