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Books Wild Ideas
Caroline Fraser Servants of the Map, by Andrea Barrett (W.W. Norton, $25). Such passion, such longing, such hot-blooded lustif Andrea Barrett were writing about sex she'd rival Jackie Collins. But Barrett's new story collection is about 19th-century science, which inspires emotions in her characters usually reserved for more animate objects of desire. In the title story, a toiler on England's Grand Trigonometrical Survey of India, the project that mapped the Himalayas in the 1860s, leaves his wife for the tarty pleasures of botany. "Two Rivers" follows a pioneering paleontologist into the Dakota Badlands in 1853, and "Theories of Rain" describes a young woman's longing
The Shell Collector, by Anthony Doerr (Scribner, $23). With this debut collection, 28-year-old Anthony Doerr invades the fictional territory of Rick Bass and brightens the place up with touches of Borgesian fable. Like Bass, he centers his stories on taciturn hunters and fishers with deep reservoirs of emotioninept conversationalists and husbands whose senses only come alive in the woods. They know where the local bear hibernates and how trout overwinter, and can feel the minute changes in stream flow: "The tea-colored river purls around his waders, thick and clingy, the way river water gets when it is cold." Doerr's wilderness contains a touch of the magical, too: A blind shell collector on the coast of Kenya discovers a miracle cure in a snail's toxic sting. Tourists land a carp so huge it can't be photographed. A woman finds she can divine the dreams of animals by feeling them. "Want to know what he dreams?" she asks her husband after touching a grizzly's fur. "Blackberries. Trout. Dredging his flanks across river pebbles." These are tales that capture both the wonder and the icy indifference of nature, and Doerr tells them exceedingly well. B.B. The Dressing Station: A Surgeon's Chronicle of War and Medicine, by Jonathan Kaplan (Grove Press, $25). "Surgeons," writes this South African field doctor, "are permitted to be sometimes wrong but never in doubt." If so, Kaplan is an extraordinary exception, for in this memoir of his peripatetic career as a war-zone trauma surgeon, he admits to being "part butcher, part priest" and wonders despairingly if "there were more effective ways to stop people dying than by being a surgeon." That kind of insight, and a gift for grisly description, elevates Kaplan's narrative beyond adventure and medical soap operathis is the real thing. Working in Kurdistan after the Gulf
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TODAY'S NEWS UPDATE!
Just wait 'til the food rankings You may have seen the recent findings of the American Public Health Association and the Partnership ... ![]()
The Gear Junkie Scoop: Sugoi Majik ...
By Stephen Regenold Sugoi calls its new Majik shell "an elite waterproof jacket that offers ... ![]() advertisement
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