• Stumble Upon
  • Reddit
  • Digg
 

A Conservative Read On Palin's 'Going Rogue'()  

Sarah Palin 'Going Rogue'

November 17, 2009 Sarah Palin may be the Republican party's next big hope, but commentator Rod Dreher says her new book, Going Rogue, does little to bolster her image. She may be the perkiest small-town American in the spotlight, but Palin is selling her personality, not a platform.

Transcript

On All Things ConsideredPlaylist

'The Lacuna,' Kingsolver's Vacant Return()  

'Lacuna' BWL

November 3, 2009 It's been nine years since Barbara Kingsolver, author of The Poisonwood Bible, has released a new novel — but is The Lacuna worth the wait? Critic Maureen Corrigan says this personalized perspective on the Red Scare in Mexico reflects the hidden meaning of the book's title: vacancy.

Transcript

On Fresh Air from WHYYPlaylist

Searching For Answers? 'Googled' Disappoints()  

'Googled' by Ken Aueltta

November 3, 2009 Ken Auletta's new book, Googled, chronicles the behemoth search engine company from the bottom up. But critic Troy Patterson says that few of the book's points are so penetrating that they couldn't be easily discovered via a quick Google query.

Transcript

On All Things ConsideredPlaylist

Lethem's Tedious, Maddening 'Chronic City'()  

Chronic City BWL

October 23, 2009 Jonathan Lethem's new novel, featuring a fatuous former child TV star and his stoner friend, swirls around aimlessly, lifted only occasionally by the author's dazzling prose.

Summary

On The 'Wisdom Trail,' Platitudes Prevail()  

The Wisdom Trail,  Book Cover

July 27, 2009 Long on generalities and short on real wisdom, The Wisdom Trail does not do justice to the women it profiles.

Transcript

On All Things ConsideredPlaylist

Journalist Looks At The 'Why' Behind Columbine()  

thumbnail

April 17, 2009 In his new book, Dave Cullen delivers a clear-eyed portrait of the brains behind the Columbine killings. He says the massacre wasn't an emotional outburst or revenge fantasy carried out by a couple of social outcasts. Reviewer Susan Jane Gilman calls the book strong, but says it doesn't quite sing.

Transcript

On All Things ConsideredPlaylist

Death's Absence, Writ Large And Small()  

thumbnail

December 9, 2008 Two new novels explore the consequences of a personified Death who fails to perform expected duties. Jonathan Carroll's The Ghost in Love focuses on an individual saved from Death, while Jose Saramago's Death with Interruptions examines an entire nation.

Transcript

On All Things ConsideredPlaylist

A Multilingual Voyage, Buoyed By A 'Sea Of Poppies'()  

thumbnail

November 12, 2008 Amitav Ghosh's sprawling historical novel is set on a former slave ship in 1838, and features a wildly diverse cast of characters and fluid, "beautifully made" sentences. Reviewer Alan Cheuse says Sea of Poppies is worth a passage.

Transcript

On All Things ConsideredPlaylist

Jim Harrison's Quixotic, Erotic Road Novel()  

thumbnail

October 27, 2008 Who says road novels have to be about the young? The English Major follows a 60-something teacher as he sets off on a cross-country journey to mend a broken heart — and revive his libido.

Transcript

On All Things ConsideredPlaylist

Freud And Oedipus Converge In 'Three Roads'()  

thumbnail

October 20, 2008 Where Three Roads Meet, the new novel from British psychologist and fiction writer Sally Vickers, is set in the spring of 1923, and features an invented encounter between the ailing Sigmund Freud and a blind, ancient soothsayer.

Transcript

On All Things ConsideredPlaylist

more Book Reviews >

Podcast and RSS Feeds

PodcastRSS

  • Books
     
  • Book Reviews
     
 
 

About Book Reviews

NPR features regular book reviews from professor and "All Things Considered" reviewer Alan Cheuse, "Day to Day" contributor Karen Grigsby Bates and "Fresh Air" reviewer Maureen Corrigan.

Questions & Comments:

Send us your thoughts