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In Print

Hampton Sides ’84
Ghost Soldiers: The Forgotten Epic of World War II’s Most Dramatic Mission
Doubleday, $24.95

As Japanese forces completed their conquest of the Philippines in April 1942, U.S. commanding general Douglas MacArthur left his fortress headquarters on Corregidor and fled to Australia. “I shall return,” MacArthur said, but to the men left behind, this appeared to be an empty promise.

Upon surrendering, the U.S. and allied troops, half-starved after months of siege and often sick with tropical diseases, were forced to undertake what came to be called the “Bataan Death March,” a week- long, 75-mile trek to prison camps. Prisoners who couldn’t keep up were killed, and those who survived suffered an awful fate: slave labor in hellish conditions. Perhaps hardest of all, the soldiers felt abandoned. “No mama, no papa, no Uncle Sam,” they chanted. “No pills, no planes, no artillery pieces … and nobody gives a damn.”

But in January 1945 MacArthur did indeed return, and as the U.S. Sixth Army began to take back the Philippines, guerrillas told military leaders about a camp filled with the “ghosts of Bataan,” 500 or so prisoners who were too weak to be shipped off to Japan to continue their enslavement. Officials feared that the men would be killed by their captors, so General Walter Krueger sent Lieutenant Colonel Henry Mucci, commander of a new kind of military unit known as the Rangers, on a perilous mission behind enemy lines to take control of the prison camp and bring the men back.

Hampton Sides, through extensive research into written records and interviews with Rangers, prisoners, and their Japanese jailers, has put together a gripping tale of heroism that is a tribute to his mentor, the late John Hersey. Chronicling how the captives managed to survive for three grim years, Sides talks about “gastrosadomasochism,” a “sport” in which the prisoners “would swap recipes for dishes that were ludicrously, obscenely rich” in a perverse attempt to slake hunger; about deathly ill patients in the “zero-zero ward”—the numbers corresponded to the chance of recovery—giving medicine to even sicker buddies; and about an engineer named Homer Hutchinson who crafted a morale-building radio from “a toothpaste tube, an old truck battery, and a crude crystal” that could pick up San Francisco.

Alternating with these chapters is an hour-by-hour account of the daring raid that is rich with sweat and suspense. “The minutes dripped by. The men kept as still as mannequins. Their nerves flitted and raced,” writes Sides, as the Rangers took up positions and aimed at the guards. “They were just 30 feet away. We sat in the dark listening to them talk and talk, wondering which of them would be the first to die.” In the silence before battle, readers are nervously holding their breath, wondering if anyone will get out alive.

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Robert Scholes ’50
The Crafty Reader
Yale University Press, $24.95

In 1938, Yale English professor Cleanth Brooks and writer Robert Penn Warren published a manifesto called Understanding Poetry. The book ushered in a way of examining literature known as the “New Criticism,” and the ap- proach has influenced generations of teachers and students.

But the effect, says Brown University English professor Robert Scholes, has not been positive. “What we still call the New Criticism was bad for poets and poetry and really terrible for students and teachers of poetry,” writes Scholes. “By following Brooks and Warren down the New Critical path of tone and tension, we English teachers succeeded in getting life itself … out of our classrooms and out of the poems we studied as well.”

Scholes offers a way to put life back into the study of poetry as well as into literature in general. To do so, the professor calls for a curriculum that emphasizes the “craft of reading” a far more wide-ranging selection of texts than has been typical. The longest essay in this engaging and often provocative book deals with how to become a “crafty reader” of verse, and Scholes urges readers to hone the craft by tackling nontraditional material, including the “monstrous personal chronicles” of Henry Miller and Anais Nin, private-eye novels, the epistles of Paul, and the paintings of Norman Rockwell. “My whole intent . is to connect the ordinary with the extraordinary: the humble text with the exalted text, the sacred with the profane, the common reader with the uncommon writer, and the common writer with the uncommon reader,” he says.

A crafty reader can even learn a lot from Harry Potter, says Scholes, offering a counterpoint to Sterling Professor of the Humanities Harold Bloom’s acerbic dismissal of the best-selling series’s worth. Far from lacking “imaginative vision,” author J. K. Rowling has “crafted her world with extreme care, and with an admirable amount of wit and joy,” says Scholes. “For those of us with middling gifts in the way of pure intelligence, serious attention to the craft of reading can take us quite far.”

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Steven T. Rosenthal ’68, ’75PHD
Irreconcilable Differences? The Waning of the American Jewish Love Affair with Israel
Brandeis University Press, $24.95

Since Israel’s founding in 1948, Jews around the world have considered the country to be their real homeland. Nowhere has this been more true than in the United States, where the financial and political support of the American Jewish community has been bedrock solid.

