Braille Book Review, Vol. 66, No. 5, September-October 1997 Braille Book Review September-October 1997 Volume 66, Number 5 _Braille Book Review_ is published bimonthly in large-print, braille, and computer diskette formats and distributed free to blind and physically handicapped individuals who participate in the Library of Congress free reading program. It lists braille magazines and books available through a network of cooperating libraries. The braille edition also lists recorded books, giving abbreviated annotations. News about library services is featured in both editions. The annotated list in this issue is limited to titles recently added to the national collection, which contains thousands of fiction and nonfiction titles, including classics, biographies, gothics, mysteries, and how-to and self-help guides. To learn more about the wide range of books in the national collection, readers may order catalogs and subject bibliographies from cooperating libraries. Librarians can check other resources for titles and answer requests for special materials. Readers can receive _Braille Book Review_ and other information through the Internet by accessing the the NLS home page at http://www.loc.gov/nls. To order books or for subscription changes, contact your local cooperating library. Correspondence regarding editorial matters should be sent to Publications and Media Section, National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, Library of Congress, Washington, DC 20542. Library of Congress, Washington 1997 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 53-31800 ISSN 0006-873X Contents: In Brief Books for Adults Nonfiction Fiction Books for Children Nonfiction Fiction Braille Magazines ### _In Brief_ _Annual Catalog Survey_ Patrons will soon be able to select and order NLS catalogs and bibliographies that will be issued in 1998. A large- print order form will be mailed early this fall to patrons who subscribe to _Talking Book Topics_. Patrons who subscribe to_ Braille Book Review_ will receive a braille order form. Catalogs and bibliographies ordered will be sent directly to patrons when the publications are produced. _Newsstand_ The following announcements may be of interest to readers. The National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped reserves the right to publish announcements selectively, as space permits. Items mentioned, however, are not part of the NLS program, and their listing does not imply endorsement. _New from the National Braille Press (NBP)_ The following books can be ordered from the National Braille Press, 88 St. Stephen Street, Boston, MA 02115; 800-548- 7323. _The AltaVista Search Revolution: How to Find Anything on the Internet_, a three-volume edition describing the Website search engine, is available for $18.99. _LOVE: Poems_, by Pablo Narrate, a braille booklet, is available for $6.95. _The Sexiest Sex of All_, which covers the latest information on safe sex and other sex-related topics, is available in two braille volumes at $8.95. _Matilda Ziegler for the Blind_ _The Ziegler_, a braille and cassette publication, reprints articles from magazines, newspapers, and books. It is available free from Matilda Ziegler for the Blind, which has produced the magazine since 1907. For more information, write The Ziegler, 80 Eighth Avenue, Room 1304, New York, NY 10011. _Announcement_ The Massachusetts Association for the Blind has a limited quantity of used braillewriters available for sale at $250- 300. For more information, write the agency in care of Debby Smith, 200 Ivy Street, Brookline, MA 02146 or call (617) 732-0242. The following information was reprinted from _Talking Book Topics_ September-October 1997. _Magazine Changes Begin in January_ The National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped (NLS) reminds patrons that many new magazine titles will be added to the program beginning in January 1998. The complete list appears in the Magazines section of this issue and includes information about the number of issues and format of each title. _Catalog Survey Coming Soon_ Patrons will soon be able to select and order NLS catalogs and bibliographies that will be issued in 1997 and 1998. A large-print order form will be mailed early this fall to patrons who subscribe to _TBT_. The form will give patrons the opportunity to order upcoming publications, such as _Adventure Stories_, _Cassette Books 1997_, and _For Younger Readers 1996-1997_. Catalogs and bibliographies ordered will be sent directly to patrons when the publications are produced. _Scourby Awards Announced_ The American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) presented its eleventh Alexander Scourby Narrator of the Year Awards to honor excellence in talking-book narration. AFB awarded prizes to narrators for three categories: fiction, nonfiction, and multilingual nonfiction. The award-winning narrators are Mary Woods, Talking Book Publishers, Inc., for fiction; Jack Fox, American Printing House for the Blind, for nonfiction; and Ed Blake, AFB, for multilingual nonfiction. The annual Scourby Award was established in 1986 in memory of the popular talking-book narrator who died in 1985. _Newsstand_ The following announcement may be of interest to readers. The National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped reserves the right to publish announcements selectively, as space permits. Items mentioned, however, are not part of the NLS program, and their listing does not imply endorsement. _Shopping Catalogs._ Home Readers offers a variety of popular mail order catalogs on 4-track cassette. The catalogs list products from companies that sell clothing, gifts, music, food, collectibles, cosmetics, pet supplies, and health-related items. The tapes feature descriptions of patterns, styles, and colors that are pictured in the print editions. Prices for the catalogs range from $2 to $4. For more information contact Home Readers, 604 W. Hulett, Edgerton, KS 66021; telephone (913) 893-6939; e-mail Homeread@Qni.com. ### _Books for Adults_ Books listed in this issue of _Braille Book Review_ were recently sent to cooperating libraries. The complete collection contains books by many authors on fiction and nonfiction subjects, including biographies, classics, gothics, mysteries, romances, and others. Contact your cooperating library to learn more about the wide range of books available in the collection. To order books, contact your cooperating library. Note: For the information of the reader, a notice may appear immediately following the book description to indicate occurrences of strong language, explicit descriptions of sex, or violence. The word "some" before any of these terms indicates an occasional or infrequent occurrence, as in "some strong language." ### _Nonfiction_ The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life. BR 9837. by Richard J. Herrnstein and Charles Murray. 