Page Sixteen THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, December 7, 1968 BooK GUIDE List suits art of (Continued from Page 15) ucational theorizing, biography, history, and the rest. But two, books that fit into none of these classes deserve top billing. First is James Watson's highly publicized, slightly scandalized re- collection of the discovery of DNA,; The Double Helix (Atheneum, $5.95). Though most reviewers have given it partial censure for its lack of grace and style, nothing could be more irrelevant here: The Double Helix-gossipy, giggly, and shameless-is science with its{ pants pulled down. It's nice (and,4 in Watson's telling, very exciting) to learn that Nobel winners are as ladder-climbing as the J. Pierre- pont Finches of big business. The other "best surprise" of non-fiction in 1968 earns its rec- ognition mostly for being the best of the crop of books on its sub- ject. The work is The Beatles Book (Cowles, $5.95), and it is a collection of widely-ranging, all- inclusive essays edited by Edward E. Davis on the same topic that has spawned a flock of p.r. bio- graphies and shallow profiles. William Buckley, Timothy Leary, music critic Ned Rorem are in- cluded in the roster of writers, rdgWarmth and comfort from the ground up... Last among the top non-fiction is a strange selection, a yearly publication that this year reflect- STA DIU M B O0TS ed the emerging new style of the whole art of exposition-Best Ma- gazine Articles, 1968 (Crown, $5.95), edited by Gerald Walker. David Halberstam and Jimmy Breslin offer the best pieces - along with Renata Adler, whose memorable visit to the national New Politics Convention in Chica- go last year is included. Written in her pre-movie reviewer days with make a reader who is familiar with the scuffle of politics on the left hate and love Miss Adler as she tries to keep herself out of the proceedings but only emerges as a terrified she-bitch who doesn't dare let anyone know of her hang-1 ups. The other articles are good, too, and their shared glory is the recent swing to personal journa- lism that has turned writers into people, too. That about wraps it up. There are countless other books that could be mentioned, but aren't be- cause of lack of space, my failure Ignore the cold and dampness in a pair to familiarize myself with them, and a fear that adding more titles would only dilute the merit of of Stadium Boots. Thick, cushion those already mentioned. But.f f you~t>>v "^4F.greu _ yor 4_4-nv nn LO. .L-raI cL d U h Ikl ok T1ll LiY p i 111111 This dark brown satin airsuit creates a very elegant effect on or off the air field. Are you ready to take fit can be found at Cebe's. Eldridge Cleaver often repulsive, is never so shock- ing as the performance. While Eldridge Cleaver dodges the cops, his early-in-the-year po- lemic on black life in white U.S. and thley do a superb job of dis- Soul .on Ice(McGraw-Hill, $5.95)ytheothoseionsour st secting The Miracle That Lasted. them on those on your gift list Tom Wolfe's portrait of Ken is just beginning to climb on the with a book this year. Sand, Green Buck-Black, Brown Leather The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test heat, it is terrifying and damn-1 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $5.95) ing, never boring, and rarely ap- is a fine example of Wolfe's liter- proaches the boggle of incompre- CORREC ION y pyrotechnics, and at the some hensibility in which the once-arti- B TER Y phy of the beginnings of the hon- recently submerged himself, advertisement for est era of hippiedom. Also among the year's outstand- DISCOUNT RECORDS 304 S. STATE STREET As much as it is agonizing to af- ing general works is number two appearing on Page 19 { ford praise to Norman Podhoretz- for Mr. Mailer, Miami and the of this supplement, praise being one-third of what Siege of Chicago, first published s the e d i t o r of Commentary in the November issue of Harper's the price of ____ _ ___ lives for, the other parts being and now available in both hard- , power and wealth- Making It cover and paper (95c) from World. "The Beatles" (2 records) (Random House, $6.95) is first Less a voyage of the mind than should be $7.89, rate. There is no better way to Armies of the Night, there is no instead of $8.25. chronicle the path of a bog-genius difficulty in classifying this work on the make, than to simply re- as non-fiction; here, Mailer shows ALSC cord his own feelings about the an incisive enough analytical mind climb upward. Podhoretz, who left to shred the Republican Party on The S. 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