Category >> Reviews
  • Marty Stuart's Country Music (9781402214530); ForeWord Magazine 12/1/08

 

"Stuart has achieved what he sought, and that was to illustrate through its practitioners the richness, beauty, and dignity of this often denigrated art form. Certainly, he ranks high among the masters he celebrates."

 

Booklist Announces Sourcebooks' Digital Expansion - Editor's Note 12-15-08

 

Posted in PhraseologyJill MansellHumpty DumptyGreen Bride GuideGeorgette HeyerDating da VinciCountry MusicConfessions of an IntrovertCity Chic

There are several books listed in the round-up (on-line), but Country Music is one of four books featured in the print issue, complete with cover and a photo from the book (the one they chose is of Porter Wagoner (pg. 172).  USA Today is the largest circulation newspaper in the country, printing over 2.2 million issues a day.  This is a big hit - congrats to all! 

Country Music: The Masters
By Marty Stuart (Sourcebooks, $50)

Musician Stuart, who owns the world's largest private collection of country music memorabilia, serenades the genre's pioneers, stars and culture with this opulent coffee-table book. Many of his photos, including the ghostly cover of Johnny Cash taken four days before his death, are published here for the first time. He shares his posters, elaborate costumes (Hank Snow's Nudie suits, Dottie West's rhinestone pumps) and guitars. (Woody Guthrie's fiddle is crudely carved, "This machine killed 10 fascists.") Stuart mostly gravitates to the grand figures of country, from an irreverent Jerry Lee Lewis to a spunky Tammy Wynette. A companion CD contains Dark Bird, Stuart's Cash tribute, performed at the funeral but never released.

Posted in USA TodayMarty StuartJohnny CashCountry Music

Cheuse catches lightning in a bottle in his take on Edward Curtis, an American first

Last updated October 23, 2008 11:16 a.m. PT

By SCOTT DRISCOLL
SPECIAL TO THE P-I

There's something attractive about "firsts." The first to fly a plane, the first to break a color barrier. We like to think of the people who accomplish these firsts as heroes, if only because we're attracted to the obsession that drove them toward that horizon.

Certainly Edward S. Curtis, the Seattle-based photographer who devoted 30 years of his life to producing 20 volumes of photographic images and writings about North American Indians, must be credited with having earned one of those "firsts." And now Alan Cheuse, in "To Catch the Lightning" (Sourcebooks, 492 pages, $25.95), admirably sets out to establish Curtis' right to hero status.

Posted in Seattle PostIntelligencerAll Things ConsideredAlan Cheuse

 

A review of Other Lives ran in Sunday's (9/7) New York Times Book Review.  

"Brink's portrait of a contemporary South Africa mobbed by unappeased ghosts has a disquieting resonance as a meditation on how the past continues to infiltrate the present."

Apartheid of the Mind By LIGAYA MISHAN

OTHER LIVES

Posted in The New York Times Book ReviewAndre Brink

   The Wild Sight by Loucinda McGary has received the first  Publishers Weekly STARRED REVIEW for our Sourcebooks Casablanca Line!

*The Wild Sight Loucinda McGary. Sourcebooks Casablanca, $6.99 (352p) ISBN 978-1-4022-1394-6*

McGary (Jewels of the Madonna) brings elements of the supernatural into this smashing romantic suspense novel. After her mother's death, Rylie Powell travels to Ireland seeking the father who abandoned her. She finds Dermot O'Shea, whose name is on her birth certificate, but he seems too old to be her father. Worse, Rylie feels an instant attraction to Dermot's son, Donovan. When the police charge Dermot with arms dealing and aiding Irish terrorists, Donovan must reluctantly use his “wild sight,” which enables him to connect with ghosts of the past, to clear his father's name and solve the mysteries of his mother's disappearance and Rylie's parentage. McGary never shortchanges the sizzling romance between Rylie and Donovan as she weaves in ancient legend and recent murders, building to a dramatic, memorable conclusion. (Oct.)

 Visit PublishersWeekly.com to see the official review online! The print version will appear in this week's issue. 

 

Posted in Wild SightSourcebooks CasablancaReviewsPublishers WeeklyLoucinda McGary

In addition to the starred review in Kirkus, In the Land of Invisible Women by Qanta Ahmed, M.D., has received amazing advanced reviews in three of the top pre-publication review mags: BookList, ForeWord, and Publishers Weekly!!

BOOKLIST 
Issue: July 1, 2008
Denied visa renewal in America, British-born Pakistani physician Ahmed, 31, leaves New York for a job in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, where she celebrates her Muslim faith on an exciting Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca even as she encounters rabid oppression from the state-sanctioned religious extremist police. She is licensed to operate ICU machines in the emergency ward, but as a woman, she is forbidden to drive, and she must veil every inch of herself. Her witty insider-outsider commentary as a Muslim and feminist, both reverent and highly critical, provides rare insight into the upper-class Saudi scene today, including the roles of women and men in romance, weddings, parenting, divorce, work, and friendship. After 9/11, she is shocked at the widespread anti-Americanism. The details of consumerism, complete with Western brand names.... are central to this honest memoir about connections and conflicts, and especially the clamorous clash of "modern and medieval, . . . Cadillac and camel. Hazel Rochman 

FOREWORD MAGAZINE
ISSUE: July 1, 2008
Whether or not a reader is familiar with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Dr. Qanta Ahmed's debut memoir is a mesmerizing read. It's also the perfect primer for those who want to know what life is really like for women in a rigidly orthodox Muslim country. A British citizen of Pakistani origin, Ahmed completed her medical training in internal medicine, pulmonary disease, and critical care in New York City. At the completion of a fellowship in sleep disorders, she found that her visa application to stay in the United States had been denied. Without much thought or familiarity with the Kingdom, Ahmed accepted a job offer to work at the King Fahad National Guard Hospital in Riyadh.

