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Summer Reading
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READING AND TRAVEL GUIDE
Here's a page from Longitude, the specialty bookseller for travelers. To order online, and to see the latest, most comprehensive selection of books and maps, go to http://reading.longitudebooks.com/LO12015. You may also call 800-342-2164 to order or request a catalog.
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The Fruit Hunters, A Story of Nature, Obsession, Commerce and Adventure
Adam Leith Gollner
SCIENCE
2008
HARD COVER
288 PAGES
The coco-de-mer, found only in the Seychelles, Asia's repugnant and coveted durian and all many exotic and wonderful fruits that you've never heard of take the starring role in this surprisingly juicy account of the history, pleasure and business of fruit. Admittedly addled, Gollner chronicles his travels all over the planet in search of Galangal, chempedak, salak, jambu, sapote, voavanga, farkleberry, ballion and other such marvels.
(NAT138, $25.00) |
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Come on Shore and We Will Kill and Eat You All, A New Zealand Story
Christina Thompson
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR
2008
HARD COVER
268 PAGES
In this story of cultural collision, and ultimate harmony, Harvard Review editor Thompson interweaves memoir and history as she tells two stories: the western encounter with New Zealand's Maori tribe, and a personal lovestory about how she met her Maori husband. With an elegant touch, she examines racial stereotypes and cultural misconceptions.
(NZL96, $24.99) |
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Apples are from Kazakhstan, The Land That Disappeared
Christopher Robbins
TRAVEL NARRATIVE
2008
HARD COVER
304 PAGES
In this richly observed portrait, the British journalist Christopher Robbins mixes tales of the Scythians and Sarmatians, of Eurasian steppe wolves and long-faced Saiga, his quest for apples and tulips, with travel, anecdote, impressions and a very evident appreciation for the diversity, beauty and future of Kazakhstan. And, yes, apples do come from Kazakhstan. Tulips too. It's a country the size of Western Europe, closed by the Tsars to foreigners in the 19th century and sealed off by the Soviets for 70 years.
(CAS160, $24.00) |
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Shopping for Porcupine, A Life in Arctic Alaska
Seth Kantner
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR
2008
HARD COVER
256 PAGES
Kantner evokes in these interconnected essays and photographs life on the Kobuk River on the Chukchi coast in northwest Alaska, a beautiful wild place, rich in resources, where he was raised by his Ohioan back-to-the-land, igloo-dwelling parents in the 1960s and where he still lives. Winner of the 2005 Whiting Writer's Award (he includes a chapter on his fish-out-of-water trip to New York), Kantner honors inupiat friends with stories, sharply drawn portraits and a lovingly conveyed feel for living close to the land.
(ALA272, $28.00) |
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The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao
Junot Diaz
LITERATURE
2008
PAPER
368 PAGES
The Dominican-born New Yorker's long-awaited, family saga. It's a dark, entertaining multi-layered tale of the hopes and dreams and tumult of the hugely overweight, hopelessly confused and endearing young New Jerseyite of the title -- his romantic aspirations, confounding bad luck, many neighbors, bewitched family and roots in the Dominican Republic, where he returns by the end of the novel.
(CRB213, $24.95) |
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The Discovery of France
Graham Robb
HISTORY
2008
PAPER
480 PAGES
Winner of the 2008 Royal Society of Literature Ondaatje Prize, Robb's erudite portrait, the result of time both in the library and on his bicycle, marvelously illuminates the rural byways, history and charting of France.
(FRN770, $17.95) |
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The Enchantress of Florence
Salman Rushdie
LITERATURE
2008
HARD COVER
Deeply absorbing and mysterious, this novel conjures life in Renaissance Florence and the Mughal court of emperor Akbar with vivid detail and humor. It begins with a Florentine stranger in Sikra and then proceeds to reveal many secrets and tell many tales. Combine a page-turning plot with Rushdie's masterful prose and philosophical complexity, and you have a thoroughly rewarding read.
(ITL948, $26.00) |
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Mister Pip
Lloyd Jones
LITERATURE
2008
PAPER
272 PAGES
A transcendent tale of the power of storytelling, well-grounded in the politics and society of the modern South Pacific. Jones, a New Zealander, draws on his travels and recent events in Bougainville, largest of the Solomon Islands and a break away province of Papua New Guinea, for his story. Shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize, Mister Pip deservedly won both the Commonwealth Prize and Kiriyama Prize.
