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Best Books 2006

By Ann Burns, Margaret Heilbrun, Barbara Hoffert, Heather McCormack, Mirela Roncevic, & Wilda Williams -- Library Journal, 1/15/2007

Looking for a little happiness? Then check out LJ's Best Books of 2006 for not one but two books on the subject. Even if you don't want to read about it, there's plenty here to make you happy, or at least powerfully intrigued. From Thomas Pynchon's Against the Day to Sarah Helm's A Life in Secrets: Vera Atkins and the Missing Agents of WWII to Jane Glover's Mozart's Women: His Family, His Friends, and His Music, here's a list that aims to get everyone reading.

See also: Best Genre Fiction 2006 | Best How-To 2006


Belleville, Bill. Losing It All To Sprawl: How Progress Ate My Cracker Landscape. Univ. Pr. of Florida. ISBN 0-8130-2928-7 [ISBN 978-0-8130-2928-3]. $24.95.

“They paved paradise and put up a parking lot.” Environmental writer/filmmaker Belleville poignantly reveals how the words of the old Joni Mitchell song have become a grim reality in central Florida, as his traditional Cracker home and rural neighborhood give way to suburban strip malls. Uncontrolled development is an issue not just for the Sunshine State but for America as a whole. (LJ 3/1/06)

Blastland, Michael. The Only Boy in the World: A Father Explores the Mysteries of Autism. Marlowe: Avalon, dist. by Publishers Group West. ISBN 1-56924-291-7 [ISBN 978-1-56924-291-9]. pap. $14.95.

As the parent of a severely autistic son, BBC journalist Blastland knows frustration, but it does not fuel his crystalline contemplation. Neither patronizing nor glib, he instead relies on fascination to unlock Joe's head, reminding us how much we “normal” people take for granted. (LJ 7/06)

Brockmeier, Kevin. The Brief History of the Dead. Pantheon. ISBN 0-375-42369-9 [ISBN 978-0-375-42369-7]. $22.95.

Home to the dead as long as someone on Earth remembers them, the City starts emptying out fast after an epidemic devastates Earth. Beautifully written and brilliantly realized, Brockmeier's second novel delivers a startling sense of what it really means to be alive. (LJ 2/15/06)

Brown, Frederick. Flaubert: A Biography. Little, Brown. ISBN 0-316-11878-8 [ISBN 978-0-316-11878-1]. $35.

In his quest to pen the definitive biography of Gustave Flaubert, acclaimed literary biographer Brown (Zola: A Life) takes us on a grand tour of France's history while disentangling the genius of one of the greatest novelists the West has known. (LJ 2/15/06)

Buford, Bill. Heat: An Amateur's Adventures as Kitchen Slave, Line Cook, Pasta-Maker, and Apprentice to a Dante-Quoting Butcher in Tuscany. Knopf. ISBN 1-4000-4120-1 [ISBN 978-1-4000-4120-6]. $25.95.

To satisfy a burning desire to work with famed chef Mario Batali, journalist Buford (Among the Thugs) agreed to become an intern, or “kitchen slave.” In this fascinating book, he describes his varied experiences preparing meals and also profiles the bigger-than-life Batali. (LJ 5/15/06)

Carey, Lisa. Every Visible Thing. Morrow. ISBN 0-06-621289-8 [ISBN 978-0-06-621289-0]. $24.95.

Five years after 15-year-old Hugh Furey's disappearance, his parents remain distanced by grief and ignore the emotional needs of their two remaining children, who turn to self-destructive behaviors. Carey's fourth novel is an affecting study of family dysfunction, sorrow, and adolescence. (LJ 7/06)

Cash, Arthur H. John Wilkes: The Scandalous Father of Civil Liberty. Yale Univ. ISBN 0-300-10871-0 [ISBN 978-0-300-10871-2]. $37.50.

Cash elegantly ensures that we remember the London journalist, rogue, agitator, saucy poet, and politician who influenced our Founding Fathers when he fought for rights regarding arrest warrants and search and seizure in the decades before the American Revolution. The personal and public life of a figure who seems out of Fielding or Sterne but whose influence still matters. (LJ 2/1/06)

de los Santos, Marisa. Love Walked In. Dutton. ISBN 0-525-94917-8 [ISBN 978-0-525-94917-6]. $23.95; pap. Plume. ISBN 0-452-28789-8 [ISBN 978-0-452-28789-1]. $14.

