Jon's bookshelf: all en-US Mon, 10 Mar 2025 12:03:43 -0700 60 Jon's bookshelf: all 144 41 /images/layout/goodreads_logo_144.jpg Murder in Brentwood 429207 448 Mark Fuhrman 0821758551 Jon 0 reviewed 3.81 1997 Murder in Brentwood
author: Mark Fuhrman
name: Jon
average rating: 3.81
book published: 1997
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/10
shelves: reviewed
review:
This book is lousy...read it if you're a psychologist & want a textbook example of someone who makes endless excuses for his own self-created problems, otherwise, skip. FOLLOW-UP: I re-read this (actually, read the paperback version) and I like it more now than before...for whatever that's worth. I now would say read it along with checking out other viewpoints: Clark's, Darden's, etc.
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<![CDATA[UNLIKEABLE: The Problem with Hillary]]> 24694051
From the author of the #1 New York Times bestsellers The Amateur and Blood Feud . . .

Unlikeable is the stunning, powerful exposé of Hillary Clinton and her floundering race for the White House. With unprecedented access to longtime associates of the Clintons and the Obamas, investigative reporter Edward Klein meticulously recreates conversations and details of Hillary Clinton's behind-the-scenes plotting in Chappaqua and Whitehaven. Klein, the former editor in chief of New York Times Magazine and a contributing editor to Vanity Fair , draws a deeply troubling portrait of Hillary Rodham Clinton, a highly unlikeable presidential candidate and a woman more associated with scandal than with accomplishments, with lying than with truth, with arrogance than with compassion.]]>
256 Edward Klein 1621573788 Jon 0 reviewed 3.59 2015 UNLIKEABLE: The Problem with Hillary
author: Edward Klein
name: Jon
average rating: 3.59
book published: 2015
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/02/27
shelves: reviewed
review:
I admit it...I hate Hillary Clinton and I'm a sucker for Hillary-bashing books. However, this one represents the sub-genre at its most simplistic, and the publisher, Regnery, at its most predictably right-wing. Lots of cheap shots (Bill is described as looking old at 68, for instance) and not much substance. Better books about the horror that is Hillary are available from the left (MY TURN, QUEEN OF CHAOS, FALSE CHOICES), right (CLINTON, INC., CLINTON CASH) and center (SHATTERED, CHASING HILLARY)...this one, you can skip. Follow-up: Klein's earlier book THE TRUTH ABOUT HILLARY is much better than this one.
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Delano. 554648 0 John Gregory Dunne 0374506973 Jon 0 3.80 1971 Delano.
author: John Gregory Dunne
name: Jon
average rating: 3.80
book published: 1971
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/02/09
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Breakfast at Tiffany's 9888 157 Truman Capote 0140274111 Jon 0 reviewed 3.72 1958 Breakfast at Tiffany's
author: Truman Capote
name: Jon
average rating: 3.72
book published: 1958
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/08/25
shelves: reviewed
review:
Somehow I never got around to reading much of Capote's fiction until now, seeing MURDER BY DEATH (and reading that awful "Children on Their Birthdays" story) must have put me off. BREAKFAST is as good a novella as MISS LONELYHEARTS: melodrama, bitchiness, sex and seediness in a brightly wrapped package (all that and a reference to my favorite Mitford sister, Unity, too). As good as his finest short stories ("Master Misery", "Shut a Final Door", "Miriam", "Headless Hawk", "Tree of Night") and better than OTHER VOICES, OTHER ROOMS, which is well-written and conveys a convincingly creepy Southern Gothic atmosphere, but which ultimately struck me as a bit gimmicky--it's harder to maintain that sense of mystery over the length of a novel, after all, and I prefer Capote's fiction when he explores urban settings, as here. And no, I haven't seen the movie (hate that "Moon River" song) and have no wish to.
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<![CDATA[An American Voter: My Love Affair with Presidential Politics]]> 9893419 226 Joan Sullivan 1596919558 Jon 0 3.50 2002 An American Voter: My Love Affair with Presidential Politics
author: Joan Sullivan
name: Jon
average rating: 3.50
book published: 2002
rating: 0
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date added: 2024/08/07
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review:

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Stories 15741435 305 Elizabeth Bowen Jon 0 3.83 1920 Stories
author: Elizabeth Bowen
name: Jon
average rating: 3.83
book published: 1920
rating: 0
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date added: 2024/06/24
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<![CDATA[Testimony of a Death: Thelma Todd: Mystery, Media and Myth in 1935 Los Angeles]]> 31253796 326 Marshall Croddy 1530498473 Jon 0 reviewed 4.06 2012 Testimony of a Death: Thelma Todd: Mystery, Media and Myth in 1935 Los Angeles
author: Marshall Croddy
name: Jon
average rating: 4.06
book published: 2012
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/01/05
shelves: reviewed
review:
Fascinating, meticulously detailed look at a real-life Hollywood mystery which as far as I'm concerned, this book solves. Croddy and Jenning also definitively demolish Andy Edmonds' faulty book on the Todd case, HOT TODDY. (I liked Edmonds' book about Fatty Arbuckle, FRAME-UP!, but the facts in the Arbuckle affair are less murky than with Todd's death.) Spoiler: Despite telling Todd "You'll have to stay in the garage all night!" in MONKEY BUSINESS, Groucho Marx was not involved. If you're interested in early Hollywood or like true crime books, this is a must-read. UPDATE: After reading Michelle Morgan's THE ICE CREAM BLONDE, I'm not so sure about this book...Morgan suggests that small-time gangsters (not Lucky Luciano, framed by Edmonds in her book, and not Todd's own drunken carelessness, blamed by Croddy and Jenning) may have rubbed Todd out, and makes a fairly good case....
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<![CDATA[A Meaningful Life (New York Review Books Classics)]]> 3979476 214 L.J. Davis 1590173007 Jon 0 reviewed 3.60 1971 A Meaningful Life (New York Review Books Classics)
author: L.J. Davis
name: Jon
average rating: 3.60
book published: 1971
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2023/07/30
shelves: reviewed
review:
The late L. J. Davis is best known as a journalist but, early in his career, published four novels, all of which are very funny, utterly unsentimental depictions of New York in the 60s and early 70s, through the eyes of similar, nebbishy protagonists who, it seems safe to say, bore more than a passing resemblance to Davis. MEANINGFUL LIFE is probably his best and certainly his most autobiographical novel, about a young couple who move from the SF Bay Area to Manhattan, then to Brooklyn where they buy and refurbish an apartment building (kicking out the deadbeat tenants in the process). COWBOYS DON'T CRY is a more bizarre work, worthy of the overused term Kafkaesque, about a native New Yorker who comes home, with disastrous results, after having a fight with his wife in California. In WHENCE ALL BUT HE HAD FLED the main character moves to Manhattan from Queens, and in WALKING SMALL he moves from Maine to Manhattan (where he's told "You don't need ID to drink in New York, it's 18!" Those WERE the days.)
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Youth, a Narrative 392274
"By all that’s wonderful, it is the sea, I believe, the sea itself—or is it youth alone? Who can tell? But you here—you all had something out of life: money, love—whatever one gets on shore—and, tell me, wasn’t that the best time, that time when we were young at sea; young and had nothing, on the sea that gives nothing, except hard knocks—and sometimes a chance to feel your strength—that only—what you all regret?"]]>
30 Joseph Conrad 1406922269 Jon 0 3.65 1898 Youth, a Narrative
author: Joseph Conrad
name: Jon
average rating: 3.65
book published: 1898
rating: 0
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date added: 2023/07/23
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Look at All Those Roses 7633569 0 Elizabeth Bowen 0224600605 Jon 0 3.00 Look at All Those Roses
author: Elizabeth Bowen
name: Jon
average rating: 3.00
book published:
rating: 0
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date added: 2023/05/25
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<![CDATA[Catch of the Day (Gideon's Cove, #1)]]> 950018 384 Kristan Higgins 0373772246 Jon 3 3.90 2012 Catch of the Day (Gideon's Cove, #1)
author: Kristan Higgins
name: Jon
average rating: 3.90
book published: 2012
rating: 3
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date added: 2023/01/14
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Constant Reader: 2 924385
Of the forty-six Constant Reader pieces that appeared, thirty-one have been reprinted here in whole or in part."]]>
157 Dorothy Parker 067023916X Jon 0 reviewed 4.25 1970 Constant Reader: 2
author: Dorothy Parker
name: Jon
average rating: 4.25
book published: 1970
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2022/11/02
shelves: reviewed
review:
Parker is best known for her poetry, short stories and having been one of the Algonquin Hotel circle of wits (who, according to Edmund Wilson, weren't really all that witty: he offered as a sample "Hiawatha nice girl until I met you.") Some of her best writing, though, was in these reviews, which are always entertaining and provide intriguing glimpses of the 20s. She's good on books by celebrities, especially women, who were not writers first & foremost (Aimee McPherson, Isadora Duncan), less strong when facing major work by "real" writers (of Gide's COUNTERFEITERS she essentially says only, "It's great.") She gets in a few good kicks at famous writers of the day, as when she points out that Sinclair Lewis' use of the term Babbitt, which he invented in the novel of that name, to describe the main character in his later novel DODSWORTH is in poor taste. Too bad that aside from a few stories, Parker never wrote an imaginative work as good as the Winnie-the-Pooh books she hated.
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Dream Story 157409 Like his Viennese contemporary Sigmund Freud, the doctor and dramatist Arthur Schnitzler (1862-1931) was a bold pioneer in exploring the dark tangled roots of human sexuality.

