The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Don’t overlook splashy coffee table books as holiday gifts

- By Leanne Italie

NEW YORK » Art, architectu­re, music or travel: Coffee table books can fill just the right gift niche, especially when the cost would be budget-busting if you bought one for yourself.

Offerings abound at holiday time. Some suggestion­s: HOMES: “Architectu­ral Digest: AD at 100, a Century of Style,” by Architectu­ral Digest. Abrams. In her foreword, Anna Wintour calls the book “quite the house tour.” It’s a centenary celebratio­n of homes past and present. Marlene Dietrich lounges in Beverly Hills, circa the 1930s. Kylie Jenner stands atop a suede pouf next at home in Los Angeles. The studios of famous artists and the homes of legendary architects are included. $100.

“Cabin Porn: Inside,” by Zach Klein. Voracious/

Little Brown. More than a decade ago, Klein — cofounder and designer of Vimeo — began collecting tales of cabin life on a blog as he and his family set up camp in upstate New York. After publishing “Cabin Porn,” about his unplugged return to nature, he’s back with a second volume filled with the interiors and small details of how lay builders went about making their dwellings all over the world. $32.

“Inside Tangier: Houses & Gardens,” by Nicolo Castellini Baldissera, photos by Guido Taroni. Ven

dome. Long a haven for hippies, artists, literary outcasts and eccentrics of all kinds, Tangier is also filled with properties reflecting the “Tangerine” lifestyle. Among those in the book: Sidi Hosni, where Woolworth heiress Barbara Hutton spent three decades. $75. MUSIC: “My Name is Prince,” by Randee St. Nicholas, Amistad. A retrospect­ive of the photograph­er’s 25 years working for Prince. Over 384 pages, St. Nichols sheds light on some of their most intriguing shoots. In the mid-1990s, she ran across the charred remains of an elegant building in Hollywood, hired a shiny grand piano and shot Prince bathed in red light amid the ruins. $90.

“Jeff Buckley: His Own Voice,” edited by Mary Guibert and David Browne. DaCapo/Hachette Books. Coinciding with the 25th anniversar­y of Buckley’s debut album, “Grace,” is this collection of never before seen journals

and unpublishe­d lyrics. Buckley died in 1997 in an accidental drowning three years after “Grace” was released. The book interspers­es photos of such artifacts as his guitars and favorite books with his writings, presented in his own hand. $40.

“Guitar: The World’s Most Seductive Instrument,” by David Schiller. Workman. Brief profiles of 24 guitar gods along with the instrument­s themselves, with detailed descriptio­ns of why each is important. Accompanie­d by a researcher, Schiller traveled far and wide to study and photograph hundreds of guitars. This is a gift for the hardcore. $35.

“Rihanna,” by Rihanna. Phaidon. It’s 504 pages. It weighs 15 pounds. It’s Rihanna’s visual biography. In more than 1,400 photos, the superstar shares her backstage moments, vacation moments and fashion moments, along with the obligatory concert moments. She smokes. She skis. She gets tattooed. There’s little from her childhood, though one of her report cards notes she was “sure of herself and displays a positive attitude.” The cheapest of four versions

sells for $150.

HOLLYWOOD:

“Game of Thrones: The Costumes,” costumes by Michele Clapton, written by Gina McIntyre. Insight Editions. The costumes of the HBO series were integral in bringing George R.R. Martin’s world alive. Best jewelry? The dragon necklace of Daenerys. Best wedding gown? Sansa had two, one in gold with the Lannister lion embroidere­d at the back of the neck and another in spectral white with a fur collar and fish clasps influenced by her mother. $75.

“Letters from Hollywood: Inside the Private World of Classic American Moviemakin­g,” compiled and edited by Rocky Lang and Barbara Hall. Abrams. Collected from libraries, archives and personal collection­s, the book covers more than five decades of letters, memos and telegrams from celebritie­s and other insiders. In a 1952 letter, Humphrey Bogart addresses John Huston as: “Dear Fly in the Ointment.” $40.

“Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od: A Visual History,” by Fred Rogers Production­s, Tim Lybarger, Melissa Wagner and

Jenna McGuigan. Potter/Penguin Random House. With a new feature film starring Tom Hanks, the beloved children’s television host and his show remain hot commoditie­s. The book offers a guide to characters, puppets and episodes. $35.

FASHION:

“Worn on this Day: The Clothes that Made History,” by Kimberly Chrisman-Campbell. Running Press. Space suits, Olympic uniforms, armor: Centuries of garments are revealed. The book time hops in a calendar format. On Oct. 13, 1970, Angela Davis was captured at a motel, almost unrecogniz­able with her “Black Power” afro straighten­ed and pulled under a short wig. Starting Sept. 1, 1941, Jews in Germany were required to wear a yellow Star of David sewn to their clothes. $28.

“Supreme Models: Iconic Black Women Who Revolution­ized Fashion,” by Marcellas Reynolds. Abrams. From the first to make it into catalogs and onto the covers of magazines to runway stars past and present, this book pays homage to black models.

Iman Abdulmajid, included, once said: “I’ll be truly happy when we’re not counting the number of ethnically diverse models on a fashion runway or campaign...” $50.

“Ralph Lauren: In His Own Fashion,” by Alan Flusser. Abrams. How did little Ralph Lifshitz, born to Jewish immigrants of modest means in the Bronx, become the mighty Ralph Lauren? For starters, he scrutinize­d the style of 1940s Hollywood stars. But when it came to westerns, Lauren wanted to be Randolph Scott, the “tough, trail-worn cowboy,” rather than the cleanshave­n hero riding the white horse, Flusser writes. The book coincides with a new HBO documentar­y, “Very Ralph.” $50.

“Ballerina: Fashion’s Modern Muse,” by Patricia Mears, Laura Jacobs, Jane Pritchard, Rosemary Harden and Joel Lobenthal. Vendome. The early 20th century included the rise of the ballerina as a cultural figure and the iconic tutu as inspiratio­n for a new style of dress, Mears writes. The influence continues today. See the progressio­n through meaty text and archival photos, stretching from the Ballets

Russes of the 1930s to Rei Kawakubo’s tulle and chiffon skirt and “Biker Ballerina” leather jacket for Comme des Garcons in 2005. $60.

ART:

“Ballerina Project,” photograph­s by Dane Shitagi. Chronicle Books. Shitagi has parlayed the popularity of his Instagram feed @ballerinap­roject— into a book in more than 170 shots of accomplish­ed dancers around the globe over 18 years. Katie Boren stands en pointe on a Wolford factory floor in Austria and Mikaela Kelly is draped over a fire hydrant in Bushwick, Brooklyn. $40.

“Ansel Adams’ Yosemite,” by Ansel Adams. Little Brown and Company. The book includes images from Yosemite National Park selected by Adams before his death in 1984 and meticulous­ly reproduced by his publisher of more than 40 years. Adams, an environmen­tal activist, wanted to encourage park visitors to be the same when he selected eight photograph­s in the 1950s to offer exclusivel­y as affordable souvenirs at Yosemite. He added to the eight over the years. $40.

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