For Cornelia Brown, it's like a scene from one of her beloved Cary Grant movies when handsome Martin Grace walks into her Philadelphia coffee shop. But this event is only the harbin- ger of more profound changes. Yes, poet de los Santos's witty and romantic debut novel is chick lit, but it's chick lit with soul and substance. (LJ 9/15/06)

Donohue, Keith. The Stolen Child. Nan A. Talese: Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-51616-9 [ISBN 978-0-385-51616-7]. $23.95.

Inspired by a W.B. Yeats poem, Donohue's haunting debut reimagines the ancient changeling myth in a modern America. Seven-year-old Henry Day is kidnapped by a group of feral hobgoblins and becomes Aniday, eternally ageless but still clinging to his humanity; his changeling replacement grows up as Henry Day but struggles to find his true identity. (LJ 2/15/06)

Dunn, Jancee. But Enough About Me: A Jersey Girl's Unlikely Adventures Among the Absurdly Famous. HarperCollins. ISBN 0-06-084364-0 [ISBN 978-0-06-084364-9]. $24.95.

“Not another memoir” has become a chorus in the LJ bookroom, but here Rolling Stone scribe Dunn effervesces with wit and insight into celebrity journalism. Sparkling storytelling juxtaposes Dunn's coming of age in 1980s suburban New Jersey with her prestige career prodding the A-list. Imagine interviewing your teen hero, Bono, with the Mount Vesuvius of pimples erupting on your forehead. (LJ 5/15/06)

Ford, Richard. The Lay of the Land. Knopf. ISBN 0-679-45468-3 [ISBN 978-0-679-45468-7]. $26.95.

Star of The Sportswriter and Independence Day, Frank Bascombe is now leading a somewhat diminished life as a real estate agent at the Jersey Shore, but Ford's enduring portrait is novel-making at its most ambitious. A pitch-perfect recapitulation of late middle age in America. (LJ 10/15/06)

Glover, Jane. Mozart's Women: His Family, His Friends, His Music. HarperCollins. ISBN 0-06-056350-8 [ISBN 978-0-06-056350-9]. $27.95.

Wolfie's love of women needs no embellishment, so Glover lets the composer speak for himself in a biography that virtually reanimates its complex subject and his intimates. Though beautiful music plays in the background, the book functions foremost as an ardent portrait of Mozart's humanity through his often impish and always diamond-acute correspondence. (LJ 11/15/05)

Grushin, Olga. The Dream Life of Sukhanov. Putnam. ISBN 0-399-15298-9 [ISBN 978-0-399-15298-6]. $24.95.

Sukhanov compromises with the regime, trading art for the easy life, then watches everything he's won come cascading down as communism nears its end. In exquisite language, first novelist Grushin captures the fading Soviet era and, even more tellingly, the prime importance of being true to oneself. (LJ 10/15/05)

Haidt, Jonathan. The Happiness Hypothesis: Finding Modern Truth in Ancient Wisdom. Basic Bks: Perseus. ISBN 0-465-02801-2 [ISBN 978-0-465-02801-6]. $26.

With singular gusto, Haidt measures ten “Great Ideas” against past/present research in psychology and science. LJ's verdict: Dr. Phil et al. don't have diddly on the old-school sages. No man is an island, indeed, and no modern reader should be without this carefully considered demystification of life. (LJ 1/06)

Harryhausen, Ray & Tony Dalton. The Art of Ray Harryhausen. Billboard: Watson-Guptill. ISBN 0-8230-8400-0 [ISBN 978-0-8230-8400-5]. $50.

In his 2004 bio, An Animated Life, hugely influential film animator Harryhausen told the story of his career in the predigital era. In this companion volume, the living legend focuses on previsualization, thus illustrating the book not with film stills but with sketches, drawings, storyboards, and wax models. The sensible text is revealing, but the art speaks even louder. (LJ 2/15/06)

Helm, Sarah. A Life in Secrets: Vera Atkins and the Missing Agents of WWII. Nan A. Talese: Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-385-50845-2 [ISBN 978-0-385-50845-X]. $27.50.

