Books - Fall 2009

Book List for Fall 2009 Classes

A Miss Marple Sampler Human Behavior & Neurobiology: Are We Hardwired? Part 1
Beginning Bridge: Play of the Hand Impacting the Developing World: Feeling Good, Doing Good, or Doing Business?
Bombarded with Persuasion: Are You the Next Target? Islam from Mohammed to Osama
Bridge: Beginners & Never-Evers Math to Keep Your Mind Sharp
Celebrating Women Over Sixty: Choices! Choices! Presidents, Political Parties & the Electoral College
Contemporary American Short Stories of 2007: More Fuel for Reflection Spirituals: The Cultural and Psychological History
Doctors on the Edge: Will Your Doc Break the Rules for You? The Garden as Fine Art
Does Economics Trump War as the Principal Source of National Power? The Great Equations: Breakthroughs in Science from Pythagoras to Heisenberg
Falling Awake: A Haiku Workshop US Poverty: A Preventable Disease
Financial Buccaneers & Regulatory Failure Write to Save Your Life: Beginning Memoir Writing
From Bosch to Bruegel: Art of the Northern Renaissance, Part 2 Writing & Journaling: Celebrating Nature’s Wonders

 

The links above will take you to the book selections for each course

A Miss Marple Sampler

Required reading: The 4:50 from Paddington, Agatha Christie.

In "The 4:50 From Paddington" Agatha Christie gives us another in her long list of detective stories involving a large family at their estate. This is, in my opinion, one of the best, and begins when Elspeth McGillicuddy, a friend of Miss Marple's, is returning from Christmas shopping in London and is on her way to visit Jane in St. Mary Mead.

Required reading: At Bertram’s Hotel, Agatha Christie.

One of the best of Agatha Christie's later mysteries. Miss Marple has found the perfect spot to stay for her vacation. Nothing ever seems to change at Bertram's Hotel, everything is just as it was before the war. But is all this charming gentility merely a facade for something far more dangerous?

Required reading: A Caribbean Mystery, Agatha Christie.

Stricken with arthritis, Miss Jane Marple has packed herself off, at the insistence of her nephew, for some rest and relaxation at a resort in the Caribbean. The sea is sublime and the weather is fine in this quiet paradise so far away from bustling St. Mary Mead. But suddenly the calm is interrupted by the death of Major Palgrave, one of her fellow guests at the hotel.

Required reading: The Mirror Crack’d, Agatha Christie.

Agatha Christie returns us to St. Mary Mead, Miss Marple's quiet village where much has changed. A new subdivision, young marrieds who buy on the installment plan, and even a supermarket have have invaded the quiet village. Only Miss Marple and her friend Miss Hartnell remain the same, still living in their same homes.

Beginning Bridge: Play of the Hand

Required reading: Play of the Hand in the 21st Century: The Diamond Series , Audrey Grant.

This is the 2nd in the American Contract Bridge League's series of bridge books for beginning and advancing players. Successfully used by students and teachers for over 20 years, this edition has been updated to reflect current standards for playing bridge. This book concentrates on the play of the hand (making a plan, promoting winners, finessing, trumping losers, etc.). The initial bidding concepts are reviewed and Jacoby transfers and slam bidding are introduced.

Bombarded with Persuasion: Are You the Next Target?

Recommended reading: Influence: Science and Practice, Cialdini, Robert B.

This marvelous book explains in clear, practical language the ways in which we become persuaded. It offers excellent insights for those who sell, but even more importantly for all of us who negotiate and buy.

Recommended reading: Amusing Ourselves to Death: Discourse in the Age of Show Business, Postman, Neil.

From the author of Teaching as a Subversive Activity comes a sustained, withering and thought-provoking attack on television and what it is doing to us. Postman's theme is the decline of the printed word and the ascendancy of the "tube" with its tendency to present everythingmurder, mayhem, politics, weatheras entertainment. The ultimate effect, as Postman sees it, is the shrivelling of public discourse as TV degrades our conception of what constitutes news, political debate, art, even religious thought. Early chapters trace America's one-time love affair with the printed word, from colonial pamphlets to the publication of the Lincoln-Douglas debates.

Recommended reading:

Communication and Persuasion: Psychological Studies of Opinion Changes, Carl I. Hovland, Irving L. Janis, & Harold H. Kelley.

Bridge: Beginners & Never-Evers

Buy Now Recommended: Bridge Basics 1: an introduction - Coded Cards, Audrey Grant.

