StarTribune.com
browser111708

On the homepage

 
Holiday Entertainment
Children's Theatre Co.

Children's Theatre Co.

Cinderella Nov. 10 - Jan. 2
Guthrie's A Christmas Carol

Guthrie's A Christmas Carol

Celebrating 35 years of a Twin Cities' holiday tradition!
Plymouth Playhouse

Plymouth Playhouse

Our gift certificates make great holiday presents! Come and see:
Chanhassen Dinner Theatre

Chanhassen Dinner Theatre

$15 Gift For You With Every $100 Gift Certificate Purchased!
All Is Calm

All Is Calm

"Gorgeously moving." 6 Performances Only! Dec. 17-20 - Pantages 800.982.2787
Meet the Real Ben.

Meet the Real Ben.

See the electrifying new exhibit, Benjamin Franklin: In Search of a Better World.
Actors Theatre Of Minnesota

Actors Theatre Of Minnesota

Holiday Savings 25-50% off tickets
Sister's Back in Town

Sister's Back in Town

The hilarious Sister's Christmas Catechism in Ordway's McKnight Theatre Now Thru Dec 27.

Home | Entertainment

Continued: The Browser: "It still moves"

IT STILL MOVES

By Amanda Petrusich (Faber & Faber, 290 pages, $25)

Petrusich, a pop music critic for the New York Times, takes readers along on this "search for the next American music." The title is a whole-hearted yes to the question of whether American music still matters, still moves people. But she takes the back roads to get there, discovering how and where music is made, from the "slapback" technique Sam Phillips used at his Sun Records studio, to the fact that Robert Johnson's fabled highways 61 and 49 merge rather than cross at Clarksdale, Miss. And while some of the roads she travels are pretty dusty with time, Petrusich is also on the trail of current musicmakers. She bemoans the "slathering with gloss" that renders music from Nashville bland and indistinguishable. And she hails New York's East Village and other less likely sites for hosting bands such as Freakwater and Th' Legendary Shack-Shakers that may or may not admit to being "alt-country." As a tour guide, Petrusich is hip and self-aware without being self-righteous, and is obviously passionate about music and the people who make it. This road trip would be oh so much more fun, though, if there were a fold-out map and a companion CD.

KATHE CONNAIR, FEATURES COPY EDITOR

I'LL NEVER BE FRENCH (NO MATTER WHAT I DO)

By Mark Greenside (Free Press, 244 pages, $24)

You know all those books about moving to France, buying a house and fixing it up? Well, here's another one. This one, though, is funny. Mark Greenside (who spoke no French) and his girlfriend (who did) went to Brittany for three months. They broke up, she left, he stayed and practically the next thing he knew, he was rattling around the countryside with his maternal French landlady, who was speaking rapidly to him in a language he could only vaguely understand. And voila! Almost against his will, he was soon the proud owner of a rather gorgeous but falling-down house. Greenside's observations are funny and generous, his encounters with his beleaguered French insurance agent are hysterical, his house sounds to die for and the only truly irritating thing about this book is his annoying habit of including snippets of dialogue in French and then not translating it for the reader. C'mon, Mark. You know what it feels like. Cut it out.

LAURIE HERTZEL, BOOKS EDITOR

Recent Entertainment stories

Today is the day of the divas - November 17, 2008
Today is the day of the divas - Monday brings an earlier-than-usual flurry of pre-holiday pop CDs. Here's the top of the crop. More

Comment on this story   |   Be the first to comment   |  Hide reader comments

Subscribe
Entertainment Finder
Shopping + Classifieds
Yellow Pages

Get A Professional

Find home maintenance, car repair, legal advice, cleaning, and more in the Yellow Pages. Go now!
Coupons and Deals

Save Your $$ With Coupons

Discounts on services, entertainment, dining, gifts, and more. Start saving!