|
You are currently browsing the archives for the Non-Fiction category.
Archive for the 'Non-Fiction' Category
Friday, January 22nd, 2010
This book caught my eye a number of times in various bookstores before I ever purchased it. At first I thought it would be a book following the veins of film noir, and the one time I briefly turned it over, I hastily scanned the back until I got to the word Chicago. Unless the book was a racist diatribe on Michael Jordan’s ascendancy as the greatest basketball player ever within the fabled Windy City (which I highly doubted), I did not think Chicago or this book had anything to offer. But I eventually succumbed to the lure of the eerie cover. The cover was too intriguing, so I picked it up and quickly became engrossed in one of the most interesting true stories I’ve ever read. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Non-Fiction
|
65 views |
No Comments »
Thursday, November 20th, 2008
Review: Growing up turns out to be a hard task. Ask any teenager (of whom I know many), and I am sure that they will agree that their lives are filled with drama of the highest order. Friends turn on friends, potential suitors are taken up and discarded in awkward moments, and occasionally one is confronted with emotional trauma related to some horribly embarrassing moment. If there was no angst, the music industry would be broke and Stephanie Meyers would be writing about something other than hormonally charged young vampires. For Robyn Scott, the author of Twenty Chickens and a Saddle, growing up in Selebei, Botswana is infinitely more difficult. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Non-Fiction
|
211 views |
No Comments »
Thursday, August 21st, 2008
Review: Zimbabwe is dying. Robert Mugabe who began his presidency by helping to stimulate the economy and providing a foundation for rapid growth now cripples his country. White farmers are driven off their prosperous farms and into exile or hiding while Mugabe uses them as scapegoats to cover his own failings. War veterans set up camp on properties, harassing, beating and occasionally killing blacks and whites alike. Caught in the middle of this crisis, Peter Godwin illustrates the tragic downfall of his homeland.
His successful career in journalism has moved him from Zimbabwe to London and then, finally, New York. He transits between the two in order to keep an eye on his aging parents who continue to live in the country they call home. Each time he touches down in Harare airport his situation becomes increasingly tenuous and desperate. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Non-Fiction
|
235 views |
No Comments »
Tuesday, July 15th, 2008

Review: Liz Gilbert, socialite, author, journalist, realizes her life is spiraling out of control. As her marriage falls apart, she begins to question her direction. Rock bottom starts to appear when she finds herself searching for answers on the floor of her bathroom. She claws through the rest of her divorce and tries to hold herself together. Solace comes in the form a new lover, but even this turns into a tumultuous relationship. She orbits this man in an erratic spiral, and, just before she enters the atmosphere in a fiery ball destined to burn up and fall to the earth a charred and useless rock, she comes to a decision. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Non-Fiction
|
260 views |
No Comments »
Monday, May 19th, 2008
Review: Valentino Achak Deng, a Dinka living in Southern Sudan, is seven years old when Northern Sudanese raiders come to his small African village, burn it down and finish off a massacre that began months earlier. He is separated from his parents, and in the chaos of burning, screaming, and dying, he flees into the forest surrounding his village. Where does a small boy turn to when faced with the dangers of wild animals, when those that would help him are slaughtered, when armed men roam the countryside hoping to exterminate his people? Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Non-Fiction
|
244 views |
No Comments »
|