The coded cards for Bridge Basics 1 are 32 different deals, indicated by the boxes numbered 1-32 on the back of each card. Each box is color-coded to show which player is dealt the card. An underline indicates the dealer.

Buy Now Recommended: Bridge Basics II: Competitive Bidding - Coded Cards, Audrey Grant.

The coded cards for Bridge Basics 2 are 32 different deals, indicated by the boxes numbered 1-32 on the back of each card. Each box is color-coded to show which player is dealt the card.

Celebrating Women Over Sixty: Choices! Choices!

Required reading: A Time of Our Own: In Celebration of Women over Sixty, Elinor Miller Greenberg & Fay Wadsworth Whitney.

The very concept of retirement is changing, especially among women. Today's mature female is a pacesetter, exemplifying a unique approach to work, service, and learning. These women, age 60 and older, find themselves entering the last third of their lives in a state of relative health, optimism, and personal freedom, and are beginning to ask, "What now?"

Recommended reading: The Fountain of Age, Betty Friedan.

Friedan has been an extremely important figure in examining society's views of women. This book is somewhat dated, with her initial realization that there were few images of people over sixty-five in the studies she was examining. There was an obsession with the problem of age and how to avoid it through diet, exercise, chemical formulas, plastic surgery, etc.

Recommended reading: Positive Aging: A Guide for Mental Health Professionals and Consumers, Robert Hill.

Although aging results in diminished physical and mental capacities, aging need not be depressing or upsetting. Following a new trend in physical and mental health care, Robert Hill outlines the principles of positive and healthy aging, and also provides practical strategies to cultivate "positive agers" and a healthy, productive lifestyle. Positive Aging shows how different aspects of our lives affect our ability to age happily. I'd recommend this book to anyone, even someone in their mid-twenties, who is curious about their future.

Recommended reading: Encore: Finding Work that Matters in the Second Half of Life, Marc Freedman.

This book challenges baby-boomers to build a better world through a second career and provides concrete steps to help them find their next job. Friedman says work will be essential for boomers. They have both a financial necessity and a psychic identity with work, he says...If the old notion was freedom from work, the new one should be freedom to work, says `Encore' author Freedman...Who says you can't carve a new life after 65?"

Recommended reading: Generations: The History of America's Future 1584 to 2069, William Strauss & Neil Howe.

William Strauss and Neil Howe posit the history of America as a succession of generational biographies, beginning in 1584 and encompassing every-one through the children of today. Their bold theory is that each generation belongs to one of four types, and that these types repeat sequentially in a fixed pattern. The vision of Generations allows us to plot a recurring cycle in American history -- a cycle of spiritual awakenings and secular crises -- from the founding colonists through the present day and well into this millenium.

Contemporary American Short Stories of 2007: More Fuel for Reflection

Required reading: The Best American Short Stories 2007, Stephen King

Wonderfully eclectic, The Best American Short Stories 2007 collects stories by undeniable talents, both newcomers and favorites. These stories examine the turning points in life when we, as children or parents, siblings or friends or colleagues, must break certain rules in order to remain true to ourselves.

Doctors on the Edge: Will Your Doc Break the Rules for You?

Required reading: Doctors on the Edge, Fredrick R. Abrams, MD.

This book exposes some of the hardest decisions to be made in a profession in which bodies are vulnerable and souls are laid bare. Doctors on the Edge is the true account of doctors who are faced with wrenching moral dilemmas, thrust upon them uninvited and unexpected. Sometimes complementary and sometimes conflicting--law, medicine, and morality intrude on the daily practice of medicine. In gripping stories that often include life-and-death decisions, doctors maneuver through ambiguities, subjectivity, and the essential principles of medical ethics.

Does Economics Trump War as the Principal Source of National Power?

Recommended reading: The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers, Paul Kennedy.

Yale historian Kennedy surveys the ebb and flow of power among the major states of Europe from the 16th centurywhen Europe's preeminence first took shapethrough and beyond the present erawhen great power status is devolving again upon the extra-European states. Stressing the interrelationships among economic wealth, technological innovation, and the ability of states efficiently to tap their resources for prolonged military preparedness and warmaking, he notes that those states with the relatively greater ability to maintain a balance of military and economic strength assumed the lead. Kennedy never reduces the analysis to crude materialism or empty tautology. Stimulating, erudite, carefully crafted, and readable.

Falling Awake: A Haiku Workshop

Recommended reading: The Essential Haiku, Robert Hass.

Hass ( Human Wishes ) defers to the complex syntactical gaps that separate the Japanese and English languages, calling his translations "versions." Here he presents three masters of the haiku form: Basho (1644-1694), the haiku poet most familiar to English readers; Buson (1716-1783), a visually oriented writer renowned in his time as a painter; and Issa (1763-1827), whose work is most poignant when he utilizes his ironic wit.

Financial Buccaneers & Regulatory Failure

Required reading: The Two Trillion Dollar Meltdown, Charles R. Morris.

Now fully updated with the latest financial developments, this is the bestselling book that briefly and brilliantly explains how we got into the economic mess that is the Credit Crunch. With the housing markets unravelling daily and distress signals flying throughout the rest of the economy, there is little doubt that we are facing a fierce recession. In crisp, gripping prose, Charles R. Morris shows how got into this mess. He explains the arcane financial instruments, the chicanery, the policy misjudgments, the dogmas, and the delusions that created the greatest credit bubble in world history.

Recommended reading: Financial Shock: Global Panic and Government Bailouts, Mark Zandi.

Dr. Mark Zandi answers these questions: thoroughly, carefully, and in plain English. This new edition has been systematically updated for the latest events, with insights into the dynamics of the worldwide Fall 2008 financial collapse, the freezing of credit markets, the extraordinary actions governments have taken in response, and the massive economic fallout.

Recommended reading: Liar's Poker: Rising Through the Wreckage on Wall Street, Michael Lewis.

As described by Lewis, liar's poker is a game played in idle moments by workers on Wall Street, the objective of which is to reward trickery and deceit. With this as a metaphor, Lewis describes his four years with the Wall Street firm Salomon Brothers, from his bizarre hiring through the training program to his years as a successful bond trader. Lewis illustrates how economic decisions made at the national level changed securities markets and made bonds the most lucrative game on the Street. His description of the firm's personalities and of the events from 1984 through the crash of October 1987 are vivid and memorable.

Recommended reading: Panic: The Story of Modern Financial Insanity, Michael Lewis.

Lewis, author and journalist, presents an anthology of financial writing done immediately before, during, and after the panics that have occurred since 1987, to show how financial markets now operate. These articles explain the mood and market factors leading up to each crisis and then with hindsight report on what actually happened. The financial panics include Black Monday, the 1987 stock market crash; the 2000 bursting of the Internet bubble; the 1999 Asian currency crisis; the Russian default that prompted the failure of the hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management in 1998; and the current subprime mortgage crisis.

Recommended reading: Traders, Guns and Money, Satyajit Das.

In derivatives, whoever you are, there are things that you don’t know that you don’t know. These are the real risks of derivatives. They’re generally left to the client to discover.   So, if you’re entering the dazzling world of derivatives, ask yourself this: What do I know? What do I need to know? What don’t I know? What am I doing?

You can find the answers in Traders, Guns & Money, a sensational and controversial first-person account of the business of derivatives trading and the financial products industry in the spirit of Liar’s Poker.  It is a true insider’s view of the business of trading and marketing derivatives for a living.  It details the nature of the business, the players, how money is made and lost, and the deceptions that underlie the entire process.

Recommended reading: The Return of Depression Economics, Paul Krugman.

Paul Krugman warns that, like diseases that have become resistant to antibiotics, the economic maladies that caused the Great Depression have made a comeback. He lays bare the 2008 financial crisis—the greatest since the 1930s—tracing it to the failure of regulation to keep pace with an out-of-control financial system. He also tells us how to contain the crisis and turn around a world economy sliding into a deep recession.

From Bosch to Bruegel: Art of the Northern Renaissance, Part 2

Recommended reading: The Northern Renaissance, Smith, Jeffrey Chipps.

Engaging accessible, yet detailed thematic presentation of the culture of the Northern Renaissance.

Recommended reading: The Dutch Republic: Its Rise, Greatness, and Fall, 1477-1806, Israel, Jonathan.

A comprehensive history of the northern Netherlands over the 300-year period of its greatest world importance.

Recommended reading: Mirror of the Artist: Northern Renaissance Art in Its Historical Context, Harbison, Craig.

A relatively brief and accessible contextual survey of Northern Renaissance art.

Human Behavior & Neurobiology: Are We Hardwired? Part 1

Recommended reading: The Ethical Brain, Michel S. Gazzaniga.

The rapid advance of scientific knowledge has raised ethical dilemmas that humankind has never before had to address. Questions about the moment when life technically begins and ends or about the morality of genetically designing babies are now relevant and timely.

