God Bless the Spectrum by the staff of the Daily News
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Paul McCartney played the Spectrum in 1976, back in his handsomer, jowl-free days. That same year in that same stadium, our Flyers kicked the Soviet Red Army's asses. And in '68? The freaking roof came off. After 42 years of gloat-worthy moments in Philly entertainment, America's Showplace is due for demo. It's time to get your reminisce on. Camino Books, 160 pp., $24.95, May 1.
Our Choice: A Plan to Save the Climate Crisis by Al Gore
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Lay off the nog this holiday season, lest you're prepared for a scolding by America's tree-huggingest politician: Al Gore wants you to drink less and save the world more. Gore gets his jollies encouraging teamwork — he even quotes a cheery African proverb on the back of this dense, colorful tome: "If you want to go quickly, go alone; if you want to go far, go together." Rodale, 416 pp., $26.99, Nov. 3.
The Map as Art: Contemporary Artists Explore Cartography by Katharine Harmon
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Maybe it's our country's recent embrace of the staycation that has travel-lustful artists across our big, beautiful globe looking at cartography for inspiration. Wrist-breakingly heavy and chock-full of gorgeous map creations — from a kimono crafted from National Geographic maps to a map made of mattresses — this coffee-table treat would please anyone obsessed with Google Earth. Princeton Architectural Press, 256 pp., $45, Sept. 23.
You Better Not Cry by Augusten Burroughs
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"It's like I have a genuine Christmas curse or something. All I want is just one good, normal, happy holiday." It's not surprising that Augusten Burroughs, the uneducated misfit turned raging alcoholic turned brilliant memoirist, has plenty of boozy holiday doozies. This compilation — naked Santa and all — makes for a grand little stocking stuffer. St. Martin's, 224 pp., $21.99, Oct. 27.
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