Arthur Schnitzler is probably most famous for La Ronde, a play too scandalous to publish or perform in his own lifetime but whose daisy-chain of couplings inspired both Max Ophuls's classic film and David Hare's modernized version, The Blue Room, which played to sell-out audiences in the West End and on Broadway. Dream Story is an equally erotic work, in which a married couple are first traumatized and then achieve a new depth of understanding by confessing to each other their sexual fantasies, dream-like adventures and might-have-beens . . .

Taking us on a guided tour of Vienna's seedy cafés, red-light district, decadent villas, hospitals and morgue, Schnitzler brilliantly uncovers the violence and depravity lurking beneath the surface of civilized society.

Dream Story is the inspiration for Eyes Wide Shut, co-written by Stanley Kubrick and Frederic Raphael.]]>
117 Arthur Schnitzler 0141182245 Jon 0 reviewed 3.86 1926 Dream Story
author: Arthur Schnitzler
name: Jon
average rating: 3.86
book published: 1926
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2022/11/02
shelves: reviewed
review:
Like many fine novels, this one is difficult to sum up or describe. It has somewhat the same dreamy, reflective feeling as another great early-20C. short novel by a German-language writer, DEATH IN VENICE, but the subject matter is drastically different (not merely because the focus is hetero- rather than homosexual). The section involving Fridolin, the main character's visit to a prostitute is reminiscent of the similar scene in CATCHER IN THE RYE, while Fridolin's meditation on the futility of trying to help the Viennese homeless will resonate with contemporary American readers. This is a brilliant work that lingers in the memory.
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Another City, Not My Own 18235
We have met Gus Bailey in previous novels by Dominick Dunne. He is a writer and journalist, father of a murdered child, and chronicler of justice-served or denied-as it relates to the rich and famous.ĚýĚýNow back in Los Angeles, a city that once adored him and later shunned him, Gus is caught up in what soon becomes a national obsession. Using real names and places, Dunne interweaves the story of the trial with the personal trials Gus endures as he faces his own mortality.

By day, Gus is at the courthouse, the confidant of the Goldman and Simpson families, the lawyers, the journalists, the hangers-on, even the judge; at night he is the honored guest at the most dazzling gatherings in town as everyone-from Kirk Douglas to Heidi Fleiss, from Elizabeth Taylor to Nancy Reagan-delights in the latest news from the corridors of the courthouse.

Another City, Not My Own does what no other book on this sensational case has been able to do because of Dominick Dunne's unique ability to probe the sensibilities of participants and observers. This book illuminates the meaning of guilt and innocence in America today. A vivid, revealing achievement, Another City, Not My Own is Dominick Dunne at his best.


From the Hardcover edition.]]>
Dominick Dunne 0517361396 Jon 0 reviewed 3.69 1997 Another City, Not My Own
author: Dominick Dunne
name: Jon
average rating: 3.69
book published: 1997
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2022/11/02
shelves: reviewed
review:
This book is a hopeless mishmash of fact and fiction that sells both genres short. No worries about Dunne overtaking Joe McGinniss' FATAL VISION or BLIND FAITH, Clark Howard's ZEBRA, Robert Graysmith's ZODIAC, or Diana Trilling's MRS. HARRIS in the true-crime sweepstakes. I don't agree with Ishmael Reed's notion that OJ might possibly be innocent, but I agree with Reed's attack on Dunne and this book. Read Marcia Clark's WITHOUT A DOUBT, Christopher Darden's IN CONTEMPT...or Dunne's nonfiction pieces about OJ collected in his book JUSTICE, but skip this.
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Tales 19271094
"Baraka's stories evoke a mood of revolutionary disorder, conjuring an alternative universe in which a dangerous African-American underground, or a dangerous literary underground still exists...Baraka is at his best as a lyrical prophet of despair who transfigures his contentious racial and political views into a transcendent, 'outtelligent' clarity."
-- New York Times Book Review (Editors' Choice) on Tales of the Out & the Gone

With a new introduction by Henry Louis Gates Jr.