10 volumes. The authors assert that information and the intellectual ability to use it separate the "haves" from the "have nots" in American society. The authors' stated goal is to convince public policy makers to acknowledge that differences in ability exist, that reliance on prejudicial assumptions is wrong, and that open discussion of class intelligence is vital. Bestseller 1994. BR 9837. ## Building Basic Skills in Reading, Book 2. BR 10355. by Contemporary Books, Incorporated. 2 volumes. Second half of a two-book program on practicing reading skills. A pretest is followed by exercises in both critical and practical reading. Topics include sorting facts from opinions; recognizing bias and propaganda; understanding style and tone; following written instructions; and reading diagrams, schedules, and charts. Also includes a posttest on these reading skills. 1982. BR 10355. ## Building Basic Skills in Science. BR 10356. by Contemporary Books, Incorporated. 2 volumes. Designed to help readers build science knowledge while practicing reading skills. Includes units on biology, earth science, chemistry, and physics, as well as a pretest, a posttest, and a glossary. 1981. BR 10356. ## Building Basic Skills in Social Studies. BR 10357. by Contemporary Books, Incorporated. 2 volumes. Designed to help readers build social studies knowledge while practicing reading skills. Includes units on economics, geography, political science, history, and behavioral science, as well as a pretest, posttest, and glossary. 1981. BR 10357. ## History of the Peloponnesian War. BR 10511. by Thucydides. 5 volumes. Written in the fifth century B.C. by an Athenian commander, this is a history of the twenty-seven-year conflict between Athens, a democratic state and sea power, and the states of the Peloponnese headed by Sparta, a conservative power with an efficient military force. 1993. BR 10511. ## The Rivals: William Gwin, David Broderick, and the Birth of California. BR 10513. by Arthur Quinn. 4 volumes. Recounts the events in the mid-1800s when two ambitious adversaries rose to power as U.S. senators from California. Reviews the personal and political conflicts that culminated in a duel, which left Broderick dead and Gwin discredited, and presents details of this tragedy using young California's transformation from a remote province to a prosperous state as a backdrop. 1994. BR 10513. ## Sofi's Aegean Kitchen: A Light Approach to Traditional Greek Home Cooking. BR 10556. by Sofi Lazarides Konstantinides. 2 volumes. When the author moved from Greece to Los Angeles, she opened a Greek restaurant that became a great success. Here she offers tips on stocking a Greek kitchen and recipes for dishes from appetizers or mezethes to phyllo pies such as spanokopita and desserts such as baklava. Soups, main dishes, and vegetables round out a collection that is lower in fat and sugar than traditional Greek cuisine. 1993. BR 10556. ## Le Cordon Bleu Classic French Cookbook. BR 10577. edited by Julia Alcock. 3 volumes. One hundred classic recipes to celebrate the cooking school's centenary. Includes first courses, such as vichyssoise; main courses, such as duck breasts with pistachios; and desserts, such as chocolate and Cointreau gateau. A section on techniques provides the beginner with the basics for becoming a successful cook. 1994. BR 10577. ## Terry: My Daughter's Life-and-Death Struggle with Alcoholism. BR 10578. by George McGovern. 2 volumes. A former senator and onetime presidential candidate's anguished story of his daughter's unhappy life and alcohol-related death. He tries to understand and explain her steady, uncontrolled descent into depression and alcoholism, concluding that genetic vulnerability was a key factor. 1996. BR 10578. ## What Happens When Women Pray. BR 10581. by Evelyn Christenson. 1 volume. The 1968 national women's chairman for the Baptist General Conference shares her experiences in leading women in prayer. She offers the "Six S's" rules for prayer groups: subject by subject, short prayers, simple prayers, specific prayer requests, silent periods, and small groups. Supports text with Bible passages and relates results obtained by many prayer groups. 1975. BR 10581. ## Cocaine and Crack: The Drug Library. BR 10616. by Marilyn Carroll. 1 volume. Carroll explains that cocaine comes from the coca plant of western South America. She discusses the history of cocaine use; describes how it is processed and what the different forms are; and outlines the effects of cocaine, the personal aspects of abusing cocaine and crack, and the efforts that are being made to solve this drug problem. For junior and senior high readers. 1994. BR 10616. ## Making Wood Tables: Practical Projects for Every Room. BR 10618. by Hugh Foster. 2 volumes. Step-by-step instructions lead novice- and intermediate-level woodworkers through the construction of twenty-six tables. General woodworking information contains descriptions of tools and techniques from selecting stock to finishing. Projects include a workbench, nightstands, several sofa tables, and an unusual glass-topped display for wood carvings. 1994. BR 10618. ## I Can Hear the Cowbells Ring. BR 10636. by Lionel G. Garcia. 