Helm tells a gripping story of World War II heroism, especially of 12 women who volunteered for Britain's Special Operations Executive (SOE) and were parachuted into Occupied France, never to return, and of the persistence of their recruiter, Vera Atkins, who tracked their fate in postwar Germany. A spellbinding and tragically true spy thriller. (LJ 6/15/06)

Hodes, Martha. The Sea Captain's Wife: A True Story of Love, Race, and War in the Nineteenth Century. Norton. ISBN 0-393-05266-4 [ISBN 978-0-393-05266-4]. $24.95

Hodes delicately unwraps papers left by Eunice Connolly, a mid-19th-century New England working-class woman who led the kind of life usually lost to history. Connolly ultimately married a black sea captain of the British West Indies and in that unconventional act found an interlude of stability. Both the biography of an unexamined and unexamining woman and an account of mapping her tempest-tossed life. (LJ 9/1/06)

Houpt, Simon. Museum of the Missing: A History of Art Theft. Sterling. ISBN 1-4027-2829-8 [ISBN 978-1-4027-2829-7]. $24.95.

Who would dare steal an original Rembrandt or Picasso? Plenty of people; as we learn here, more than 20,000 stolen artworks are still missing. If your interest in learning about art theft wasn't spurred by the 2004 snatching of Edvard Munch's The Scream (recently recovered), it surely will be after reading journalist Houpt's crime novel–like investigation. (LJ 8/06)

Johnson, Steven. The Ghost Map: The Story of London's Most Terrifying Epidemic—and How It Changed Science, Cities, and the Modern World. Riverhead: Putnam. ISBN 1-59448-925-4 [ISBN 978-1-59448-925-9]. $26.95.

Even the weak-stomached will agree that Johnson has a way with lethal intestinal disease. From microscopic bacteria (cholera), he builds a sweeping nail-biter of groundbreaking science and sociology that drops readers in the dead center of malodorous Victorian London. An intellectual appreciation of life and death that packs the punch of histories double its size. (LJ 9/15/06)

Kamp, David. The United States of Arugula: How We Became a Gourmet Nation. Broadway. ISBN 0-7679-1579-8 [ISBN 978-0-7679-1579-3]. $26.

In this captivating story of the American food revolution, Vanity Fair magazine writer Kamp pays special tribute to the “big three” pioneer chefs (James Beard, Julia Child, and Craig Claiborne) who changed the way we shop, cook, and eat. (LJ 9/15/06)

Klinkenborg, Verlyn. Timothy; or, Notes of an Abject Reptile. Knopf. ISBN 0-679-40728-6 [ISBN 978-0-679-40728-7]. $16.95.

In The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne (1789), English curate/naturalist Gilbert White noted the behavior of a tortoise named Timothy who lived in his garden. Now his subject (who actually was female) returns the favor, offering her wise and wry perspectives on the foibles of White and the other Selborne residents. Nature writing at its most original and delightful. (LJ 12/05)

Ledgard, J.M. Giraffe. Penguin Pr: Penguin Group (USA). ISBN 1-59420-099-8 [ISBN 978-1-59420-099-1]. $24.95.

On April 30, 1975, secret police in Czechoslovakia circled a small-town zoo and slaughtered nearly 50 giraffes, the largest domesticated herd in the world. In dreamlike yet incisive language, Ledgard tries to make sense of that event, offering a heartbreaking debut novel that compels us to confront suffering even as it limns the awful human weakness for doublethink. (LJ 8/06)

McCarthy, Cormac. The Road. Knopf. ISBN 0- 307-26543-9 [ISBN 978-0-307-26543-2]. $24.

A man and his son wander a devastated landscape, scavenging as they can and avoiding the few people they meet as real threats. Will they reach their destination? Will they even survive? In spare, brutally beautiful language, McCarthy offers the postapocalyptic novel against which all others will be measured. (LJ 9/1/06)

McMahon, Darrin M. Happiness: A History. Atlantic Monthly. ISBN 0-87113-886-7 [ISBN 978-0-87113-886-6]. $27.50.

Forget “To be or not to be.” The modern dilemma is more complicated, often revolving around our relentless pursuit of happiness. But what is happiness? In this accessible study, historian McMahon teaches us that its definition has evolved over time; at first embracing virtue and prosperity, happiness later became synonymous with God and is now perceived as an earthly entitlement. (LJ 1/06)

Messud, Claire. The Emperor's Children. Knopf. ISBN 0-307-26419-X [ISBN 978-0-307-26419-0]. $25.