These sixteen artful and nuanced stories fall into two parts: the first nine concern themselves with the sensibility of a hip, perceptive young black man in white America. The last seven stories endeavor to place that same man within the context of his awareness of and participation in a rapidly emerging and powerfully felt negritude. They deal, it might be said, with the black man in black America. Yet these tales are not social tracts, but absolutely masterful fiction--provocative, witty, and, at times, bitter and aggressive.
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132 Amiri Baraka Jon 0 reviewed 3.33 1967 Tales
author: Amiri Baraka
name: Jon
average rating: 3.33
book published: 1967
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2022/09/06
shelves: reviewed
review:
Surreal urban scenes portrayed with bitter humor. Essentially, the first half or so is great, then Jones decided to become a black nationalist and lost his edge, at least from a literary standpoint. He may have been sick of hanging out with ofays at that point (and hey, who'd blame him) but he certainly wrote better fiction, as well as better poetry, when he was....
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<![CDATA[Don't You Want Somebody to Love: Reflections on the San Francisco Sound]]> 418987 136 Slick 0943389089 Jon 0 reviewed 4.00 1993 Don't You Want Somebody to Love: Reflections on the San Francisco Sound
author: Slick
name: Jon
average rating: 4.00
book published: 1993
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2022/04/25
shelves: reviewed
review:
SF Bay Area life in the 60s may not have been all it's cracked up to be, but Darby Slick makes it sound pretty fun in his memoir about how he, brother Jerry, and sister-in-law Grace formed the Great Society and how the band eventually fell apart, with Grace leaving to join the Jefferson Airplane. Darby (who wrote "Somebody to Love" for the Society before the Airplane made it a hit) wasn't just focused on music during this period: he decamped to New York for awhile to sit in on the ongoing obscenity trial of Lenny Bruce (subject of "Father Bruce", another Great Society song), then returned to find the Stones' new LP 12 X 5 on the turntable and a fat joint rolled-up for him to enjoy it with. Whether it was strong enough weed to make Mick Jagger's blues covers sound as good as the originals, Slick doesn't say....
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The Nigger of the Narcissus 178533 112 Joseph Conrad 1419175602 Jon 0 3.67 1897 The Nigger of the Narcissus
author: Joseph Conrad
name: Jon
average rating: 3.67
book published: 1897
rating: 0
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date added: 2021/11/25
shelves:
review:
People who prefer reading the title of a novel to the laborious process of reading the book itself may cite this work as a proof of Conrad's "racism", but I drew the opposite conclusion. James Wait, the black sailor and title character, is a precursor to Ralph Ellison's invisible man--in fact, that might have been a better title for this novel than for Ellison's. He stays below decks for most of the story, sick (or perhaps feigning it, since he has an alleged history of doing that sort of thing) while the other sailors project their own fears, anxieties, hatreds upon him. Brilliant, ambiguous, memorable, this is the finest Conrad novel I've read.
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<![CDATA[The Third Man and The Fallen Idol]]> 3705 The Third Man is Greene's brilliant recreation of post-war Vienna, a city of desolate poverty occupied by four powers. Rollo Martins, a second-rate novelist, arrives penniless in Vienna to visit his old friend and hero Harry Lime. Harry is dead, but the circumstances surrounding his death are highly suspicious, and his reputation, at the very least, dubious.

Graham Greene said of The Third Man that he "wanted to entertain [people], to frighten them a little, to make them laugh" and the result is both a compelling narrative and a haunting thriller. The Fallen Idol is the chilling story of a small boy caught up in the games that adults play. Left in the care of the butler, Baines, and his wife, Philip realizes too late the danger of lies and deceit. But the truth is even deadlier.]]>
160 Graham Greene 014018533X Jon 0 3.73 1949 The Third Man and The Fallen Idol
author: Graham Greene
name: Jon
average rating: 3.73
book published: 1949
rating: 0
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date added: 2021/11/17
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<![CDATA[The Fading Smile: Poets in Boston, from Robert Frost to Robert Lowell to Sylvia Plath,]]> 295174
Louis S. Auchincloss

An intimately perceptive account, by a poet who knew them all, of the brilliant circle of poets who lived and worked in Boston through the half-decade beginning in 1955. That was the year Peter Davison, coming to Boston as a book editor. was swept up in a world -- in a tumult -- of poetry. He rediscovered his father's old friend Robert Frost. He briefly squired Sylvia Plath. He came to know Robert Lowell (whose poems and private disasters dominated the period) and Adrienne Rich, Stanley Kunitz, Richard Wilbur. Anne Sexton, W. S. Merwin, and others who, closely bound together in friendship or rivalry or both, defined the shape of American poetry at mid-century Through their eves as well as his own, and often in their words, Davison presents a sharply fresh vision of the shift from confidence to a troubled questioning that overtook America -- a transformation that was, in a sense, foreshadowed in the sensibilities, in the writings, sometimes in the lives, of some of our finest poets.]]>
346 Peter Davison 0679406581 Jon 0 reviewed 3.60 1994 The Fading Smile: Poets in Boston, from Robert Frost to Robert Lowell to Sylvia Plath,
author: Peter Davison
name: Jon
average rating: 3.60
book published: 1994
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2021/07/17
shelves: reviewed
review:
Peter Davison combines memoir and criticism in this nostalgic, unsentimental look at a variety of poets who lived and worked in the Boston area during the 1950s and 60s. Favorite anecdote: W. S. Merwin follows Robert Lowell around at a party asking him what he thinks of his work until Lowell finally tells Merwin he's "a first-rate second-rate poet." (Well, you had to ask, Merwin.) Davison himself is hard on writers who he thinks failed to live up to their potential, such as Adrienne Rich,or who exploited their private demons to create less-than-great work, such as Anne Sexton. (I agree with him in both cases.) Davison is particularly good on Lowell, portraying him as a man who lived for literature--largely at the expense of life itself--and Sylvia Plath, whose tortured, conflicted personality comes through with awful clarity in Davison's rendering. Davison also includes poems by the poets he discusses and one of his own.
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<![CDATA[Our Savage Art: Poetry and the Civil Tongue]]> 6431019
Like The Undiscovered Poetry in the Age of Tin , which won the National Book Critics Circle Award in Criticism, Our Savage Art features the corrosive wit and darkly discriminating critiques that have become the trademarks of Logan's style. Opening with a defense of the critical eye, this collection features essays on Robert Lowell's correspondence, Elizabeth Bishop's unfinished poems, the inflated reputation of Hart Crane, the loss of the New Critics, and a damning-and already highly controversial-indictment of an edition of Robert Frost's notebooks.

Logan also includes essays on Derek Walcott and Geoffrey Hill, two crucial figures in the divided world of contemporary poetry, and an attempt to rescue the reputation of the nineteenth-century poet John Townsend Trowbridge. Short reviews consider John Ashbery, Anne Carson, Billy Collins, Rita Dove, Louise GlĂĽck, Jorie Graham, Robert Hass, Seamus Heaney, and dozens of others. Though he might be called a cobra with manners, Logan is a fervent advocate for poetry, and Our Savage Art continues to raise the standard of what the critic can do.]]>
368 William Logan 0231147325 Jon 0 reviewed 3.82 2009 Our Savage Art: Poetry and the Civil Tongue
author: William Logan
name: Jon
average rating: 3.82
book published: 2009
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2021/07/17
shelves: reviewed
review:
William Logan has published several poetry collections, but is perhaps best known for being the Don Rickles of American poetry criticism, lambasting poets he doesn't like. But while it's entertaining--up to a point--to read his demolishings of Tess Gallagher, Mary Oliver, Billy Collins and other contemporaries, I find his longer essays--analyses of earlier poets such as Auden, Frost, Lowell, and Bishop--far more useful and interesting. As a critic Logan is a devotee of the cooked over the raw, the palefaces not the redskins--he doesn't think much of the Beats, the New York School (except some of Ashbery's work), the Black Mountain brigade, most Harlem Renaissance/Black Arts poetry, or (pseudo?) tough guys Alan Dugan and Charles Bukowski (though Logan's opinion of Hilda Doolittle is very similar to Bukowski's, as expressed in the latter's poem "vegas"). OUR SAVAGE ART is a typical collection of Logan's reviews and essays and includes an insightful piece about the different ways Florida, the state where Logan lives, has been portrayed by poets, as well as an interview in which this classicist reveals that he began his writing career as...a rock critic! The irony of it all....
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<![CDATA[The Great Derangement: A Terrifying True Story of War, Politics, and Religion at the Twilight of the American Empire]]> 1948003
Rolling Stone's Matt Taibbi set out to describe the nature of George Bush's America in the post-9/11 era and ended up vomiting demons in an evangelical church in Texas, riding the streets of Baghdad in an American convoy to nowhere, following a trail of pork through the halls of Congress, and falling into the rabbit hole of the 9/11 Truth Movement.

