Books

April 26, 2008

Lee Child's DIE TRYING

Die_tryingAfter 13 years in the Army as an MP, Reacher just wanted to muster out and disappear.  Two days in one place is enough.  He owns no property, has no credit cards, no phone.  He barely owns the clothes he wears.  He just wants to travel the United States with no obligations.  The problem is, it's hard to blend into the scenery when you're 6'5", and you weigh 250 muscular pounds.  And worse still when your courtly manners embroil you in a kidnap right on the streets of Chicago on a beautiful summer's day.
That's where DIE TRYING, the second novel in Lee Child's Jack Reacher canon, starts.  From there, he and the kidnap target, who harbors her own secrets, end up lost in the heart of America's great expanse, at the mercy of men who seek to separate themselves from a "despotic" United States government.  By force, if necessary.
Tough and brutal, yet clever and brilliantly conceived, DIE TRYING may not be for the faint-hearted, but its intelligence and strong writing will crackle in your head.  The Jack Reacher books provide me with a dilemma: the pages fly past my eyes, yet I want to delay my departure from Reacher's company as long as possible.
I hope Lee Child keeps spinning out these Jack Reacher yarns for many years.

Ray @ Paperbacks Plus

April 16, 2008

Jack Reacher novel #1

    Lee Child is the name of a rising star in the thriller mystery genre. If you haven't heard of him, you soon will. His most recent book, Bad Luck & Trouble published by Bantam Dell, is #3 on the NY Times bestseller list. Over the next few week my colleague and myself will be review all 10 of the Jack Reacher novels.
Killing_floor_2
        The first book in the series is The Killing Floor published by Jove. Although not the first story chronologically, it’s the one that introduces the reader to the ex-military policeman Jack Reacher. I had read 2 other books in the series before this one and I had already come to enjoy the gruff, take no prisoners attitude of Reacher. That attitude is what drew me in from the first page to the last. Reacher, five months after leaving the army, has become a drifter. Aimlessly wandering from town to town on a whim. He happens upon Margrave, Georgia, and promptly gets arrested for murder.

What follows is part mystery part thriller. Reacher doesn’t wrestle with moral problems or fear of what repercussions his actions have. That’s not to say he is a loose cannon. The control he has over himself is testament to his training. He may be rough around the edges, but he is a character that I’ve come to appreciate. I wont try to sugar coat this or any of his books, they are not for the weak of heart. At times the descriptions can be quite unappetizing. I’ve since read the majority of Lee Childs’ Reacher novels, and I’ve come to see them as sum of every great 90’s action film. This is a book that you cannot go wrong with, a great summer read.

Liam @ Paperbacks Plus

March 21, 2008

Maryrose Wood & The Riverdale Rising Stars

Maryrose Wood & The Riverdale Rising Stars

Join us at the bookstore on Saturday, March 29th at 2:30pm for a fun event for young adult readers.
My_life
Our Riverdale neighbor Maryrose Wood will read from her scintillating new young adult novel My Life: The Musical (published by Delacorte Press).
In addition, the Riverdale Rising Stars will be performing songs right in our store from Zombie Prom (in performance at The Riverdale Y on March 29th and 30th).
After the program, Maryrose will sign copies of her books.

There is no admission charge for this event.

Special Offer: Buy one of Maryrose's books at the event and save $2.00 off the ticket price of Zombie Prom at the Riverdale Y on March 29th & 30th.

February 27, 2008

Rabbi Brad Hirschfield Signing at Paperbacks Plus

Brad Hirschfield Bradhirschfield_photo 

Rabbi Brad Hirschfield
will be signing copies of his new book,

You Don't Have To Be Wrong For Me To Be Right: Finding Faith Without Fanaticism

(published by Harmony Books)

on Sunday, March 9th at 2:00pm 

at Paperbacks Plus.

You_dont_have_2 "We live in a world," writes Brad Hirschfield, "where religion is killing more people than at any time since the Crusades."
Rabbi Hirschfield once embraced fanaticism, but now renounces the reduction of people to absolute good or evil, as totally right or wrong. He now seeks to build bridges among people of different faiths--and those with no faith.
His new book. drawing on his Biblical scholarship as well as personal stories, provides a pragmatic path to peace and understanding.
In a world ridden with strife, especially between people proclaiming faith, the publication of this work could not be more timely or valuable.
Rabbi Brad Hirschfield is president of The National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership. He was cited as one of the Top 50 Rabbis in America in a list reported by Newsweek. He's our neighbor here in Riverdale.

His website may be found here.

November 14, 2007

Are These Books Turkeys or What?

Over_the_river With the approach of Thanksgiving, followed by the year-end, gift-giving holidays, I'm led to wondering why some occasions seem to generate so many books, while others mean bupkis.
By far and away, of course Hanukkah and Christmas yield the most books, of all kinds for all ages from pop-ups to literary anthologies to songbooks to the spiritual to books trashing the occasion. Easter and Halloween books are almost all directed at young readers, and follow predictable visual lines (Eggs, bunnies, and chicks for the former, pumpkins and spooks for the latter).

