August 2003
Please let us know at least 7 days in advance if you would like an
autographed copy. This will allow us sufficient time to have enough
copies of the book in stock. Thank You.
Tuesday,
August 5at 7:30 p.m.
Paul Martin
One Man's Leg: A Memoir
As a child growing up in a working-class Massachusetts
city, Paul Martin took part in athletic competition to provide some
relief from an otherwise difficult childhood and from time in a foster
home. He wound his way through his early 20s with determination, humor
and uncertainty, working in construction, going to college and eventually
starting a career. But it wasn't until the age of 25, when he lost
the lower half of his left leg in a car accident, that Paul Martin
looked in the mirror and made a true commitment to his life and his
future--and went on to become a world champion triathlete and Paralympic
competitor. Come hear an amazing story from a true American hero.
Sunday, August 10th at 7:30 p.m.
Elizabeth George
A Place of Hiding (Bantam)
The author of eleven novels and one short story
collection, New York Times best-selling author Elizabeth George
has firmly established herself as a gifted novelist able to eloquently
portray the powerful and often murderous, passions of the heart. Now,
in her twelfth novel, George again masterfully probes the darker landscapes
of human relationships. The novel begins as forensic scientist Simon
St. James and his wife Deborah travel to the solitary island of Guernsey
in the English Channel, where an old friend of Deborah's is accused
of killing the island's wealthiest benefactor. This is an island where
the specter of World War II shadows the inhabitants and nearly everyone
has a secret to hide. Riveting, suspenseful and heart wrenching, A
Place of Hiding is a gripping tale of betrayal and devotion, love
and loss, war and remembrance, showcasing George's incomparable storytelling
gifts.
Monday, August 11th at 7:30 p.m.
Roger King
A Girl From Zanzibar
(Helen Marx Books)
Zanzibar in the early 1980's--Marcella D' Souza---a
young, beautiful business-minded woman on mixed heritage--yearns to
escape the stultifying, closeted world of the East African island.
Soon after she meets a United Nations development official, Geoffrey
Sutton, she discovers the true source of her alienation and longing
turns to desperation. She leaves with Geoffrey, determined never to
look back on her previous life. In this remarkable debut which was
the winner of the Bay Area Book Reviewer's Association Award for fiction
2003, British-born novelist Roger King weaves a mesmerizing story
of what it's like to be from everywhere---and nowhere. It is a tale
of modern-day immigration in a globalized world fed by fear and greed.
Wednesday, August 13th at 7:30 p.m.
Lauren Kessler
Clever Girl: Elizabeth Bentley and the Dawn of the McCarthy Era
(HarperCollins)
Lauren Kessler brings us the definitive, dramatic
biography of the Soviet spy turned FBI informant who ushered in the
McCarthy era and became one of the most controversial figures in the
history of espionage in America. Her code name was "Clever Girl,"
but to the New York City tabloids in the late 1940s, she was the "Red
Spy Queen." She ferried secret documents from covert Communists in
the federal government to her Russian lover, a KGB operative. She
recruited informants and debriefed agents. During the "golden age"
of Soviet espionage, Elizabeth Turrill Bentley, the well-bred, Vassar-educated
descendant of Puritan clergy, ran two of the most productive spy rings
in America. And then, one day in 1945, she "turned"-- and started
naming names. When she finished, she had exposed scores of Communist
agents in the government, pinpointed spies in top administrative positions,
and started the Rosenbergs on their way to execution. Her disclosures
and accusations-the repercussions of which historians have debated
for decades-put a halt to Russian spying for years and helped set
the tone of American political life for nearly a decade.
Wednesday,
August 20th at 7:30 p.m.
David Corbett
Done for a Dime
(Ballantine)
David Corbett's first book, The Devil's
Redhead, was hailed by critics as a searing work of suspense.
Now, one of the hottest new names in modern crime fiction is back
with a riveting and soulful new noir. Back in the day, Raymond "Strong"
Carlisle made his mark as an ace sideman blowing baritone sax alongside
all the biggest names in R&B. Now he lies in the grass outside his
home, shot dead from behind and pelted by the heedless rain that mingles
with his own blood. He is the first official casualty of a dirty war
being lethally waged for control of Rio Mirada: a low-rent, "city
in transition" of clashing subcultures at the northern tip of the
San Francisco Bay, beset by drug dealers, arsonists, squatters . .
. and now murder.
Wednesday, August 20th at 6:30 p.m.
Book Club
Happiness by Will Ferguson
In the late 1990's, with their cups running over
with billions of Silicon Valley dollars, a new generation of super rich
mounted an invasion of their unsuspecting neighbors in California's
wine country. Napa Valley was overrun quickly, but Sonoma was resisting,
and thus was born a fierce debate over the visions of an ideal community
- a paradise for wealthy newcomers or rural eccentrics? Acclaimed Vanity
Fair journalist Deutschman has penned a rich story of wine and the
characters that make it and covet it, and asks provocative questions
concerning the preservation of our remaining natural spaces.
Thursday, August 21st
at 7:00 pm *
Unholy Wars
John K. Cooley
This group
meets every month to discuss a book relevant to current event(s) around
the world. To date, we have examined books focusing on a variety of
events in Asia, the Middle East, Africa, Latin America and Europe. As
always, we welcome people from all backgrounds and affiliations to participate.
This month, we will discuss the important book Unholy Wars: Afghanistan,
America and International Terrorism by award-winning journalist
John Cooley. Internationally renowned scholar Edward Said has described
Unholy Wars as a "masterpiece of reportorial thoroughness, painstaking
research, and serious reflection." For more information you may email
Graham Parsons at parsons402@yahoo.com or call the store at 462-4415.
* Please Note Time