He discovered in his travels across the country that the resilient blue state/red state narrative of American politics had become irrelevant. A large and growing chunk of the American population was so turned off--or radicalized--by electoral chicanery, a spineless news media, and the increasingly blatant lies from our leaders ("they hate us for our freedom") that they abandoned the political mainstream altogether. They joined what he calls The Great Derangement.

Taibbi tells the story of this new American madness by inserting himself into four defining American subcultures:
� The Military, where he finds himself mired in the grotesque black comedy of the American occupation of Iraq;
� The System, where he follows the money-slicked path of legislation in Congress;
� The Resistance, where he doubles as chief public antagonist and undercover member of the passionately bonkers 9/11 Truth Movement; and
� The Church, where he infiltrates a politically influential apocalyptic mega-ministry in Texas and enters the lives of its desperate congregants.

Together these four interwoven adventures paint a portrait of a nation dangerously out of touch with reality and desperately searching for answers in all the wrong places. Funny, smart, and a little bit heartbreaking, The Great Derangement is an audaciously reported, sobering, and illuminating portrait of America at the end of the Bush era.

"The funniest angry writer and the angriest funny writer since Hunter S. Thompson roared into town."
-- James Wolcott

"�[A] scabrous, hilarious vivisection of our disintegrating nation. …Taibbi shines a light on the corruption, absurdities, and idiot pieties of modern American politics. Beneath his cynical fury, though, are flashes of surprising compassion for the adrift credulous souls who are taken in by it all."
-- Michelle Goldberg]]>
281 Matt Taibbi 0385520344 Jon 0 reviewed 3.93 2008 The Great Derangement: A Terrifying True Story of War, Politics, and Religion at the Twilight of the American Empire
author: Matt Taibbi
name: Jon
average rating: 3.93
book published: 2008
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2021/07/17
shelves: reviewed
review:
My favorite part of this book was the section about Congress and how its public sessions are an excruciating waste of time and taxpayers' money--during the one Taibbi attended, the Senate managed to dedicate a post office to Ava Gardner's memory--while all their real work (or should that be dirty work?) is done behind the scenes. Fun book, but ultimately Taibbi doesn't break too much new ground.
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<![CDATA[Some People, Places, and Things That Will Not Appear in My Next Novel (Short Story Index Reprint Series)]]> 499129 175 John Cheever 0836934490 Jon 0 3.87 1961 Some People, Places, and Things That Will Not Appear in My Next Novel (Short Story Index Reprint Series)
author: John Cheever
name: Jon
average rating: 3.87
book published: 1961
rating: 0
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date added: 2021/06/23
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<![CDATA[The Enormous Radio (Creative Short Stories)]]> 499130 32 John Cheever 0871919591 Jon 0 4.01 1947 The Enormous Radio (Creative Short Stories)
author: John Cheever
name: Jon
average rating: 4.01
book published: 1947
rating: 0
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date added: 2021/06/23
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<![CDATA[The Housebreaker of Shady Hill and Other Stories]]> 2071818 143 John Cheever Jon 0 4.19 1958 The Housebreaker of Shady Hill and Other Stories
author: John Cheever
name: Jon
average rating: 4.19
book published: 1958
rating: 0
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date added: 2021/06/23
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The World of Apples 213618 158 John Cheever 0446896454 Jon 0 3.81 1973 The World of Apples
author: John Cheever
name: Jon
average rating: 3.81
book published: 1973
rating: 0
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date added: 2021/06/23
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<![CDATA[Hail, Hail, Euphoria!: Presenting the Marx Brothers in Duck Soup, the Greatest War Movie Ever Made]]> 7934860 160 Roy Blount Jr. 0061808164 Jon 0 reviewed 3.25 2010 Hail, Hail, Euphoria!: Presenting the Marx Brothers in Duck Soup, the Greatest War Movie Ever Made
author: Roy Blount Jr.
name: Jon
average rating: 3.25
book published: 2010
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2021/06/22
shelves: reviewed
review:
Classic comedy...lousy book. Blount devotes what seems like 300 pages to hand-wringing over a supposedly "racist" line spoken by Groucho, okay Roy, you're a Southern liberal, I GET it. Read THE MARX BROS. SCRAPBOOK, RAISED EYEBROWS, GROUCHO CHICO HARPO & SOMETIMES ZEPPO, HELLO I MUST BE GOING, Maxine Marx's GROWING UP WITH CHICO, Simon Louvish's MONKEY BUSINESS...but not this.
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<![CDATA[Sacred Monsters, Sacred Masters: Beaton, Capote, DalĂ­, Picasso, Freud, Warhol, and More]]> 37561587 Life of Picasso, the 28 sketches assembled here make an agreeable diversion, revealing Richardson's lighter side and formidable knowledge of art history. Admiring portraits of Chilean collector Eugenia Errazuriz ("Picasso's Other Mother") and British painter Lucian Freud are among the very few laudatory pieces in a collection notable for its enjoyable emphasis on the less edifying traits of the rich and/or famous. The Sitwells were spiteful mythomaniacs. Armand Hammer was "a veteran con man." As for the sexual proclivities of Salvador DalĂ­ and his wife Gala... well, Richardson gives you all the gory details, some of which would have impressed the Marquis de Sade. Richardson appears as a character in several pieces: he worked for Hammer, spent a summer with Truman Capote in Venice, and sat for a portrait by Andy Warhol. But these appearances seldom seem self-aggrandizing; they're integrated into the essays with the same smoothness that distinguishes his prose. --Wendy Smith ]]> 386 John Richardson 0224062557 Jon 0 4.00 2001 Sacred Monsters, Sacred Masters: Beaton, Capote, DalĂ­, Picasso, Freud, Warhol, and More
author: John Richardson
name: Jon
average rating: 4.00
book published: 2001
rating: 0
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date added: 2021/05/04
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Woman beware woman 4758674 176 Emma Tennant 0224021648 Jon 0 2.90 1984 Woman beware woman
author: Emma Tennant
name: Jon
average rating: 2.90
book published: 1984
rating: 0
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date added: 2021/03/15
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Pride and Prejudice 84979 Another cover edition for this ISBN