2 volumes. Garcia, whose novels have earned him awards from Southwest and Texas organizations, recalls his childhood in a South Texas Mexican American community during the 1950s. With warmth and humor he retells family stories he heard from his grandparents and their children. Reveals a town with very human, and often quirky, characters. 1994. BR 10636. ## Fear of Wine: An Introductory Guide to the Grape. BR 10637. by Leslie Brenner. 3 volumes. Humorous lessons on wine by a food and wine writer. Brenner gives an overview of the wine-making process, tells which grapes yield certain flavors, and explains the information on the bottle. She describes how to taste, smell, and swirl wine and which wines complement particular foods. Gives tips on selecting a bottle for a dinner party and compiling a small domestic or international wine cellar. 1995. BR 10637. ## Pearl's Kitchen: An Extraordinary Cookbook. BR 10638. by Pearl Bailey. 2 volumes. The popular singer wrote this book at her kitchen table late at night, "thinking of yesterday and cooking for tomorrow." Contains advice on child rearing, entertaining, and housekeeping. 1973. BR 10638. ## Sister to Sister: Women Write about the Unbreakable Bond. BR 10639. edited by Patricia Foster. 3 volumes. The bond of sisterhood as experienced by twenty women writers. The complexities of their relationships with their sisters--love and hate, pride and jealousy--are described by women who make a living observing humankind. Some of the bonds include tragedy, but all include unique intimacies. Some strong language and some descriptions of sex. 1995. BR 10639. ## Train Go Sorry: Inside a Deaf World. BR 10653. by Leah Hager Cohen. 3 volumes. The author, who is not deaf, grew up in the New York Lexington School for the Deaf, where her parents worked. Her own memoirs combined with the stories of her deaf grandparents and those of current students reflect the changing deaf culture. Cohen discusses issues such as American Sign Language versus oralism and attitudes toward cochlear implants. 1994. BR 10653. ## The Dilbert Principle: A Cubicle's-Eye View of Bosses, Meetings, Management Fads, and Other Workplace Afflictions. BR 10668. by Scott Adams. 3 volumes. A humorous look at the workplace from the creator of the "Dilbert" cartoon strip. The Dilbert Principle is that "the most ineffective workers are systematically moved to the place where they can do the least damage--management." Bestseller 1996. BR 10668. ## On Our Own Terms: Portraits of Women Business Leaders. BR 10672. by Liane Enkelis and Karen Olsen. 2 volumes. Interviews with fifteen women who lead large corporations and also have a personal life. The women include the principal chief of the Cherokee Nation, the president of two highly successful catalog companies, and the head of one of the world's leading software companies. 1995. BR 10672. ## How Good Do We Have to Be? A New Understanding of Guilt and Forgiveness. BR 10700. by Harold S. Kushner. 1 volume. Kushner, who wrote_ When Bad Things Happen to Good People (BR 5310)_, believes individuals demand too much of themselves in regard to sin and guilt. By offering a different approach to the story of Adam and Eve, Kushner suggests that God forgives our mistakes--experiences from which people learn and grow. Bestseller 1996. BR 10700. ## Seeds of Disquiet: One Deaf Woman's Experience. BR 10701. by Cheryl M. Heppner. 2 volumes. The author says that as a profoundly deaf child, she was taught to adapt to the hearing world. But after two strokes left Heppner completely deaf, she learned sign language and then realized how frustrating her earlier life had been. She eventually became an advocate for deaf people. 1992. BR 10701. ## Jobs vs. the Environment: Can We Save Both?. BR 10709. by Nathan Aaseng. 1 volume. Aaseng rejects the claim that environmentalists negatively impact the economy, yet also proposes ways to protect the earth that would least disrupt workers' lives. He provides an overview of the issue from 1681 to the 1990s. For junior and senior high and older readers. 1994. BR 10709. ## The Air Down Here: True Tales from a South Bronx Boyhood. BR 10723. by Gil C. Alicea. 1 volume. A collection of short autobiographical ruminations by a sixteen-year-old from New York's South Bronx. Alicea discusses issues and problems that he confronts in his stressful urban environment: drugs, violence, gangs, parents with HIV, and the deaths of his mother and sister. For junior and senior high readers. 1995. BR 10723. ## Pierced by a Ray of Sun: Poems about the Times We Feel Alone. BR 10735. selected by Ruth Gordon. 1 volume. Seventy-three poems culled from a variety of sources but unified by one overlying theme: loneliness. Gordon's collection--which includes poems by Keats, Sandburg, and Yeats and translations from other languages--illustrates that alienation is a universal experience. For junior and senior high readers. 1995. BR 10735. ## My Dog Skip. BR 10740. by Willie Morris. 1 volume. The author tells how he grew up in a small southern town in the 1940s with a dog that could run football patterns and, it was believed, drive a car. The author demonstrates his storytelling skills in this tribute to his dog, Skip. Grade 1 braille. 1995. BR 10740. ## The Words of Martin Luther King Jr.. BR 10758. selected by Coretta Scott King. 1 volume. Selections from King's speeches and writing arranged in seven areas of concern: the community of man, racism, civil rights, justice and freedom, faith and religion, nonviolence, and peace. An introduction by Coretta Scott King provides personal and historical background for King's words. Also includes a chronology of his life. 1983. BR 10758. ## A Beginner's Faith in Things Unseen. BR 10759. by John Hay. 1 volume. Reminiscences of a life lived in harmony with the natural order, written by a man on the brink of eighty. Laments the damage wreaked on the environment through technology. Celebrates nature as it is seen through "the eye of a child." 