Review Potpourri with Audrey and Paul #1
List of some of the books discussed or mentioned in passing on our show of October 6, 2008. Right click Image to download mp3 file.
Myths: Tales of the Greek and Roman Gods by Lucia Impelluso(Abrams)

From the same series as Abrams’ successful Saints and Angels comes Myths, richly illustrated with representations of these celestial heralds from ancient murals and pottery to the paintings of Gustav Klimt and Odilon Redon. Author Lucia Impelluso has drawn from a variety of sources, including the plays of Euripides and Aeschylus, the epics of Homer and Virgil, Aesop’s fables, Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Petrarch’s sonnets, and the works of Pindar, Sophocles, Plutarch, Pliny the Elder, and Bocaccio.
Beginning with the stories of Earth’s creation and its early rulers, the Titans, Impelluso recounts the major episodes and figures of Greek and Roman mythology, with sections on the gods of the sky, the sea, the earth, and the underworld; the Fates and the Muses; monsters; human heroes; and the Iliad, the Odyssey, and the Aeneid. Here are beloved stories, retold and illustrated in a wonderful, giftable format.
Jim Copp, Will You Tell Me a Story?: Three Uncommonly Clever
Tales [Book and Musical CD] by Jim Copp and Lindsay
duPont (Harcourt)
DuPont's quirky ink-and-watercolor
illustrations, which insinuate themselves into the text with
abandon, add several more degrees of giggle and jocosity to the
happy mix.
Frances Yates and the Hermetic Tradition
by Marjorie G. Jones (Iblis) This is the first full-length
biography of British historian Frances Yates, author of such
acclaimed works as Giordano Bruno and The Hermetic Tradition and
The Art of Memory, one of the most influential non-fiction books
of the twentieth century.
Jones’s book explores Yates’
remarkable life and career and her interest in the mysterious
figure of Giordano Bruno and the influence of the Hermetic
tradition on the culture of the Renaissance. Her revolutionary
way of viewing history, literature, art, and the theater as
integral parts of the cultural picture of the time period did
much to shape modern interdisciplinary approaches to history and
literary criticism. Jones focuses not only on the particulars of
Yates’ life, but also sheds light on the tradition of female
historians of her time and their contributions to Renaissance
scholarship. In addition to her insightful commentary on Yates’
academic work, Jones quotes from Frances’ diaries and the
writings of those who were close to her, to shed light on Yates’
private life. This biography is significant for those with an
interest in literary criticism, women’s history, scientific
history, or the intellectual atmosphere of post-war Britain, as
well as those interested in the Hermetic tradition.
Unstuck: Your Guide to the Seven-Stage Journey Out of Depression
by James S. Gordon M.D. ( Penguin Press) Each year,
as many as twenty million Americans are diagnosed with clinical
depression. Tens of millions more have low energy or feel
unhappy and dissatisfied with their lives. And each year,
American doctors write 189 million prescriptions for
antidepressant drugs for these people.
Dr. James Gordon, a
Harvard Medical School-educated psychiatrist who founded and
directs The Center for Mind-Body Medicine in Washington, D.C.,
has been helping his patients find their way out of the darkness
of depression for the past forty years. He has worked with
everyone from high-powered Washington politicians to Hurricane
Katrina victims, from overstressed doctors, lawyers, and
stay-at-home moms to orphans from war-ravaged Kosovo and Gaza.
Each one of Dr. Gordon’s patients is unique, but all suffer from
some level of depression, and none are getting relief from the
antidepressant drugs their doctors keep prescribing or the
psychotherapy they’ve been receiving.
One of our country’s most distinguished psychiatrists and a
pioneer in integrative medicine, Dr. Gordon believes that
depression is not an end point, a disease over which we have no
control. It is a sign that our lives are out of balance, that
we’re stuck. It’s a wake-up call and the start of a journey that
can help us become whole and happy, one that can change and
transform our lives. Unstuck is a practical, easy-to-use guide
explaining the seven stages of Dr. Gordon’s approach and the
steps we can take to exert control over our own lives and find
hope and happiness. Unstuck is designed for anyone who is
suffering from depression, from mild subclinical depression
(“the blues”) to its severest forms.
Dr. Gordon shows us how doctors and patients alike have come to
depend on antidepressants, and how these drugs have disappointed
so many. He then carefully links each of his seven stages to
helpful suggestions for relieving depression’s symptoms. Using
dramatic and inspiring examples from the patients he has worked
with over the years, he explains the useful, mood-healing
benefits of: food and nutritional supplements; Chinese medicine;
movement, exercise, and dance; psychotherapy, meditation and
guided imagery; and spiritual practice and prayer. He concludes
each chapter with a carefully designed Prescription for
Self-Care, guidelines to help each person play an active,
effective role in their own healing. The result is Unstuck, an
incredibly thoughtful, practical, and meditative guide to the
difficult but rewarding journey out of depression.
Sun in a Bottle: The Strange History of Fusion and the Science
of Wishful Thinking by Charles Seife (Viking
Press) When weapons builders detonated the first hydrogen
bomb in 1952, they tapped into the vastest source of energy in
our solar system--the very same phenomenon that makes the sun
shine. Nuclear fusion was a virtually unlimited source of power
that became the center of a tragic and comic quest that has left
scores of scientists battered and disgraced.
For the past
half-century, governments and research teams have tried to
bottle the sun with lasers, magnets, sound waves, particle
beams, and chunks of meta. (The latest venture, a giant,
multi-billion-dollar, international fusion project called ITER,
is just now getting underway.) Again and again, they have
failed, disgracing generations of scientists. Throughout this
fascinating journey Charles Seife introduces us to the daring
geniuses, villains, and victims of fusion science: the brilliant
and tortured Andrei Sakharov; the monomaniacal and Strangelovean
Edward Teller; Ronald Richter, the secretive physicist whose
lies embarrassed an entire country; and Stanley Pons and Martin
Fleischmann, the two chemists behind the greatest scientific
fiasco of the past hundred years. Sun in a Bottle is the
first major book to trace the story of fusion from its
beginnings into the 21st century, of how scientists have gotten
burned by trying to harness the power of the sun.
Deep Rhythm and the Riddle of Eternal Life by John S. Dunne (University of Notre Dame)
In Deep Rhythm and the Riddle of Eternal Life, John S. Dunne's twentieth book,
he
examines the end of earthly life and the prospect of eternal
life. He begins with two questions: Is death an event of life?
Is death lived through? If we answer yes to both questions, then
we face "the riddle of eternal life." This book explores that
riddle.
Dunne finds his answer in the Gospel of John, with its three great metaphors of life, light, and love. Dunne contemplates the meaning of the metaphors in "deep rhythm," the deep rhythm of rest in the restlessness of the heart. The words of eternal life in the Gospel speak of life and light and love but also of life passing through death, of light passing through darkness, of love passing through loneliness. So, too, Christ, embodying life and light and love, passes through death and darkness and loneliness. This deeply meditative book from one of our most gifted spiritual writers and teachers will offer consolation to those at the end of life as well as hope for all readers who contemplate eternal life.
An audio CD is included containing Dunne's "Symphony of Songs," with vocals by soprano Quinn Smith accompanied by John S. Dunne on the piano.
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