Since its immediate success in 1813, Pride and Prejudice has remained one of the most popular novels in the English language. Jane Austen called this brilliant work "her own darling child" and its vivacious heroine, Elizabeth Bennet, "as delightful a creature as ever appeared in print." The romantic clash between the opinionated Elizabeth and her proud beau, Mr. Darcy, is a splendid performance of civilized sparring. And Jane Austen's radiant wit sparkles as her characters dance a delicate quadrille of flirtation and intrigue, making this book the most superb comedy of manners of Regency England.]]>
334 Jane Austen 0553213105 Jon 0 reviewed 4.36 1813 Pride and Prejudice
author: Jane Austen
name: Jon
average rating: 4.36
book published: 1813
rating: 0
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Whoever this Jane Austen character is, she's guilty of writing blatantly antifeminist child pornography and should be placed on a sex-offender registry, after undergoing re-education sessions at the hands of Andrea Dworkin. The main characters are four young sisters--the youngest, Lydia, is only 14--who, as a result of having been sexualized by corrupt media and life in a sexist society, think of nothing but hooking-up and define themselves solely in terms of their involvements with men. A fifth sister, Mary, has appearance issues and receives only contempt from Austen for her attempts at intellectual activity. For shame! This novel should be banned since, as all right-thinking people know, censorship isn't REALLY censorship when left-wingers and feminists support it. Right?
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The Moon and the Bonfires 527724 The Moon and the Bonfires, Cesare Pavese's last and greatest novel, returns to Italy from California after the Second World War. He has done well in America, but success hasn't taken the edge off his memories of childhood, when he was an orphan living at the mercy of a bitterly poor farmer. He wants to learn what happened in his native village over the long, terrible years of Fascism; perhaps, he even thinks, he will settle down. And yet as he uncovers a secret and savage history from the war—a tale of betrayal and reprisal, sex and death—he finds that the past still haunts the present.

The Moon and the Bonfires is a novel of intense lyricism and tragic import, a masterpiece of twentieth-century literature that has been unavailable to American readers for close to fifty years. Here it appears in a vigorous new English version by R. W. Flint, whose earlier translations of Pavese's fiction were acclaimed by Leslie Fiedler as "absolutely lucid and completely incantatory."

Winner of the 2003 PEN/Book-of-the-Month Club Translation Prize

A NEW YORK REVIEW BOOKS ORIGINAL

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154 Cesare Pavese 1590170210 Jon 0 3.83 1950 The Moon and the Bonfires
author: Cesare Pavese
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average rating: 3.83
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Save Me The Waltz 43841163 Save Me the Waltz is the first and only novel by Zelda Fitzgerald. During the years when her husband F. Scott Fitzgerald was working on Tender is the Night—which many critics consider his masterpiece—Zelda Fitzgerald was preparing her own story. The novel strangely parallels events from her husband’s life, throwing a fascinating light on Scott Fitzgerald and his work. In its own right, it is a vivid and moving story—centered upon the confessional of a famous glamour girl of the affluent 1920s and an aspiring ballerina—that captures the spirit of an era.]]> 303 Zelda Fitzgerald 1999828046 Jon 0 3.55 1932 Save Me The Waltz
author: Zelda Fitzgerald
name: Jon
average rating: 3.55
book published: 1932
rating: 0
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Bottom Dogs 7551659 269 Edward Dahlberg Jon 0 reviewed 3.00 1930 Bottom Dogs
author: Edward Dahlberg
name: Jon
average rating: 3.00
book published: 1930
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date added: 2020/08/21
shelves: reviewed
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Powerful novel from the 1930s about Dahlberg-alter-ego Lorry and his mother, a hairdresser, and his experiences roaming the country with Mom and living in an orphans' home. FROM FLUSHING TO CALVARY continues the story with Dahlberg using a fancier style, no doubt influenced by his reading of Joyce, ULYSSES in particular. D. H. Lawrence wrote a review of BOTTOM DOGS that appears as an introduction in some editions of the novel, including an omnibus volume that also includes FLUSHING and THOSE WHO PERISH, another fine early Dahlberg work dealing with American Jews' divergent responses to the Nazi threat from overseas.
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Only Girl 42086117 A raucous and vividly dishy memoir by the only woman writer on the masthead of Rolling Stone Magazine in the early Seventies.
In 1971, Robin Green had an interview with Jann Wenner at the offices Rolling Stone magazine. She had just moved to Berkeley, California, a city that promised "Good Vibes All-a Time." Those days, job applications asked just one question, "What are your sun, moon and rising signs?" Green thought she was interviewing for a clerical job like the other girls in the office, a "real job." Instead, she was hired as a journalist.

With irreverent humor and remarkable nerve, Green spills stories of sparring with Dennis Hopper on a film junket in the desert, scandalizing fans of David Cassidy and spending a legendary evening on a water bed in Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s dorm room. In the seventies, Green was there as Hunter S. Thompson crafted Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, and now, with a distinctly gonzo female voice, she reveals her side of that tumultuous time in America.

Brutally honest and bold, Green reveals what it was like to be the first woman granted entry into an iconic boys' club. Pulling back the curtain on Rolling Stone magazine in its prime, The Only Girl is a stunning tribute to a bygone era and a publication that defined a generation.]]>
0 Robin Green 0349010218 Jon 0 3.27 Only Girl
author: Robin Green
name: Jon
average rating: 3.27
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Contemporaries and snobs, 1582624 Laura (Riding) Jackson 0403007054 Jon 0 5.00 1928 Contemporaries and snobs,
author: Laura (Riding) Jackson
name: Jon
average rating: 5.00
book published: 1928
rating: 0
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<![CDATA[The Age of Entitlement: America Since the Sixties]]> 52419341 A major American intellectual makes the historical case that the reforms of the 1960s, reforms intended to make the nation more just and humane, instead left many Americans feeling alienated, despised, misled—and ready to put an adventurer in the White House.

Christopher Caldwell has spent years studying the liberal uprising of the 1960s and its unforeseen consequences. Even the reforms that Americans love best have come with costs that are staggeringly high—in wealth, freedom, and social stability—and that have been spread unevenly among classes and generations.

Caldwell reveals the real political turning points of the past half century, taking readers on a roller-coaster ride through Playboy magazine, affirmative action, CB radio, leveraged buyouts, iPhones, Oxycontin, Black Lives Matter, and internet cookies. In doing so, he shows that attempts to redress the injustices of the past have left Americans living under two different ideas of what it means to play by the rules.

