THE END OF MEN: And the Rise of Women, by Hanna Rosin. (Riverhead, $ 27.95.) Women around the universe are increasingly dominant in work, education, households, as well as even love as well as marriage, Rosin argues in this optimistic narrative.
VAGINA: A New Biography, by Naomi Wolf. (Ecco/HarperCollins, $ 27.99.) "The vagina is the smoothness complement for the states of mind which we call confidence, liberation, self-realization," Wolf writes.
BREASTS: A Natural as well as Unnatural History, by Florence Williams. (Norton, $ 25.95.) Williams's environmental call to arms deplores chemicals in breast milk as well as the practice for silicone implants.
THE BLACK COUNT: Glory, Revolution, Betrayal, as well as the Real Count of Monte Cristo, by Tom Reiss. (Crown, $ 27.) The first Alexandre Dumas, the mixed-race general of the French Revolution, is the theme of this talented biography.
ON A FARTHER SHORE: The Life as well as Legacy of Rachel Carson, by William Souder. (Crown, $ 30.) An interesting autobiography of the pioneering environmental writer on the 50th anniversary of "Silent Spring."
THE FORGETTING TREE, by Tatjana Soli. (St. Martin's, $ 25.99.) In Soli's vivid second novel, the mysterious Caribb! ean lady cares for the cancer studious on an removed California ranch.
SPLENDORS AND GLOOMS, by Laura Amy Schlitz. (Candlewick, $ 17.99; ages 9 to 13.) This glorious novel by Schlitz, the past Newbery Award winner, is filled with sensuous denunciation as well as Victorian atmosphere.
THE PECULIAR, by Stefan Bachmann. (Greenwillow/HarperCollins, $ 16.99; ages 9 as well as up.) An achieved first novel set in an alternate Victorian world.
BEAUTIFUL LIES, by Clare Clark. (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $ 26.) The mother of the in advance politician leads the stand in hold up in Victorian London in Clark's novel.
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