(PNG22, $12.00) |
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How the Soldier Repairs the Gramophone
Sasa Stanisic
LITERATURE
2008
HARD COVER
304 PAGES
Powerful, vivid and funny, Stanisic's devastating tale shows the calamity of war through the eye's of the young Bosnian refugee Aleksandar Krsmanoviae. The boy keeps holds onto his grandfather Slavko's credo "the most valuable gift of all is invention, imagination is your greatest wealth, remembering life in Bosnia before it was town apart by ethnic violence.
(BOS32, $24.00) |
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Zoli
Colum McCann
LITERATURE
2008
PAPER
347 PAGES
The acclaimed author of "Dancer" and "This Side of Brightness" delivers a sensuous novel about exile, belonging, and survival, based loosely on the true story of the Romani poet Papsuza. It spans the 20th century and travels the breadth of Europe.
(EUR305, $15.00) |
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Away, A Novel
Amy Bloom
LITERATURE
2008
PAPER
256 PAGES
Bloom's marvelous fifth novel draws from the real-life particulars of Lillian Leyb, a remarkable Russian immigrant who, settled in New York, took off across America, determined to walk to Siberia and reunite with her young daughter. Bloom draws the reader into 1920s Yiddishkeit New York, Chicago, rough-and-tough Seattle, the Alaskan wilderness in this tender, absorbing tale. The reviewer in Publisher's Weekly raved, "Encompassing prison, prostitution and poetry, Yiddish humor and Yukon settings, Bloom's tale offers linguistic twists, startling imagery, sharp wit and a compelling vision of the past. Bloom has created an extraordinary range of characters, settings and emotions. Absolutely stunning."
(USA162, $14.00) |
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In Europe, Travels Through the Twentieth Century
Geert Mak
HISTORY
2008
PAPER
896 PAGES
Dutch journalist Mak's big, bold account of Europe on the threshold of the 21st century bridges travel, journalism and history. He reports from Lisbon and Helsinki to Moscow, Istanbul, the D-day beaches and other momentous sites, deftly profiling the people and events that have defined modern Europe.
(EUR254, $20.00) |
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We Die Alone, A WWII Epic of Escape and Endurance
David Howarth
Stephen Ambrose
EXPLORATION
2007
PAPER
208 PAGES
A 1955 account by British historian David Howarth of courage, determination and valor in Nazi-occupied Norway. It's the story of Jan Baalrud -- and his extraordinary escape across the Lyngen Alps, as reconstructed from interviews with Baalrud and the brave people who helped him escape. Stumbling half-dead into an Arctic village, he is nursed back to health by the local people and, finally, makes his way to neutral Sweden.
(NOR14, $16.95) |
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The Sea Lady, A Late Romance
Margaret Drabble
LITERATURE
2008
PAPER
345 PAGES
Drabble brings marine biologist Humphrey Clark and long-lost childhood sweetheart Ailsa Kelman, also a celebrated academic, together by the sea in this digressive, playful novel, her 17th. She doles out plenty of asides, salting the narrative with musings on the sex lives of fish, mermaids, and watery imagery. The setting of postwar Ornemouth, a gray beachtown on the North Sea, is arfully rendered.
(GBR725, $14.00) |
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The Innocents Abroad
Mark Twain
TRAVEL NARRATIVE
2003
PAPER
523 PAGES
On June 8, 1867, young journalist Samuel Longhorne Clemens, not yet famous as Mark Twain, set sail on a grand tour of Europe. With his disarming wit, Clemens makes the very best traveling companion in this classic account. The section on his visit to "the land which was the mother of civilization" is a celebrated highlight of the book. Twain has few rivals in art of reporting the horrors of travel with humor. "Paris, England, Scotland, Switzerland, Italy--Garibaldi! The Grecian Archipelago! Vesuvius! Constantinople! Smyrna! The Holy Land! Egypt and 'our friends the Bermudians'!" are among the main ports of call.
(MDE08, $14.95) |
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The Maytrees
Annie Dillard
LITERATURE
2008
PAPER
240 PAGES
Dillard evokes the character and texture of Provincetown, its history, artists, seaside setting, nature and Bohemian spirit, with offhand grace in this loving tale.
(USE405, $13.95) |
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The Fragile Edge, Diving and Other Adventures in the South Pacific
Julia Whitty
TRAVEL NARRATIVE
2008
PAPER
304 PAGES
Whitty (A Tortoise for the Queen of Tonga) illuminates coral reefs and their inhabitants and the pleasures of diving in this memoir of underwater adventures in Rangiroa, Tuvalu and Moorea. Winner of the 2008 Kiriyama Prize and John Burroughs Medal.