Recommended reading: The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature, Steven Pinker.

Drawing on decades of research in the "sciences of human nature," Pinker, a chaired professor of psychology at MIT, attacks the notion that an infant's mind is a blank slate, arguing instead that human beings have an inherited universal structure shaped by the demands made upon the species for survival, albeit with plenty of room for cultural and individual variation.

Impacting the Developing World: Feeling Good, Doing Good, or Doing Business?

Required reading: Dead Aid, Dambisa Moyo.

In this important analysis of the past fifty years of international (largely American) aid to Africa, economist and former World Bank consultant Moyo, a native of Zambia, prescribes a tough dose of medicine: stopping the tide of money that, however well-intentioned, only promotes corruption in government and dependence in citizens.

Recommended reading: The Bottom Billion, Paul Collier.

Fluent, thought-provoking book. David Smith, The Observer Rarely can a book on this subject have been such a pleasurable read. David Smith, The Observer Every politician should read this. Simon Shaw, Irish Mail on Sunday.

Recommended reading: Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon? China & Africa’, Strunk and White.

This book focuses on the rapidly growing economic and political influence that China has in Africa. Cutting-edge contributions from sixteen pan-African authors provide an historical and geo-political context for understanding the evolving partnership between Africa and China. The book features nine detailed country case studies and assesses China's Africa policy and interests in relation to those of other powers. It broadens the debate on this crucial topic and ensures that African voices enrich a discourse that could well determine the future of the continent.

Recommended reading: The White Man's Burden, William Easterly.

No one who attacks the humanitarian aid establishment is going to win any popularity contests, but, neither, it seems, is that establishment winning any contests with the people it is supposed to be helping. Easterly, an NYU economics professor and a former research economist at the World Bank, brazenly contends that the West has failed, and continues to fail, to enact its ill-formed, utopian aid plans because, like the colonialists of old, it assumes it knows what is best for everyone.

Recommended reading: NGOs in International Politics, Shamima Ahmed & David Potter.

Non-governmental organizations have gained a great deal of popularity in recent years. The awarding of the Nobel Prize to The International Campaign to Ban Landmines in 1977 and to Medicins Sans Frontieres in 1999 has highlighted the emergence of these organizations as "new" forces in international politics. Yet, there is no work to date that has provided an overview of the varieties of interaction between NGOs and states, international organizations and in international politics.

Islam from Muhammad to Osama

Required reading: Islam: The Straight Path, John Esposito.

Islam: The Straight Path includes a new Epilogue by John Esposito in which he addresses the impact 9/11 and its aftermath have had on both the Muslim and non-Muslim world, discussing Islam's relationship to democracy and modernity and focusing more sharply on the origins and growth of extremism and terrorism in the name of Islam.

Recommended reading: Islam, Karen Armstrong.

The picture of Islam as a violent, backward, and insular tradition should be laid to rest, says Karen Armstrong, bestselling author of Muhammad and A History of God. Delving deep into Islamic history, Armstrong sketches the arc of a story that begins with the stirring of revelation in an Arab businessman named Muhammad. His concern with the poor who were being left behind in the blush of his society's new prosperity sets the tone for the tale of a culture that values community as a manifestation of God.

Recommended reading: Muhammad: A Biography of the Prophet, Karen Armstrong.

In a meticulous quest for the historical Muhammad, Armstrong first traces the West's long history of hostility toward Islam, which it has stigmatized as a "religion of the sword." This sympathetic, engrossing biography portrays Muhammad (ca. 570-632) as a passionate, complex, fallible human being--a charismatic leader possessed of political as well as spiritual gifts, and a prophet whose monotheistic vision intuitively answered the deepest longings of his people.

Recommended reading: What Everyone needs to know about Islam, John Esposito.

Georgetown professor Esposito has written an excellent primer on all aspects of Islam. The question-and-answer format allows readers to skip ahead to areas that interest them, including hot-button issues such as "Why are Muslims so violent?" or "Why do Muslim women wear veils and long garments?" In his answers, which are anywhere from a paragraph to several pages long, Esposito elegantly educates the reader through what the Qur'an says, how Muslims are influenced by their local cultures, and how the unique politics of Islamic countries affects Muslims' views.

Recommended reading: Introduction to the Study of the Holy Qur’an, Maulana Muhammad ‘Ali.

The Holy Qur'an claims to be the greatest spiritual force which is ultimately destined to bring the whole of humanity to perfection.

