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THE ROMANCE OF RISK

WHY TEENAGERS DO THE THINGS THEY DO

A provocative, well-documented assessment of adolescence as a time of risk-taking. Ponton (Psychiatry/Univ. of California, San Francisco) challenges the prevailing notion that adolescence is naturally a turbulent time for both teens and their parents. Adolescence, she contends, is a time of risk-taking, most of which is positive and healthy. In fact, 80 percent of young people manage this developmental period without significant difficulties, engaging in the kinds of risks which allow them to develop their potential as they mature. It's the remaining 20 percent that is the focus of Ponton's book. Ponton presents the case histories of 15 troubled adolescents from her clinical practice who were unable to navigate their teen years without taking unhealthy risks. The teens are a diverse group, ranging from an inner-city mother who fears that she will once again become pregnant to the daughter of a surgeon who has begun cutting herself in a desperate attempt to signal that she needs help. Although the factors that trigger unhealthy risk-taking are as varied as the risk-takers, a number of patterns emerge. Parents who are so deeply involved in their own daily struggles that they have neither the time nor energy to communicate with their children often put them at risk, as do those parents who become overly involved with their teens and view them as buddies. With divorce so prevalent, too many parents treat their children as peers rather than as youngsters in need of parental guidance. Teens need, insists Ponton, adults to guide them in making choices and to provide them with constructive opportunities to engage in healthy risk-taking. Adults, too, must be constantly on guard against negative risk behavior. Worthwhile reading for parents and teachers, and for professionals who come in contact with teens.

Pub Date: Sept. 10, 1997

ISBN: 0-465-07075-2

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Basic Books

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 1997

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WOMEN AND MEN

A PHILOSOPHICAL CONVERSATION

These transcripts of discussions by two French intellectuals— a man and a woman—about relations between the sexes make for generally delightful reading. The male interlocutor is LÇvy (Barbarism with a Human Face, 1979, etc.), best known as one of the advocates of the ``nouvelle philosophie'' who in the late 1970s led an insurrection against Marxist and structuralist theory. The woman is Giroud (Alma Mahler, or the Art of Being Loved, 1992), a sometime government minister and a journalist perhaps best known for her association with the news magazine L'Express. These curricula vitae suggest this volume's range of reference: Giroud and LÇvy follow the thread of love through philosophies of all vintages, cultural politics, and conventional wisdom about contemporary lifestyles. Their ultimate common ground is the literary anecdote, where their discussion achieves a certain universality. One could never have heard of Proust and yet appreciate the verve with which they recapitulate his anatomy of jealousy. This book's accessibility will probably surprise apprehensive English-language readers. The central questions, after all, are familiar to everyone. Have women changed their vocation? Are they truly ``making progress''? Baroque exchanges—about whether women have an intrinsically masochistic relation to men, or about what ugliness really might be—resolve back to more mundane issues. Giroud and LÇvy ask if in this era of divorce we have lost touch with true romance. Is love a melding of two bodies or a battle of two minds? With great shows of reluctance, they draw on personal experience to consider whether love in marriage and fidelity are possible, and to analyze the behaviors of the coquette and the Don Juan. The discussion continually circles back to the central question of the degree to which sexual difference remains entrenched. LÇvy and Giroud relentlessly desiccate each other's clichÇs while appreciating each other's aperáus. They will make agreeable companions for those anglophone readers who don't find their Parisian intellectual millieu too recherchÇ.

Pub Date: Jan. 18, 1995

ISBN: 0-316-31474-9

Page Count: 248

Publisher: Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 1994

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THE PRESIDENCY OF GERALD R. FORD

Gerald Ford comes across here as an average nice guy who was thrust into the hot seat of a banished president and who tried to heal a demoralized nation in the aftermath of Watergate and Vietnam. Greene (History/Cazenovia College; The Nixon and Ford Administrations, not reviewed) mined the Ford Presidential Library's wealth of manuscript material, as well as conducting interviews with Ford himself and others. As a result, we gain a greater understanding of a president burdened by a recalcitrant Congress and bad press, facing one crisis after another: an oil embargo, ``stagflation,'' school integration conflicts, the bankruptcy of New York City, CIA assassination scandals, the invasion of Crete by Turks using NATO arms, the Mayaguez seizure, the fall of Saigon and Phnom Penh, the ever-smoldering Middle East powder keg, the Lebanese civil war, an unpopular policy of dÇtente with the Soviet Union, and attacks from the Republican right. The author believes that Ford's honesty and candor performed a great service to the nation, serving as a healing force in the wake of Nixon's presidency, and proved that moral leadership is a necessity in a president. However, Greene argues, Ford's pardon of Richard Nixon was the defining act of his presidency; his approval rating dropped from 71% to 50% within a week and remained foremost in people's minds. In foreign policy, Greene states, it's a myth that Ford blindly followed the advice of Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, and he demonstrated his independence from Congress by vetoing 66 bills in two and a half years. Greene concludes that Ford's successes did not completely heal the nation or restore trust in government, and the Nixon pardon made possible Jimmy Carter's narrow victory in 1976. A fair, balanced account of a troubled time and of a decent man whose efforts left the White House in better shape than he found it.

Pub Date: Jan. 6, 1995

ISBN: 0-7006-0638-6

Page Count: 272

Publisher: Univ. Press of Kansas

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 1994

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