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Also, big savings on the 1998 National Book Award winners! I N T E R V I E W T A B L E+T A L K
Cast your vote for the worst so-called classic of the 20th century in the Books area of Table Talk
B O O K C A S E
R E C E N T L Y
They Call Me Mad Dog! A Story for Bitter, Lonely People
The Endurance: Shackleton's Legendary Antarctic Expedition
A First Rate Tragedy: Robert Falcon Scott and the Race to the South
Pole
Confessions of a Late Night Talk Show Host: The Autobiography of Larry Sanders
Grown Up All Wrong: 75 Great Rock and Pop Artists from Vaudeville to Techno
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T H E+G A R N E R
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Both Anthony Holden's "Charles at Fifty" and Penny Junor's "Charles: Victim or Villain?" explore with intimate detail the public and private life of the vilified and misunderstood man who will be king. But while both leap to wildly different conclusions about his character, neither offers much of a case that Charles would be a very compelling figure were it not for the fact that his mom gets to wear a tiara at work. The prince is an unlikely poster boy for the boomer generation. He's not, after all, the kind of guy one imagines ever having owned a bong or a copy of "Electric Ladyland." But Anthony Holden, the author of two previous bios of Charles (as well as other works on the royals and Diana), is adept at showing both a sadly removed-from-reality figurehead and a single parent who, like it or not, must one day assume the family business. N E X T+P A G E | Charles and Diana: Warts-and-all The Winners are in! Read Salon's reviews of the 1998 National Book Award
winners: Slaves in the Family |
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