♦ Page 3B books Christmas book list has something for all By Joan Hanauer United Press International From the temples of ancient Rome to the world of bowling, from the history of medicine to the history of weeds, there’s a gift book for everybody this Christ mas. All you need is the money to pay for them and the muscles to lug home these bigger and more beautiful than ever books. Maybe supernatural help will solve your problems, as in Faeries, by Brian Froud and Alan Lee (Abrams, $14.95). The book is every bit as elvishly delightful as last year’s Gnomes, by Wil Huygen (Abrams, $17.50), which remains a best seller a year after publication. Faeries, like many other newly published coffee table books, can be bought at bargain rates — the price goes up after Christmas. Abrams, which has long been one of the world’s most suc cessful publishers of gorgeous art books, appears to be taking over the fey field as well. It also has added The Muppet Show Book to its list, which for $14.95 offers Kermit, Miss Piggy and the rest of the Jim Henson creatures that appeal to young of all ages. In the same category is the beautifully illustrated Walt Disney’s Treas ury of Children’s Classics (Ab rams, $19.95). From the ridiculous to the sub lime, but still with a supernatural flavor, is David Bindman’s The Complete Graphic Works of William Blake (Putnam’s, $45), one of a number of literary- inspired art books for Christmas giving. It is for serious Blake scholars, offering manuscripts and art, but no color. Even more expensive, but a bargain at the price, is A.L. Rowse’s three volume The Anno tated Shakespeare (Potter, $55), which answers fascinating ques tions about the Bard of Avon you never even asked. Other literary works that re ceived artistic attention this holi day season include Sir James George Frazer’s The Golden Bough, edited by Mary Douglas (Doubleday, $14.95), and The Annotated Jules Verne: From the Earth to the Moon, by Walter James Miller (Crowell, $16.95). Hemingway is having a minirevival, with Peter Buckley’s Ernest (Dial, $17.50) presenting a photo biography of the author from handsome youth to the last sad years, while Hemingway’s Paris is brought to life by Robert E. Gajdusek (Scribner’s, $14.95). Literary lions aside, there’s The Literary Dog (Putnam s, $14.95) in which William E. Maloney and J.C. Suares collect canine illusions from Ecclesiastes Thurber. All sorts of animals are availa ble in Great Sculpture of An cient Greece, by Pierre Devam- bez and Great Baroque and Rococo Sculpture, by Maurizio Fagiolo dell’Arco (Morrow, $25 each) part of this year’s cor nucopia of art books. Switching from the baroque to the primitive mood is R.C. Gorman: The Lithographs, by Doris Born Man- than (Northland, $35), the reser vation born American-lndian ar tist’s depiction of the life of Indian women. Other individual artists whose work can delight for the holidays include Sisley, by Raymond Cogniat (Crown, $5.95), a bar gain in lovely impressionist col ors; Mark Rothko, a Retrospec tive, by Diane Waldman (Ab rams, $30) for those who dig re ctangles of disembodied color; Ti tian, by David Rosand (Abrams, $25) for those who prefer Re naissance light and color; The Arts of David Levine (Knopf, $25) ranging from watercolors at Coney Island to wicked carica tures of Richard Nixon and other politicians, and James McNeill Whistler, by Hilary Taylor (Put nam, $22.50) to prove once and for all that Whistler’s art was not limited to his mother. The Art of Glen Loates, Albums inspired by By William D. Laffler United Press International The Wiz When L. Frank Baum wrote a story about a little girl named Dorothy and a mountebank who called himself the Wizard of Oz, he may have fashioned one of the greatest fairy tales of all time. Time is on his side. The Oz books captured the imagination of children through several gen erations. And the movie version starring Judy Garland has been a perennial favorite on television. Ray Bolger, the Scarecrow in the Garland movie, said on a talk show some time ago he thought this motion picture would be popular for at least 200 years. Broadway had to wait almost four decades for the arrival of the Oz tale as a live stage show. It was produced as an all-black musical as “The Wiz,” becoming an overnight sensation and be ginning a run that was to last for years. And now “The Wiz” is the sub ject of a lively movie starring Diana Ross as Dorothy. And what a cast! Richard Pryor is the crafty Wizard, Lena Horne is Glinda, Nipsy Russell is the Tinman, Michael Jackson is the Scarec row, and Ted Ross is the Cow ardly Lion. Mabel King re-creates her Broadway role of Evilene, the wicked witch. The original motion picture soundtrack of “The Wiz,” (MCA Records MCA2-1400), a two-LP Album, is a major event. In addi tion to the outstanding cast, the recording involves a roomful of musicians and children’s and adult choirs. The fine songs of the Broadway show, especially “Ease on Down the Road,” re main in the movie version. Additionally, producer Quincy Jones has created some new ma terial. As a Broadway show, “The Wiz” won seven Tony Awards, among them “best musical score.” The movie may try to pick up as many Oscars. Sesame Street Fever Those people on Sesame Canada’s foremost wildlife artist, is being republished this year (Prentice-Hall, $35) because snafus in distribution last year lim ited supplies. The art of Salvador Dali toasts wine in an alternately outrageous, informative and beautiful book called The Wines of Dali, with text by Max Gerard and Louis Crizet, illustrated by Dali (Ab rams, $50). This volume won the . Prix Montesquieu de la Sommel- lerie Francaise as the best