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REFLECTIONS FROM THE SHADOW OF LOS ANGELES

A VERY BRIEF MEMOIR

A meditative and moving recollection conveyed in elegant prose.

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In this elegiac memoir, Schneider remembers his youth in the 1960s and ’70s in Southern California.

The author’s parents moved to Southern California as part of the “great migration of the early 1950s,” the beginning of the “golden age” of the state. He was a happy and creatively mischievous child—he learned, long before the internet demystified such things, that saltpeter could be used to make homemade gunpowder, a discovery that made for an unfortunately potent science project. His childhood had a wholesome quality; his family was obsessed with Disneyland (“our holy grail, the promised land”). Upon turning 9, the author requested and received a single share of Disney stock. Once, his Uncle Rob took him on a kind of safari expedition to see, for the first time, hippies, memorably described by Schneider as a “mysterious and fearsome subculture.” Tragically, the brightness of his childhood was dimmed by a horrific event—on the evening before his 10th birthday, the author was sexually assaulted by his grandfather, a violation that shook Schneider deeply and robbed him of something tenderly innocent. “Literally overnight, all my implicit and unquestioning trust, my deeply undifferentiated, unconditional life-long love and adoration and affection for him, had been replaced by hate. I hated him with a deep glaring hatred. I hated him more than anything in the world. And that hatred continued unabated for years.” The author’s openness is deeply admirable—without sentimentality or rancor, he invites readers into the most intimate recesses of his life. His writing is somehow both anecdotally informal and lapidary, and, at its best, it rises to the poetic. While a profoundly melancholic thread runs through this remembrance, it also has a good deal of lightsome, genuinely funny humor. This is a delightfully thoughtful memoir—one can only wish it were longer.

A meditative and moving recollection conveyed in elegant prose.

Pub Date: Feb. 15, 2024

ISBN: 9780996383547

Page Count: 80

Publisher: Impervious Press

Review Posted Online: Dec. 27, 2023

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  • New York Times Bestseller

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TANQUERAY

A blissfully vicarious, heartfelt glimpse into the life of a Manhattan burlesque dancer.

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A former New York City dancer reflects on her zesty heyday in the 1970s.

Discovered on a Manhattan street in 2020 and introduced on Stanton’s Humans of New York Instagram page, Johnson, then 76, shares her dynamic history as a “fiercely independent” Black burlesque dancer who used the stage name Tanqueray and became a celebrated fixture in midtown adult theaters. “I was the only black girl making white girl money,” she boasts, telling a vibrant story about sex and struggle in a bygone era. Frank and unapologetic, Johnson vividly captures aspects of her former life as a stage seductress shimmying to blues tracks during 18-minute sets or sewing lingerie for plus-sized dancers. Though her work was far from the Broadway shows she dreamed about, it eventually became all about the nightly hustle to simply survive. Her anecdotes are humorous, heartfelt, and supremely captivating, recounted with the passion of a true survivor and the acerbic wit of a weathered, street-wise New Yorker. She shares stories of growing up in an abusive household in Albany in the 1940s, a teenage pregnancy, and prison time for robbery as nonchalantly as she recalls selling rhinestone G-strings to prostitutes to make them sparkle in the headlights of passing cars. Complemented by an array of revealing personal photographs, the narrative alternates between heartfelt nostalgia about the seedier side of Manhattan’s go-go scene and funny quips about her unconventional stage performances. Encounters with a variety of hardworking dancers, drag queens, and pimps, plus an account of the complexities of a first love with a drug-addled hustler, fill out the memoir with personality and candor. With a narrative assist from Stanton, the result is a consistently titillating and often moving story of human struggle as well as an insider glimpse into the days when Times Square was considered the Big Apple’s gloriously unpolished underbelly. The book also includes Yee’s lush watercolor illustrations.

A blissfully vicarious, heartfelt glimpse into the life of a Manhattan burlesque dancer.

Pub Date: July 12, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-250-27827-2

Page Count: 192

Publisher: St. Martin's

Review Posted Online: July 27, 2022

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MARK TWAIN

Essential reading for any Twain buff and student of American literature.

A decidedly warts-and-all portrait of the man many consider to be America’s greatest writer.

It makes sense that distinguished biographer Chernow (Washington: A Life and Alexander Hamilton) has followed up his life of Ulysses S. Grant with one of Mark Twain: Twain, after all, pulled Grant out of near bankruptcy by publishing the ex-president’s Civil War memoir under extremely favorable royalty terms. The act reflected Twain’s inborn generosity and his near pathological fear of poverty, the prime mover for the constant activity that characterized the author’s life. As Chernow writes, Twain was “a protean figure who played the role of printer, pilot, miner, journalist, novelist, platform artist, toastmaster, publisher, art patron, pundit, polemicist, inventor, crusader, investor, and maverick.” He was also slippery: Twain left his beloved Mississippi River for the Nevada gold fields as a deserter from the Confederate militia, moved farther west to California to avoid being jailed for feuding, took up his pseudonym to stay a step ahead of anyone looking for Samuel Clemens, especially creditors. Twain’s flaws were many in his own day. Problematic in our own time is a casual racism that faded as he grew older (charting that “evolution in matters of racial tolerance” is one of the great strengths of Chernow’s book). Harder to explain away is Twain’s well-known but discomfiting attraction to adolescent and even preadolescent girls, recruiting “angel-fish” to keep him company and angrily declaring when asked, “It isn’t the public’s affair.” While Twain emerges from Chernow’s pages as the masterful—if sometimes wrathful and vengeful—writer that he is now widely recognized to be, he had other complexities, among them a certain gullibility as a businessman that kept that much-feared poverty often close to his door, as well as an overarchingly gloomy view of the human condition that seemed incongruous with his reputation, then and now, as a humanist.

Essential reading for any Twain buff and student of American literature.

Pub Date: May 13, 2025

ISBN: 9780525561729

Page Count: 1200

Publisher: Penguin Press

Review Posted Online: Feb. 1, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2025

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