Great new books: ‘Girl With the Dragon Tattoo’ follow-up and

Lisbeth Salander is again, a Swedish educator tries to assist younger males navigate intercourse, and the long run seems to be, properly, scary in these new fiction and nonfiction e-book releases. ‘The Girl Who Lived Twice’ by David Lagercrantz (Knopf , $27.95, fiction) What it’s about: David Lagercrantz continues Stieg Larsson’s Millennium collection (“The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo”) with the sixth Lisbeth Salander journey, “The Girl Who Lived Twice.” This time, Lisbeth goes lacking in the course of the hunt for evil twin sister Camilla, whereas Mikael Blomkvist wants her assist unraveling a twisted plot. The buzz: “It all makes for good bloody fun,” Kirkus Reviews writes. 2 Chicago-area appearances: Lagencrantz will converse at

Dragon deconstructed by rampant Ireland

Updated: Saturday, 08 Feb 2014 20:55 | Comments Chris Henry (bottom of pile) scored Ireland's first-half try Video Audio By Brendan Cole at Aviva Stadium Wales had no answer for a rampant Ireland on a day when Irish victories in individual battles across the pitch and a superior game plan saw the visitors thoroughly deconstructed as the home side claimed a 26-3 win. Four penalties by Jonathan Sexton and tries scored off the back of the superb Irish maul by Chris Henry and Paddy Jackson were a more than fair reflection of Ireland’s dominance. The contest saw Wales outplayed at the ruck, out-muscled at the coalface and out-thought across the park on a day when the Joe Schmidt era officially kicked into overdrive. From the opening exchanges,