1995. BR 10759. ## Saving Our Sons: Raising Black Children in a Turbulent World. BR 10762. by Marita Golden. 2 volumes. An African American mother tells of her ten-year life in America after her divorce in Nigeria. She contrasts her son's relative safety overseas against the perils that beset young black males in America. She depicts actual cases of violence to dramatize her message and provide insights into the issue. Strong language. 1995. BR 10762. ## The Trumpet of Conscience. BR 10772. by Martin Luther King. 1 volume. These five essays, delivered as radio lectures by King in November and December 1967, portray a nightmarish America of reality and the egalitarian America of his visions. They express his hopes for the future of nonviolence as a means to social revolution even in a climate of riot. 1968. BR 10772. ## Braille Books 1995-1996. BR 10811. by National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped . 2 volumes. A catalog of braille books produced during 1995 and 1996 by the National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped. Separate sections list fiction and nonfiction subject categories. Young adult books are also included. 1996. BR 10811. ## ### _Fiction_ Skeleton Crew. BR 10512. by Stephen King. 6 volumes. Stories primarily collected from magazines, written by a master of horror. Includes such tales as "The Jaunt," a science fiction/horror hybrid; "The Monkey," a familiar tale of a demonic toy; and "Big Wheels," a humorous and macabre account set in rural Maine. Strong language and some descriptions of sex. Bestseller 1985. BR 10512. ## The Fifth Conspiracy. BR 10528. by Ted Jones. 4 volumes. This sequel to _Hard Road to Gettysburg (BR 9743)_ portrays Civil War battles and espionage. Union officer Sam Wade becomes involved in clandestine operations deep in enemy territory, where he frees his brother from a rebel prison and discovers a plot to assassinate President Lincoln. 1995. BR 10528. ## The Vor Game. BR 10544. by Lois McMaster Bujold. 3 volumes. Miles Vorkosigan, son of Lord Vorkosigan of the planet Barrayar, hasn't lost his knack for getting into trouble and embarrassing his family. Nevertheless, despite his physical disabilities, he graduates from the Imperial Academy, hoping for space duty. He is assigned to an arctic weather station instead. Even here he finds trouble, and he is reassigned across the galaxy for more unexpected adventures. 1990. BR 10544. ## His Last Bow: Some Reminiscences of Sherlock Holmes. BR 10567. by Arthur Conan Doyle. 3 volumes. Seven stories by Doyle and three unsigned pieces by P.G. Wodehouse. In "His Last Bow," Holmes, crippled by attacks of rheumatism, comes out of retirement to help the British government track down a German agent. In "Wisteria Lodge," Mr. Eccles asks Holmes for help when he awakens one night at the lodge to find everyone gone, even his host. Introduction by Owen Dudley Edwards. Includes a Doyle chronology. 1993. BR 10567. ## Homecoming: The Holts; an American Dynasty, Volume 9. BR 10569. by Dana Fuller Ross. 3 volumes. In this sequel to _Pacific Destiny (BR 9770)_, Henry Blake is discouraged by the protracted war in Manila, but falls in love with a local woman. Frank returns from the Yukon, only to be drawn back to the West. Aspiring artist India Blackstone must fight to pursue her dreams. Strong language, some violence, and some descriptions of sex. 1994. BR 10569. ## South Sea Tales. BR 10580. by Jack London. 2 volumes. Eight tales of adventure on the seas of the South Pacific. Salty, often violent characters pit themselves against each other and against nature. In "The Seed of McCoy," a smoldering ship is boarded at Pitcairn by a descendant of one of the famous _Bounty_'s survivors, who guides the ship to safety. Introduction by A. Grove Day tells of London's own adventure in the south seas, which inspired and financed his writing. Some violence. 1911. BR 10580. ## Haveli. BR 10586. by Suzanne Fisher Staples. 2 volumes. Continues the story begun in _Shabanu: Daughter of the Wind (BR 8312)_. Shabanu and her young daughter are never safe from the cruelty within Rahim's family. Hoping for a better future, she begs to go with Rahim to his ancestral home in Lahore. But even there she remains in danger. For junior and senior high readers. 1993. BR 10586. ## Digging to Australia. BR 10593. by Lesley Glaister. 2 volumes. Just as Alice escaped to Wonderland, Jennifer longs to escape her English hometown, her terribly odd parents, and her loneliness. As she turns thirteen, all is topsy-turvy: truths and dark mysteries about her birth mother, a deceitful friend, an ominous transient, and adolescence itself. By sorting through the mysteries she finds some, but not all, answers to her questions. Some strong language and some descriptions of sex. 1992. BR 10593. ## Missing Joseph. BR 10620. by Elizabeth George. 5 volumes. When the St. Jameses visit Lancashire, they are shocked to learn that an acquaintance, the vicar, has died of poisoning. They are also disturbed because the constable handling the case is having an affair with Juliet Spence, the herbalist responsible for the "accidental" poisoning. But, since the vicar was trying to help Juliet with her troubled thirteen-year-old daughter, would she kill him? Strong language and explicit descriptions of sex. 1993. BR 10620. ## While the Messiah Tarries: Stories. BR 10623. by Melvin Jules Bukiet. 2 volumes. Nine stories, at times magical or comic and at other times mundane or tragic, describing the lives of Jews in America. In "Gematria," a woman's visit to New York's diamond district leaves the jeweler thinking about gematria, the transliteration of names and numbers, and about his own death. In "The Golden Calf and the Red Heifer," Kleinberg the butcher tries to hide the facts that he is a vegetarian and that his knife is not kosher. 1995. BR 10623. ## A Plague of Dreamers: Three Novellas. BR 10624. by Steve Stern. 