CHECK IT OUT
To better serve customers, librarians at the Newport Beach Public Library
frequently swap stories about their favorite print picks. Their “best
bets” for summer are featured annually in a flier listing recently
enjoyed fiction, nonfiction and biographies.
There are coming-of-age novels, story collections and funky fusions of
fiction and real-life on this year’s list.
Find lyrical reads like “Seventeen Ways to Eat a Mango,” in which a
tropical fruit becomes a medium for exploring human nature, alongside
“Timeline,” a Michael Crichton thriller that looks forward into the
geek-run world of quantum mechanics and backward into the 14th century.
From the best-selling author of “Generation X” comes “Miss Wyoming,” a
darkly humorous mystery about a burned-out director and a failed soap
opera star who leave Tinseltown in search of meaning. Douglas Coupland
serves up a funny view of American culture and the generation he
christened in this bittersweet romance about hopeful dead-enders.
For sports fans, the list includes “Slo Mo: My Untrue Story,” a romp
through professional basketball’s seamy side. With real-life characters
like Charles Barkley and Phil Jackson intermixed with highly
identifiable, theoretically fictional sports types, this wacko
“autobiography” pokes fun at everything from greedy agents to greedier
shoe companies to coaches who believe their own zany Zen mantras.
Professional boxing is depicted in a similarly dim light in “The Devil
and Sonny Liston,” a knockout read that profiles the tragic life of a
heavyweight champion through police reports, prison records, newspaper
articles and reminiscences.
For a more upbeat take on real life, check out “Million Dollar Mermaid,”
about Esther Williams, one of Hollywood’s most bankable stars during the
glory days of moviemaking.
Lovers of smart-mouthed detectives like Spenser and Elvis Cole will enjoy
the antics of English professor Tres Navare and his enchilada-eating cat
in Rick Rioddan’s “The Last King of Texas.” In this third book in an
entertaining series, Tres is asked to fill the vacant chair of Chaucer
studies at the University of Texas, San Antonio, to solve the mystery of
the two previous occupants’ deaths.
For short story fans, eight interrelated tales in “Girl in Hyacinth Blue”
follow the trail of an allegedly new painting by Dutch master Vermeer,
from its creation in 17th century Holland to the present day. The stories
come together as an elegant novel that travels backward in time, through
the painting’s parade of ownership.
A more comic premise forms the core of “Sick Puppy,” Carl Hiaasen’s
latest romp through South Florida’s backwoods. Equal parts farce and
outrage at the despoilment of nature, the story revolves around a
millionaire eco-terrorist’s efforts to save a small island from
development.
Once you’ve had enough of escapist fare, consider digesting “Emperors of
Chocolate,” a journey into a real-life industry dominated by corporate
leviathans courting America’s sweet tooth.
Like chocolate itself, this view into the empires of Milton Hershey and
Forrest Mars is a rich blend of winning ingredients that comes together,
in this case, in a compelling mixture of biography, cultural history and
investigative reporting.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams, in collaboration with
reference staff.
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