Essential, timely, hard to put down, The Age of Entitlement is a brilliant and ambitious argument about how the reforms of the past fifty years gave the country two incompatible political systems—and drove it toward conflict.]]>
352 Christopher Caldwell 1501106899 Jon 0 4.01 2020 The Age of Entitlement: America Since the Sixties
author: Christopher Caldwell
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average rating: 4.01
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<![CDATA[Debating P.C.: The Controversy over Political Correctness on College Campuses]]> 716927
Contents

“The Big Chill? Interview with Dinesh D’Souza� by Robert MacNeil
“On Modern Language Association Presidential Address 1990� by Catharine R. Stimpson
“The Periphery v. the The MLA in Chicago� by Roger Kimball
“The Storm over the University� by John Searle
“Public Imaged Political Correctness and the Media’s Big Lie� by Michael Berubé
“The Value of the Canon� by Irving Howe
“The Politics of Knowledge� by Edward W. Said
“Whose Canon Is It, Anyway?� by Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
“Why Do We Read?� by Katha Pollitt
“’Speech Codes� on the Campus and Problems of Free Speech� by Nat Hentoff
“Freedom of Hate Speech� by Richard Perry and Patricia Williams
“There’s No Such Thing as Free Speech and It’s a Good Thing, Too� by Stanley Fish
“The Statement of the Black Faculty Caucus� by Ted Gordon and Wahneema Lubiano
“Radical English� by George F. Will
“Critics of Attempts to Democratize the Curriculum Are Waging a Campaign to Misrepresent the Work of Responsible Professors� by Paula Rothenberg
� E Pluribus Plures� by Diane Ravitch
� An Exchange� by Molefi Kete Asante
“The Prospect Before Us� by Hilton Kramer
“P.C. Rider� by Enrique Fernández
“Diverse New World� by Cornel West
“The Challenge for the Left� by Barbara Ehrenreich]]>
356 Paul Berman 0385315333 Jon 0 3.48 1992 Debating P.C.: The Controversy over Political Correctness on College Campuses
author: Paul Berman
name: Jon
average rating: 3.48
book published: 1992
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<![CDATA[The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life]]> 223556 912 Richard J. Herrnstein 0684824299 Jon 0 3.62 1994 The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life
author: Richard J. Herrnstein
name: Jon
average rating: 3.62
book published: 1994
rating: 0
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The World of Andy Capp 52240546 Reg Smythe Jon 0 0.0 1992 The World of Andy Capp
author: Reg Smythe
name: Jon
average rating: 0.0
book published: 1992
rating: 0
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House of Gold 3381590 328 Elizabeth Cullinan 057109564X Jon 0 3.50 House of Gold
author: Elizabeth Cullinan
name: Jon
average rating: 3.50
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the time of adam 51496007 Elizabeth Cullinan Jon 0 0.0 the time of adam
author: Elizabeth Cullinan
name: Jon
average rating: 0.0
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I only found out about Cullinan when she died recently, she wrote excellent short stories in a style associated with the NEW YORKER in its heyday (almost all her stories were published in that magazine). Subtle, not much action, but beautiful work, all the more erotic for keeping the theme of sexuality beneath the surface. Cullinan typically wrote about being Catholic and most of her stories are set either in the New York area or Ireland. The one time she tried something different, an O. Henry-type surprise ending (more predictable than surprising, actually) in her story "Dreaming", it didn't come off. But within her limitations she was a brilliant writer whose stories reward close attention.
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Yellow Roses 5043019 208 Elizabeth Cullinan 0670793876 Jon 0 3.83 1977 Yellow Roses
author: Elizabeth Cullinan
name: Jon
average rating: 3.83
book published: 1977
rating: 0
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<![CDATA[Nomad: From Islam to America: A Personal Journey Through the Clash of Civilizations]]> 6663818 Ayaan Hirsi Ali captured the world’s attention with Infidel, her compelling coming-of-age memoir, which spent thirty-one weeks on the New York Times bestseller list. Now, in Nomad, Hirsi Ali tells of coming to America to build a new life, an ocean away from the death threats made to her by European Islamists, the strife she witnessed, and the inner conflict she suffered. It is the story of her physical journey to freedom and, more crucially, her emotional journey to freedom—her transition from a tribal mind-set that restricts women’s every thought and action to a life as a free and equal citizen in an open society. Through stories of the challenges she has faced, she shows the difficulty of reconciling the contradictions of Islam with Western values.

In these pages Hirsi Ali recounts the many turns her life took after she broke with her family, and how she struggled to throw off restrictive superstitions and misconceptions that initially hobbled her ability to assimilate into Western society. She writes movingly of her reconciliation, on his deathbed, with her devout father, who had disowned her when she renounced Islam after 9/11, as well as with her mother and cousins in Somalia and in Europe.

Nomad is a portrait of a family torn apart by the clash of civilizations. But it is also a touching, uplifting, and often funny account of one woman’s discovery of today’s America. While Hirsi Ali loves much of what she encounters, she fears we are repeating the European mistake of underestimating radical Islam. She calls on key institutions of the West—including universities, the feminist movement, and the Christian churches—to enact specific, innovative remedies that would help other Muslim immigrants to overcome the challenges she has experienced and to resist the fatal allure of fundamentalism and terrorism.

This is Hirsi Ali’s intellectual coming-of-age, a memoir that conveys her philosophy as well as her experiences, and that also conveys an urgent message and mission—to inform the West of the extent of the threat from Islam, both from outside and from within our open societies. A celebration of free speech and democracy, Nomad is an important contribution to the history of ideas, but above all a rousing call to action.

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277 Ayaan Hirsi Ali 1439157316 Jon 0 3.93 2010 Nomad: From Islam to America: A Personal Journey Through the Clash of Civilizations
author: Ayaan Hirsi Ali
name: Jon
average rating: 3.93
book published: 2010
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<![CDATA[A Report in depth on Barry Goldwater]]> 51050246 160 James M. Perry Jon 0 0.0 A Report in depth on Barry Goldwater
author: James M. Perry
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Landmarks in the Desert 6384086 208 Kent Winslow Jon 0 reviewed 4.25 2008 Landmarks in the Desert
author: Kent Winslow
name: Jon
average rating: 4.25
book published: 2008
rating: 0
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This book--like Winslow's previous memoir, DREAM WORLD--does not have an ISBN, an example of Winslow's disdain for rules and convention. Both books tell the story of his life as an anarchist, atheist, abused child, radio DJ, antiwar activist in the 60s and 70s, and independent printer/publisher. I would rank DREAM WORLD higher than LANDMARKS, but both make compelling reading. In both books the author takes aim at some of his favorite targets including academics, militarists, cops, government agents, and Black Panthers and other misguided (in his view) militants. Powerful, take-no-prisoners, no-bullshit writing from a lifelong rebel.
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Infidel 81227
Infidel shows the coming of age of this distinguished political superstar and champion of free speech as well as the development of her beliefs, iron will, and extraordinary determination to fight injustice. Raised in a strict Muslim family, Hirsi Ali survived civil war, female mutilation, brutal beatings, adolescence as a devout believer during the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood, and life in four troubled, unstable countries ruled largely by despots. She escaped from a forced marriage and sought asylum in the Netherlands, where she earned a college degree in political science, tried to help her tragically depressed sister adjust to the West, and fought for the rights of Muslim women and the reform of Islam as a member of Parliament. Under constant threat, demonized by reactionary Islamists and politicians, disowned by her father, and expelled from family and clan, she refuses to be silenced.

