Author Rebecca Walker's recent memoir, "Baby Love: Choosing Motherhood After a Lifetime of Ambivalence, " tells the story of her pregnancy: not just the physical evolution, but also the emotional and intellectual transformation from ambivalence to certainty to unconditional love. It's the story of the birth of her son, as well as the tale of a generation — a wise, thought-provoking, and engaging memoir by a writer who has proven to be an important voice of her era.
Narrated by gossip columnist Walter Winchell, "All the Stars Came Out That Night" a book by Kevin King, paints a vivid and moving portrait of Depression-era baseball—its raw joy and elegance but also its cursing, boozing, womanizing, and racism, and its odd relationships with bootleggers, racketeers, Hollywood stars, kidnappers, and even Dominican dictators.
The date was October 20, 1934, just days after Diz's Cardinals won the World Series....
All board for Dreamland! Hold on to your pillow because the Goodnight Train is taking…
Teacher and best-selling novelist Sue Miller continues the tradition of identifying the best young…
Teenagers and the law? Aren't teenagers supposed to have the same rights and freedoms…
Christopher Wilson's "Cotton" (Harcourt, $14) tells the tale of Lee Cotton, a…
Americans" working lives are growing more precarious every day. Corporations slash employees"
After purchasing an assisted living facility that specializes in the care of elderly mentally…
Beginning with the dramatic events surrounding his birth, Ferguson recreates adventures involving…
Inspired by the extraordinary events of Dr. May Chinn's life, Kuwana Halsey's "Angel of Harlem" (One World paperback, $13.95) is an affecting story of love and transcendence. Weaving scenes from the battlefields of the Civil War — during which May's father escaped from slavery — with the Harlem living rooms and kitchen tables where May is sometimes forced to operate on her patients, this fascinating novel lays bare the heart of a woman who changed the face of medicine.