Nothing works out as expected for three friends from Brown—earnest journalist Danielle; insecure, gay Julius; and spoiled Marina, who's still living at home and struggling to write that big book. But Messud effectively captures the insecurities and little successes of these three fledglings, at the same time giving us an unerring snapshot of contemporary society. (LJ 6/1/06)

Moore, Christopher. A Dirty Job. Morrow. ISBN 0-06-059027-0 [ISBN 978-0-06-059027-7]. $24.95.

Having retraced Jesus's “missing years” in Lamb, satirist/fantasist Moore now turns his rapier wit to an equally weighty subject: Death. Meek beta male Charlie Asher becomes Death's assistant after walking in on a strange man dressed in mint green collecting his wife's soul. This mock epic of mortality and love is bizarre, outrageous, and very, very funny. (LJ 3/15/06)

Nasaw, David. Andrew Carnegie. Penguin Pr: Penguin Group (USA). ISBN 1-59420-104-8 [ISBN 978-1-59420-104-2]. $35.

It's weighty but reads like a breeze, surmounting the life of the industrialist and philanthropist who systematically accumulated a fortune and then just as systematically gave it away. (Where would our public libraries be without him?) Not just a Horatio Alger story but a thorough and engaging study of a steel titan who never departed from idiosyncratic human aspirations. (LJ 9/1/06)

Némirovsky, Irène. Suite Française. Knopf. ISBN 1-4000-4473-1 [ISBN 978-1-4000-4473-3]. $25.

Before she was swallowed up by Ausch­witz, Russian-born French Jewish author Némirovsky completed two parts of a five-part opus intended to capture the madness around her as the Germans invaded France. The result, which lay undiscovered for decades, is a landmark publication that powerfully delivers the era and the horrible suffering that defined it. (LJ 6/15/06)

Powers, Richard. The Echo Maker. Farrar. ISBN 0-374-14635-7 [ISBN 978-0-374-14635-1]. $25.

A terrible accident leaves Mark Schulter with Capgras Syndrome—he thinks his sister is an identical imposter. But by deftly blending issues of identity and memory with a palpable sense of mystery, all rendered in faultless prose, Powers again proves himself to be the real thing. (LJ 7/06)

Pynchon, Thomas. Against the Day. Pen- guin Pr: Penguin Group (USA). ISBN 1-59420- 120-X [ISBN 978-1-59420-120-2]. $35.

Ranging from the Chicago World's Fair to the bad, bad American West to Venice, Mexico, and the trenches of World War I, this grand Wellesian fantasia is a superlative act of imagination. Readers may sometimes feel that they are on a runaway horse, but when the ride is over, every other book will seem ordinary. (LJ 11/15/06)

Reece, Erik. Lost Mountain: A Year in the Vanishing Wilderness—Radical Strip Mining and the Devastation of Appalachia. Riverhead: Putnam. ISBN 1-59448-908-4 [ISBN 978-1-59448-908-4]. $24.95.

Reese's gripping work of literary journalism chronicles the systematic destruction of one Kentucky mountain through the brutal strip-mining process known as mountaintop removal. His portrait of the resulting environmental, economic, and social devastation will leave readers heartbroken and angry. (LJ 2/1/06)

Scurr, Ruth. Fatal Purity: Robespierre and the French Revolution. Metropolitan: Holt. ISBN 0-8050-7987-4 [ISBN 978-0-8050-7987-6]. $30; pap. ISBN 0-8050-8261-1 [ISBN 978-0-8050-8261-6]. $17.

Scurr chose one of history's most complex and contradictory figures for her first book, following the path of the provincial lawyer who rose with astonishing speed during the French Revolution and fell even faster—an apparent fanatic devoured by his own Reign of Terror. With integrity, Scurr draws in her readers and allows them to reach their own conclusions. (LJ 4/1/06)

Smolin, Lee. The Trouble with Physics: The Rise of String Theory, the Fall of a Science, and What Comes Next. Houghton. ISBN 0-618-55105-0 [ISBN 978-0-618-55105-7]. $26.

