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Archived "New Arrivals"

Books

American Vertigo: Traveling America in the Footsteps of Tocqueville
By Bernard Henri-Lévy
Random House, 2006

(from Publishers Weekly): Lévy's journey through this "magnificent, mad country" is indeed vertiginous as he loops from coast to coast and back, mounting to the heights of wealth and power—interviewing the likes of Barry Diller and John Kerry—and plunging into the depths of poverty and powerlessness, in urban ghettoes and prisons. (In this last, he truly follows Tocqueville, whose assignment in the young America was to visit prisons.) Each scene is quite short, which is frustrating at first, but soon the quick succession of images creates a jostling, animated portrait of America, full of resonances and contradictions. Sharon Stone in her luxurious home, railing about the misery of the poor, is quickly followed by Lévy's chat with a waitress in a Colorado town struggling to make ends meet. A gated retirement community in Arizona seems to the author like a prison, while Angola, a prison in Louisiana, has lush grounds that resemble a retirement community's. Lévy (Who Killed Daniel Pearl), the celebrated French thinker and journalist, is a master of the vignette and the miniature, whether explaining why he could feel at home in Seattle or pondering whether Diller's apparent amorality is "too flaunted to be completely sincere." In France, where anti-Americanism has been so popular, Lévy has been an anti-anti-Americanist, and while he finds serious fissures in this country's social landscape, in the end he is an optimist about the future of a country he admires for the richness of its culture and its political vision.

 

The Long Tail: Why the Future of Business Is Selling Less of More
by Chris Anderson
Hyperion, 2006
(by the author): The Long Tail took form over nearly two years as an "open-source research project" on my blog at www.longtail.com. This experiment in book development, where I shared data and ideas in progress and my smart readers helped improve them, fleshed out the theory and stress-tested the analysis, which made the book far better than it would have been if I had worked on it in isolation. It also suggested applications in industries I never expected, from beer to fashion, which has hugely expanded the scope the research. Now that the book is out the conversation is continuing on the blog, where we're going beyond the printed page with everything from drill-downs on some of the statistical techniques to an ongoing tracking of mainstream media and entertainment in decline.

 

LBJ: Architect of American Ambition
by Randall Woods
Free Press, 2006
(from Publishers Weekly): Why, after major works by Robert A. Caro and Robert Dallek, do we need another biography of Lyndon B. Johnson? The answer is that Johnson was so complex that every new biographer willing to do the tough spadework of original research discovers fresh layers of Johnsonian reality to explain, new psychological and political corridors to explore. Such is the case with this excellent new work by University of Arkansas historian Woods (Fulbright, a Biography). Woods finds Johnson's key motivation to be largely altruistic, emerging from righteous outrage over the poverty and racism he'd witnessed while growing up in Texas. Woods serves up a Johnson who is less cynical, less self-serving and more heroic and tragic than the man portrayed elsewhere. Woods's Johnson is a man who saw his greatest personal ambitions realized with the Civil Rights Acts of 1957 and 1964, and the Great Society programs. Not inappropriately, Woods concludes his eloquent and riveting account by quoting Ralph Ellison, who noted that Johnson, spurned at the end of his life by both liberals and conservatives, would "have to settle for being recognized as the greatest American President for the poor and for the Negroes, but that, as I see it, is a very great honor indeed."