Lifestyle

Let Huck Finn tell it as it was

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"That is just the way with some people,” says Huckleberry Finn in Mark Twain’s eponymous novel, published in 1885. “They get down on a thing when they don’t know nothing about it.” Huck was talking about the Widow Douglas’s disapproval of smoking. But his point applies more generally to the legions of American parents and political activists who have lately sought, with considerable success, to ban or censor Twain’s work.

Huckleberry Finn is not the world’s greatest novel, but it is the most American of the world’s great novels. It follows Huck on a rafting voyage down the Mississippi with Jim, a runaway slave. Along the way, with subtlety, wryness and explosive humour, Twain deflates the ideology of racism as Americans lived it in the 19th century. For US adolescents, the book has been an irreplaceable bridge from juvenile into adult reading. Its page-turning picaresque draws the reader towards deep questions of the human condition. Unfortunately for present-day sensibilities, it does so in the dialect of Missouri in the 1840s. Twain’s characters use the word “nigger” at least 200 times.

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Beware those Black Swans

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After completing my book The Black Swan, I spent some time meditating on the fragility of systems with the illusion of stability. This convinced me that the banking system was the mother of all accidents waiting to happen. I explained in the book that the best teachers of wisdom are the eldest, because they may have picked up invisible tricks that are absent from our epistemic routines and which help them survive in a world more complex than the one we think we understand. So being old implies a higher degree of resistance to "Black Swans" (events with the following three attributes: they lie outside the realm of regular expectations; they carry an extreme impact; and human nature makes us concoct explanations for their occurrence after the fact).

Innocent

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Scott Turow rose to fame with his first novel Presumed Innocent in which Tommy Molto charges his colleague and fellow prosecutor, Rusty Sabich with murder. Presumed Innocent was the precursor to John Grisham and the other lawyers turned novelists.Now for the second time, Rusty, who has spent twenty years rehabilitating himself so much so that he is a chief judge, is the main suspect when his wife is found dead in suspicious circumstances.Clever, page turning and a long time to wait for the sequel but well worth hanging in for.

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Think of a Number

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First novel from John Verdon and he has come up with a prettty full on story. Verdon's main character, Dave Gurney is an ex-detective enjoying his retirement and passing the time creating artworks which involve portraits of killers. He is contacted by a guy named Mark Mellery who he used to go to college with, and who has just recieved a strange and threatening letter and Gurney gets pulled in and before he knows he is back trying to make some sense of a brutal murder. Edgy and well paced Think of a Number has all the makings of a bestseller.Good sort of book to settle down with if the weather closes in.

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2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa Fact File

Perfect swot stuff for those young soccer fans. Teams by group, star player profiles and space to fill in the scores and lots of other puzzles and activities make this a great souvenir of the latest World Cup. Suitable for 7-11 year old fans.

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How to Survive a Leaky Home

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An essential for any home owner. Yvonne van Dongen discovered her home was a leaky building and so began a long process of trying to find out who was at fault and how could she remedy the problem. Accessible information about what to look for, how to get the right opinion and how to repair and reaccess the market value of the affected property along with some case studies make this a very handy and informative book on a very tricky subject.The $20 investment is a sound proposition considering what it could cost if you don't do your homework.

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The Breaking of Eggs

Whimsical and witty story of Feliks Zhukovski who has spent years travelling around Eastern Europe updating his travel guide and espousing his left-wing views. Times change and after the fall of Communism and now the fall of the Berlin Wall ( 1991) Feliks has to consider whether he will sell his business to an American company and if he does what will he do with the time he has left. Fans of Marina Lewycka or Muriel Barbery will appreciate this book but it deserves a wider audience, its a clever and enlightening piece of writing and an enjoyable read.

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Robert Ludlum's The Bourne Objective

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From the first page to the last a hot new thriller from the man who has taken over custody of Ludlum's Jason Bourne. This time it is a hunt and chase to find out what the engraving on a ring means and why have people been killed for it and can Bourne and Arkadin-his Russian adversary discover who the assassin is and are they on his list? Van Lustbader produces a seamless continuation in this his sixth Bourne book. Read and enjoy.

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The Dead Republic

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The final part in the trilogy that began with a Star Called Henry followed on by Oh, Play That Thing. it's now 1951 and Henry arrives back in Ireland after nearly 30 years ,with him is the movie producer John Ford who hires Henry as an advisor on a film he is making titled The Quiet Man which is losely based on Henry's life.Full of incidence and coincidence Roddy Doyle has written a major work based on the troubles and their resolution but keeping that deft touch that won him the Booker Prize for Paddy Clarke . I thought I wasn't going to like this book because of the subject matter but the part about making the movie is sheer genius and it drove me back to the internet to rewatch the clips for the Quiet Man. All in all I would recommend that you sit and read all three novels one after the other to get the breadth and cleverness of the whole story.

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'South Park' and the Informal Fatwa

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'South Park" is hilarious, right? Not any more.

Last week, Zachary Adam Chesser—a 20-year-old Muslim convert who now goes by the name Abu Talhah Al-Amrikee—posted a warning on the Web site RevolutionMuslim.com following the 200th episode of the show on Comedy Central. The episode, which trotted out many celebrities the show has previously satirized, also "featured" the Prophet Muhammad: He was heard once from within a U-Haul truck and a second time from inside a bear costume.

For this apparent blasphemy, Mr. Amrikee warned that co-creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone "will probably end up" like Theo van Gogh. Van Gogh, readers will remember, was the Dutch filmmaker who was brutally murdered in 2004 on the streets of Amsterdam. He was killed for producing "Submission," a film that criticized the subordinate role of women in Islam, with me.

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