Ultimately a celebration of triumph over adversity, Hirsi Ali’s story tells how a bright little girl evolves out of dutiful obedience to become an outspoken, pioneering freedom fighter. As Western governments struggle to balance democratic ideals with religious pressures, no other book could be more timely or more significant.]]>
353 Ayaan Hirsi Ali 0743289684 Jon 0 4.17 2006 Infidel
author: Ayaan Hirsi Ali
name: Jon
average rating: 4.17
book published: 2006
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Five Women (Verba Mundi) 191939
The recent translations of The Man Without Qualities and Musil's Diaries have shown why the Austrian writer is often thought of as Germanic literature's Proust, and this newly translated English version of his five hefty stories demonstrates that the novelist's work in shorter fiction also bears his distinctive iconoclastic, bold signature. Opening the volume are a trio of tales, two of which, "Grigia" and "Tonka," investigate the sexuality of peasant women. Musil's cerebral style seamlessly executes his explorations of the mind/body duality, the ways society and intellectual life affect, but do not eradicate, the truth of the carnal body. His attitudes toward femininity oscillate between fear, disenchantment and adoration, and in stories written over 75 years ago, this range of perception will be tantalizing for readers who value innovative classics. (From Publishers Weekly)]]>
224 Robert Musil 1567920756 Jon 0 3.90 1924 Five Women (Verba Mundi)
author: Robert Musil
name: Jon
average rating: 3.90
book published: 1924
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Under a Glass Bell 46065 Under a Glass Bell is one of Nin's finest collections of stories. First published in 1944, it attracted the attention of Edmond Wilson, who reviewed the collection in The New Yorker. It was in these stories that Nin's artistic and emotional vision took shape. This edition includes a highly informative and insightful foreword by Gunther Stuhlmann that places the collection in its historical context as well as illuminates the sequence of events and persons recorded in the diary that served as its inspiration.
Although Under a Glass Bell is now considered one of Anaïs Nin’s finest collections of stories, it was initially deemed unpublishable. Refusing to give up on her vision, in 1944 Nin founded her own press and brought out the first edition, illustrated with striking black-and-white engravings by her husband, Hugh Guiler. Shortly thereafter, it caught the attention of literary critic Edmund Wilson, who reviewed the collection in the New Yorker. The first printing sold out in three weeks.

This new Swallow Press edition includes an introduction by noted modernist scholar Elizabeth Podnieks, as well as editor Gunther Stuhlmann’s erudite but controversial foreword to the 1995 edition. Together, they place the collection in its historical context and sort out the individuals and events recorded in the diary that served as its inspiration. The new Swallow Press edition also restores the thirteen stories to the order Nin specified for the first commercial edition in 1948.]]>
101 AnaĂŻs Nin 0804003025 Jon 0 reviewed 3.95 1944 Under a Glass Bell
author: AnaĂŻs Nin
name: Jon
average rating: 3.95
book published: 1944
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In a few of these stories ("The Labyrinth", "Through the Streets of My Own Labyrinth") Nin slips into self-indulgent narcissism, but others ("The Mouse", "The Mohican", "Ragtime") are brilliant character sketches of Parisian low-lifes. (Nin handles such characterizations with more empathy and flair than her friend Henry Miller, a narcissist if there ever was one.) "The Child Born Out of the Fog" is a heartbreaking tale of a romance destroyed by racism, while "Je Suis le Plus Malade des Surrealistes" and "The Eye's Journey" are compelling portraits of frustrated would-be artists. However, Nin doesn't stay in tragic mode all the time--in "Houseboat", she gets in some good kicks at French bureaucrats. This was my first excursion into Nin-land and while it didn't make me want to rush out and get everything else she ever wrote, it did make me appreciate a writer I'd heard a lot about but never read before.
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<![CDATA[The Death of American Virtue: Clinton vs. Starr]]> 7023586
In exclusive interviews, Bill Clinton, Ken Starr, Monica Lewinsky, Paula Jones, Susan McDougal, and many more key players offer candid reflections on that period. Drawing on never-before-released records and documents—including the Justice Department’s internal investigation into Starr, new details concerning the death of Vince Foster, and evidence from lawyers on both sides—Gormley sheds new light on a dark and divisive chapter, the aftereffects of which are still being felt in today’s political climate.]]>
800 Ken Gormley 0307409449 Jon 0 4.20 2010 The Death of American Virtue: Clinton vs. Starr
author: Ken Gormley
name: Jon
average rating: 4.20
book published: 2010
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<![CDATA[Panic Attack: Young Radicals in the Age of Trump]]> 37638251 Panic Attack, libertarian journalist Robby Soave answers these questions by profiling young radicals from across the political spectrum.

Millennial activism has risen to new heights in the age of Trump. Although Soave may not personally agree with their motivations and goals, he takes their ideas seriously, approaching his interviews with a mixture of respect and healthy skepticism. The result is a faithful cross-section of today's radical youth, which will appeal to libertarians, conservatives, centrist liberals, and anyone who is alarmed by the trampling of free speech and due process in the name of social justice.]]>
324 Robby Soave 1250169887 Jon 0 3.81 2019 Panic Attack: Young Radicals in the Age of Trump
author: Robby Soave
name: Jon
average rating: 3.81
book published: 2019
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<![CDATA[Murder in Amsterdam: The Death of Theo van Gogh and the Limits of Tolerance]]> 9950 288 Ian Buruma 1594201080 Jon 0 3.71 2006 Murder in Amsterdam: The Death of Theo van Gogh and the Limits of Tolerance
author: Ian Buruma
name: Jon
average rating: 3.71
book published: 2006
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The Rage and the Pride 70684 The Rage and the Pride Oriana Fallaci breaks a ten year silence. The silence she kept until September 11's apocalypse in her Manhattan house. She breaks it with a deafening noise. In Europe this book has caused and causes a turmoil never registered in decades. Polemics, discussion, debates, hearty consents and praises, wild attacks.

With her well-known courage Oriana Fallaci faces the themes unchained by the Islamic terrorism: the contrast and, in her opinion, incompatibility between the Islamic world and the Western world; the global reality of the Jihad and the lack of response, the lenience of the West. With her brutal sincerity she hurls pitiless accusations, vehement invectives, and denounces the uncomfortable truths that all of us know but never dare to express. With her rigorous logic, lucidity of mind, she defends our culture and blames what she calls "our blindness, our deafness, our masochism, the conformism and the arrogance of the Politically Correct". With the poetry of a prophet like a modern Cassandra she says it in the form of a letter addressed to all of us.

The text is enriched by a dramatic preface in which Oriana Fallaci reveals how The Rage and the Pride was born, grew up, and detachedly calls it "my small book." In addition, a preface in which she tells significant episodes of her extraordinary life and explains her unreachable isolation, her demanding and inflexible choices. Because of this too, what she calls "my small book" is in reality a great book. A precious book, a book that shakes our conscience. It is also the portrait of a soul. Her soul. No doubt it will remain as a thorn pierced inside our brains and our hearts.]]>
168 Oriana Fallaci 0847825043 Jon 0 3.80 2001 The Rage and the Pride
author: Oriana Fallaci
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average rating: 3.80
book published: 2001
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<![CDATA[In Pursuit of Satan: The Police and the Occult]]> 2525520 420 Robert D. Hicks 0879756047 Jon 0 4.20 1991 In Pursuit of Satan: The Police and the Occult
author: Robert D. Hicks
name: Jon
average rating: 4.20
book published: 1991
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Lenin on the Train 29847081
By 1917 the European war seemed to be endless. Both sides in the fighting looked to new weapons, tactics and ideas to break a stalemate that was itself destroying Europe. In the German government a small group of men had a brilliant idea: why not sow further confusion in an increasingly chaotic Russia by arranging for Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, the most notorious of revolutionary extremists, currently safely bottled up in neutral Switzerland, to go home?