Math to Keep Your Mind Sharp

Recommended reading: The Math Gene, Keith Devlin.

Mathematics merely involves a relatively high level of abstraction--but one we can all cope with, if we work at it. "Doing mathematics is very much like running a marathon," writes Devlin. "It does not require any special talent, and 'finishing' is largely a matter of wanting to succeed."

Recommended reading: Innumeracy, Mathematical Illiteracy and its Consequences, John Allen Paulos.

This is the book that made "innumeracy" a household word, at least in some households. Paulos admits that "at least part of the motivation for any book is anger, and this book is no exception. I'm distressed by a society which depends so completely on mathematics and science and yet seems to indifferent to the innumeracy and scientific illiteracy of so many of its citizens."

Recommended reading: The Glass Wall, Why Mathematics Can Seem Difficult , Frank Smith.

Following his years of studying human intellectual accomplishments such as language, reading, writing, thinking, and learning, Frank Smith now turns his critical lens on the teaching and learning of mathematics. In The Glass Wall, Smith helps us to understand why some people find the world of mathematics so compelling while others find it so difficult.

Presidents, Political Parties & the Electoral College

Recommended reading: April 1865, The Month that Saved America, Jay Winik.

This is one of those rare, shining books that takes a new look at an old subject and changes the way we think about it. Winik shows that there was nothing inevitable about the end of the Civil War, from the fall of Richmond to the surrender at Appomattox to the murder of Lincoln. It all happened so quickly, in what "proved to be perhaps the most moving and decisive month not simply of the Civil War, but indeed, quite likely, in the life of the United States."

Spirituals: The Cultural and Psychological History

Required reading: Wade in the Water: The Wisdom of the Spirituals, Arthur Jones.

Spirituals emerged from the crucible of slavery. They inspired enslaved African Americans to risk their lives for the chance to be free. Wade in the Water celebrates these spirituals as an art form and as unique and powerful cultural expression. For those with little knowledge of the tradition, it provides a wealth of information. For those who know and love the spirituals, it offers a fresh prespective and an invitation to deeper understanding, spiritual transformation, and social renewal. The book comes with a CD of some of the spirituals covered in the book.

The Garden as Fine Art

Recommended reading: The Garden: Visions of Paradise, Gabrielle van Zuylen.

The garden is an expression of our ability to make nature into art. This pocket-sized book of the "New Horizons" series examines the evolution of the garden over more than 2000 years, exploring some of the most beautiful gardens in the world, from antiquity, medieval Europe, Renaissance Italy, classical France, 18th-century England and the modern day.

The Great Equations: Breakthroughs in Science from Pythagoras to Heisenberg

Required reading: The Great Equations, Robert P. Crease.

The Great Equations tells the stories of ten seminal equations, revealing the personal struggles of their ingenious originators and the impact that their work had on civilization.  Prof. Robert P. Crease locates the equations in the panoramic sweep of Western history, showing that they are as integral to their time and place of creation as are great works of art.

US Poverty: A Preventable Disease

Required reading: Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting by in America, Barbarn Ehrenreich.

Acclaimed as an instant classic upon publication, Nickel and Dimed has sold more than 1.5 million copies and become a staple of classroom reading. Chosen for “one book” initiatives across the country, it has fueled nationwide campaigns for a living wage. Funny, poignant, and passionate, this revelatory firsthand account of life in low-wage America—the story of Barbara Ehrenreich’s attempts to eke out a living while working as a waitress, hotel maid, house cleaner, nursing-home aide, and Wal-Mart associate—has become an essential part of the nation’s political discourse.

Required reading: All Together Now: Common Sense for a Fair Economy, Jared Bernstein.

Jared Bernstein is to most economic writers what Red Bull is to decaf latte. In All Together Now he makes such a rousing case for mutual responsibility and shared risk that you'll leap out of your chair and into action. Everyone in the sub-billionaire class needs to read this book and send a gift copy to his or her elected officials.

Write to Save Your Life: Beginning Memoir Writing

Recommended reading: Writing Your Life, Lou W. Stanek.

We all have stories to tell -- of a rapturous first kiss, a life-altering moment of choice, or the shocking revelation of a long-guarded secret. And these stories are often as distinctive, fascinating, exciting and entertaining as those found in the memoirs and autobiographies that currently top the nation's bestseller lists. We just need to know how to tell them best.

Recommended reading: Writing Down the Bones, Natalie Goldberg.

