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  Robert - Teen 2.0 (2009)
Posted by: Simon - 12-16-2025, 06:53 PM - Replies (1)

   


This book changed my life. Its author, Robert Epstein, demonstrates how we invented adolescence and all its limits. Every right is put on trial: right to vote, right to marry, right to have sex, right to go on war, right to work, right to go or leave school and much more. Every single argument is backed up by a large amount of evidence. When I first read this book, I thought teens were irresponsible and unable to do anything. After reading this, I had opened my mind on almost every topic regarding kids and teens. 

Teens in America today have less freedom than prisoners and members of the armed forces. Teen 2.0 calls for a paradigm shift in the way we think about teenagers. He argues that the turbulence we see in modern adolescence doesn't even exist in every cultural around the world. Teenagers want and need meaningful responsibility, as well as positive adult interactions and mentors. The book explains the tension teens live in today, and why teens act the way they do. He argues for recognition of competence in teens in several key areas like love, creativity, and art. The book also includes the young person's bill of rights, and practical tips to finding the adult in your teen.

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  Other Voices, Other Rooms (1948)
Posted by: Simon - 12-16-2025, 06:45 PM - Replies (1)

       



Truman Capote’s first novel is a story of almost supernatural intensity and inventiveness, an audacious foray into the mind of a sensitive boy as he seeks out the grown-up enigmas of love and death in the ghostly landscape of the deep South.
At the age of twelve, Joel Knox is summoned to meet the father who abandoned him at birth. But when Joel arrives at the decaying mansion in Skully’s Landing, his father is nowhere in sight. What he finds instead is a sullen stepmother who delights in killing birds; an uncle with the face—and heart—of a debauched child; and a fearsome little girl named Idabel who may offer him the closest thing he has ever known to love. 

Quote:    Below: The iconic photograph of Truman Capote by Harold Halma used on the cover of Other Voices, Other Rooms in 1948.

    The Los Angeles Times reported that Capote looked "as if he were dreamily contemplating some outrage against conventional morality."

    Gerald Clarke wrote in his 1988 book Capote: A Biography, "The famous photograph: Harold Halma's picture on the dust jacket of Other Voices, Other Rooms caused as much comment and controversy as the prose inside. Truman claimed that the camera had caught him off guard, but in fact he had posed himself and was responsible for both the picture and the publicity … [it gave Capote] not only the literary, but also the public personality he had always wanted."

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  The Rich Pay Late (1969)
Posted by: Simon - 12-16-2025, 06:40 PM - Replies (1)

   


The Rich Pay Late finds a group of thrusting young hopefuls down from university, feeling their way through the world of politics, journalism and business. Jude Holbrook covets the influential journal Strix edited by that acned acme of slippery pragmatism, Somerset Lloyd-James. But the ‘rather common’ Jude ('Are you sure he was at Winchester?') finds an obstacle to his burning ambition in his watery and ingenuous partner, Donald Salinger, who falls prey to the parasitic voluptuary, Vanessa Drew. Also ranged against Holbrook in the battle for Strix are his own epicurean patron, 'Young' Lord Philby, man of honour Peter Morrison M.P., and of course, the multi-faceted jewel of casuistry, Somerset Lloyd-James himself. So take your seats, ladies and gentlemen, Maintenant le jeu recommence, the game begins once more ...

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  Come Like Shadows (1972)
Posted by: Simon - 12-16-2025, 06:35 PM - Replies (1)

   


Come Like Shadows is the eighth novel in Simon Raven’s bestselling ‘Alms for Oblivion’ series. In it he traces the continuing checkered career of Fielding Gray, ex-soldier and writer, who is persuaded by his friend Tom Llewyllyn to join a film unit in Corfu as script adaptor for a movie of The Odyssey. Arch-cad and lecher Fielding strikes problems with opposing interpretations of the epic - from pornographic to orthodox Marxist - but with a little studied manipulation he contrives to indulge most of his dubious tastes outside script writing, what with the kinky leading lady Sasha and a neat blackmail deal on the side. But this kind of wheeling and dealing has a habit of backfiring ...

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  The Sabre Squadron (1967)
Posted by: Simon - 12-16-2025, 06:27 PM - Replies (1)

   


When Daniel Mond left Cambridge for the summer for a few months’ research at a provincial German university into the theories of a mathematical genius fourteen years dead, he had little idea what lay ahead. Nights of revelry with a group of high-living British Army officers alternated with bouts of mounting unease as his researches took on an increasingly sinister aspect. As undercover British, American and German agents turned on the pressure to force Daniel to disclose the horrific secret he had unintentionally discovered, he was driven to the very edge of terror. And over it... The Sabre Squadron has all the successful ingredients of Simon Raven’s other novels, plus a compulsively exciting new element of suspense and intrigue.

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