Theoretical physicist Smolin argues that string theory is a scientific dead end, having led to unprecedented stagnation in theoretical physics over the past 30 years. Provocative and groundbreaking. (LJ 8/06)

Zoellner, Tom. The Heartless Stone: A Journey Through the World of Diamonds, Deceit, and Desire. St. Martin's. ISBN 0-312-33969-0 [ISBN 978-0-312-33969-2]. $24.95.

Diamonds are the hardest substance, but what's really hard about them is the poverty, corruption, smuggling, and tenacious cartels they inspire. Zoellner's lucid text takes us into the blood and mire of diamond mining's racism and political corruption, showing us that the jewelry we buy comes at a global cost. (LJ 5/1/06)


Author Information
Ann Burns is Associate Editor, Margaret Heilbrun is Social Sciences Editor, Barbara Hoffert is Editor, Heather McCormack is Managing Editor, Mirela Roncevic is Arts/Reference Editor, and Wilda Williams is Fiction Editor, LJ Book Review

 

BEST GENRE FICTION 2006

LJ's 11th annual list, selected by Jo Ann Vicarel (mystery), Jackie Cassada (sf/fantasy), Kristin Ramsdell (romance), Tamara Butler (Christian fiction), and Jeff Ayers (thrillers)

MYSTERY

Benjamin, Carol Lea. The Hard Way: A Rachel Alexander Mystery. Morrow. ISBN 0-06-053903-8 [ISBN 978-0-06-053903-0]. $23.95.

This is one of the best mystery series around, and Benjamin maintains her high standards, mixing social conscience with an intriguing puzzle as her sleuth goes undercover as a homeless person in the Big Apple to investigate a subway murder. (LJ 9/1/06)

Box, C.J. In Plain Sight: A Joe Pickett Novel. Putnam. ISBN 0-399-15360-8 [ISBN 978-0-399-15360-0]. $24.95.

Against all odds, Wyoming Fish and Game warden Joe Pickett must solve the disappearance of a wealthy woman, find out who is mutilating animals, and save his family from destruction. Another heart-stopping addition to a fine series. (LJ 5/1/06)

Church, James. A Corpse in the Koryo. Minotaur: St. Martin's. ISBN 0-312-35208-5 [ISBN 978-0-312-35208-0]. $23.95.

Inspector O of the Pyongyang Police finds himself in an impossible situation when he investigates a series of incidents involving smuggling, murder, and North Korean paranoia. A spectacular debut by a veteran intelligence officer. (LJ 8/06)

Haines, Carolyn. Penumbra. Minotaur: St. Martin's. ISBN 0-312-35160-7 [ISBN 978-0-312-35160-1]. $23.95.

In a dramatic departure from Haines's cozy paranormal Sarah Booth Delaney series, this standalone, set in 1950s small-town Mississippi, is an intricately plotted noir tale of racial tension and murder. (LJ 2/1/06)

Spencer-Fleming, Julia. All Mortal Flesh: A Clare Fergusson/Russ Van Alstyne Mystery. Minotaur: St. Martin's. ISBN 0-312-31264-4 [ISBN 978-0-312-31264-0]. $22.95.

In what may be the pièce de résistance of an outstanding series, the wife of police chief Russ Van Alstyne is murdered after he confesses his love for Episcopal priest Clare Fergusson. With wild plot twists and a shocking ending. (LJ 8/06)

SF & Fantasy

Butcher, Jim. Proven Guilty: A Novel of the Dresden Files. ROC: NAL. ISBN 0-451-46085-5 [ISBN 978-0-451-46085-1]. $23.95.

Newly appointed to the White Council of Wizards, private investigator Harry Dresden battles dark magic, warring Faerie courts, and a Fallen angel to keep the teenage daughter of an old friend from losing her soul—and her head. The latest installment of an outstanding dark urban fantasy with hard-boiled charm. (LJ 4/15/06)

Carey, Jacqueline. Kushiel's Scion. Warner. ISBN 0-446-50002-X [ISBN 978-0-446-50002-9]. $26.95.

The author of the “Kushiel's Legacy” trilogy launches a new series set in the same lavish quasi-Renaissance world as a younger generation of noble scions struggle to make their mark. A stellar example of sensually exotic dynastic fantasy. (LJ 6/15/06)

de Lint, Charles. Widdershins. Tor. ISBN 0-7653-1285-9 [ISBN 978-0-7653-1285-3]. $27.95.

