Loud and Clear FROM THE PUBLISHER
In this remarkable book, Anna Quindlen, one of America's favorite novelists and a Pulitzer Prize -- winning columnist, once again gives us wisdom, opinions, insights, and reflections about current events and modern life. With her trademark insight and her special ability to convey the impact public events have on ordinary lives, Quindlen here combines commentary on American society and the world at large with reflections on being a woman, a writer, and a mother. In these pieces, first written for Newsweek and The New York Times, Loud and Clear takes on topics ranging from social change to raising children, from the political and emotional aftermath of September 11 to personal values, from the impact on individuals of global events to the growth that can be gained by spending summer days staring into the middle distance. Grounding the public in the private, connecting people to each other and to the greater world, Quindlen encourages us to develop authentic lives, even as she serves as a catalyst for political and social change.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
Bestselling author Quindlen (One True Thing; A Short Guide to a Happy Life; etc.), a veteran reporter and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for commentary, couldn't have picked a more apt title for her latest collection of columns from Newsweek and the New York Times. Whether or not readers agree with Quindlen's opinions on everything from youth culture to gun control, these razor-sharp musings will open avenues of debate and discussion long after the book is closed. Quindlen is at the top of her game when she turns her eagle eye on the tiny threads that make up the fiber of domestic life. After all, "The world of children and child-rearing is social history writ small but indelible, whether it's the minutia of Barbie dolls and Power Ranger action figures or the phenomenon of books like Harry Potter or The Cat in the Hat. It's a shared experience, not just for the children but for their parents, and a snapshot of where we were then." The only weak link in this memorable book is the scant connective tissue between sections. Quindlen divides the essays by theme-heart, mind, soul, voice and body-and while the individual pieces shine, the overviews of each topic provide thin explanations for why they are grouped this way. Overall, however, this is not a matter of great concern. Quindlen's columns speak for themselves, loud and clear. (On sale Apr. 6) Forecast: Although all of these essays have been previously published, the book should still attract an enormous number of buyers. National TV and radio interviews in New York and Washington, D.C., as well as print ads and a chapter sampler promo, will ensure high visibility. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
Library Journal
As a New York Times columnist and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, Quindlen burnishes the minutiae of everyday life into universal truths, both private and shared: families, mothers, aging, success, feminism, 9/11, the war in Iraq, Catholicism. This compilation, penned between 1994 and 2002, radiates insight, conscience, and thoughtful analysis. The author stimulates, illuminates, and aggravates, her novelist side nailing visual images and wrapping each vignette in narrative symmetry. Essays in the abridgment were chosen by Quindlen and are uncut, delivered in her own kitchen table voice (the listener envisions a cigar dangling from her mouth). In the unabridged program, Quindlen reads only the introduction, the remainder smoothly narrated by actress Kathe Mazur with timeless, placeless diction that, after listening to Quindlen herself, initially seems all dressed up in her mother's high heels and smeared with lipstick. Either the abridged or unabridged version would be a worthwhile purchase. Recommended for public library nonfiction and current events collections.-Judith Robinson, Univ. at Buffalo, NY Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
AudioFile
Somewhere among these fine collected essays, previously published in THE NEW YORK TIMES, is one on speeches that translate well to print. Turn that around and you have this productiona selection of Quindlen's musings on the pleasures and absurdities of today's society which, with the help of a superb reading, become audio gems. With a clear voice and an unhurried pace, Kathe Mazur picks up on Quindlen's joy in her children, her ache for her long-dead mother, her outrage at the notion that Christmas spending can ease the pain of 9/11, and her puzzlement that "family time" must be scheduled. Although the essays have a definite point of view, Mazur avoids a preachy tone, as does the author. Only the difficulty in relocating a specific column mars this terrific listening experience. J.B.G. © AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine
Kirkus Reviews
Steam-cleaned opinions from novelist and columnist Quindlen (Blessings, 2002, etc.). Light, appealing, and devoid of nutritional value, this selection of New York Times and Newsweek essays dating from the early 1990s to last year doesn't demand that readers think much. Since the author's opinions are never surprising, they eventually become background noise. This is a shame, because much of what Quindlen has to say is valuable, if shopworn. She fulminates against cigarettes, the death penalty, and the abuse of women-all worthy targets, though Quindlen's garden-variety critiques will change few minds. She reminds parents that child-rearing is an improvised dance in which you must trust yourself: "There is no formula, much as I once looked for one in the pages of Spock and Penelope Leach." (It's puzzling that she fails to mention that this is precisely Spock's credo.) She has intelligent things to say on alcoholism, the mother myth, and, in perhaps the most valuable pages here, the work of Pulitzer-winning poet Yusef Komunyakaa. She can also display a measure of elitism in an attack on racial profiling (posing the coy riddle of why a Princeton professor and a Harvard-educated attorney were pulled over by the police) and remarkable naivete in a paean to free speech ("if there is any justification for an imperial America, it is because this is the jewel in its crown"). Occasionally, though these occasions are mercifully rare, she'll make you want to run screaming into the woods: "Then the moment itself, when the first feeble sentence, often merely a prelude to better things, appears as my fingers play word jazz on the keyboard." Rather than float a homily, it would be nice for Quindlen to atleast occasionally offer a knot or a koan. Agency: ICM