From Publishers Weekly
This rather desultory anthology gathers some 72 sessions of C-SPANs popular author-interview series, this time covering prominent nonfiction books on American history. As in the three previous Booknotes anthologies, the interviews are edited to remove host Lambs side of the dialogue; at their best, they read like chatty, informal essays. But the fact remains that no amount of editing can impart to conversational exchanges the kind of structure, focus and polish that makes an essay readable. In consequence, these pieceslacking the orienting and framing clues that the hosts questions provide to the TV audiencetend to lurch from one topic to another, rarely settling down to a coherent theme. It doesnt help that so many of the books discussed are biographies, which can give rise to perfunctory first-he-did-this-and-then-he-did-that narrative rehashes. The most coherent and interesting pieces are the polemical ones, like Victor Davis Hansons diatribe against American immigration policy and James Loewens critique of high school American history texts, both of which have the vigorous drive of an oft-rehearsed stump speech. But none of them really surmounts the problem that, no matter how lively it may sound on TV, conversational English can be very tedious to readcoarse and flat, stripped of inflection and rhythm, full of stammering repetitions and the sort of vivacious colloquialism ("For example, Union Station in Washington D. C., in 1909, she busted up a saloon and who knows? Im not sure why she did that" blurts Fran Grace about temperance crusader Carrie Nation) that comes off as discombobulated rambling on the page. There are eminent personages aplenty in here, but theyre not shown in their best light.
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During the last 15 years, Lamb has been the host of C-SPAN's
Booknotes and has interviewed more than 750 authors of nonfiction books. In this new collection, Lamb has selected 72 original pieces from these interviews and has edited them into essays. Their topics span 225 years of the American experience. They include Michael Moore (views from the Left), Ann Coulter (views from the Right), Michael Korda (memoirs of Presidents Reagan and Nixon), Arthur Schlesinger Jr. (American multiculturalism), Sandra Day O'Connor (the early years of the first female justice), Isaac Stern (his life and music), David Von Drehle (the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire), and Richard Lingeman (Sinclair Lewis). The book is divided into sections entitled "The Nation's Leaders," "Social and Political Movements in America," "America at War," "A Nation of Law and Order," "American Inventors and Businessmen," and "Our Cultural Heritage." Readers who watch Lamb's engrossing TV interviews will welcome the book.
George CohenCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved