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Here Comes the Bookmobile With Hot, New Summer Pages!

Thu, 05/29/2008 - 2:45pm by CitizenSugar
578 Views - 34 comments

What to read, what to read? With serious beach towel time or an empty nightstand, you might just be looking for a new book. Here are some brand spanking new releases that I'm checking out right now.

Goodnight Bush
With lyrical rhymes and Where's Waldo? detail, this parody of the childhood bedtime favorite Goodnight Moon bids farewell to the Bush administration. Here's a little sample:

Goodnight Constitution and goodnight evolution. Goodnight
democracy and goodnight privacy. Goodnight old growth trees, goodnight detainees. Goodnight allies, goodnight Abu Ghraib 'Cheese!'

OK, I might not be ordering that one, but there's more — polygamy! Fascism! Oh, my! For more Citizen-approved books, piquing my interest read more.

Stolen Innocence: My Story of Growing Up in a Polygamous Sect, Becoming a Teenage Bride, and Breaking Free of Warren Jeffs

A memoir by the 21-year-old star witness in polygamist Warren Jeffs' 2007 trial. Elissa Wall tells all about her forced marriage, the impenetrable mindset of the FLDS, and her long-awaited escape.

Liberal Fascism: The Secret History of the American Left, From Mussolini to the Politics of Meaning

Today "fascist" is usually an insult slung at conservatives. National
Review
editor Jonah Goldberg reminds us that history's great fascists were first socialists (liberal is pushing it). Look for controversial connections between fascist themes and American pop culture.

Final Salute: A Story of Unfinished Lives

Imagine having the job of knocking on doors to tell mothers and fathers their child was dead. Pulitzer prize-winning journalist Jim Sheeler did. He spent two years shadowing the marine in charge of casualty notification to give us vignettes of insight.

What's on your reading list this summer?

on Yahoo!

34 Comments Add a Comment

  • stephley's picture
    stephley
    1

    Okay, I'd buy Good Night Bush and the daughter I read Good Night Moon to more than a million times is old enough to 'enjoy' it now too... I'll skip the others. If I need to get depressed, I'll go to the grocery store, then read my receipt.

    25 weeks 23 hours ago Report Comment
  • em113's picture
    em113
    2

    Good Night Bush sounds hysterical!
    The polygamy book would just make me feel too upset, that stuff is heartbreaking.

    25 weeks 22 hours ago Report Comment
  • Lainetm's picture
    Lainetm
    4

    Snippy, juvenile "books" like "Goodnight Bush"--from any side of an issue--just turn me off to whatever kool-aid they're selling. If you can't present a rational, well-reasoned argument, then I'm not interested.

    25 weeks 20 hours ago Report Comment
  • yesteryear's picture
    yesteryear
    5

    lighten up - it's a joke! if we can't laugh at things then we are all just angry people... i think this is excellent - and it's going to make these guys a ton of money. good for them!

    25 weeks 19 hours ago Report Comment
  • em1282's picture
    em1282
    7

    Well, I think it's funny, but then again I also worship at the altar of Colbert...so yeah, I'm gonna find that funny. Smiling

    Next up on my reading list is "Loving Frank" about an affair between Frank Lloyd Wright and one of his (married) clients. Hot architext sex! Eye-wink Just finished "The Emperor of Scent" written by the awesome Chandler Burr. It basically combines science and beauty (specifically perfume), so it's perfect for a geek like me.

    25 weeks 19 hours ago Report Comment
  • flutterpie's picture
    flutterpie
    8

    i usually dont believe in indoctrinating kids into politics too soon, but that is hilarious!

    25 weeks 18 hours ago Report Comment
  • Kimpossible's picture
    Kimpossible
    9

    lainetm, I agree with you. And YY I realize that some may find this a joke, or funny, but I find it sad that this is what we as society find humorous.

    em1282 I have that Loving Frank book on my nightstand to read soon. I'm currently reading The Boleyn Inheritance.

    25 weeks 17 hours ago Report Comment
  • stephley's picture
    stephley
    10

    Yeah, but some are us are more sad at what reality has become in this society - the America I grew up in didn't torture people so routinely that was standard fare in jokes and summer movies.

