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MOTHERS AND OTHER FICTIONAL CHARACTERS

A MEMOIR IN ESSAYS

Deftly crafted essays likely to resonate with grateful readers.

Intimate essays on contemporary womanhood.

Award-winning essayist, journalist, and critic Lipson, a 44-year-old mother of three, makes an impressive book debut with a gathering of 12 deeply thoughtful essays on the transitions, joys, and challenges that have marked her life. Anchored by topics such as motherhood and daughterhood, friendship and marriage, beauty, aging, and gender stereotypes, the essays cohere into a revealing memoir. Often, Lipson finds wisdom—or at least comfort—in fictional depictions of women. “There are books that seem to glide into our lives at a particular time as if by design,” she writes, “finishing thoughts just partially formed in our minds.” Kate Chopin’s The Awakening was one, with college freshman Lipson connecting with the sexual stirrings of Chopin’s transgressive Edna. As a mother, confused by her oldest daughter’s apparently fluid gender identity, Lipson found enlightenment in Shakespeare’s cross-dressing Rosalind from As You Like It and Virginia Woolf’s Orlando. She finds solace in Alice Munro’s depiction of motherhood as a “heroic journey,” in which mothers are thinking beings. Lipson is candid about the tensions and worries generated by mothering: She feels unsettled, for example, about letting her son play with guns, part of a larger concern about the cultural messages he’s learning about manhood. A loving wife in a happy marriage, still, she acknowledges a gnawing desire for solitude. Sometimes, she wonders “if marriage, with its contractual origins, can ever fully transcend the transactional. In a marriage, it can feel as if something is always owed, because it’s entirely impossible, despite the gauzy hopes we pin on matrimony, for two people to fulfill each other’s every need.” With empathy and grace, Lipson unravels the tangle of “illusory standards” that weigh on any marriage and any woman’s sense of self.

Deftly crafted essays likely to resonate with grateful readers.

Pub Date: March 4, 2025

ISBN: 9781797228563

Page Count: 248

Publisher: Chronicle Prism

Review Posted Online: Jan. 7, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2025

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HISTORY MATTERS

A pleasure for fans of old-school historical narratives.

Avuncular observations on matters historical from the late popularizer of the past.

McCullough made a fine career of storytelling his way through past events and the great men (and occasional woman) of long-ago American history. In that regard, to say nothing of his eschewing modern technology in favor of the typewriter (“I love the way the bell rings every time I swing the carriage lever”), he might be thought of as belonging to a past age himself. In this set of occasional pieces, including various speeches and genial essays on what to read and how to write, he strikes a strong tone as an old-fashioned moralist: “Indifference to history isn’t just ignorant, it’s rude,” he thunders. “It’s a form of ingratitude.” There are some charming reminiscences in here. One concerns cajoling his way into a meeting with Arthur Schlesinger in order to pitch a speech to presidential candidate John F. Kennedy: Where Richard Nixon “has no character and no convictions,” he opined, Kennedy “is appealing to our best instincts.” McCullough allows that it wasn’t the strongest of ideas, but Schlesinger told him to write up a speech anyway, and when it got to Kennedy, “he gave a speech in which there was one paragraph that had once sentence written by me.” Some of McCullough’s appreciations here are of writers who are not much read these days, such as Herman Wouk and Paul Horgan; a long piece concerns a president who’s been largely lost in the shuffle too, Harry Truman, whose decision to drop the atomic bomb on Japan McCullough defends. At his best here, McCullough uses history as a way to orient thinking about the present, and with luck to good ends: “I am a short-range pessimist and a long-range optimist. I sincerely believe that we may be on the way to a very different and far better time.”

A pleasure for fans of old-school historical narratives.

Pub Date: Sept. 16, 2025

ISBN: 9781668098998

Page Count: 208

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: June 26, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2025

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A WEALTH OF PIGEONS

A CARTOON COLLECTION

A virtuoso performance and an ode to an undervalued medium created by two talented artists.

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The veteran actor, comedian, and banjo player teams up with the acclaimed illustrator to create a unique book of cartoons that communicates their personalities.

Martin, also a prolific author, has always been intrigued by the cartoons strewn throughout the pages of the New Yorker. So when he was presented with the opportunity to work with Bliss, who has been a staff cartoonist at the magazine since 1997, he seized the moment. “The idea of a one-panel image with or without a caption mystified me,” he writes. “I felt like, yeah, sometimes I’m funny, but there are these other weird freaks who are actually funny.” Once the duo agreed to work together, they established their creative process, which consisted of working forward and backward: “Forwards was me conceiving of several cartoon images and captions, and Harry would select his favorites; backwards was Harry sending me sketched or fully drawn cartoons for dialogue or banners.” Sometimes, he writes, “the perfect joke occurs two seconds before deadline.” There are several cartoons depicting this method, including a humorous multipanel piece highlighting their first meeting called “They Meet,” in which Martin thinks to himself, “He’ll never be able to translate my delicate and finely honed droll notions.” In the next panel, Bliss thinks, “I’m sure he won’t understand that the comic art form is way more subtle than his blunt-force humor.” The team collaborated for a year and created 150 cartoons featuring an array of topics, “from dogs and cats to outer space and art museums.” A witty creation of a bovine family sitting down to a gourmet meal and one of Dumbo getting his comeuppance highlight the duo’s comedic talent. What also makes this project successful is the team’s keen understanding of human behavior as viewed through their unconventional comedic minds.

A virtuoso performance and an ode to an undervalued medium created by two talented artists.

Pub Date: Nov. 17, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-250-26289-9

Page Count: 272

Publisher: Celadon Books

Review Posted Online: Aug. 30, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2020

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