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“An Astronaut’s Guide to Life on Earth” by Chris Hadfield. Recommended by Phil Plait, Bad Astronomy blogger. Moustachioed Canadian space traveler Chris Hadfield’s book is an engaging read by someone who has achieved the near-unachievable, packed with stories and great advice for attaining your own less-than-cosmic goals. It’s a pretty good thing to have your feet on the ground when your head’s above the clouds. “You Don’t Know Me but You Don’t Like Me: Phish, Insane Clown Posse, and My Misadventures With Two of Music’s Most Maligned Tribes” by Nathan Rabin.

Recommended by David Plotz, Slate editor, Phish and Insane Clown Posse are the two most reviled and ridiculed bands in America, Nathan Rabin spent two years immersed in the subcultures surrounding the bands: the vague and wobbly stoners who follow Phish, and the motley, lawless Juggalos who create primal havoc at ICP’s annual Gathering, “You Don’t Know Me” is awesomely funny, but what’s most remarkable is Rabin’s portrait of the poor, slovenly, excessively tattooed dropouts and i love ballet charm bracelet, silver-plated bangle, pink enamel ballet dress, i love ballet heart charm, ballet shoes charm, gir weirdos who follow ICP, I’ve rarely read something that was so good at understanding and building empathy for such an unlikely group..

“The Maid’s Version” by Daniel Woodrell. Recommended by Emma Roller, editorial assistant. This novel unspools the mystery of a horrific dance hall fire as witnessed by different townfolk in rural Missouri. Woodrell, who also wrote “Winter’s Bone,” has more than a little of Flannery O’Connor’s Southern spit and gothic wit. And at 164 pages, it’s blessedly short for the English major home on winter break trying to keep up her chops. “Doctor Sleep” by Stephen King.

Recommended by Dan Skahen, digital marketing strategist, It’s rare enough to see a sequel in the same league as its predecessor, let alone when that sequel is to one of the most popular novels of all time, from one of the most popular authors in America, over 20 years after its release, But King has accomplished exactly that with this riveting follow-up to “The Shining.”, “Ike and Dick: Portrait i love ballet charm bracelet, silver-plated bangle, pink enamel ballet dress, i love ballet heart charm, ballet shoes charm, gir of a Strange Political Marriage” by Jeffrey Frank, Recommended by Mark Joseph Stern, contributor..

A dual biography of Dwight Eisenhower and Richard Nixon — two of the most chronically overexposed figures of recent American history — might seem utterly superfluous. Yet in his sly “portrait,” Frank pulls off a neat narrative trick, turning the usually nefarious Nixon into a whimpering victim of the ostensibly high-minded Eisenhower’s cruel manipulations. In light of Frank’s account, Nixon’s infamous groveling seems less like righteous bluster than pathetic desperation. A highly satisfying read.

“Inside the Dream Palace” by Sherill Tippins, Recommended by Dana Stevens, movie critic, The Chelsea Hotel has sheltered artists, bohemians and weirdos ever since it was built in 1884 by a disciple of the French utopian philosopher Charles Fourier, Tippins traces the hotel’s history from its Gilded Age origins through i love ballet charm bracelet, silver-plated bangle, pink enamel ballet dress, i love ballet heart charm, ballet shoes charm, gir its heyday as a center of postwar countercultures from Beat to punk, and into the real-estate development limbo in which it now resides, This smashingly entertaining book tells the story not just of a building, but of an idea..

“City of Night” by John Rechy. Recommended by June Thomas, Outward editor. Although I’ve long been aware of Rechy’s autobiographical novel about a young gay hustler plying his trade around the United States, I didn’t pick it up until Grove Press issued a 50th anniversary edition this November. It was like discovering “The Great Gatsby.” “City of Night” isn’t just an unflinching portrait of a lost gay world; it’s also lush and lyrical, a wonderful evocation of a young man’s longing for something, someone, somewhere.

“The Skies Belong to Us” by Brendan I, Koerner, Recommended by Julia Turner, deputy editor, When you are waiting in a long line for your flight this holiday season, what better to read than a book that will make you grateful for airport security? In a mesmerizing account of what his subtitle calls the i love ballet charm bracelet, silver-plated bangle, pink enamel ballet dress, i love ballet heart charm, ballet shoes charm, gir “Golden Age of Hijacking,” Koerner, a former Slate writer, offers a portrait of just how crazy American air travel got during the 1960s and early ’70s, when more than 150 flights were hijacked with varying degrees of ambition (and success), At the center of Koerner’s narrative is one of the most fantastical hijackings of all: the time U.S, veteran Roger Holder and his gal pal Cathy Kerkow hijacked a flight from the West coast all the way to Africa, with more than $500,000 in ransom, But the book also chronicles in fascinating detail how lax airport security was during this period and how hard airlines fought to keep it that way, even as the skyjacking epidemic escalated: Airlines thought passengers simply wouldn’t fly if we were subjected to metal detectors and other invasive procedures..



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