Plutopia

BROWN_Plutopolis Cover 2013Plutopia: Nuclear Families, Atomic Cities, and the Great Soviet and American Plutonium Disasters by Kate Brown (Oxford University Press)

Plutopia won the the 2014 George Perkins Marsh Prize from the American Society for Environmental History (ASEH) and the 2014 Ellis W. Hawley Prize from the Organization of American Historians (OAH).

In the aftermath of WWII and at the height of the Cold War frenzy, both the United States and Russia built plutonium plants around “model cities,” whose citizens were carefully selected and monitored by heavy security to work in these plants and produce plutonium as quickly as possible. In the U.S. it was the Hanford nuclear facility in Washington state and the Russian counterpart — modeled on Hanford — was the Maiak plant in the southern Urals. In over 40 years of operation they each invisibly issued 200 million curies of radioactive isotopes into the environment, endangering not only these model citizens who became sick from radioactivity, but also the rivers, fields and forests surrounding the towns making the areas uninhabitable. Kate Brown — author and academic — has been working for over five years on this untold story and Plutopia is the first book to narrate the history of these disasters in tandem. Brown speaks Russian and other related languages fluently and is the first journalist to get the Russians to relate their experiences in their own words; this, along with her first-hand observations of both areas, access to previously untouched archives and the stories of the Americans results in a powerful narrative and major work.

“Turning up a surprising amount of hitherto hidden material and talkative survivors, Brown (History/Univ. of Maryland, Baltimore County; A Biography of No Place: From Ethnic Borderland to Soviet Heartland, 2005) writes a vivid, often hair-raising history of the great plutonium factories and the privileged cities built around them. … An angry but fascinating account of negligence, incompetence and injustice justified (as it still is) in the name of national security.”
—Kirkus (starred review)

“An unflinching and chilling account.”
—Seattle Times

“Harrowing… Meticulously researched… Plutopia has important messages for those managing today’s nuclear facilities, arguing for caution and transparency.”
—Nature

“One of the Cold War’s more striking perversities never made it to public view. … Brown is a good writer, and she describes with precision the construction of the two sites (a difficult process in the U.S. case, an unbelievably horrid one in the Russian case), the hazardous occupations undertaken by their inhabitants, and the consciously contrived bubbles of socioeconomic inequality both places became.”
—Foreign Affairs

“Brown’s account is unique, partisan and occasionally personal in that she includes some of her thoughts about interviews she conducted… But because she is open and thorough about her sources, those are strengths to be celebrated, not weaknesses to be deplored. It also means her book is engaging, honest and, in the end, entirely credible.”
—New Scientist

“Kate Brown has written a provocative and original study of two cities — one American, one Soviet — at the center of their countries’ nuclear weapons complexes. The striking parallels she finds between them help us — impel us — to see the Cold War in a new light. Plutopia will be much discussed. It is a fascinating and important book.”
—David Holloway, author of Stalin and the Bomb

“Kate Brown has produced a novel and arresting account of the consequences of Cold War Nuclear policies on both sides of the Iron Curtain. Interweaving documentary research in government archives, reviews and revisions of the public record, and a host of personal interviews with the citizens — perpetrators, victims, and witnesses — Brown’s Plutopia makes a lasting contribution to the continuing chronicle of the human and environmental disasters of the atomic age.”
—Peter Bacon Hales, author of Atomic Spaces: Living on the Manhattan Project

The Vast Unknown

VAST UNKNOWN_finalThe Vast Unknown: America’s First Ascent of Everest by Broughton Coburn (Crown)

Fifty years after the greatest climb in American history, this remarkable story of men and mountain is told in full.

From the bestselling author of Everest: Mountain Without Mercy, The Vast Unknown is a riveting chronicle of the iconic first American expedition to Mt. Everest in May 1963.

“A sweeping account of the first American visitors to Mount Everest’s peak… Coburn’s unhurried, character-driven narrative pays scrupulous attention to the climb’s every detail and to Everest’s majestic natural history… An exhilarating slice of American adventure-sporting history.”
—Kirkus

“Coburn brings this exciting chapter of American mountaineering history to life.”
—Library Journal

“Gripping… Not just another book about mountain climbing, this is also a story of America in the early 1960s.”
—Booklist

“Broughton Coburn has written a book to renew our faith in what it means to believe in each other, and in ourselves. This is what it looked like when ordinary men of extraordinary courage and self-discipline worked through tragedy, dissent, and hardship not for individual glory but toward a common goal. When were we last this self-effacing, this optimistic, this outrageously can-do? A compulsively entertaining read.”
—Alexandra Fuller, author of Cocktail Hour Under the Tree of Forgetfulness