The latest in de Lint's urban fantasy series set in fictitious Newford, Canada, revolves around Jillie Coppercorn, brilliant painter and friend to the faerie folk who dwell unseen at the edges of the visible world. Themes of love, loss, and the importance of myth inform this exceptional story. (LJ 5/15/06)

Heinlein, Robert A. & Spider Robinson. Variable Star. Tor. ISBN 0-7653-1312-X [ISBN 978-0-7653-1312-6]. $24.95.

In a tale begun by the late Grand Master in 1955, musician Joel Johnston encounters love and loss on a journey to the stars. The Heinlein estate authorized award-winning sf veteran Robinson's completion of the novel. A fortuitous melding of authors. (LJ 8/06)

McDevitt, Jack. Odyssey. Ace. ISBN 0-441-01433-X [ISBN 978-0-441-01433-0]. $24.95.

A journalist opposed to the prestigious Space Academy's deep space program discovers a catastrophic secret when he joins a mission to explore the strange lights known as moonriders, glimpsed in nearby planetary systems. A hard sf gem set in the far future of space exploration. (LJ 10/15/06)

ROMANCE

Balogh, Mary. Simply Love. Delacorte. ISBN 0-385-33883-X [ISBN 978-0-385-33883-7]. $22.

Resigned to a life of “disgraced spinsterhood,” an unwed teacher holidays in the country with her young son and finds love with a wounded war veteran. This poignant second title about the staff at Miss Martin's School for Girls explores social expectations and self-acceptance with a sensitivity and intensity that is pure Balogh. One of her best. (LJ 6/15/06)

Eagle, Kathleen. Ride a Painted Pony. Mira: Harlequin. ISBN 0-7783-2359-5 [ISBN 978-0-7783-2359-4]. $24.95.

Running for her life but determined to reclaim her infant son, a star jockey finds shelter—as well as friendship, love, and healing—at the South Dakota ranch of a wary, wounded Lakota loner. Well-developed characters and a beautifully unfolding romance, mixed with undercurrents of danger, add to this sensitive tale. (LJ 12/06)

Putney, Mary Jo. The Marriage Spell. Ballantine. ISBN 0-345-44918-5 [ISBN 978-0-345-44918-4]. $24.95.

In a reinvented world where magic is accepted but considered “common” by society's leaders, a reckless aristocrat and a talented healing wizard find love despite prejudice, fear, and very real danger. Putney puts a new twist on the Regency period with this sensual, beautifully crafted tale. (LJ 6/15/06)

Smith, Deborah. The Crossroads Cafe. BelleBooks. ISBN 0-9768760-5-1 [ISBN 978-0-9768760-5-2]. pap. $16.95.

A badly burned celebrity wanting anonymity and an architect who's drowning in vodka after losing his family in the 9/11 attacks seek solitude in the North Carolina Smokies but instead find love. With marvelous characters, a brilliant mix of serious issues and lighthearted humor, and a generous lacing of Southern charm. (LJ 8/06)

Wax, Wendy. Single in Suburbia. Bantam. ISBN 0-553-58897-4 [ISBN 978-0-553-58897-2]. pap. $6.99.

Forced to support herself and her two children after being dumped by her husband, a desperate housewife masquerades as a French maid and takes the Atlanta suburbs by storm. This witty, romantic romp takes deadly aim at the self-satisfied suburban lifestyle. (LJ 6/15/06)

CHRISTIAN FICTION

Alexander, Tamera. Rekindled. Bethany. ISBN 0-7642-0108-5 [ISBN 978-0-7642-0108-0]. pap. $12.99.

Set in the 19th-century American West, Alexander's impressive debut follows Kathryn and Larson Jennings as disappointment and separation lead them on a journey of spiritual discovery. (LJ 2/1/06)

Higgs, Liz Curtis. Grace in Thine Eyes. WaterBrook: Random. ISBN 1-57856-259-7 [ISBN 978-1-57856-259-6]. pap. $13.99.

Following up on her heart-wrenching “Lowlands of Scotland” trilogy, Higgs proves once again that she can write tortured romance like nobody else. This moving tale draws its inspiration from the biblical story of Dinah. (LJ 4/1/06)

Hines, T.L. Waking Lazarus. Bethany. ISBN 0-7642-0204-9. $18.99.