2 volumes. Stories set in the Pinch, an isolated Jewish community in Memphis, and flavored with Yiddish phrases. Events often have a mystical quality and reveal universal longings. In the first story, "Zelik Rifkin and the Tree of Dreams," a wimpy young boy gains stature when he looks into the lives and dreams of his neighbors. Some strong language and some descriptions of sex. 1994. BR 10624. ## Murder at the God's Gate. BR 10626. by Lynda S. Robinson. 2 volumes. The young pharaoh Tutankhamen is beset by problems: a crumbling empire, invaders at the gates, and unrest within his court. Pharaoh's adviser, Lord Meren, suspects a conspiracy and uses ingenious investigative methods to uncover a plot that threatens the Egyptian empire. Sequel to _Murder in the Place of Anubis (BR 10186)_. 1995. BR 10626. ## When the Rainbow Goddess Wept. BR 10627. by Cecilia Manguerra Brainard. 2 volumes. When the Japanese attack the Philippines during World War II, nine-year-old Yvonne and her family flee for safety. The horrors of war are inescapable, and young Yvonne witnesses slaughter and atrocities. For strength and hope, she turns to the legends of her people: the Woman Warrior and the Rainbow Goddess. Violence, strong language, and some descriptions of sex. 1994. BR 10627. ## A Tale of Two Cities. BR 10640. by Charles Dickens. 4 volumes. Two men who bear a strong physical resemblance to each other love the same woman. The sacrifice of one, Sydney Carton, is the climax of this classic story set in London and Paris during the French Revolution. 1850. BR 10640. ## Let the Drum Speak: A Novel of Ancient America. BR 10654. by Linda Lay Shuler. 4 volumes. In this sequel to _Voice of the Eagle (BR 8887)_, Antelope is chosen by her mother, Kwani, to succeed her as the people's revered leader. Antelope journeys with her mate and child to the City of the Great Sun, yet is torn between enjoying her newfound power here or returning home to warn her people of impending doom. 1996. BR 10654. ## The Valley of Fear. BR 10660. by Arthur Conan Doyle. 3 volumes. Sherlock Holmes grapples with the criminal mastermind Professor Moriarty to solve a foul murder that takes place in a Sussex manor house. The investigation uncovers an earlier and grimmer history of lawlessness and wholesale slaughter in a mining valley in the United States. Includes Doyle's chronology and an introduction by editor Owen Dudley Edwards. 1993. BR 10660. ## Darkness, I: Third in the Blood Opera Sequence. BR 10663. by Tanith Lee. 3 volumes. Continues the saga of the vampiric and elegant Scarabae. Rachaela gives birth to Anna, who may be a reincarnation of Rachaela's first daughter. Anna grows to adolescence in two years and is kidnapped to Cain's ancient and evil underground. Sequel to _Personal Darkness (BR 10865)_. Strong language, violence, and explicit descriptions of sex. 1994. BR 10663. ## Mirror Dance: A Vorkosigan Adventure. BR 10665. by Lois McMaster Bujold. 4 volumes. In this sequel to _Brothers in Arms (BR 10666)_, Miles Vorkosigan discovers that his clone-brother and rival, Mark, has impersonated Admiral Naismith and led a raid on planet Jackson's Whole. When the mission goes awry, Miles is killed and put in cryogenic suspension. Mark revives his brother's body, then falls victim to an old foe. 1994. BR 10665. ## Brothers in Arms: A Vorkosigan Adventure. BR 10666. by Lois McMaster Bujold. 3 volumes. Just as he is lamenting the peace that has idled his Dendarii Free Mercenary Fleet, Miles discovers that brigands have stolen the Dendarii payroll. The fact that he himself has been cloned presents Miles with the additional problem of unraveling his personal identities and loyalties. Prequel to _Mirror Dance (BR 10665)_. Violence and strong language. 1989. BR 10666. ## Incidents in the Rue Laugier. BR 10675. by Anita Brookner. 2 volumes. After her mother's death, Maffy finds a pink silk kimono and a cryptic diary. Surprised, Maffy creates a story about her parents' lonely lives. In this tale, Maud's passion for a playboy leaves her pregnant, and the seducer's reserved friend offers the protection of marriage. Some strong language and descriptions of sex. 1995. BR 10675. ## Miss You like Crazy. BR 10682. by Eliza Clark. 2 volumes. Marylou travels to Florida where Flossie, who was her mother and best friend, died playing gin rummy. The trip back to Kansas with her father becomes an adventure filled with odd characters, including the flighty neighbor, CeCe, who leaves her doltish husband and beetle-eating young son. Strong language and some descriptions of sex. 1991. BR 10682. ## Random Acts of Senseless Violence. BR 10684. by Jack Womack. 6 volumes. The diary of twelve-year-old Lola Hart records the crises of her deteriorating family life in a crumbling, futuristic New York City. When misfortune forces her family to move to the poor and violent Upper East Side, Lola takes to the mean streets with the Death Angels, a girls' gang. Some strong language. 1993. BR 10684. ## Cetaganda: A Vorkosigan Adventure. BR 10688. by Lois McMaster Bujold. 3 volumes. While Miles Vorkosigan and his dim-witted cousin Ivan are on a diplomatic mission to the Cetaganda Empire, the Cetagandan empress dies. After another mysterious death, Miles investigates and is drawn into a treacherous game of court politics and romance in an alien land. 1996. BR 10688. ## Fire in the Canes. BR 10689. by Glenville Lovell. 2 volumes. A novel of magic realism set in post-slavery West Indies. When the sensuous Peata and her nubile daughter, Midra, arrive in the village, they attract the men's attention and the women's jealousy. Midra becomes pregnant by the mysterious Prince, adding to the strange happenings. Violence and explicit descriptions of sex. 1995. BR 10689. ## The Stone Raft. BR 10693. by Jose Saramago. 3 volumes. A parable about the European community. A series of ominous events leads to catastrophe as the Iberian Peninsula is inexplicably set adrift from the continent. The frantic residents band together in a bid to survive a world out of control. 1995. BR 10693. ## The View from the Summerhouse. BR 10694. by Barbara Whitnell. 