But while numerous wars between the Israelis and their Arab neighbors and the recent attempt at the UN’s conference on racism to condemn Israel have tended to unite Jews, this solidarity, particularly in the U.S., is both fragile and illusory, says historian Steven T. Rosenthal.

Rosenthal demonstrates how support for the Jewish state, as measured by such things as “checkbook Zionism,” visits to Israel, and uncritical acceptance of Israeli policies, has declined since the early 1980s. “A series of crises, both foreign and domestic, within and outside the Jewish community, pushed American Jews toward a less idealized view of Israel and encouraged their growing sense of independence,” he explains. Among the divisive events cited are the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982, the Jonathan Pollard spying affair, the Intifada, and the controversy over who might be considered Jewish. (The breakdown of the peace process during the current Palestinian uprising occurred too late to be included in the book.)

Some of this drifting away from Israel is inevitable, Rosenthal points out. “Israel’s and Zionism’s great tasks have been largely achieved,” he notes. But while there is no longer a sense of looming Apocalypse to keep a dispersed population together, this loss of connection may have profound spiritual consequences. If American Jews lose touch with Israel, says Rosenthal, they risk losing their sense of Jewish identity.

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Alexandra Robbins ’98 and Abby Wilner
Quarterlife Crisis: The Unique Challenges of Life in Your Twenties
Jeremy P. Tarcher/Putnam, $14.95

Pity the poor twentysomethings. After years of academic achievement, they graduate and enter a world that plays by vastly different rules. As a result, many young adults in their 20s experience a collective malaise that the authors, both members of that age group, have called the “quarterlife crisis”: a period of intense questioning and ceaseless doubts.

“At its heart, the quarterlife crisis is an identity crisis,” say Robbins and Wilner, who present interviews with more than 100 members of their own generation. Older adults may have scant patience with young men and women who need to be told that “it often helps to be willing to compromise at least a little bit” and who fear a pattern dubbed “the two-month itch.” Still, the perceived disconnect between college and life afterwards can be jarring, and a plethora of opportunities can be as traumatic as too few, say the authors. By demonstrating the pervasiveness of this age-related ennui and offering a gentle “this too shall pass” nudge, the authors perform a useful service to beleaguered twentysomethings and their parents. The book can also be useful to men in the throes of a midlife crisis. “You can better understand the mood swings of your brand-new girlfriend,” note Robbins and Wilner.

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Brief Reviews

T. Berry Brazelton and Joshua D. Sparrow '85MD
Touchpoints Three to Six: Your Child’s Emotional and Behavioral Development

Perseus/Merloyd Lawrence, $27
America’s best-known pediatrician teams up with a child psychiatrist to explore the issues that matter in raising healthy children. The authors offer a wealth of information for parents.

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F.J. Chu '77
Paradigm Lost: The Psychology of Money and Investing
Fraser Publishing, $14.95

“Have the remarkable innovations of technology and the seductions of material abundance altered what we think about money?” asks financial advisor and philosopher Chu. Or is the market still just a “great game?”

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Laura Pappano '84
The Connection Gap: Why Americans Feel So Alone
Rutgers University Press, $26

The convenience of having everything available online has not made people happier, says the author, who examines why technology has contributed to loneliness and offers ways to disconnect—and reconnect.

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Edward Samuels '71
The Illustrated Story of Copyright
Thomas Dunne/St. Martin’s Press, $40

In an entertaining and enlightening volume, law professor Samuels traces the history of copyright from its origins in this country in the 18th century during the printingpress era to its recent adaptations to cover challenges posed by computer and digital technologies.

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Paul Weiss, Sterling Professor Emeritus of Philosophy
Emphatics.
Vanderbilt University Press, $34.95

In this investigation of the metaphysics of being, philosopher Weiss explores how the study of “emphatics” such as changes in pitch in speech and question marks in writing offer “a better understanding of what is real.”

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Jon Wertheim '93
Venus Envy: A Sensational Season Inside the Women’s Tour
HarperCollins, $25

Dysfunctional dads hold center court as sportswriter Wertheim takes readers on a tell-all exploration of the 2000 season that examines how the familiar names in women’s tennis attempt to deal with a new superstar.

