Salon recommends

A guide to the mythological roots of the Harry Potter books, an inside look at the powerful family behind the New York Times and more.

Published June 25, 2001 7:00PM (EDT)

What we're reading, what we're liking

The Magical Worlds of Harry Potter by David Colbert
As Colbert points out at the beginning of this browsable little book, many of the figures and events in J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter books have their roots in classical and Norse mythology, as well as in folklore. Adults with a Potter jones and dim memories of poring over "Bullfinch's Mythology" years ago will consider this an amusing casual read (we're not talking "The Golden Bough," here). But I suspect the most avid audience for this book will be curious kids who will be delighted to learn that centaurs, manticores, phoenixes and fiery salamanders have been around (at least in the human imagination) for centuries and can be found in many other books. It'll be a while until the fifth book in Rowling's series comes out, but Colbert's guide should tip young fans off to all the other great books to investigate while they're waiting.

-- Laura Miller

The Trust: The Private and Powerful Family Behind the New York Times
by Susan E. Tifft and Alex Jones
This history of the paper offers the perspective not of the newsroom that has made for such compelling reading in previous Times tomes but rather of four generations of the Ochs and Sulzbergers who have controlled the paper, beginning with the visionary patriarch Adolph Ochs and continuing through to a great-grandson, Arthur Sulzberger Jr. While it's a parlor game in media circles to attack the Times -- for everything from its coverage of the Wen Ho Lee espionage case to its daily corrections -- the effect of this book, which watches its keepers tend their charge from on high, is fairly sobering. (What other paper would even attempt the self-analysis the times offered in the wake of the Wen Ho Lee coverage? And who has as rigorous an approach to corrections?) Full of racy details like Arthur Hay Sulzberger's marital infidelities, "The Trust" is arguably too long, with a weight of material that can be numbing. But for those of us who have a morbid interest in how what is for better or worse the most serious publication on the globe understands itself, it's a necessity.

-- Bill Wyman

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