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By BOB HOOVER, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Four score and more books out for Lincoln celebration
By BOB HOOVER, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
"He said he felt like a little boy who had stubbed his toe in the dark. He said that he was too old to cry, but it hurt too much to laugh." -- Adlai Stevenson, quoting Abraham Lincoln, after losing the presidential election to Dwight Eisenhower in 1952.
It's Roth, but just half a loaf
By BOB HOOVER, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
'INDIGNATION." BY PHILIP ROTH (HOUGHTON MIFFLIN, $26.)
In Philip Roth's America, the Jew continues the Diaspora, never secure, never completely at home. The closest Roth's characters come to a brief haven is his native Newark -- "hard-working, coarse-grained, bribe-ridden, semi-xenophobic Irish-Italian-German-Slavic-Jewish-Negro Newark."
Following the low road in Scotland
By BOB HOOVER, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
"WHEN WILL THERE BE GOOD NEWS?" By Kate Atkinson (Little, Brown; $24.99)
"EXIT MUSIC." By Ian Rankin (Little, Brown; $24.99)
The history of Scotland is rife with bloodshed, poverty, betrayal and mystery, as Shakespeare reminded us, and things haven't changed much for the 21st-century Scots if these authors are accurate judges.
Seeing red over green-lit titles
By BOB HOOVER, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Although studies show us abandoning print in droves, the number of new books published every year increases, hitting more than 200,000 separate titles last year.
A look at the best books for fall
By BOB HOOVER, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Fall is shaping up as the busiest season for new releases ever.
The list of upcoming fiction is both broad and deep, particularly in new titles by old names. Here's the list, starting with a very familiar name:
"The Widows of Eastwick" by John Updike (Knopf, $24.95). Oct. 31.
Two new novels tackle broken lives and self-destruction
By BOB HOOVER, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
"AMERICA, AMERICA." BY ETHAN CANIN. RANDOM HOUSE. $27.
"THE GARDEN OF LAST DAYS." BY ANDRE DUBUS III. NORTON. $24.95.
We seldom know why books are published when they are. A new novel by Andre Dubus III, anointed by Oprah Winfrey and Hollywood for his 1999 "House of Sand and Fog," would seem to be a "big" fall release.
What to look for in fall's book lineup
By BOB HOOVER, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Summer has barely started and it's now time to think about the fall and beyond. Despite a flat economy and a spate of studies claiming reading is in trouble, the autumn-winter releases this year appear to be both substantial and plentiful.
A few to look for:
Debut novelists
Book about a sensational true-life murder case is corrected
By BOB HOOVER, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
After years of pointing out mistakes to publishers and getting the brush, I can now report partial vindication in my quixotic, annoying campaign to set the record straight about the lives of Evelyn Nesbit and Harry Thaw.
Rushdie's new novel an enchanting tale
By BOB HOOVER, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
It was hard to avoid stumbling over Salman Rushdie at BookExpoAmerica, the national book show held earlier this month in Los Angeles. The Indian-born novelist seemed to turn up everywhere, from the autograph sessions to the chi-chi parties. He must revel in the freedom after years of hiding from the fatwa pronounced against him by Iran for his 1988 novel, "The Satanic Verses."
On the critic's reading list: Naipaul, Sorensen and Tarbell
By BOB HOOVER, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
What I've been reading:
"Counselor: A Life at the Edge of History"
By Ted Sorensen
Harper, $27.95
Looking back on his 80 years of a life marked by responsibility, loyalty and circumspection, the former aide to President John F. Kennedy has written a memoir reflecting those traits.

