November 2, 2005

Spook: Science Tackles the Afterlife by Mary Roach

Filed under: Non-fiction — Jen @ 8:09 pm

After the incredible success of her off-kilter best-selling debut book Stiff, Spook has author Mary Roach return with a book that deals with a subject just as seemingly bizarre: what happens to the supposed human soul after death? Roach approaches the topic with her usual combination of wry humor, skepticism, but a genuine desire to know and understand the various efforts and methods scientists, believers, and scientists who believe have employed in order to discover, study, and obtain scientific evidence of the afterlife. She interviews both scientists and mediums, goes to school for mediums and subjects her brain to electromagnetic waves in order to see ghosts, and embarks on a journey to record the sounds made by the Donner party. Like her previous book, Spook is littered with footnotes that begin to take a life of their own, usually tangential but always utterly fascinating.

Read an interview with Mary Roach in The Book Standard.

November 1, 2005

700 Sundays by Billy Crystal

Filed under: Uncategorized — Jen @ 6:02 pm

Billy Crystal’s one-man Broadway show smash that broke box office records now comes to you in the memorable book 700 Sundays, carrying an equal amount of humor and poignancy as its theatrical counterpart. Crystal discusses his amazing childhood and oftentimes hilarious Jewish family, including his uncle, Milt Gabler, who started up the Commodore music label and recorded Billie Holiday’s “Strange Fruit,” when no one else would, Holiday taking him to see his first movie, Louis Armstrong at the Crystal family seder, and most important of all, Crystal’s father, who supported his son’s dreams of wanting to be a comedian and died young. Crystal deftly weaves a strong narrative of an amazing cast of characters in an eventful time with his renown wit, yet at the center of it all is the heartfelt story of a father and his son.

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