Our battalion of newsroom Browsers found some gems in the Great Pile this month, including an illuminating history of the first woman executed in the United States, words of advice for young women trying to find their place in the world, a conversational tome for knitters, a moving memoir of a woman who got pregnant after a one-night stand and, best of all, a new David Housewright. Enjoy.
MADMAN ON A DRUM
By David Housewright (St. Martin's, 272 pages, $24.95)
You can't make it as a literary private eye with just your gun. You need to shoot with your mouth, too. And Housewright's P.I., Rushmore McKenzie, excels in this area -- never at a loss for words, be it a smart retort or a pointed comment on this messed-up world we live in. McKenzie's first-person narrative begins with the kidnapping of a policeman's daughter as she walks home from school in St. Paul, and then the story becomes more and more about McKenzie, who is a friend of the victim's family and puts up the ransom money. The fast-paced action takes the reader across the Twin Cities area, to such varied locales as an East Side bar in St. Paul, where a meat raffle is in progress, and a mansion on the shores of Lake Minnetonka. I haven't read Housewright before, but this outing -- with its fine detail and surprises -- makes me want to pick up his previous McKenzie books and the ones sure to come.
STEVE RIEL, Nation & World editor
THE ASSASSIN'S ACCOMPLICE: MARY SURRATT AND THE PLOT TO KILL ABRAHAM LINCOLN
By Kate Clifford Larson (Basic Books, 263 pages, $26)
With a single pistol shot, John Wilkes Booth changed the course of U.S. history. The chance of a more benevolent -- and likely wiser and more successful -- reconciliation between North and South after the Civil War died with Abraham Lincoln. Larson offers a masterful recounting of the surprisingly wide and intricate conspiracy of Southern sympathizers who formed the murder plot, focusing on perhaps the most controversial figure in the story -- Mary Surratt. The book takes us through Surratt's early life, her involvement in the Southern "cause" through spying, the conspiracy, the trial and finally the death of this first woman executed by the U.S. government. Larson illuminates the whipsaw passions of the time, as both media and public sentiment vilified Surratt and called for bloody vengeance during her trial, then recoiled in sympathy and remorse when the court delivered a death sentence and actually executed a woman. The author's extensive research leaves little doubt that, despite the arguments still made by apologists, Mary Surratt was guilty of deep involvement in the conspiracy.
BRIAN LEEHAN, CALENDAR/STAFF WRITER
THE FIDELITY FILES
By Jessica Brody (St. Martin's, 417 pages, $13.95)