3 volumes. Memories come flooding back to David Holt when his son Simon calls to say he has been commissioned to write an article on Caleb Carne, a broadcaster during World War II. David often visited Caleb, his wife, and their daughters during the war and was in love with one of the girls, but it is the memory of a terrible night just before D-Day that David has tried to forget. Simon's search for information on Caleb is interwoven with David's memories. 1994. BR 10694. ## Door Number Three. BR 10695. by Patrick O'Leary. 3 volumes. A comely patient confides to therapist John Donelly that aliens have allowed her one year to convince a sane person that she is not of this earth. Donelly agrees to be that sane person and commences a bizarre year in which he falls in love, discovers the meaning of dreams, and saves the earth. Strong language. 1995. BR 10695. ## Manila Time. BR 10696. by Jack Trolley. 3 volumes. In this sequel to _Balboa Firefly (BR 10531)_, detective sergeant Donahoo can't understand why a local crime boss is trying to bribe him. What Donahoo doesn't know is that his dead partner had been blackmailing the criminal and hinting that Donahoo was involved. Strong language, violence, and descriptions of sex. 1995. BR 10696. ## In Your Dreams. BR 10703. by Colin Neenan. 2 volumes. Hale, fifteen, and his older brother, Tom, are at the beach when they first see Sheri. Hale is attracted to her but knows that with his looks he doesn't stand a chance. When Tom starts dating Sheri, Hale's crush continues. Hale is mortified when Clay, a new girl in his class, catches him spying on the couple. Since Clay is a friend of Hale's younger sister, who hates him, his secret is bound to come out. For junior and senior high readers. 1995. BR 10703. ## Letters from the Inside. BR 10705. by John Marsden. 1 volume. Bored, Australian teenager Mandy answers an ad for a pen pal from a girl named Tracey. After the two develop a friendship through their letters, Mandy learns an astonishing fact about Tracey. Some strong language. For junior and senior high readers. 1991. BR 10705. ## A Time for Dancing. BR 10714. by Davida Wills Hurwin. 2 volumes. High school girls Sam and Jules spend the summer before senior year preparing for a dance concert, struggling over Jules's breakup with her boyfriend, and agonizing about odd symptoms that baffle Jules's doctors. When she is diagnosed with cancer, the girls' friendship is put to a severe test. Strong language. For junior and senior high readers. 1995. BR 10714. ## The Legend of Storey County. BR 10715. by Brock Thoene. 2 volumes. Seth Townsend, a reporter from San Francisco, is in Virginia City, Nevada, in September 1938 to write a story on the final run of the V&T Railroad. But Seth gets a much better story when the train captain sends him to see Jim Canfield, a one-hundred-year-old escaped slave, Civil War soldier, and holder of a stake in the richest vein of silver in Nevada. 1995. BR 10715. ## Annotations. BR 10716. by John Keene. 1 volume. Acclaimed novel about an African American child coming of age in the St. Louis suburbs during the 1960s. In poetic prose, describes the narrator's discovery of racial, sexual, and intellectual identity during turbulent times. Some descriptions of sex. 1995. BR 10716. ## Tree of Heaven. BR 10724. by R.C. Binstock. 2 volumes. China, 1938. In this tale of forbidden love, Japanese officer Kuroda, stationed in China, prevents his men from raping Li and then offers her his protection. The two will come to trust and love each other, but will also realize the impossibility of a future together. 1995. BR 10724. ## Dancing Lessons for the Advanced in Age. BR 10727. by Bohumil Hrabal. 1 volume. In one long sentence, the acclaimed Czech author presents the monologue of a spirited old shoemaker who has enjoyed a full life. His loves and lusts, the history of Czechoslovakia, and the pleasures of drink play roles in the shoemaker's story. Strong language, violence, and explicit descriptions of sex. 1964. BR 10727. ## An Acceptable Time. BR 10728. by Madeleine L'Engle. 2 volumes. In this companion to _A House like a Lotus (BR 6368)_, sixteen-year-old Polly O'Keefe visits her grandparents' farm in Connecticut and discovers a "time gate" that takes her back three thousand years. There she meets Anaral, a Native American girl; Karralys, a druid expelled from Britain; and Tav, a warrior who has accompanied Karralys. For junior and senior high readers. 1989. BR 10728. ## Politically Correct Holiday Stories: For an Enlightened Yuletide Season. BR 10730. by James Finn Garner. 1 volume. Garner, who wrote _Politically Correct Bedtime Stories (BR 9870)_ and _Once upon a More Enlightened Time (BR 10132)_, now rewrites holiday favorites for the 1990s. Includes "'Twas the Night before Solstice," "Frosty the Persun of Snow," and "Rudolph the Nasally Empowered Reindeer." In "A Christmas Carol," Marley is visited by spiritual facilitators. Bestseller 1995. BR 10730. ## Absolution. BR 10732. by Olafur Johann Olafsson. 2 volumes. He does not ask for forgiveness, but his life has been shaped by guilt over a crime of passion he committed in his youth. After fleeing his native Iceland, the wealthy and manipulative old man has spent his adult years in New York City. Estranged from his children, he reflects on the events of his life and sifts through his motivations and obsessions. Strong language and explicit descriptions of sex. 1991. BR 10732. ## The Ghost Road. BR 10741. by Pat Barker. 2 volumes. Final book in World War I trilogy, following _Regeneration (BR 10543)_ and _The Eye in the Door (BR 10645)_. Psychologist William Rivers struggles with the dilemma of healing men who must then rejoin the battle. Patient Billy Prior wants to return to the French front, though the war is nearing an end. Some strong language and some descriptions of sex. 1995 Booker Prize winner. 1995. BR 10741. ## An Imaginative Experience. BR 10763. by Mary Wesley. 