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  • Chris Watson, Bookbriefs

    San Jose Mercury News, USA

    Chris Watson, Bookbriefs
    -
    Article Launched: 10/05/2008 01:36:33 AM PDT

    In 1868, John Muir took his first trip across California, from Oakland
    to Yosemite via the Santa Clara Valley, Pacheco Pass and the San
    Joaquin Valley to Snelling and Coulterville.

    In 2006, Peter and Donna Thomas, Santa Cruz book artists, followed in
    Muir's footsteps, recording their impressions along the way.

    Because everything is grist for the artistic spirit, Peter then
    decided to create, in secret, a record of the trip for his wife's 51st
    birthday.

    Using Donna's drawings and adding original lines from Muir about what
    he saw so long ago, Peter made, on home-made rag paper, a 12-page
    accordion book.

    Luckily, he made 51 copies of the book and book collectors may
    purchase one by visiting http://www2.cruzio.com/~peteranddonna/.

    Saroyan honored in his centenary

    William Saroyan isn't an author that all readers -- even native
    Californian readers -- are familiar with.

    The big, blustery Armenian-American may have lived up and down the
    state over his lifetime and may have written scads of short stories, a
    couple of novels and even won a Pulitzer for his play, "The Time of
    Your Life", but his legacy has been, in large part, neglected.

    On the centenary of Saroyan's birth, Heyday Books of Berkeley has
    published a volume

    it hopes will revivify the author's importance to California letters.

    "He Flies Through the Air With the Greatest of Ease: A William Saroyan
    Reader," edited by William E. Justice $35 cloth; $24.95 paper, is a
    whopping 600-page volume that samples widely from Saroyan's published
    work: selected short stories from four anthologies; two novels; his
    prize-winning play; plus, selected autobiographical writings that
    illustrate why the man wrote the way he did "" big, with bravado and
    joy and a visceral need to get it all down on paper.

    Included is a foreword by his friend and fellow author Herbert Gold
    and eight pages of family photos.

    Lehane movesto a bigger stage

    If you're in the vicinity of Corte Madera on Monday or San Francisco
    on Tuesday, you might want to stop by in that order Book Passage or
    Books, Inc. at 7 p.m. to hear author Dennis Lehane read from his new
    novel, "The Given Day."

    Although Lehane has already earned himself a reputation for dark,
    daring novels "" e.g., "Mystic River," "Shutter Island," "Gone, Baby,
    Gone" "" his new effort ups the ante considerably.

    A bruiser of a novel at over 700 pages, "The Given Day" profiles a
    period in American life "" the end of World War I "" when social,
    political and economic forces collided with considerable force.

    Boston's Irish populations still figure, but anarchists and
    city-dwelling blacks have big roles too, as does Babe Ruth.

    If you think today's world is complicated, read this book and be of
    good cheer.

    Reading beyond 1984

    George Orwell wrote a lot more than just "Animal Farm" and "Nineteen
    Eighty-Four."

    If he'd been alive today, it's likely that the prolific Orwell would
    have been a blogger. In consideration of that fact, a professor at the
    University of Westminster in London is publishing Orwell's diary
    entries daily 70 years to the day after they were written.

    Check it out at orwelldiaries.wordpress.com

    Coming this week

    ¢ Wendy Chapkis and Richard Webb, "Dying to Get High: Marijuana as
    Medicine," with special guests Valerie and Michael Corral, 7:30
    p.m. today, Bookshop Santa Cruz, 1520 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz.

    ¢ Robert Martensen, "A Life Worth Living: A Doctor's Reflections on
    Illness in a High-Tech Era," 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Bookshop Santa Cruz.

    ¢ Wendy Chapkis, "Dying to Get High," 12:30-2 p.m. Room 301,
    College 8, UC Santa Cruz.

    ¢ The Rev. John Dear, SJ, "A Persistent Peace: One Man's Struggle
    for a Nonviolent World," 7:30 p.m. Friday, Capitola Book Cafe, 1475
    41st Ave., Capitola.

    Contact Chris Watson at [email protected].
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