SNAP JUDGMENT: BOOKS

 
Sponsored by
 

Email To A Friend

Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link.

Separate multiple addresses with commas

 

A Great Improvisation by Stacy Schiff

The rage for books about the Founding Fathers is turning into a rage for one founder in particular, Benjamin Franklin. Reading Pulitzer Prize winner Schiff's absorbing account of Franklin's crucial attempt to win French support for the American Revolution, you see why. Droll and sly, Franklin--now the subject of five books in three years--charmed and outmaneuvered his decadent European hosts at every turn. Time has only burnished his charisma.

--Malcolm Jones

Nice Big American Baby by Judy Budnitz

Budnitz is a riveting young short-story writer whose weird fairy tales burrow toward truths we may or may not want to see. A pregnant woman, presumably Mexican, is so desperate that her baby be born in the United States that she carries him for years until she can finally sneak across the border. A woman's parents get lost on the way to visit and career into an unnamed evil. Budnitz has misgivings about America's place in the world. But she avoids even the names of countries, burning away anything that will distract from the primal questions of who we are and what we owe each other. One reviewer recently advised Budnitz to write realistic fiction--a patronizing suggestion, as well as a naive one. She already does.

--Jeff Giles

 
Discuss
Sponsored by
 
 
 
The Peek
 
 
STRATEGIES

Isn't it ironic: Xerox is hoping it can profit by teaching companies how to reduce their printing.

Sponsored by
 
 
 
 
NATIONAL SECURITY
Sponsored by
 
 
 
loadingLoading Menu