(PAC173, $14.95) |
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Gertrude Bell: Queen of the Desert, Shaper of Nations
Georgina Howell
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR
2008
PAPER
481 PAGES
Archaeologist, spy, Arabist, linguist (fluent in six languages), author, photographer, mountaineer, and army major, the intoxicating, intrepid Major Miss Bell, who made her home in Baghdad, with T. E. Lawrence and Churchill, created modern Iraq. Howell quotes liberally from Bell's diaries, letters and books, bringing out the character of this remarkable woman.
(ARB82, $15.00) |
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Brilliant Orange: The Neurotic Genius of Dutch Soccer
David Winner
CULTURAL PORTRAIT
This odd book, all about soccer but not really about the sport at all, conveys the wry Dutch character in anecdote, image and history.
(NTH56, $14.95) |
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The Classical World, An Epic History from Homer to Hadrian
Robin Lane Fox
HISTORY
NEW
Fox conjures tyrants, conquerors and enthralling personalities in this marvelously written history of ancient Greece and Rome.
(GRE293, $18.95) |
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Into the Wild
Jon Krakauer
EXPLORATION
The gripping tale of a young man searching for experience, wilderness and self, who meets his end in the wilds north of Mt. McKinley.
(ALA52, $13.95) |
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The Year of Eating Dangerously, A Global Adventure in Search of Culinary Extremes
Tom Parker Bowles
TRAVEL NARRATIVE
Son of the Duchess of Cornwall, Bowles travels the world in search of unusual, risky or odd food, documented here in sardonic detail.
(WLD154, $14.95) |
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Travels With Herodotus
Ryszard Kapuscinski
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR
In this most personal book, and his last, the great Polish journalist and writer weaves tales of his youthful encounters in India, China, Egypt, Congo, Iran and Ethiopia with a meditation on Herodotus.
(MED106, $14.95) |
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China, A Traveler's Literary Companion
Kirk Denton
ANTHOLOGY
An introduction both to China's finest modern writers and its diverse cultures, concerns and landscapes, this collection takes the reader from Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong to the mountains and streams of West Hunan, the silk-worm raising country of Zhejiang and the high plateau of western Sichuan.
(CHN520, $14.95) |
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City of Thieves
David Benioff
LITERATURE
Benioff turns his grandfather's stories of surviving the infamous Siege of Leningrad into a wise and touching novel of coming of age.
(RUS380, $24.95) |
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On Chesil Beach
Ian McEwan
LITERATURE
McEwan's masterful 13th work of fiction, which unfolds on Edward Mayhew and the Florence Ponting's wedding day in Dorset 1963, shows the subtle horror of social convention and the damage it can inflict on a young, impressionable couple.
(GBR716, $13.95) |
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The Fish Can Sing
Halldor Laxness
Magnus Magnusson
LITERATURE
A quirky, moving coming-of-age tale set in Reykjavik at the turn of the last century, featuring an unforgettable cast of Icelandic characters. Laxness, who also wrote "Independent People" (ICL01), won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1955.
(ICL14, $14.00) |
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The Gathering
Anne Enright
LITERATURE
The Hagerty clan gathers in Dublin to mourn ths loss of a son in this family saga, winner of the 2007 Booker Prize. Enright draws you in with raw emotion, unblinking prose and promise of redemption.
(IRE229, $14.00) |
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The Road Home
Rose Tremain
LITERATURE
Tremain's affecting novel, winner of the 2008 Orange Prize, charts the course of one broken-hearted man from Eastern Europe in London.
(GBR790, $24.99) |
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The Shadow Catcher
Marianne Wiggins
LITERATURE
Wiggins effortlessly weaves the tale of her own father and that of Edward S. Curtis, the great photographer of the American West, in this beautful novel of family and discovery.
(USA160, $15.00) |
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The Size of the World
Joan Silber
LITERATURE
Set in wartime Vietnam, Thailand and Florida in the 1920s, Mexico, WWII Sicily and present-day Indiana, Joan Silber's loosely linked stories illuminate the difficulty of finding one's place in the world in just 300 heartfelt pages. Drawing on her travels in Asia (her characters often circle back to Thailand), Silber brings a depth of experience in the region to her richly imagined tales.
(WLD143, $23.95) |
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The Summer Book
Tove Jansson
Thomas Teal
LITERATURE
Tove Jansson's slender novel is a season told in episodes in the lives a six-year-old girl, awakening to existence, and her grandmother, who is nearing the end of hers.
(SCN56, $14.00) |
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The Yiddish Policemen's Union
Michael Chabon
LITERATURE
Chabon's marvelous and wildly imaginative detective story is set in Alaska, but not an Alaska that anyone would recognize. It's Sitka gone Eastern Europe, filled with Jews saved from the holocaust and refugees from an Israel that never was.
(ALA243, $15.95) |
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