2 volumes. When Londoner Sylvester Wykes's commuter train hisses to an emergency halt, he is impressed to see a woman passenger leap to the aid of a stranded sheep. Later the housecleaner he hires turns out to be the same altruistic woman, and Wykes falls in love. 1994. BR 10763. ## ### _Books for Children_ Books listed in this issue of _Braille Book Review_ were recently sent to cooperating libraries. The complete collection contains books by many authors on fiction and nonfiction subjects, including animals, geography, nature, mystery, sports, and others. Contact your cooperating library to learn more about the wide range of books available in the collection. To order books, contact your cooperating library. ### _Nonfiction_ Steve Wozniak: Inventor of the Apple Computer. BR 10590. by Martha E. Kendall. 1 volume. Biography of a man called the father of the computer age. When Wozniak was a boy, he was very good at math and electronics. He later dropped out of college to work in the field of computers and at twenty-six founded a computer company called Apple, which produced a "small, easy-to-use, and affordable home computer." The now very wealthy Wozniak volunteers to teach children about computers. For grades 6-9. 1994. BR 10590. ## Wolf Cub Scout Book. BR 10601. by Boy Scouts of America. 1 volume. This handbook for the first phase of Cub Scouting explains the requirements for completing the Wolf achievements and electives. Also includes requirements for the initial Bobcat badge. For grades 2-4. 1986. BR 10601. ## The Big Bear Cub Scout Book. BR 10604. by Boy Scouts of America. 2 volumes. This handbook for the second phase of Cub Scouting explains the requirements for completing the Bear achievements and electives. For grades 2-4. 1984. BR 10604. ## Girls and Young Women Inventing: Twenty True Stories about Inventors Plus How You Can Be One Yourself. BR 10610. by Frances A. Karnes and Suzanne M. Bean. 2 volumes. Profiles of twenty young female inventors arranged by type of invention. The authors explain the inventing process and how to turn an idea into a product. Also included are listings of organizations to contact, motivational quotations, and facts about female inventors in history. For grades 5-8. 1995. BR 10610. ## Zoology: Forty-Nine Science Fair Projects. BR 10642. by H. Steven Dashefsky. 2 volumes. Science fair projects about animals are divided into sections on behavior, systems, animals in their environments, beyond the naked eye, animal lives, communication and senses, growth and development, form and function, and applied science. Adult supervision required. For grades 5-8. 1995. BR 10642. ## Rascal. BR 10678. by Sterling North. 1 volume. Although his life is full with a Saint Bernard, a family of skunks, a raucous crow, and an unfinished canoe, Sterling is captivated by a tiny raccoon kit he names Rascal. The ingenious animal quickly takes over the house and Sterling's heart but also makes enemies by stealing corn and raiding chicken coops. Until he gets too big, Rascal shares many adventures with Sterling in the Wisconsin countryside. For grades 4-7. 1963. BR 10678. ## A House Divided: The Lives of Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee. BR 10717. by Jules Archer. 2 volumes. Joint biography of the two military leaders of the American Civil War. Archer says that although Grant's side won the war and he was later elected president, Grant proved to be inept as a civilian. In contrast, Archer says, Lee had successful military and civilian careers. For grades 3-6. 1995. BR 10717. ## Celebrate America in Poetry and Art. BR 10729. edited by Nora Panzer. 1 volume. This book celebrates American life as seen through the work of artists and writers. Combining a sampling of poetry with visual arts from the Smithsonian's National Museum of American Art, Panzer shows the many kinds of people, landscapes, and beliefs that make up American life. For grades 5-8 and older readers. 1994. BR 10729. ## Sweet Dreams of the Wild: Poems for Bedtime. BR 10791. by Rebecca Kai Dotlich. 1 volume. Poems that explain to a sleepy child where different kinds of animals go to bed. A hummingbird sleeps in a teacup-sized nest, a turtle rests on a moss-covered log, sheep nap in the open countryside, and all "cuddle up tight with sweet dreams of the wild." For preschool-grade 2. 1996. BR 10791. ## ### _Fiction_ The Old Dog. BR 10034. by Charlotte Zolotow. 1 volume. Ben and his dog have been together for a long time, and now his dog has become old. One morning when Ben goes to wake her up, she doesn't wag her tail or open her eyes. Ben's father quietly tells Ben that she is dead. Now Ben has no one to run and play with--until his father comes home with a surprise. PRINT/BRAILLE. For grades K-3. 1995. BR 10034. ## Waterless Mountain. BR 10589. by Laura Adams Armer. 2 volumes. Eight-year-old Younger Brother loves the beauty of the dawn, the sky, the rainbow, and the clouds. When the boy sees the Deer People in a vision, his uncle knows that Younger Brother can learn the songs of his Navajo people to become a powerful medicine man. Younger Brother finds adventures in nature around him, new encounters with whites, and his role as Little Singer. Newbery Medal winner in 1932. For grades 5-8. 1931. BR 10589. ## Painted Devil. BR 10617. by Michael Bedard. 2 volumes. While Alice's mother is confined to bed with a difficult pregnancy, Alice watches her little sister, Lela, and begins a job at the library. She is confused by the odd feelings she has about both Lela's doll and the scary devil puppet at the library. Meanwhile, Alice's secretive Aunt Emily arrives with a chilling tale about a magic show she attended twenty-eight years earlier, which she believes is about to happen again. For grades 5-8. 1994. BR 10617. ## Black-Eyed Susan. BR 10670. by Jennifer Armstrong. 1 volume. Susie lives with her parents in a sod house on their Dakota farm. She loves the wide open spaces and likes to stand on her sod roof to watch the sunrise. But Susie's mother, who misses trees and her life back east, is becoming more and more depressed, and Susie wants to cheer her up. For grades 3-6. 