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11 New Books We Recommend This Week Feb. 11, 2021 Crime and punishment make their presence felt in this week’s recommended titles, from Russell Shorto’s family history of his grandfather’s mob ties (“Smalltime”) to Philippe Sands’s account of a Nazi fugitive (“The Ratline”); Maurice Chammah’s study of the death penalty and its decline (“Let the Lord Sort Them”) to Reuben Jonathan Miller’s look at the life that awaits ex-inmates (“Halfway Home”). Also on our night stands this week: Ethan Zuckerman’s new book about the collapse of institutional authority (“Mistrust”), Emily Rapp Black’s memoir of motherhood and grief (“Sanctuary”), Jeremy Atherton Lin’s personal and cultural history (“Gay Bar”) and Avi Loeb’s argument that aliens visited the neighborhood in 2017 (“Extraterrestrial”). Finally, there’s Thomas Healy’s “Soul City,” about one man’s attempt to create a Black-run city in the 1970s; Charles Wheelan’ ....
Father chronicles a family’s journey around the globe From left, CJ, Katrina and Sophie Wheelan take a selfie at Machu Picchu in November 2016. Charles Wheelan has written We Came We Saw We Left: A Family Gap Year about their trip around the world. (Courtesy Charles Wheelan) From left, Katrina, CJ, Sophie, Leah and Charlie Wheelan in Bhutan in March 2017. Charles Wheelan has written We Came We Saw We Left: A Family Gap Year about their trip around the world. (Courtesy Charles Wheelan) Modified: 2/1/2021 7:27:50 PM HANOVER At first glance, Charles Wheelan’s new book, We Came, We Saw, We Left: A Family Gap Year might seem completely detached from our pandemic moment. ....
em We Came, We Saw, We Left: A Family Gap Year /em , by Charles Wheelan In 2015, my wife and I renovated a ramshackle travel trailer and toured the Lower 48 states one week, one campground at a time. It was the most rewarding year of our lives, and yet our adventure seemed to polarize everyone who knew about it especially the baby boomers. They either encouraged the idea, wishing they had done something similar before their health had failed or their life had grown too complicated, or they wrote us off with patronizing jokes about freelancers and millennials, wishing they had done something similar before their health had failed or their life had grown too complicated. ....
Home/News from NPR/‘We Came, We Saw, We Left’ Takes Us On One Family’s Gap Year Adventure ‘We Came, We Saw, We Left’ Takes Us On One Family’s Gap Year Adventure By Carson Vaughan January 31, 2021 In 2015, my wife and I renovated a ramshackle travel trailer and toured the Lower 48 states one week, one campground at a time. It was the most rewarding year of our lives, and yet our adventure seemed to polarize everyone who knew about it especially the baby boomers. They either encouraged the idea, wishing they had done something similar before their health had failed or their life had grown too complicated, or they wrote us off with patronizing jokes about freelancers and millennials, wishing they had done something similar before their health had failed or their life had grown too complicated. ....
In 2016, Charles Wheelan, best-selling author of “Naked Economics,” decided to go on a nine-month, global grand tour with his wife, Leah, and their three children. “We Came, We Saw, We Left: A Family Gap Year” (out Jan. 26) is the result, a manic travelogue-cum-family newsletter that gamely tries to squeeze some deeper meaning from what seems like little more than a really nice extended vacation. Charles Wheelan (Courtesy Jon Gilbert Fox) Wheelan and his wife are determined to pass on their love of travel to their kids: college-bound Katrina, 18; defiant Sophie, 16; and chronic oversharer CJ, 13, who will probably come to rue his father’s detailed account of his pubescence. The parents see the trip as an opportunity to give the kids a taste of life outside the “bubble” of their hometown of Hanover, New Hampshire. ....