Charlie_brown_thanksgiving Now, Thanksgiving...it certainly is a major Holiday, right up there with the aforementioned. Ah, but it seems to merit far fewer books (What titles we have you can count on one hand.), with the expected turkeys, Pilgrims, and Native Americans (as well as pumpkins apparently left over from Halloween) festooning the covers.

Why so few? Thanksgiving has a great storyline, one fundamental to American identity (whether one accepts it as actual history or mere myth). And it gathers families around a table, a situation perfect for reading aloud, a la Passover.

Why is there no literary classic for Thanksgiving on the order of A Christmas Carol or
"The Night Before Christmas" for the Yuletide?

Xmas_visitor(And, yes, I hear you saying, "Capote's  A Thanksgiving Visitor." Please.)

 Why is there no go-to book like How the Grinch Stole Christmas to keep the kids quiet? (And, no, Thanksgiving Mad Libs don't count.)

So, what Thanksgiving book finds favor at your turkey dinner, hmm?

See ya in the stacks.
Joe Pilla for Paperbacks Plus

October 26, 2007

Storytime on Saturdays

Parents of eager young bookworms should note that our Paperbacks Plus Pals Storytimes (for readers age 3 to 8) now take place at Noon on Saturdays. Therein, we read aloud from picture books and, if there are somewhat older guests, chapter books.

Our usual reader on Saturdays is the ebullient master Dad and colorful storyteller Ray Norberto. Why, when Ray reads Curious George, you can practically smell the bananas!

Curious_georgeSo, join us on Saturdays at Noon, and be sure to ask Ray to tell you the story about his acting stint on The Sopranos .

See ya in the stacks!
Joe Pilla for Paperbacks Plus





Joe finds diamonds in the stacks...

'Been reading a lot about the bygone Negro baseball leagues lately, perhaps because this is the 60th anniversary of Jackie Robinson joining the Dodgers and pretty much dooming those leagues to history.

We've got in stock an excellent introduction to black baseball, Lawrence Hogan's Shades of Glory (Nat'l Geog.),Shades_of_glory in paperback. Not only does it chronicle, in welcome detail, the tortured chronology of black pro ball from the 19th Century to the aftermath of the busting of the big leagues' color line, but it highlights many black stars, most of whom never got the chance to play integrated ball.

We've also got a lovely little book titled Heroes of the Negro Leagues (Abrams),Heroes_negro_leagues collecting between hardcovers a 1990 set of trading cards featuring fine watercolors by Mark Chiarello and  neat brief bios by Jack Morelli. A terrific bonus is included: a DVD of the moving and revelatory doc, Only the Ball Was White.


However, my favorite book on the topic is one we don't stock (but which we'll happily order for you--hint, hint!). (Indeed, it's the best baseball book I've read all year--and it's been a very good year for baseball books, with such great reads as Cait Murphy's Crazy '08, Jonathan Eig's Opening Day, John Heidenry's The Gashouse Gang, and Tom Adelman's Black and Blue.)


Joe Posnanski's The Soul of Baseball (Morrow)Soul_of_baseball chronicles his year-long odyssey with the late, great 94-year-old Negro Leagues luminary (and longtime major league coach and scout) Buck O'Neil, as the latter spreads good will, innumerable hugs, priceless baseball stories, and undimmed love of the game. To Buck, despite the privations segregation imposed on him (not the least of which was being denied playing in the major leagues), life was a banquet. He had no time for bitterness or recriminations.  It's a heartwarming read, and not just for baseball fans.


For those of you in The Bronx who have set aside your Yankees cap for the duration of the World Series and have donned the red B, we have some books sure to satisfy members of Red Sox Nation.

Seth Mnookin's Feeding the Monster (Simon),Feeding_the_monster which details the building of the Sox's curse-crushing 2004 Championship team, is simply, along with Michael Lewis' Moneyball, one of the best books about running a modern major league baseball franchise. Oh, sure, there are scenes from the field of play here, superbly rendered. But, the core of the book makes plain that pennants are won as much from November through March as they are when the umpire cries, "Play ball!"

The most powerful smile in the Red Sox clubhouse--and oh, yeah,
the most feared bat in their lineup--come from David Ortiz, and his literal rags-to-riches story is told in Big Papi (MacMillan)Big_papi, an as-told-to-title with Tony Massarotti. I'm not a big fan of as-told-to sports bios, which tend to be either bland or needlessly and crudely provocative--rarely any middle ground. But, Papi's apparently quite real sweet nature comes through here, and if you root for the big guy and the Sox, you'll enjoy the book.

See ya in the stacks!
Joe Pilla for Paperbacks Plus

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