Login  |  Register          Free Newsletter Subscription
Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Stillman Directs Week's Best Books

by Staff, PW Daily for Booksellers -- Publishers Weekly, 5/28/2004

As published in the Week magazine, Whit Stillman, who wrote and directed the films Metropolitan, Barcelona and The Last Days of Disco, the last of which he also adapted as a novel, offers his favorite books for "slow reading," with commentary:

Balzac, a Biography by Graham Robb (Norton, $15). A classic--the sort of imaginative identification that inspires page pondering rather than page turning. For a merely 400-page book, Robb's opus has a delightfully interminable quality, as if one could, and really should, dine out on every paragraph.

The Claws of the Dragon by John Byron and Robert Pack (out of print). A gothic biography of the Stalinist-trained chief of Mao's secret police. It lives up to its subtitle--"Kang Sheng: The Evil Genius Behind Mao--And His Legacy of Terror in People's China." Kang was the instigator or inspiration for murderous ideological campaigns, from China's Rectification Movement, in the early 1940s, to Cambodia's Khmer Rouge.

Max: A Biography by David Cecil (out of print). The relics of a saint. The fascination of critic and caricaturist Max Beerbohm might now rest--more than on his works--on his stance, perspective, and manner of facing experience or avoiding it entirely. Cecil provides the complete picture, while the inspired hero worship of S.N. Behrman's A Portrait of Max remains closer to the hearts of the faithful.

Puritan Boston and Quaker Philadelphia by E. Digby Baltzell (Transaction, $30). Baltzell, the charismatic Penn sociology professor who coined the term "WASP," spent years preparing this, his magnum opus--a social and intellectual history of "Two Protestant Ethics and the Spirit of Class Authority and Leadership." It could make for some years of stimulating reading.

The Road to Guilford Courthouse by John Buchanan (Wiley, $20). How, in our first civil war, armed Whigs led by Nathaniel Greene, Daniel Morgan, and Francis (the "Swamp Fox") Marion set the stage for a Tory defeat and American independence. A social, political, and military history of the falling apart and coming back together of the Whig cause in the crucial 1780-81 Carolinas campaign.

The English Novel by Walter Allen (out of print). In the best and most sweeping of term papers, Professor Allen is the brilliant explainer of the 250 years of the English novel's origins and development. Like so much else, it ends sadly in the 20th century.

This article originally appeared in the May 27, 2004 issue of PW Daily for Booksellers. For more information about PW Daily, including a sample and subscription information, click here »
Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Talkback

We would love your feedback!

Post a comment

» VIEW ALL TALKBACK THREADS

Related Content

Related Content

 

By This Author

PW PARTNERS




 
Advertisement

More Content

  • Blogs
  • Podcasts
  • Photos

Blogs


Sorry, no blogs are active for this topic.

» VIEW ALL BLOGS RSS

Photos

Advertisements






NEWSLETTERS
Click on a title below to learn more.

PW Daily
Religion BookLine
Children's Bookshelf
PW Comics Week
©2008 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites