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The best good and bad quotes last forever or at least until the end of the year … for example, making your “Don’t Tase Me, Bro!” T-shirt still a worthy Christmas present.
While a delicious quote on a T-shirt might bleach out in the wash, a book of memorable quotes lasts a lot longer.
Fred R. Shapiro, an associate librarian and lecturer at the Yale Law School, is the editor of “The Yale Book of Quotations,” released earlier this year after six years of research. It contains about 13,000 quotes, each extensively researched to verify its origin. He expects to add about 1,000 more quotes — mostly modern — for the next edition of his book in about five years.
More recently, Shapiro released a list of the 10 most memorable quotes of 2007. With help from the Associated Press, here’s the list from bottom to top:
10. “I think as far as the adverse impact on the nation around the world, this administration has been the worst in history.”
Former President Jimmy Carter, referring to the Bush administration in an interview with the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette newspaper
9. “I mean, you got the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy. I mean, that’s a storybook, man.”
Sen. Joseph Biden, referring to rival Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama
8. “(I have) a wide stance when going to the bathroom.”
Idaho Republican Sen. Larry Craig, explaining why his foot touched the foot of an undercover police officer in an airport men’s room
7. “I’m not going to get into a name-calling match with somebody who has a 9 percent approval rating.”
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Democrat, referring to Republican Vice President Dick Cheney
6. “There’s only three things he (Republican presidential candidate and former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani) mentions in a sentence: a noun and a verb and 9/11.”
Sen. Joseph Biden, speaking during a debate for Democratic presidential candidates
5. “I don’t recall.”
Former U.S. Attorney Alberto Gonzales’ repeated response to questions from members of Congress about the firing of U.S. attorneys
4. “That’s some nappy-headed hos there.”
Radio personality Don Imus, referring to the Rutgers University women’s basketball team
3. “In Iran we don’t have homosexuals like in your country.”
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, during a speaking engagement at Columbia University in New York
2. “I personally believe that U.S. Americans are unable to do so because some people out there in our nation don’t have maps and I believe that our education like such as in South Africa and the Iraq and everywhere like such as and I believe that they should our education over here in the U.S. should help the U.S. or should help South Africa and should help the Iraq and the Asian countries so we will be able to build up our future for us.”
Lauren Upton, the South Carolina contestant in the Miss Teen America contest, when asked why one-fifth of Americans cannot find the U.S on a map
1. “Don’t tase me, bro.”
Andrew Meyer, a senior at the University of Florida, after being hauled away by campus police during a speech made by Sen. John Kerry.
Don’t Tase Me, Bro! The Video
Now that I’ve refreshed your memory on some top unforgettable quotes of 2007, I recommend getting your hands on an extensive list found in “The Yale Book of Quotations.”
This from Booklist’s Carolyn Mulac:
To paraphrase Ira Gershwin, “on every [page] that you turn you meet a notable with a statement that is eminently quotable” in this collection. According to editor Shapiro, this is “the first quotation book to be compiled using state-of-the-art research methods to seek out quotations and to trace quotation sources.” He compares his approach with that of the Oxford English Dictionary: he, too, traces words back to their earliest possible usages. Using a variety of electronic sources, such as JSTOR, LexisNexis, ProQuest Historical Newspapers, andTimes Digital Archive, scores of quotations were verified, and in many cases reverified. The more than 12,000 quotations collected here span a wide array of subjects, from literature, philosophy, and history to science, business, and politics.
Quotations are presented alphabetically by the name of the author or speaker. Shakespeare and the Bible, the mother lodes of quotations, are amply represented, but emphasis is on “modern and American materials.” Children’s authors, who are often ignored in other dictionaries, are quoted here. There are a number of special sections devoted to particular types of quotations, among them advertising slogans, ballads, film lines, political slogans, and radio and television catchphrases. Song lyrics are entered by the name of the composer, and film lines appear either under the film title in the special section devoted to movie lines or, if they originated in a book or play upon which the film was based, under the author of that literary source. Proverbs span the centuries and often include evidence of a saying’s first print appearance. A keyword index, an essential element of any quotation dictionary, rounds out the text.
Don’t disappoint me, bro…go check out “The Yale Book of Quotations” now!
- Alexander
Author Will Self reads from his book “Psychogeography: Disentangling the Modern Conundrum of Psyche and Place” and discusses the concept behind it in this discussion at Google.
Publishers Weekly describes the book: “This artful and entertaining collection of essays by novelist Self (The Book of Dave) will delight anyone who enjoys his weekly column of the same name in the Independent or his last collection of essays, Feeding Frenzy. Here Self shifts from gonzo journalism to the study of psychogeography, the study of how geographical environments affect emotions and behavior. Setting off on a quest for the intrinsic character of various places as well as the manner in which the contemporary world warps the relationship between psyche and place, Self casts a dismissive eye on most of the world. Singapore strikes him as Basingstoke force-fed with pituitary gland; Sao Paolo’s lack of a street plan makes it an unholy miscegenation between London and Los Angeles. But Steadman’s beautifully harsh illustrations (worthy of their own book) and Walking to New York, a previously unpublished semi-autobiographical meditation on life and death, reveal a surprising depth to Self’s cynical insights.”
In the hour-long discussion, Self reads from “Psychogeography” and discusses why he wrote it. Self says people need to get out and interact with their world on a more personal level.
“This method is about reappopriating what is beautiful,” he says in the video below. “Why shouldn’t we live in a world that if we can’t consider it as being beautiful the the whole time? We can at least consider that we are actually in it. We can at least give it that respect.”
Psychologist Philip Zimbardo discusses his book “The Lucifer Effect: Understanding How Good People Turn Evil” at Google Headquarters in this hour-long video.
Publishers Weekly summarizes the book: “Psychologist Zimbardo masterminded the famous Stanford Prison Experiment, in which college students randomly assigned to be guards or inmates found themselves enacting sadistic abuse or abject submissiveness. In this penetrating investigation, he revisits—at great length and with much hand-wringing—the SPE study and applies it to historical examples of injustice and atrocity, especially the Abu Ghraib outrages by the U.S. military. His troubling finding is that almost anyone, given the right “situational” influences, can be made to abandon moral scruples and cooperate in violence and oppression. (He tacks on a feel-good chapter about “the banality of heroism,” with tips on how to resist malign situational pressures.)”
In the video discussion below, he talks about how easily people are susceptible to evil given the right circumstances. He also delves into the Abu Ghraib prison scandal (some images are graphic).
“Do we take into account the system?” he asks of our legal sentencing when outside influences pressure people to commit evil. To what extent are the individuals guilty compared to those who are in charge of the system?
“What you are going to see is that evil begins as all evil begins — with a small first step,” he says before discussing how the Abu Ghraib abuses escalated.
Use the BookOpinion.com price comparison search to find the best prices on “The Lucifer Effect.”
Jeffrey Toobin visited the Google New York office recently to discuss his new book “The Nine: Inside the Secret World of the Supreme Court.” In this 45-minute video, he talks about a wide range of Supreme Court-related subjects. 
“They are very cordial to each other,” Toobin says. “They are very correct, polite. They are not particularly close friends.”
Toobin mentions some of the interests of the Justices, as well. “Clarence Thomas has maybe the most interesting hobby of them all. Clarence Thomas, about six years ago, adopted a great nephew who was about eight years old at the time. For entertainment, he bought this gigantic RV which he calls ‘The Bus’. This huge RV. And he and his family tavel around the country, usually in the South, spending the night in WalMart parking lots.”
He also highlights what he said was the one decision that has impacted the court the most.
“They came away from Bush v. Gore rather shellshocked and disturbed about the place of the Court in public life and I think that worry was one factor that pushed Kennedy and O’Connor to the left,” he says.
To find the best prices on “The Nine,” use the BookOpinion price comparison search here.
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Doris Lessing won the 2007 Noble Prize for Literature. When told she just won the prize, the author responded with a less-than-enthusiastic, “Oh, Christ!”
“It’s been going on now for more than 30 years,” she said. “I can’t get more excited.”
Check out the classic reaction from the newly named Nobel Laureate here:
To use BookOpinion’s price comparison shopper to find the best prices on Lessing books, click here.
Here is a biography of Lessing’s life and work:
Doris Lessing was born on 22 October 1919 to British parents in Kermanshah in what was then known as Persia (now Iran) as Doris May Taylor. Her father, Alfred Cook Taylor, formerly a captain in the British army during the First World War, was a bank official. Her mother, Emily Maude Taylor, had been a nurse. In 1925 the family moved to a farm in what was then Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) hoping to improve their income. Lessing described her childhood on the farm in the first part of her autobiography, Under My Skin (1994). At the age of seven, she was sent to a convent boarding school but later moved to a girls’ school in Salisbury. When 14 she independently ended her formal schooling. In the following years she worked as a young nanny, telephonist, office worker, stenographer and journalist and had several short stories published. In 1939 she married Frank Charles Wisdom with whom she had a son, John, and a daughter, Jean. The couple divorced in 1943. In 1945 Doris married Gottfried Lessing, a German-Jewish immigrant she had met in a Marxist group mainly concerned with the race issue. She became involved with the Southern Rhodesian Labour Party. She and Gottfried had a son, Peter. When the couple divorced in 1949, she took Peter and moved to London, quickly establishing herself as a writer. Between 1952 and 1956 she was a member of the British Communist Party and was active in the campaign against nuclear weapons. Because of her criticism of the South African regime, she was prohibited entry to that country between 1956 and 1995. After a brief visit to Southern Rhodesia in 1956, she was banned there as well for the same reason. In African Laughter: Four Visits to Zimbabwe (1992) she described going back in 1982 to the country where she had grown up. She now lives in London.
Doris Lessing made her debut as a novelist with The Grass is Singing (1950), which examines the relationship between a white farmer’s wife and her black servant. The book is both a tragedy based in love-hatred and a study of unbridgeable racial conflicts.
Even the semi-autobiographical Children of Violence series, usually called the Martha Quest series for its main character, is largely set in Africa. The series comprises Martha Quest (1952), A Proper Marriage (1954), A Ripple from the Storm (1958), Landlocked (1965) and The Four-Gated City (1969). It describes Martha Quest’s awakening to greater awareness on every level and was pioneering in its depiction of the mind and circumstances of the emancipated woman. With these books Lessing created a modern equivalent of the Bildungsroman of women writers of the 19th century. The Children of Violence, despite its emphatic liberation theme, is characterised by an almost fatalistic outlook. The story is told with the mild despair of someone seeing her younger self from the heavens of an afterlife, unable to intervene. The masterpiece is the final volume of the series, The Four-Gated City, a period frescoe apparently enveloping all of England – indeed our entire culture – illuminated by the author’s empathy and incivility.
The Golden Notebook (1962) was Doris Lessing’s real breakthrough. The burgeoning feminist movement saw it as a pioneering work and it belongs to the handful of books that informed the 20th-century view of the male-female relationship. It used a more complex narrative technique to reveal how political and emotion conflicts are intertwined. The style levels of differing documents and experiences mix: newspaper cuttings, news items, films, dreams and diaries. Anna Wulf, the main character, has five notebooks for her thoughts about Africa, politics and the communist party, her relationship to men and sex, Jungian analysis and dream interpretation. The disjointed form reflects that of the main character’s mind. There is no single perspective from which to capture the entirety of her life experience.
Books published in the 1970s included Briefing for a Descent into Hell (1971), inspired by R. D. Laing. Lessing has characterised her novel from this period as “inner-space fiction”: an attempt in the spirit of Romanticism to expand human knowledge to encompass regions beyond the control of reason and the ego.
