2005 summer reading: the listeners choose

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After a summer of weekly reading selections from notables, _Weekend Edition Sunday_ asked listeners to recommend books. Here are a few selections: JEAN SIBLEY, Etna, New Hampshire I adored


Hannah Holmes' _Suburban Safari: A Year on the Lawn_. True to its title, it is a detailed, often wacky, account of absolutely everything that was happening on Holmes' two-tenths of


an acre of backyard. Chipmunks and crows, ladybugs and weeds demanded Holmes' attention, along with trees, soil formation, pollution, early settlers and protective plant chemicals. Out


of this chaos, Holmes constructed an orderly and amusing account full of useful information, much of which was new to me, -- and I've been looking at the same things she has for 79


years without seeing half of it. BRIAN BRANAGAN, Seattle, Washington _A History of the World in Six Glasses_, by Tom Standage. As the title implies, it tells the history of the world by


telling the story of the predominate beverage of that time from beer which may have spurred the transition from hunting and gathering to agriculture all the way to Coca-Cola which is the


beverage of globalization. Along the way he discusses wine, spirits, tea and coffee. I'll never look at what I'm drinking as simply satisfying my thirst again. ROBERTA MYYRA,


Milan, Michigan This summer I picked up and re-read Ray Bradbury's _Something Wicked This Way Comes_. It is set in a small midwestern town in which an itinerant carnival show (with a


very dark side) makes a late season stop. When I first read this book I was in junior high school. I remembered the story as tense and frightening, with prose that conveyed the intensity of


the fear, disbelief and confusion of the two thirteen-year-old protagonists who experienced true evil for the first time. It was the first book I ever stayed up all night reading. Having


been born and raised in Los Angeles, I had never experienced such a thing, but I now live in a small Midwestern town and the big event this summer was a fair, replete with music, fireworks


and a carnival. my first impression took me directly back to Something Wicked. The prose held up and the story was still compelling. and now my kids will be able to read it and understand


why I will never let them go into the House of Mirrors. ERIC K. WASHINGTON, Harlem, NYC I enjoyed _Florence Mills: Harlem Jazz Queen_, by Bill Egan. It's an exhaustively thorough


biography of a woman who was arguably the first international African-American female star of the entertainment world. In the 1920s, Mills was the unparalleled jazz artist of her generation.


She had the distinction of turning down the great Ziegfeld for his "Follies" in deference to the work she felt her status obliged her to continue on behalf of her race. Mills is


largely forgotten today, but Mr. Egan's affectionate and scholarly and immensely entertaining biography should correct that. His book is a monument not only to Mills' memory, but


to the history of popular theatre as it matured via jazz from vaudeville to Broadway. I'm not lending my copy to anyone! STEFANIE DEE, San Mateo, California I very much enjoyed


_Starstruck: When a Fan Gets Close to Fame_, by Michael Joseph Gross. It recounts both Gross's own brushes with famous people as well as with average Americans who make a living (or at


least a hobby of) trying to get within autograph-signing reach of celebrities. It's not just an entertaining book, but quite thought provoking, making me wonder why I care so much about


"stars" and what makes them seem so much better than your average working class slob. It takes a good hard look at the seemingly insatiable appetite of Americans for


"fame." Did it make me stop reading _People_ and _US_ weekly? No... but it definitely made me think about why I want to! Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.