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LIFE ON THE MISSISSIPPI

AN EPIC AMERICAN ADVENTURE

For armchair-travel aficionados and frontier-history buffs, it doesn’t get much better.

Awards & Accolades

Our Verdict

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  • Kirkus Reviews'
    Best Books Of 2022


  • New York Times Bestseller

An invigorating blend of history and journalism informs this journey down Old Man River.

Buck walks the walk, or perhaps rows the row: As with his previous book on the Oregon Trail, he follows the path of preceding generations in the hope of seeing something of what they saw. That’s not easy in the case of the Mississippi River, which, along with one of its principal tributaries, the Ohio, is “jointly managed by the U.S. Coast Guard and the Army Corps of Engineers exclusively for the benefit of commercial barge traffic.” With those massive strings of barges, some as many as 25 containers long, clogging the river, traversing it by means of an old-fashioned wooden flatboat seems an invitation to disaster. Yet that’s just what Buck did, building his own craft in the manner of the 19th-century pioneers who saw in the river system a means of knitting far-flung territories into a nation. Building the boat was a challenge, and the author “would shortly learn that the flatboat was indeed an ideal school for acquiring a knowledge of human nature.” Buck populates his invigorating narrative with a memorable cast of characters, some people who traveled with him, some people he met along the way. The author was courtly to all of them, save a loudmouth Trumper who “considered it absolutely vital to explain to me that the ‘’nited states of ’merica’ was being ruined by ‘librals and buree-cats.’ ” Buck’s adventures alternate between nearly being swamped by massive commercial vessels and dealing with more mundane disasters; as he noted to his first mate, “Clusterfuck is our new normal.” Besides being a willing and intrepid traveler, Buck is also an able interpreter of history, and it’s clear that he’s devoured a library of Mississippiana. It all makes for an entertaining journey in the manner of William Least Heat-Moon, John McPhee, and other traveler-explainers.

For armchair-travel aficionados and frontier-history buffs, it doesn’t get much better.

Pub Date: Aug. 9, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-5011-0637-8

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Avid Reader Press

Review Posted Online: May 9, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2022

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THE TRIUMPH OF NANCY REAGAN

The definitive biography of the woman who drove her husband’s presidential ambitions—a shoo-in for the silver screen.

A deep dive into the life of Nancy Reagan (1921-2016).

In a luminous and exhaustive biography, Washington Post political columnist Tumulty chronicles the private life and political influence of Ronald Reagan’s wife. Drawing on interviews with surviving figures from the Reagan years, including George Shultz and James A. Baker, the author vividly captures the personality and impact of the Chicago Gold Coast debutante who became a Hollywood star and then first lady. Tumulty shows us a shrewd, savvy woman. “Hers was the power that comes with intimacy,” writes the author. “The first lady was the essential disinterested observer of the ideological battles and power struggles that went on in the White House, because she had but one preoccupation: Ronald Reagan’s well-being and success.” She was tasked with running the household and keeping up the family’s clean, conservative image: “Ronnie…left all the difficult and contentious parts of parenting to Nancy.” Fostering a strong interest in astrology, she insisted that her husband’s schedule, including dates and even desirability of visits from foreign leaders, align with the readings of San Francisco astrologer Joan Quigley. Tumulty’s riveting narrative transcends such oddities as she leads us through the White House years, with colorful portraits of all of the relevant political players as well as the Reagan children. The author’s chapter on the AIDS crisis is a gem, as she clearly portrays the neglect by the White House, the complexity of the Reagans’ view of homosexuality, and the engagement of Surgeon General C. Everett Koop to anchor the administration’s belated response. Another standout section follows the grim tale of the Iran-Contra scandal, culminating in the Tower report and Reagan’s public apology. Tumulty also assesses some tell-all books from departing staffers as well as Nancy’s own memoir, My Turn (1989). Through it all, Nancy maintained her abiding love for her husband. After his death, she would see visions of him at night.

The definitive biography of the woman who drove her husband’s presidential ambitions—a shoo-in for the silver screen.

Pub Date: April 13, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-5011-6519-1

Page Count: 672

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: Feb. 9, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2021

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THE NEED TO BE WHOLE

PATRIOTISM AND THE HISTORY OF PREJUDICE

A rambling and frustrating book from a normally reliable author.

The acclaimed farmer, novelist, and environmental essayist considers—and grumbles about—our current racial reckonings.

Berry has been writing about race for much of his career. His 1970 book, The Hidden Wound, considered the impact of slavery and its aftereffects on the country in general and his native Kentucky in particular. In essence, his approach hasn’t changed. He still advocates for tightknit communities that are, if not actively agrarian, at least compassionate toward the environment; from there, he suggests, balms to many social ills will naturally arrive. This digressive, at times exhausting book is at best a well-meaning, eloquent utopian plea to abandon urbanity; at worst, it lapses into all-lives-matter rhetoric insisting that slavery and the Confederacy, while wrongheaded, were misunderstood. Berry finds recent efforts to remove Confederate monuments to be unhelpful, leading to an extended consideration of Robert E. Lee as “one of the great tragic figures of our history, who embodied and suffered in his personal life our national tragedy.” The author also argues that most Confederate soldiers were not necessarily White supremacists but rather unfairly maligned just-following-orders types. “Whatever there may have been of kindness in slavery does not excuse it,” he writes later, “and whatever was most cruel does not typify it.” In his effort to seek nuance in racial divisions, Berry risks being misunderstood, which he acknowledges. The deeper problem is that he cherry-picks where he goes looking for nuance. He laments the Great Migration without considering its causes; curiously, mentions Jim Crow only in passing; and laments the loss of Confederate statues but doesn’t consider the option of elevating other communities in their places. The hardworking Amish farm he describes certainly sounds lovely, but his prescription that we somehow build a country from that kind of model is as impractical as any bureaucratic approach he has railed against in the past.

A rambling and frustrating book from a normally reliable author.

Pub Date: Oct. 4, 2022

ISBN: 978-8-9856798-0-9

Page Count: 528

Publisher: Shoemaker & Company

Review Posted Online: July 29, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2022

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