Although she had been raised Muslim, Ahmed had very little knowledge of the religion. Through her writing, readers gain an education as well. Further, Ahmed's firsthand experiences in a Muslim country elucidate facets of its culture, from an explanation of blood money to the practices of polygamy. One of the most moving sections of the book covers Ahmed's Hajj, or pilgrimage to Mecca, the holiest site for Muslims. It's on this journey, ripe with adventures and side turns, that Ahmed discovers the importance of religion to her, and embraces all the positivism of Islam.

Yet, throughout, Ahmed encounters various dichotomies, especially because she is a Westernized Muslim woman. Right away, her experience wearing an abbayah-a robe that covers from head to toe except for the eyes, which all women in the Kingdom must wear when they go out in public, no matter their nationality or beliefs-was paradoxically restrictive and freeing: "As I fastened the abbayah in front of a mirror inside the makeshift dressing room, I watched my eradication. Soon I was completely submerged in black. No trace of my figure remained. My androgyny was complete." She described it as a "strangely inviting prison" and "in some respects the abbayah was a powerful tool of women's liberation from the clerical male misogyny." Only through the abbayah's protective layer can a woman get anything done.

There are other examples of the way Saudi women "benefit," from their female status. In marriage, women receive a mahr from their new husbands, which is a substantial fortune. And if they divorce, the woman gets to keep all of her mahr. Divorce is also easily obtained; if a man wants to take on a second wife (in Saudi Arabia, he can have up to four), this alone is grounds enough for divorce. Yet, in a divorce, men are awarded custody of children over the age of seven or nine, a fact that runs counter to a Westerner's way of thinking.



Posted in ReviewsQanta AhmedPublishers WeeklyIn the Land of Invisible WomenForeWordBookList

The July 1 issue of Kirkus  ran a terrific, starred review of In the Land of Invisible Women by Dr. Qanta Ahmed. A star is assigned to books of unusual merit, determined by the editors of Kirkus Reviews.  This is in addition to Qanta's upcoming feature in Kirkus' Fall/Winter Special, to run in their September 1 issue. Click the title below to a link to the reveiw on the Kirkus website!

IN THE LAND OF INVISIBLE WOMEN
A Female Doctor's Journey in the Saudi Kingdom
Author: Ahmed, Qanta A.

A female doctor provides a uniquely revealing look at the hidden world of Saudi Arabian women.

Denied a renewal of her visa in the United States, British-born, American-educated pulmonologist Ahmed accepted a position at a hospital in Riyadh. On rounds, the male residents she supervised would interrupt her, and female residents (what few there were) would cluster silently at the back of the group. All female doctors were required to be completely veiled. In surgeries, sons would supervise unconscious mothers, not to ensure the quality of their medical care, but to ensure that no parts of their faces were revealed by slipping veils. With such evidence around her, Ahmed began to think of these women as the wretched of the Earth. "I wouldn't be corrected in my simplistic views," she writes, "until much later, when I had befriended more Saudi women." When she did, she learned that the lives of these women under veils were no less complex and rich for being largely unseen. At her first party, she was astounded by the elegance and confidence exuded by professional women who had struggled immensely to achieve their positions. She began to understand how respect and love for women were expressed in her adopted society. Despite the strict monitoring of their clothing and behavior and the edicts against showing even the smallest scrap of skin in public, the Saudi women she met were neither so silent nor so helpless as their formless presence suggested. However, her friends were wealthy and educated; the vast impoverished majority could not even afford to visit doctors, let alone become one. Though never ceasing to be dismayed by the uglier aspects of regressive Saudi orthodoxy, Ahmed also found her own Muslim faith deepened and her conception of Islam broadened by her sojourn there. If she never learned to love the veil, she at least learned to understand it.

A big-hearted examination of the extreme contradictions in a society very different-yet not so different-from our own.

 More to come about this incredible book!

Posted in ReviewsQanta AhmedKirkusIn the Land of Invisible Women

Rock Star librarian,  Nancy Pearl's Summer Reading segment ran today, July 10, on NPR's Morning Edition, where she has picked An Infamous Army by Georgette Heyer as one of her "Carry-On Books To Take You Up, Up and Away."  You can also listen to the audio of this morning's show!

 Morning Edition receives about 12.4 Million listerners every week, and Nancy Pearl's reading recommendations are coveted and highly regarded by readers everywhere (she has her own action figure!).  

 In light of NPR being one of the media outlets that is actually increasing it's book coverage (both on-air and on their website), this is a great honor!

 

Posted in NPRNancy PearlGeorgette Heyer