Middle Men
by Jim Gavin (Simon & Schuster)
The guys (mostly Southern Californians) in Gavin’s first story collection are not at the top of the heap. They are trying to at least achieve fine middle-class lives. With a sharp, witty eye, Gavin gives us a game-show assistant whose high-powered host sends him to steal his dog back from an ex-wife (“Elephant Doors”). There’s a one-hit-wonder screenwriter, who’s success was ethnic cop-buddy flick “Hyde & Sikh” (“Illuminati”). And in “Costello,” a father-and-son toilet-salesmen team.
Where the Cherry Tree Grew
The Story of Ferry Farm, George Washington’s Boyhood Home
by Philip Levy (St. Martin’s)
Levy asserts that a young George Washington never really chopped down a cherry tree, much less refused to lie about it. But the author did spend a decade researching and excavating the property, near Fredericksburg, Va., where Washington lived from age 6 to about 15. He recounts how the cherry-tree myth began; the sordid tale of how real-estate speculators tried to sell the grave of Washington’s mother; bloody Civil War battles on the property; and more recently, how Walmart tried to turn the farm into a mall.
The Soundtrack of My Life
by Clive Davis (Simon & Schuster)
Clive Davis has come pretty far for a kid from Crown Heights who lost both parents as a teen. As a top record exec, he found, signed, worked with and mentored the likes of Whitney Houston, Janis Joplin, Aretha Franklin, Barry Manilow, Simon and Garfunkel, Aerosmith, Alicia Keys, Jennifer Hudson and many more. He recalls the first time he heard Houston sing, at Sweetwater’s in 1983 (he immediately offered her a contract); how he found out Simon and Garfunkel were breaking up; and a chance meeting with John Lennon at a coffee shop, where the ex-Beatle told him he was moving to the Dakota.
Washed Away
How the Great Flood of 1913, America’s Most Widespread Natural Disaster, Terrorized a Nation and Changed it Forever
by Geoff Williams (Pegasus)
One hundred years ago, there was no AccuWeather forecast or Doppler Radar or Weather Channel, so the people of Ohio, Indiana, their neighboring states — and even as far away as New Jersey, New York and Vermont — hardly knew what hit them. Tornadoes and a days-long deluge wreaked havoc. As many as 1,000 people died. In Omaha, Neb., alone, a March 23 twister killed 140. Williams brings the disaster back to life with tales of desperation and heroism that sadly sound so familiar today.
Doug Unplugged
by Dan Yaccarino (Knopf)
Take a break from your electronic and digital devices for this delightful picture book about a robot boy, Doug, whose robot parents plug him in every morning for his information download. Until one day, Doug — drawn a bit like Elroy Jetson — figures he can learn even more by unplugging and exploring the city. He takes the subway, sees pigeons, makes a friend and plays in the park and ends up sharing what he learned with his parents.
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