Wherein we discover that many of the "rules" for good writing and good sex are the same: Keep your hand moving, lose control, and don't think. Goldberg brings a touch of both Zen and well... *eroticism* to her writing practice, the latter in exercises and anecdotes designed to ease you into your body, your whole spirit, while you create, the former in being where you are, working with what you have, and writing from the moment.

Recommended reading: Your Life As Story, Tristine Rainer.

Every person's life tells a story, but few of us dare to consider our own story worthy of being written. Tristine Rainer shows us how to apply the structure of story telling to an ordinary life to give it shape, meaning, and clarity.

Recommended reading: How to Write the Story of Your Life, Frank Thomas.

How to Write the Story of Your Life shows writers how to mine the depths of their experience to write an engaging and saleable memoir. Frank P. Thomas gives readers the instruction they need to write the stories of their lives, including: The five Rs essential to the completion and publishing of a life story; research, remembering, 'riting, reading and reproduction Hundreds of memory sparkers to get readers started Organizational techniques for developing a writing plan and how to work with photos and documents Memories and the author's expert guidance are all writers need to leave a legacy for generations to come.

Recommended reading: Old Friend Far Away, Natalie Goldberg.

Millions of Americans want to write about their lives. With Old Friend as the road map for getting started and following through, writers and readers will gain a deeper understanding of their own minds, learn to connect with their senses in order to find the detail and truth that give their written words power and authenticity, and unfold the natural structure of the stories they carry within.

Writing & Journaling: Celebrating Nature’s Wonders

Required reading: Land of Grass and Sky, Young, Mary Taylor.

The author's odyssey through the austere yet beautiful shortgrass prairie offers stories of connection to the land. Part nature lore, part history, part meditation, this narrative reveals an intricately woven landscape of wildlife, plants, and people. To look beyond the open space, to truly know a prairie and its secrets, the author learns to look inward, and to see with more than her eyes.

Recommended reading: A Sand County Almanac, Leopold, Aldo.

A Sand County Almanac is a classic of nature writing, widely cited as one of the most influential nature books ever published. Writing from the vantage of his summer shack along the banks of the Wisconsin River, Leopold mixes essay, polemic, and memoir in his book's pages.

Recommended reading: Selected Journals of Henry David Thoreau, Thoreau, Henry David.

The complete text of "Civil Disobedience," "Life without Principle," "My Prayer," the major parts of Walden, and some extracts from his journals. Edited by Lewis Leary, this volume also contains an excellent introduction, a list of principal dates in the life of Thoreau, and a selected bibliography.

Recommended reading: High Tide in Tucson, Kingsolver, Barbara.

Displaying a diverse background and multiple interests, Kingsolver has written about subjects as varied as the biological clock of hermit crabs, tourist wanderings in Benin, and visiting an obsolete Titan missile site. The recurring themes here are the wonder and excitement of parenting; the respect for all creatures, religions, and points of view; and the importance of the natural world in our lives.

Recommended reading: Bird by Bird, Lamont, Anne.

Think you've got a book inside of you? Anne Lamott isn't afraid to help you let it out. She'll help you find your passion and your voice, beginning from the first really crummy draft to the peculiar letdown of publication.

Recommended reading: On Writing Well, Zinsser, William.

Whether you write an occasional professional letter or a daily newspaper column, William Zinsser's On Writing Well should be required reading. Simplicity is Zinsser's mantra: he preaches a stripped-down writing style, strong and clear. He has no patience for excess (most use of adjectives and adverbs, he writes, just adds clutter) or tired phraseology (for instance, he'd like to outlaw all leads involving those "future archaeologists" most often found "stumbl[ing] upon the remains of our civilization").

Recommended reading: Write Down The Bones, Goldberg, Natalie.

Wherein we discover that many of the "rules" for good writing and good sex are the same: Keep your hand moving, lose control, and don't think. Goldberg brings a touch of both Zen and well... *eroticism* to her writing practice, the latter in exercises and anecdotes designed to ease you into your body, your whole spirit, while you create, the former in being where you are, working with what you have, and writing from the moment.

Recommended reading: Writing About Nature, Murray, John A.

Originally published by the Sierra Club in 1995, this handbook has already helped thousands of aspiring writers, scholars, and students share their experiences with nature and the outdoors. Using exercises and examples, John Murray covers genres, techniques, and publication issues. Also included are recommended readings, a directory of creative writing programs, professional organizations for writers, and a directory of environmental organizations.

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