1995. BR 10670. ## The Night the Heads Came. BR 10697. by William Sleator. 1 volume. Late one night, Leo is driving his friend Tim to catch a bus to New York. Instead, the car is stopped by aliens who let Leo go but keep Tim. Afterwards Tim must remember what happened and then convince himself, Leo's parents, and the police. For grades 6-9. 1996. BR 10697. ## Would My Fortune Cookie Lie?. BR 10702. by Stella Pevsner. 1 volume. Alexis Dawson, thirteen, and her best friend, Suzy Wing, live in the same condo building in Chicago. Alexis's mother wants to move to the suburbs, but her father has other plans. And Suzy thinks she is being followed by a stranger. For grades 5-8. 1996. BR 10702. ## Lost in Cyberspace. BR 10713. by Richard Peck. 1 volume. Sixth-grade New Yorker Josh Lewis has problems. His parents are separated, his mother is trying to find an acceptable au pair, and his friend Aaron is trying to convince him one can use a computer to travel through time. Then Aaron accidentally brings a young woman from 1923 into the 1990s, solving one problem but creating others. For grades 4-7. 1995. BR 10713. ## Dakota Dream. BR 10720. by James Bennett. 1 volume. Fifteen-year-old Floyd Rayfield, who has lived in foster homes most of his life, believes his destiny is to become a Dakota. No longer able to tolerate being shuffled from home to home, and without telling his counselor, Floyd heads for Pine Ridge Reservation with hopes of undergoing a vision quest and finding a place where he really belongs. For grades 6-9. 1994. BR 10720. ## The Tinker's Daughter. BR 10731. by Sheila Hayes. 1 volume. Holly Gerard, twelve, just wants to live a normal life. But with a mom who never gave up her "flower child" lifestyle, it is difficult. When newcomer Maddy Brown picks Holly as her best friend, Holly is overjoyed but terrified; she can't let Maddy know about her mother. For grades 5-8. 1995. BR 10731. ## Tales from the Brothers Grimm and the Sisters Weird. BR 10739. by Vivian Vande Velde. 1 volume. Humorous reworkings of thirteen folktales by the Brothers Grimm. In "The Granddaughter," Granny and the wolf find Little Red Riding Hood so disagreeable they both plot against her. After the oldest Billy Goat Gruff disposes of the troll in "The Bridge," he knocks both brothers into the water out of spite. For grades 3-6. 1995. BR 10739. ## Blue Sky, Butterfly. BR 10764. by Jean Van Leeuwen. 1 volume. Eleven-year-old Twig is devastated by her parents' separation. Her mother mopes around the house all day; the laundry is piling up and the refrigerator is empty. Her older brother is almost never home and stays in his room when he is, and her father has his own apartment, which Twig refuses to visit. Life is difficult--until Grandma Ruthie arrives. For grades 4-7. 1996. BR 10764. ## The Amazing Magic Show. BR 10769. by P.J. Petersen. 1 volume. There is a magic show in town, and Hal and his big brother, Chuck, want to go. They earn the money and have a great time at the show--Chuck even disappears for a while and Hal gets scared. But when Hal tries to do some tricks at home, he wishes Chuck would disappear again. For grades 2-4. 1994. BR 10769. ## Katy No-Pocket. BR 10792. by Emmy Payne. 1 volume. Katy is a kangaroo without a pocket. She tries to carry her son, Freddy, the way other types of animals carry their young, but nothing works. So Katy and Freddy head for the city to buy a pocket. For grades K-3. 1944. BR 10792. ## Mary by Myself. BR 10796. by Jane Denitz Smith. 1 volume. Ten-year-old Mary is having trouble adjusting to the crib death of her baby sister, Felicity. Mary's parents are concerned about her and hope that four weeks at summer camp will be good for her. At camp, Mary develops a relationship with Laura that proves helpful, but not in the way Mary expects. For grades 3-6. 1994. BR 10796. ## ### _Braille Magazines_ The following is a list of braille magazines in the Library of Congress program. Magazines with a dagger (+) will be available beginning in January 1998. If you currently subscribe to one of the magazines that will be discontinued and replaced by a new title, you will automatically receive the new magazine and need not take any action. In all other cases, contact your braille-lending library for new subscriptions. Boys' Life (for children and teens, monthly) Braille Book Review (bimonthly) Braille Chess Magazine (British quarterly) Braille Music Magazine (British monthly) +Conundrum (British monthly) Cooking Light (bimonthly [3] and monthly [6]) Inside Sports (monthly) +Harper's (literary; monthly) +Health Newsletters (includes Harvard Health Letter, Mayo Clinic Health Letter, and University of California at Berkeley Wellness Letter; monthly) +Kiplinger's Personal Finance Magazine (monthly) Ladies' Home Journal (monthly) +Martha Stewart Living (home and entertaining; replaces Better Homes and Gardens; current subscribers will automatically receive new magazine; 10 issues) +Muse (for children; 6 issues) The Musical Mainstream (quarterly) National Geographic (monthly) The New York Times Large Type Weekly (weekly) News (NLS quarterly) Parenting (monthly except January and July) +PC World (personal computing; replaces PC Computing; current subscribers will automatically receive new magazine; monthly) Playboy (monthly) Poetry (monthly) Popular Communications (monthly) Popular Mechanics (monthly) Popular Music Lead Sheets (irregular) +Rolling Stone (popular culture; 26 issues) Science News (weekly) Seventeen (for teens, monthly) +Short Stories (British monthly) +Spider: The Magazine for Children (replaces Jack and Jill; current subscribers will automatically receive new magazine; monthly) +Stone Soup (children's writings; replaces Children's Digest; current subscribers will automatically receive new magazine; 5 issues) Update (NLS quarterly) The Washington Post Book World (weekly) The following sports schedules are also available: American Baseball League Schedule National Baseball League Schedule National Basketball Association Schedule National Football League Schedule National Hockey League Schedule