This memoir by Frank McCourt’s younger brother is the literary equivalent of sharing a Guinness or ten with a loquacious, life-loving Irishman. Actor, bar owner, smuggler, raconteur—McCourt wears many hats. After escaping the grinding poverty of Limerick as a child, he comes of age in …
Read MoreMicro-Review #103: Teacher Man
Before he wrote Angela’s Ashes, McCourt spent 30 years teaching in public high schools in New York. A typical educator he was not. There were odd-ball singalongs in class, field trips to the movies, and, inevitably, firings because he refused to suffer the foolishness of …
Read MoreMicro-Review #102: Not Forgotten
An American missionary crosses into North Korea with “treacherous” religious materials on his hard drive. What follows is a 15-year sentence of hard labor and a life of deprivation and indoctrination. Throughout his ordeal, Bae maintains his faith and does what Jesus would do, trying …
Read MoreMicro-Review #101: The Motherf**cker with the Hat
This play about addiction, friendship and love is a hard-edged hoot and an affecting character study. Jackie is a recovering addict who’s going straight after his latest prison stretch. Ralph D. is his sponsor, a sage of Big Book wisdoms who can maybe help keep …
Read MoreMicro-Review #100: The Top 10 Reviewed Books
Cue the fireworks for our one-hundredth review. Only the grandest literary achievements deserve to be mentioned in this space. Here are the top 10 books I’ve reviewed in the last few years, in order of brilliance. Feel free to quibble. STORY OF A SECRET STATE …
Read MoreMicro-Review #99: Mind Over Matter: The Epic Crossing of the Antarctic Continent
Known as the world’s greatest (and in some ways last) living explorer, the author of this bracing account of the first unsupported walk across the bottom of the world gives us an enthralling look at an epic errand. Frostbite, starvation and injury are all potentially …
Read MoreMicro-Review #98: The Secret Life of War
This series of war sketches by the foreign affairs editor of The Observer is both brilliant and oppressively heavy, both harrowing and over-intellectual. Beaumont’s main focus is on the effects of war on civilians There’s no doubting his intelligence or his experience, but at times …
Read MoreMicro-Review #97: On All Fronts: The Education of a Journalist
A good book with a very accurate sub-title. Rather than providing the usual compendium of war-is-hell reminiscences, CNN’s chief international correspondent takes us from her days as a somewhat privileged college student to the hottest war zones of the last 30 years. Along the way …
Read MoreMicro-Review #96: Tracy Flick Can’t Win
Perrotta’s 8th novel reintroduces us to the eternally ambitious main character from his 1998 novel Election. Tracy Flick is now an assistant principal who’s dying for a promotion. Obstacles stand in her way, but if there’s one thing we know about Tracy, she doesn’t quit. …
Read MoreMicro-Review #95: Squeeze Me
The Florida satirist’s latest novel features a Trump-like president codenamed “Mastodon,” a coterie of ultra-wealthy, blue-haired “Potussies” who would go to Hell and back for him, and a Burmese python intent on gobbling up geriatric Republicans. Throw in a malfunctioning presidential tanning bed and a …
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