Hine's intricate thriller about a man declared dead several times offers plenty of twists and turns without sacrificing character development. Supernatural suspense that pushes the envelope. (LJ 6/1/06)

Lewis, Beverly. The Brethren. Bethany. ISBN 0-7642-0107-7 [ISBN 978-0-7642-0107-3]. pap. $13.99.

Lewis concludes her absorbing “Annie's People” trilogy (The Preacher's Daughter, The Englisher) about an Amish girl's struggles between her traditional life and her forbidden artistic talents and budding romance with an outsider. (LJ 11/1/06)

Tatlock, Ann. Things We Once Held Dear. Bethany. ISBN 0-7642-0004-6 [ISBN 978-0-7642-0004-5]. pap. $13.99.

Tatlock hones her sparkling prose into a memorable story about artist Neil Sadler, who tries to reconnect the pieces of his past and understand the path he has chosen. An unforgettable homecoming tale of tragedy, choices, and forgiveness. (LJ 2/1/06)

THRILLERS

Baldacci, David. The Collectors. Warner. ISBN 0-446-53109-X. [ISBN 978-0-446-53109-2]. $26.99.

A death in the rare books room of the Library of Congress and an elaborate con are just two of the intriguing elements that make Balducci's latest page-turner his best in years. (web review, LJ 11/28/06)

Coben, Harlan. Promise Me. Dutton. ISBN 0-525-94949-6 [ISBN 978-0-525-94949-7]. $26.95.

A promise to two young girls comes back to haunt Myron Bolitar as he tries to solve a disappearance. Fans are cheering the return of Coben's reluctant sleuth after a six-year absence. (LJ 5/1/06)

Lynds, Gayle. The Last Spymaster. St. Martin's. ISBN 0-312-30159-6 [ISBN 978-0-312-30159-0]. $24.95.

Lynds, the reigning queen of espionage fiction, resuscitates the Cold War spy novel with this thrilling tale about the hunt for an escaped agent convicted of treason. (LJ 5/15/06)

Meltzer, Brad. The Book of Fate. Warner. ISBN 0-446-53099-9 [ISBN 978-0-446-53099-6]. $25.99.

An aide's life is changed forever when he survives an assassination attempt on the President in an attack tied to the history of the Freemasons and the building of Washington, DC. Meltzer's best thriller yet. (LJ 8/06)

Preston, Douglas & Lincoln Child. Book of the Dead. Warner. ISBN 0-446-57698-0 [ISBN 978-0-446-57698-7]. $25.95.

A new museum exhibit revives an ancient curse, and a madman sees the perfect opportunity to create havoc. Can agent Pendergast stop his brother and save everyone? An exciting conclusion to the Pendergast trilogy. (LJ 5/15/06)


BEST HOW-TO 2006

LJ's third annual list, selected by columnists Deborah Bigelow (self-help), Karen Ellis (do it yourself), Constance Ashmore Fairchild (crafts), Daniel Lombardo (art instruction), Judith Sutton (cookery), Gayle Williamson (interior design), and Janice Zlendich (fiber crafts)

Bachrach, Lilyan. Contemporary Enameling, Art and Techniques. Schiffer. ISBN 0-7643-2355-5 [ISBN 978-0-7643-2355-3]. $39.95. CRAFTS (LJ 6/15/06)

Brackmann, Holly. The Surface Designer's Handbook: Dyeing, Printing, Painting, and Creating Resists on Fabric. Interweave. ISBN 1-931499-90-X [ISBN 978-1-931499-90-3]. $29.95. FIBER CRAFTS (LJ 12/06)

Covey, Stephen R. & David K. Hatch. Everyday Greatness: Inspiration for a Meaningful Life. Rutledge Hill. ISBN 1- 4016-0241-X [ISBN 978-1- 4016-0241-3]. $24.99. SELF-HELP (LJ 11/15/06)

Ellis, Thomas. This Thing Called Grief: New Understandings of Loss. Syren. ISBN 0-929636-64-3 [ISBN 978-0-929636-64-1]. pap. $14.95. SELF-HELP (LJ 7/06)

The Family Handyman Eds. Storage & Shelving Solutions: Over 70 Projects and Ideas That Fit Your Budget, Space, and Lifestyle. Reader's Digest. ISBN 0-7621-0636-0 [ISBN 978-0-7621-0636-3]. $26.95. DO IT YOURSELF (LJ 3/1/06)

Green, Aliza. Starting with Ingredients: Quintessential Recipes for the Way We Really Cook. Running Pr. ISBN 0-7624-2747-7 [ISBN 978-0-7624-2747-5]. $39.95. COOKERY (LJ 10/15/06)

Greenspan, Dorie (text) & Alan Richardson (photogs.). Baking: From My Home to Yours. Houghton. ISBN 0-618-44336-3 [ISBN 978-0-618-44336-9]. $40. COOKERY (LJ 12/06)

Grossman, Anna Jane & Flint Wainess. It's Not Me, It's You: The Ultimate Breakup Book. Da Capo. ISBN 0-7382-1051-X [ISBN 978-0-7382-1051-3]. $18. SELF-HELP (LJ 2/15/06)

Heard, James. Paint Like Monet. Cassell Illustrated, dist. by Sterling. ISBN 1-84403-445-3 [ISBN 978-1-84403-445-1]. pap. $17.95. ART INSTRUCTION (LJ 7/06)

Isager, Marianne. Knitting Out of Africa: Inspired Sweater Designs. Interweave. ISBN 1-931499-98-5 [ISBN 978-1-931499-98-9]. pap. $24.95. FIBER CRAFTS (LJ 4/15/06)

Mann, Elise. The Bead Directory: The Complete Guide to Choosing and Using More Than 600 Beautiful Beads. Interweave. ISBN 1-59668-002-4 [ISBN 978-1-59668-002-9]. $24.95. CRAFTS (LJ 6/15/06)

Martin, Sam. Manspace: A Primal Guide to Marking Your Territory. Taunton. ISBN 1-56158-820-2 [ISBN 978-1-56158-820-6]. $24.95. INTERIOR DESIGN (LJ 9/15/06)

Mendel, Janet. Cooking from the Heart of Spain: Food of La Mancha. Morrow. ISBN 0-06-075174-6 [ISBN 978-0-06-075174-6]. $24.95. COOKERY (LJ 3/15/06)

Morosco, Gerald Lee. How To Work with an Architect. Gibbs Smith. ISBN 1-4236- 0007-X [ISBN 978-1-4236- 0007-7]. $24.95. INTERIOR DESIGN (LJ 5/15/06)

Peters, Rick. Popular Mechanics Garage Makeovers: Adding Space Without Adding On. Hearst: Sterling. ISBN 1-58816-513-2 [ISBN 978-1-58816-513-8]. pap. $17.95. DO IT YOURSELF (LJ 12/06)

Pryor, Liz. What Did I Do Wrong?: When Women Don't Tell Each Other the Friendship Is Over. Free Pr: S. & S. ISBN 0-7432-8631-6 [ISBN 978-0-7432-8631-2]. $19.95. SELF-HELP (LJ 5/1/06)

Richard, Michel with Susie Heller & Peter Kaminsky (text) & Deborah Jones (photogs.). Happy in the Kitchen. Artisan: Workman. ISBN 1-57965-299-9. $45. COOKERY (LJ 12/06)

Shachtman, Tom. Rumspringa: To Be or Not To Be Amish. Farrar. ISBN 0-86547-687-X [ISBN 978-0-86547-687-5]. $25. SPIRITUAL LIVING (LJ 3/1/06)

Sortun, Ana with Nicole Chaison (text) & Susie Cushner (photogs.). Spice: Arabic Flavors of the Mediterranean. Regan Bks: HarperCollins. ISBN 0-06-079228-0 [ISBN 978-0-06-079228-2]. $34.95. COOKERY (LJ 6/15/06)

Tappenden, Curtis & others. Complete Art Foundation Course: Drawing, Watercolor, Oils and Acrylics. Cassell Illustrated, dist. by Sterling. ISBN 1-84403-487-9 [ISBN 978-1-84403-487-9]. $24.95. ART INSTRUCTION (LJ 11/15/06)

This I Believe: The Personal Philosophies of Remarkable Men and Women. Holt. ed. by Jay Allison & Dan Gediman. ISBN 0-8050-8087-2 [ISBN 978-0-8050-8087-2]. $23. SPIRITUAL LIVING (LJ 10/1/06)

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