wine book of 1977 but it won’t win applause from the California winemakers. Leave that to the Wines of California, by Robert Lawrence Balzer (Abrams, $25). Art doesn’t stop with painting and sculpture, as Walter Terry il lustrates in Great Male Dancers of the Ballet (Anchor, $10 paper) from Louis IV to Baryshnikov and Dupond, while music is repre sented by a reissue of Arthur Hutching’s stunning Mozart, The Man, The Musicians (Schirmer, $45) and The Book of Music, A Visual Appreciation, edited by Gill Rowley (Prentice Hall, $19.95). Art and history combine in the magnificent Rome and Her Em pire, text by Barry Cunliffe (McGraw-Hill, $50), which makes the reader realize the grandeur that was Rome. One of the handsomest gift books for armchair historians is The Times Atlas of World His tory, edited by Geoffrey Barrac- lough (Hammond, $50), with maps that span the millenia from the origin of man to the 1970s. Some of the map colors are star tling, but the book achieves great clarity in its chronology. Another super history is the Bettmann Archive Picture His tory of the World, by Otto L. Bettmann (Random House, $19.95) with almost 5,000 pic tures of history from caveman to spaceman. In the special history category, the best-known author is Robert Redford, whose The Outlaw Trail movies, T\ Street have come forth with a humorous takeoff on “Saturday Night Fever.” It is a concept album called “Sesame Street Fever” (Sesame Street Records CTW 79005). Joe Raposo and Arthur Shimkin dreamed up the show from an idea by Norman Stiles. While Raposo is very much in evidence as an arranger, editor and music director, the man re sponsible for the Muppets, Jim Henson, is in the cast as “Ernie.” The album consists of six numbers, with Robin Gibb, Ernie, The Count and Cookie gettings things started with the title tune. Robin Gibb encores later with “Trash.” Bert and the Girls have a good time “Doin’ the Pigeon,” be fore Ernie and his Rubber Duckie return for another laugh. Cookie Monster and The Girls and Marty and Grover wind the proceedings up with “C is for Cookie” and “Has Anybody Seen My Dog.” This album is a lot of fun — especially the “Doin’ the Pigeon” number — and it should win friends both young and old. (Grosset & Dunlap, $19.95) tells the tale of badmen from Montana to the Mexican border with gorgeous photography by Jonathan Blair. Fireman turned author Dennis Smith has put together the His tory of Firefighting in America (Dial, $17.50). The Slaves, by Susanne Everett (Putnam, $20) presents an “illustrated history of the monstrous evil” that is cruel, slashing and sometimes hard to take. Vicarious tourists will enjoy American Rivers, by Bill Thomas (Norton, $30), and the New York Graphic Society’s At Home in the Wild, New England’s White Mountains, text by Brooks Atkin son and W. Kent Olson. For those who prefer man made wonders, there’s the Na tional Trust Book of Great Houses of Britain, by Nigel Nicolson (Godine, $30), which will make your home seem like a hut. Forget it and enjoy The Joy of Paris, by Bernard Herman (Vendome, $17.95), a splendid look at people as well as places. Gardening tomes will be grow ing like weeds on America’s cof fee tables this year. These in clude An Illustrated History of Gardening, by F.R. Crowell (Houghton Mifflin, $20), The Au dubon Society Book of Wildflowers, by Les Line and Walter Henricks Hodge (Abrams, $37.50) and two from Mayflower, Flowering Plants of the World, edited by C.V. Hey wood, and The Wild Garden, an Illustrated His tory of Weeds, by Lys de Bray ($17.95 and $19.95 respectively). Domesticated nature appears among the dog, cat and horse books. For dog-lovers, Macmillan presents The Dog Catalogue, by Don Myrus ($16.95), while McGraw-Hill offers Standard Guide to Pure-Bred Dogs ($24.95). Cat types get Cham pion Cats of the World, by Catherine Ing and Grace Pond (St. Martin’s, $17.50). What horse lover could say neigh to Great Stud-Farms of the World, by Monique and Hans Dossenbach and Hans Joachim Kohler (Morrow, $35). From sport of kings to Sports! by George Plimpton (Abrams, $29.95), which includes every thing from the hulks of football to man made tiny, overwhelmed by the Hawaiian surf. Individual sports in the spotlight include Jack Nicklaus On & Off the Fairway, an autobiographhy with Ken Bowden (Simon & Schuster, $12.95), and The Perfect Game, the World of Bowling, by Her man Weiskopf (Prentice-Hall, $15.95). Car buffs will adore the classic beauty of 20 Silver Ghosts, the Incomparable Pre World War I Rolls-Royce, paintings by Mel bourne Brindle, text by Phil May (Doubleday, $17.95) and be amused by Auto Ads, by Jane and Michael Stern (Random House, $12.95). Bestsellers FICTION 1. War and Remembrance — Herman Wouk 2. Chesapeake — James A. Michener 3. Fools Die — Mario Puzo 4. The Far Pavilions — M. M. Kaye 5. Evergreen — Bella Plain 6. The Empty Copper Sea — John D. MacDonald 7. Prelude to Terror — Helen Maclnnes 8. The Silmarillion — J. R. R. Tolkien 9. Bright Flows the River — Taylor Caldwell 10. Wifey — Judy Blume 14 NONFICTION 1. Mommy Dearest — Christina Crawford 2. A Distant Mirror — Bar bara Tuchman 3. American Caesar — William Manchester 4. If Life Is a Bowl of Cher ries, What Am I Doing in the Pits — Erma Bombeck 5. Gnomes — Wil Huygen 6. In Search of History — Theodore White 7. The Complete Book of Running — James Fixx 8. Jackie Oh! — Kitty Kelly 9. The Country Diary of an Edwardian Lady — Edith Holden 10. Robert Kennedy and His Times — Arthur Schlesinger Jr. Rock ’n Roll Country-Western Easy Listenin’ Disco Jazz CHECK OUR WEEKLY RECORD SPECIALS We also stock Maxell recording tapes 211 University Drive Open 10-7 846-3901