    25 weeks 17 hours ago Report Comment
  • cine_lover's picture
    cine_lover
    13

    I have, Liberal Fascism: The Secret History of the American Left, From Mussolini to the Politics of Meaning, sitting on my night stand just waiting to be read. I can't wait!

    It is next in line after Atlas Shrugged.

    25 weeks 9 hours ago Report Comment
  • Kimpossible's picture
    Kimpossible
    15

    Stephly we don't know that - it may just not have been reported, it may have been kept secret. Not that that makes it right. also, it still isn't something to joke about and make fun of imo.

    25 weeks 7 hours ago Report Comment
  • yesteryear's picture
    yesteryear
    16

    and kim, if our society didn't have the ability to laugh at itself and its leaders we'd be living in (gasp) communist china. even if you're not laughing along, chill out and thank god you live in a country where you have the ability to.

    25 weeks 7 hours ago Report Comment
  • Kimpossible's picture
    Kimpossible
    17

    YY I think you'd be hard pressed to find anyone more grateful to be living in this country or more grateful for the freedoms we have. I just have a different idea of what is humorous is all.

    25 weeks 7 hours ago Report Comment
  • syako's picture
    syako
    18

    well it could look a whole lot more like China depending on the nov. elections. Eye-wink

    sorry, I couldn't resist.

    25 weeks 7 hours ago Report Comment
  • colleenb's picture
    colleenb
    19

    I don't think Goodnight Bush is meant for kids, flutterpie. Apparently, there is a line of coke next to GB's bed that slowly disappears with the turn of each page. And the clock is always on 9:11.

    25 weeks 7 hours ago Report Comment
  • piper23's picture
    piper23
    20

    My daughter's favorite book is Goodnight Moon. Its a nightime staple in our house. On that note I wish that they had chosen another book to parody.

    The Clinton Administration were believers in rendition. Maybe the torture wasn't done on our land but it was done none the less. But I'm sure that they didn't come up with the idea. I'd be willing to bet that torture has been around throughout my lifetime.

    25 weeks 7 hours ago Report Comment
  • cine_lover's picture
    cine_lover
    22

    I don't know if I am a fan yet. This will be my first book I have read by her. I have a feeling I will love it.

    25 weeks 6 hours ago Report Comment
  • lilkimbo's picture
    lilkimbo
    24

    You will love it, cine! Atlas Shrugged is better than The Fountainhead, in my opinion. I actually read Atlas Shrugged first, as well, and loved it. I read The Fountainhead a little later on and I like it, but not as much.

    25 weeks 5 hours ago Report Comment
  • stephley's picture
    stephley
    25

    Torture hasn't been a staple in the U.S. for more than eight years.
    My 12-year old loves Good Night Moon and she knows enough about what's going on in the country to have read the parody and she got it. I think its important to teach a child to respect but question authority, and to be very clear on the limits of powerful people.

    25 weeks 5 hours ago Report Comment
  • lilkimbo's picture
    lilkimbo
    26

    I think 12 is an ok age, Stephley, but the book is obviously geared toward adults, not children the same age as the children Good Night Moon is geared toward.

    I saw the Bush book last weekend and didn't really find it funny at all. I know it might be "ok" to make fun of torture now, but I will never find it funny or tasteful.

    25 weeks 5 hours ago Report Comment
  • yesteryear's picture
    yesteryear
    27

    i dont think they are making fun of torture... i think they are using comedy to point out the fact that we are now committing torture. there's a huge difference between those two things.

    25 weeks 5 hours ago Report Comment
  • lilkimbo's picture
    lilkimbo
    30

    Goodnight Bush. That's why I'm talking about, at least, and I think that was directed at me, yy.

    25 weeks 5 hours ago Report Comment
  • piper23's picture
    piper23
    31

    I have an 18 month old so I don't think she would get it. But I look forward to her choosing her own books at age 12 and forming her own opinions.

    25 weeks 5 hours ago Report Comment
  • cine_lover's picture
    cine_lover
    32

    I will read Fountain Head later. I have heard nothing but amazing things about Atlas so I can't wait to start. I have just been too lazy lately.

    25 weeks 4 hours ago Report Comment
  • stephley's picture
    stephley
    33

    Well my daughter's curiosity about the world was likely urged along by seeing the Florida recount and 9/11 coverage - maybe yours will grow up in quieter times.

    25 weeks 4 hours ago Report Comment

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