“This book is like a time capsule from the Cold War, showing how in 1963, a bunch of crazy American mountaineers embarked on a plan to ascend via the never-before-summited west ridge, while racing a Chinese group to the top.”
—Sacramento Bee

Ernie K-Doe

Ernie K-Doe: k-doe_cover - Website The R&B Emperor of New Orleans by Ben Sandmel (The Historic New Orleans Collection)

Kirkus Best of 2012
2013 Humanities Book of the Year from the Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities

“Sandmel offers a terrific biography of the much-missed performer. Packed with anecdotes, candid photos, and interviews from those who knew K-Doe best… Rounded out with a thorough index and discography of K-Doe’s recordings, this is essential reading for those interested in the unique culture of New Orleans”
Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“A vital, essential addition to the shelf of great books about New Orleans.”
Kirkus (starred review)

“With passionate R&B-detective research and eyewitness accounts from local legends like Dr. John and Allen Toussaint, Ben Sandmel vividly captures K-Doe’s wild rise out of poverty, the riches on his many 45s and his long, strange rebirth as a Crescent City treasure.”
Rolling Stone (four star review)

Planetfall

Planetfall: New Solar System Visions by Michael Benson (Abrams)

Taking a quasi-cinematic approach, Planetfall showcases the truly extraordinary images of Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, the Sun and Earth (among others) like we have never seen them before.

“All retrospectives, art and otherwise, should shock us awake the way this one does… Planetfall is a book of science through and through, but it also deepens our sense of the miracle and the mystery of the universe, of our eye-blink lives.”
The New York Times

“This is the way I like to tour the solar system. Find a chair. Sit. Turn some pages. Gaze. Wonder.”
—NPR.com

“Beautiful interplanetary images.”
—MSNBC.com

“Beautiful visions of what’s out there.”
The Huffington Post

“To encounter a Benson landscape is to be in awe of not only how he sees the universe, but also the ways in which he composes the never-ending celestial ballet.”
—Time.com

See More From Author

The Holy or the Broken

The Holy or the Broken: Leonard Cohen, Jeff Buckley, and the Unlikely Ascent of “Hallelujah” by Alan Light (Atria/Simon and Schuster)

When Leonard Cohen first recorded “Hallelujah” in 1984, he had no idea the song would become one of the most loved, most performed, and most misunderstood compositions of its time.  Looking at the history and impact of “Hallelujah” via extensive interviews and critical analysis, THE HOLY OR THE BROKEN is a biography of a song – its creation, its interpretation, its fixed and changing messages over time. First picked up by former Velevet Underground member John Cale, the song reached a haunting apotheosis with Jeff Buckley’s classic, melancholy version. In the past 25 years it has been recorded and performed by hundreds of artists from Bono to Bon Jovi, Justin Timberlake to Celine Dion, Willie Nelson to Susan Boyle, been placed on various lists of the best songs of all time, and served as a national balm after 9/11. Given the song’s powerful essence, its ambiguities and its remarkable history, the story of “Hallelujah” offers new and far-reaching possibilities for how we look at music.

 

“Former Vibe and Spin editor Alan Light’s (The Skills to Pay the Bills: The Story of the Beastie Boys) brisk, engrossing study of ‘Hallelujah’ comes on the heels of Sylvie Simmons’ definitive Cohen biography, but this book is brilliantly revelatory on its own. […] A masterful work of critical journalism.”
Kirkus (starred review)

“A charming ode to a pop music phenomenon…”
Publishers Weekly

“Thoughtful and illuminating… [Mr. Light] is a fine companion for this journey through one song’s changing fortunes.”
The New York Times

“A combination mystery tale, detective story, pop critique and sacred psalm of its own.”
The Daily News

“A deeply researched mixture of critical analysis and cultural archaeology.”
Los Angeles Times

“Keeps the pages turning… A well-constructed, consistently enlightening book, which should have Cohen devotees and music fans alike seeking out their favorite version of the song.”
The Boston Globe

“Fresh and compelling.”
Entertainment Weekly

“Reverentially details every stage in the [song’s] evolution—and along the way, he reveals the compelling stories behind some of its most iconic interpretations.”
The Atlantic

“Absorbing…Eloquent… Light expertly unpacks the song’s long, strange journey to ubiquity.”
The Village Voice

“A must for music fans.”
Booklist (starred review)

New Atlantis

Swenson__Atlantis_featuredNew Atlantis: Musicians Battle for the Survival of New Orleans by John Swenson (Oxford University Press)

Now in paperback!  

At its most intimate level, music heals our emotional wounds and inspires us. At its most public, it unites people across cultural boundaries. But can it rebuild a city? That’s the central question posed in New Atlantis, journalist John Swenson’s beautifully detailed account of the musical artists working to save America’s most colorful and troubled metropolis: New Orleans.

New Atlantis is a fast-moving hybrid of richly detailed journalism and compelling partisan memoir.”
— David Fricke, Rolling Stone

“A solid, rewarding book.”
— Kirkus Reviews

“An all-inclusive and engrossing study of New Orleans music and life in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. Highly recommended.”
— Library Journal

“This intimate portrait of a city that lost so much yet still has so much to offer captures the resiliency of its inhabitants and their stubborn determination to never give up.”
— Booklist

“Intimate, intelligent and passionate… Swenson’s concern for the future of the music culture is as personal as it is journalistic – probably more so – and reading him, you can’t help but care, too.”
— The Times-Picayune

“The eloquent central narrative beautifully evokes New Orleans, alongside interviews with those who, like the Neville Brothers and Big Chief Monk Boudreaux, lived through the deluge, scraped out the sludge and faced down the National Guard.”
— Financial Times

I’m Your Man: The Life Of Leonard Cohen

I’m Your Man: The Life of Leonard Cohen by Sylvie Simmons (Ecco/HarperCollins)

We are delighted to announce the publication of Sylvie’s new book. Not only did it receive glowing reviews, but it went straight to the New York Times bestseller list!

I’m Your Man is the major, soul-searching biography that Leonard Cohen deserves… a mesmerizing labor of love.”
—Janet Maslin, The New York Times

“A new gold standard of Cohen bios.”
Los Angeles Times

“This is the bio Cohen long deserved, and it makes every prior Cohen bio practically unnecessary.”
Rolling Stone (four-and-a-half star review)

“An elegant, deeply researched life of the Canadian musician, poet and novelist. […] It’s hard to imagine a better [book] than veteran music journalist Simmons’s work. […] Taking on a looming subject with intelligence and wit, Simmons manages to take the full measure of her man.”
Kirkus (starred review)

“Simmons’ rich, compelling and provocative book… is a star-studded but also frank account of how the music industry really works and, at the same time, a discerning portrait of one especially important musician.”
Jewish Journal Los Angeles

Handmaking America

Handmaking America: A Back-to-Basics Pathway to a Revitalized American Democracy by Bill Ivey (Counterpoint)

Featured on PBS’s NewsHour

America has survived an economic near-disaster. While the state of employment and housing will one day improve, we will never return to the delusional prosperity that defined the first decade of the 21st century. Progressives should hold the key to quality of life in our coming post-consumerist society, but today Democrats have become timid, our vision of the good life marginalized by three decades of partisan attacks and the think tank-induced assumption that an unfettered marketplace, low taxes, and international adventurism will somehow give us an America capable of inspiring the world. Handmaking America, reaches back to the Arts-and-Crafts roots of progressive thought, confronting the way right-wing ideology and the power of post-industrial capitalism have undermined work, government; our very way of life, advancing a practical, achievable vision for a good society that can use the capacity of government to recover the essential strength of the American idea.

Kicking and Dreaming

Kicking and Dreaming: A Story of Heart, Soul, and Rock & Roll by Ann and Nancy Wilson with Charles Cross (It Books/HarperCollins)

A National Bestseller

From the women who brought us the wicked riff of “Barracuda,” the mystery of “Magic Man” and the sadness and beauty of “Alone,” in collaboration with the talented Charles R. Cross (author of landmark biographies of Kurt Cobain and Jimi Hendrix) comes the groundbreaking story of two women who broke gender barriers, and broke all the rules about rock music.

“Righteously entertaining…[it] shows just what it’s like to be a woman who rocks, then and now.”
—New York Daily News

“Sisters Ann and Nancy Wilson — better known as the faces and voices of Heart — look back on the personal and professional struggles and triumphs that define their legacy as one of rock’s pioneering female-fronted, creatively autonomous acts.”
—USA Today

“Thorough and entertaining…[Kicking and Dreaming is] satisfying for its breadth and spirit… the Wilsons write movingly and with a sense of humor.”
—Miami Herald

“An interesting duet that details precisely how women truly rock.”
—Kirkus Reviews