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More Books by Yale Authors

Elizabeth Alexander, Associate Professor (Adjunct) of African American Studies
Antebellum Dream Book
Graywolf Press, $14

Jack M. Balkin, Knight Professor of Constitutional Law, Editor
What Brown v. Board of Education Should Have Said: The Nation’s Top Legal Experts Rewrite America’s Landmark Civil Rights Decision
New York University Press, $29.95

Mark J. Blechner 1977PhD
The Dream Frontier
Analytic Press, $49.95

Paula Marantz Cohen 1975
Silent Film and the Triumph of the American Myth
Oxford University Press, $18.95

Elisha Cooper 1993, Author and Illustrator
Dance!
Greenwillow Books/HarperCollins, $15.95

Nancy F. Cott, Sterling Professor of History
Public Vows: A History of Marriage and the Nation
Harvard University Press 2000 $27.95

Francis de Tarr 1949, 1958PhD
Pierre Mendes France: Un Temoignage
Mille Sources, 50 Francs

Drew Denbaum 1971 and Sue Benton
Chi Fitness: A Workout for Body, Mind, and Spirit
HarperCollins, $25

Joanne B. Freeman, Assistant Professor of History
Affairs of Honor: National Politics in the New Republic
Yale University Press, $29.95

Seth Garfield 1988, 1996PhD
Indigenous Struggle at the Heart of Brazil: State Policy, Frontier Expansion, and the Xavante Indians, 1937-1988
Duke University Press, $59.95

Abner S. Greene 1982
Understanding the 2000 Election: A Guide to the Legal Battles that Decided the Presidency
New York University Press, $20

Jonathan Hay 1989PhD
Shitao: Painting and Modernity in Early Qing China
Cambridge University Press, $95

Dwight B. Heath 1959PhD
Contemporary Cultures and Societies of Latin America, 3rd Edition
Waveland Press, $29.95

Sarah Heidt 1991, 1998PhD, and C. P. Ragland, Editors
What Is Philosophy?
Yale University Press $30

Jody Helpren 1982, 1989MD, 1994PhD
From Detached Concern to Empathy: Humanizing Medical Practice
Oxford University Press, $37.95

Jeremy B.C. Jackson 1971PhD, Scott Lidgard, and Frank K. McKinney, Editors
Evolutionary Patterns: Growth, Form, and Tempo in the Fossil Record
University of Chicago Press, $80

Elmer W. Johnson 1954 and Donald L. Miller
Chicago Metropolis 2020: The Chicago Plan for the Twenty-First Century
University of Chicago Press, $40

Brian C. Kalt 1997JD
Sixties Sandstorm: The Fight Over Establishment of a Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, 1961-1970
Michigan State University Press, $17.95

Peter Kivy 1960MA
The Possessor and the Possessed: Handel, Mozart, Beethoven and the Idea of Musical Genius
Yale University Press, $35

Adam J. Kosto 1989
Making Agreements in Medieval Catalonia: Power, Order, and the Written Word, 1000-1200
Cambridge University Press, $64.95

Robert L. Leahy 1967, 1974PhD
Overcoming Resistance in Cognitive Therapy
Guilford Publications, $35

Buzz Mauro 1984 and Deb Gottesman
Taking Center Stage: Masterful Public Speaking Using Acting Skills You Never Knew You Had
Berkley Publishing Group, $13

Thomas Morawetz 1968LLB, 1969PhD
Making Faces, Playing God: Identity and the Art of Transformational Makeup
University of Texas Press, $50

Eric L. Muller 1987JD
Free to Die for Their Country
University of Chicago Press, $27.50

Yale Daily News Editors
The Insider’s Guide to the Colleges 2002
St. Martin’s Griffin, $17.99

Marianne Novy 1973PhD, Editor
Imagining Adoption: Essays on Literature and Culture
University of Michigan Press, $47.50

Howard T. Odum 1951PhD and Elisabeth C. Odum
A Prosperous Way Down: Principles and Practices
University Press of Colorado Jul-01 $45

Clifford A. Pickover 1982PhD
Computers, Pattern, Chaos, and Beauty: Graphics from an Unseen World
Dover Books, $16.95

Horace Porter 1981PhD
Jazz Country: Ralph Ellison in America
University of Iowa Press, $29.95

Adam Rome 1980
The Bulldozer in the Countryside: Suburban Sprawl and the Rise of American Environmentalism
Cambridge University Press, $54.95

M. E. Sarotte 1998PhD
Dealing with the Devil: East Germany, D?tente, and Ostpolitik, 1969-1973
University of North Carolina Press, $55

Alex Shakar 1991
The Savage Girl
HarperCollins, $25

David J. Strohmaier 1995MAR
The Seasons of Fire: Reflections on Fire in the West
University of Nevada Press, $21.95

Lisa Tiersten 1991PhD
Marianne in the Market: Envisioning Consumer Society in Fin-de-Siecle France
University of California Press, $45

Rachel Toor 1984
Admissions Confidential: An Insider’s Account of the Elite College Selection Process
St. Martin’s Press, $23.95

Dick Wimmer 1959MA
The Irish Wine Trilogy: Irish Wine, Boyne’s Lassie, and Hagar’s Dream
Penguin Books, $13

Lee Adams Young 1949
At Home with God: Here and Now
Xlibris Press, $25

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