In the novel series Canopus in Argos: Archives (vol. 1–5, 1979–1984) Lessing expanded the science fiction genre. The series studies the post-atomic war development of the human species. Lessing varies thoughts about colonialism, nuclear war and ecological disaster with observations on the opposition between female and male principles. Among inspirations for the work was the Idries Shah’s school of Sufism that she discovered in the 1960s. Doris Lessing revisited her interest in Sufism in the Time Bites (2004) collection of essays.
Lessing returned to realistic narrative in The Good Terrorist (1985), providing a satirical picture of the need of the contemporary left for total control and the female protagonist’s misdirected martyrdom and subjugation. Her analysis of the greenhouse for the terrorist mind in generation hatred and an Übermensch attitude retains currency.
The autobiographical Under My Skin (1994) and Walking in the Shade (1997) represented a new peak in her writing. Lessing recalls not only her own life but the entire epoch: England in the last days of the empire. Her novel The Sweetest Dream (2001) is a stand-alone sequel in fictive form. Perhaps her unsparing view of the polical antics of friends and lovers necessitated such discretion.
Her other important novels are The Summer Before the Dark (1973) and The Fifth Child (1988). In the former, the reader at first infers a liberation motif: a woman finally about to fulfil her gift and sexual desires. After a first reading, the contours of the real novel take shape: a ruthless study of the collapse of values in middle age. The Fifth Child is a masterfully realised psychological thriller, where a woman’s repressed or denied aggression against family life is incarnated in a monstrous boy child.
The vision of global catastrophe forcing mankind to return to a more primitive life has had special appeal for Doris Lessing. It reappears in some of her books of recent years: the fantasy novel Mara and Dann (1999) and its sequel The Story of General Dann and Mara’s Daughter, Griot and the Snow Dog (2005). From collapse and chaos emerge the elementary qualities that allow Lessing to retain hope in humanity…
Known, of course, for his legal thrillers, John Grisham has taken a turn at a fish-out-of-the-water story with his new book, “Playing for Pizza.” Despite receiving luke-warm reviews, the book is currently No. 10 on Amazon’s bestseller list. BookOpinion has compiled reviews, an excerpt and a video interview about the novel.

Pblishers Weekly summarizes the plot: “Third-string Cleveland Browns quarterback Rick Dockery becomes the greatest goat ever by throwing three interceptions in the closing minutes of the AFC championship game. Fleeing vengeful fans, he finds refuge in the grungiest corner of professional football, the Italian National Football League as quarterback of the inept but full-of-heart Parma Panthers. What ensues is a winsome football fable, replete with team bonding and character-building as the underdog Panthers challenge the powerhouse Bergamo Lions for a shot at the Italian Superbowl.”
Grisham said the inspiration for “Playing for Pizza” came when he was researching “The Broker
” and discovered American football being played in Italy.
“One of my guides in the area played football for the Bologna Warriors for 10 years,” Grisham said in an Amazon interview. “I couldn’t believe that American football actually existed there, but the more I heard about it the more intrigued I became.”
The Associated Press writes, “Surely, he has an affection for football, Italy and Italian food, but not much of that love shows through. He tackles the well-worn expatriate story from a unique angle and it would have been nice to have seen this sports point of view with more depth; it would have been nice to see Grisham take Rick and his story to a place where he’s more than ‘an extra in a foreign film.’”
The L.A. Times are among the reviewers who wished the novel dug a little deeper. “In ‘Playing for Pizza,’ Grisham is content to keep it light,” The L.A. Times writes. “The fish-out-of-water premise often devolves into stereotypes — Italians like to eat amazing food and drink amazing wines — while Rick’s transformations and the outcome of the Panthers season are predictable. And Grisham avoids tackling perhaps the ultimate challenge for a sports novelist or screenwriter: writing an original halftime tongue-lashing by a coach. Instead, he merely describes the coach’s speech… Football may be at the center of ‘Playing for Pizza
,’ but this isn’t a football novel. It reads like part Frances Mayes’ ‘Under the Tuscan Sun,’ part Mario Batali culinary diary and part Fodor guidebook.”
