Sunday books: for July 11, 2010.
- 1
Starr and Hiltzik breathe life into the back stories of two soaring monuments that forever changed California: the Golden Gate Bridge and Hoover Dam.
- 2
The Mexican intellectual with an unassailable independence of mind who refused to be cowed was a man of the people, known by Mexico City’s cab drivers as well as its leaders.
- 3
A Faulkneresque story of brotherly love and violence.
- 4
The first biography of the private William Golding is compassionate, witty and rhapsodic, even if it ebbs into occasional longueurs.
- 5
The U.K. professor takes a fresh look at Henry VIII’s second wife. His conclusions are sure to raise hackles.
- 6
In these humane stories, everyone is on drugs, and drugs are on everyone.
- 7
Also: ‘The Subtle Body’ and ‘Bayshore Summer’
- 8
In Lawerence Goldstone’s ‘The Astronomer,’ a young student is enmeshed in a plot to silence a revolutionary thinker. Plus: William Eamon’s ‘The Professor of Secrets’ shows the plight of Renaissance-era doctors.