The Washington Post reviews the novel:
…It’s easy to see the enticement for Grisham, who has probably spent enough days in law libraries, police stations and morgues to last the rest of his life. By inventing a washed-up former NFL quarterback and limning this obscure subculture, he can dash off the story of an innocent abroad, accustomed to fame and fortune but now forced to ply his trade in virtual anonymity surrounded by oddities such as opera, small cars and teammates who smoke before games. Even better, Grisham can set it against the dolce vita of long meals, good wines, soaring cathedrals and beautiful women.
And that’s exactly what Grisham has done. Unfortunately, he neglected the primary duty of the storyteller, which is to tell a story. The suspense builds as the veteran Grisham reader waits for the surprising plot turn, or the overlooked character detail on which the story will pivot, or the unveiling of a mystery begging to be solved. He waits in vain. The book rumbles straight ahead, as simple and direct and unadorned as a fullback pushing up the middle for a three-yard gain.
The most surprising thing about it, in fact, is that it’s actually about football: the contrived, game-by-game (and even play-by-play) adventures of a real team in a real league that even the Italians don’t care about. Its dramatic arc roughly resembles that of Coach Clair Bee’s adolescent Chip Hilton stories — the early defeat that teaches a lesson, the loss of an injured star, the coming together against adversity, the improbable upset victory — while its lead character, Rick Dockery, is the sort of implausible American boor usually seen in dopey television commercials. That he finds true happiness after he picks up a Georgia cheerleader at a sidewalk cafe is only fitting, I suppose. But it doesn’t exactly make for thrill-a-minute reading…
The Boston Globe felt differently, writing: “Grisham has connected with a deeply satisfying story of an athlete finding redemption. What could have been a painful exile for a disgraced American quarterback becomes a delightfully unexpected homecoming.”
Grisham discusses the book with Matt Lauer on the Today Show here:
And, finally, here is an excerpt from Playing for Pizza:
Chapter 1
It was a hospital bed,that much appeared certain, though certainty was coming and going. It was narrow and hard and there were shiny metal railings standing sentry-like along the sides, preventing escape. The sheets were plain and very white. Sanitary. The room was dark, but sunlight was trying to creep around the blinds covering the window.
He closed his eyes again; even that was painful. Then he opened them, and for a long silent minute or so he managed to keep the lids apart and focus on his cloudy little world. He was lying on his back and pinned down by firmly tucked sheets. He noticed a tube dangling to his left, running down to his hand, then disappearing up somewhere behind him. There was a voice in the distance, out in the hallway. Then he made the mistake of trying to move, just a slight adjustment of the head, and it didn’t work. Hot bolts of pain hit his skull and neck and he groaned loudly.
“Rick. Are you awake?”
The voice was familiar, and quickly a face followed it. Arnie was breathing on him.
“Arnie?” he said with a weak, scratchy voice, then he swallowed.
“It’s me, Rick, thank God you’re awake.”
Arnie, the agent, always there at the important moments.
“Where am I, Arnie?”
“You’re in the hospital, Rick.”“Got that. But why?”
“When did you wake up?” Arnie found a switch, and a light came on beside the bed.
“I don’t know. A few minutes ago.”
“How do you feel?”
“Like someone crushed my skull.”
“Close. You’re gonna be fine, trust me.”
Trust me, trust me. How many times had he heard Arnie ask for trust? Truth was, he’d never completely trusted Arnie and there was no plausible reason to start now. What did Arnie know about traumatic head injuries or whatever mortal wound someone had inflicted?
Rick closed his eyes again and breathed deeply. “What happened?” he asked softly.
Continue Reading »
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