Catherine Merridale's Lenin on the Train recreates Lenin's extraordinary journey from harmless exile in Zurich, across a Germany falling to pieces from the war's deprivations, and northwards to the edge of Lapland to his eventual ecstatic reception by the revolutionary crowds at Petrograd's Finland Station.

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368 Catherine Merridale 0241011329 Jon 0 3.61 2016 Lenin on the Train
author: Catherine Merridale
name: Jon
average rating: 3.61
book published: 2016
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Visions Before Midnight 1855162 176 Clive James 0330264648 Jon 0 4.00 1977 Visions Before Midnight
author: Clive James
name: Jon
average rating: 4.00
book published: 1977
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<![CDATA[Reflections on the Revolution In Europe: Immigration, Islam, and the West]]> 3570210
Europe has undergone a demographic revolution it never expected. A half century of mass immigration has failed to produce anything resembling an American-style melting pot. By overestimating its need for immigrant labor and underestimating the culture-shaping potential of religion, Europe has trapped itself in a problem to which it has no obvious solution.

Christopher Caldwell has been reporting on the politics and culture of Islam in Europe for more than a decade. His deeply researched and insightful new book reveals a paradox. Since World War II, mass immigration has been made possible by Europe’s enforcement of secularism, tolerance, and equality. But when immigrants arrive, they are not required to adopt those values. And they are disinclined to, since they already have values of their own. Muslims dominate or nearly dominate important European cities, including Amsterdam and Rotterdam, Strasbourg and Marseille, the Paris suburbs and East London. Islam has challenged the European way of life at every turn, becoming, in effect, an “adversary culture.�

The result? In Reflections on the Revolution in Europe , Caldwell reveals the anger of natives and newcomers alike. He describes guest worker programs that far outlasted their economic justifications, and asylum policies that have served illegal immigrants better than refugees. He exposes the strange ways in which welfare states interact with Third World customs, the anti-Americanism that brings European natives and Muslim newcomers together, and the arguments over women and sex that drive them apart. He considers the appeal of sharia, “resistance,� and jihad to a second generation that is more alienated from Europe than the first, and addresses a crisis of faith among native Europeans that leaves them with a weak hand as they confront the claims of newcomers.

As increasingly assertive immigrant populations shape the continent, Caldwell writes, the foundations of European culture and civilization are being challenged and replaced. Reflections on the Revolution in Europe is destined to become the classic work on how Muslim immigration permanently reshaped the West.
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432 Christopher Caldwell 0385518269 Jon 0 3.68 2009 Reflections on the Revolution In Europe: Immigration, Islam, and the West
author: Christopher Caldwell
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average rating: 3.68
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<![CDATA[I Can't Breathe: A Killing on Bay Street]]> 32740061 The Divide.

On July 17, 2014, a forty-three-year-old black man named Eric Garner died on a Staten Island sidewalk after a police officer put him in what has been described as an illegal chokehold during an arrest for selling bootleg cigarettes. The final moments of Garner's life were captured on video and seen by millions. His agonized last words, "I can't breathe," became a rallying cry for the nascent Black Lives Matter protest movement. A grand jury ultimately declined to indict the officer who wrestled Garner to the pavement.

Matt Taibbi's deeply reported retelling of these events liberates Eric Garner from the abstractions of newspaper accounts and lets us see the man in full—with all his flaws and contradictions intact. A husband and father with a complicated personal history, Garner was neither villain nor victim, but a fiercely proud individual determined to do the best he could for his family, bedeviled by bad luck, and ultimately subdued by forces beyond his control.

In America, no miscarriage of justice exists in isolation, of course, and in I Can't Breathe Taibbi also examines the conditions that made this tragedy possible. Featuring vivid vignettes of life on the street and inside our Kafkaesque court system, Taibbi's kaleidoscopic account illuminates issues around policing, mass incarceration, the underground economy, and racial disparity in law enforcement. No one emerges unsullied, from the conservative district attorney who half-heartedly prosecutes the case to the progressive mayor caught between the demands of outraged activists and the foot-dragging of recalcitrant police officials.

A masterly narrative of urban America and a scathing indictment of the perverse incentives built into our penal system, I Can't Breathe drills down into the particulars of one case to confront us with the human cost of our broken approach to dispensing criminal justice.]]>
304 Matt Taibbi 0812988841 Jon 0 4.36 2017 I Can't Breathe: A Killing on Bay Street
author: Matt Taibbi
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average rating: 4.36
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Folk Devils and Moral Panics 996853 Revisiting the theory of moral panic and exploring the way in which the concept has been used, this new edition features a select bibliography of key texts for further reading. The third edition of Folk Devils and Moral Panics makes available a valuable and widely recommended text.]]> 200 Stanley Cohen 0415267129 Jon 0 3.97 1973 Folk Devils and Moral Panics
author: Stanley Cohen
name: Jon
average rating: 3.97
book published: 1973
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<![CDATA[War without Mercy: Race and Power in the Pacific War]]> 95849
In this monumental history, Professor John Dower reveals a hidden, explosive dimension of the Pacific War—race—while writing what John Toland has called “a landmark book ... a powerful, moving, and evenhanded history that is sorely needed in both America and Japan.�
Ěý
Drawing on American and Japanese songs, slogans, cartoons, propaganda films, secret reports, and a wealth of other documents of the time, Dower opens up a whole new way of looking at that bitter struggle of four and a half decades ago and its ramifications in our lives today. As Edwin O. Reischauer, former ambassador to Japan, has pointed out, this book offers “a lesson that the postwar generations need most ... with eloquence, crushing detail, and power.”]]>
399 John W. Dower 0394751728 Jon 0 4.06 1986 War without Mercy: Race and Power in the Pacific War
author: John W. Dower
name: Jon
average rating: 4.06
book published: 1986
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<![CDATA[Categorically Famous: Literary Celebrity and Sexual Liberation in 1960s America (Post*45)]]> 42589784 248 Guy Davidson 1503602354 Jon 0 4.00 Categorically Famous: Literary Celebrity and Sexual Liberation in 1960s America (Post*45)
author: Guy Davidson
name: Jon
average rating: 4.00
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<![CDATA[My Pilgrim's Progress: Media Studies, 1950-1998]]> 323370
When his classic Within the Context of No Context was first published, George W. S. Trow parsed television's overwhelming dominance over America's consciousness. In My Pilgrim's Progress , he returns with a provocative tour of politics and the media to show "how 1950 got to be 1998."

The son of a tabloid journalist, Trow was raised in the "Deepest Roosevelt Aesthetic," and found himself seduced by the ordinaryness of the Eisenhower era. It was a time when the Old World was giving way to the New. Perusing The New York Times of February 1950, he gives us America at the peak of its power, with its politicians and celebrities (and the nearly hesitant advent of television) and the fresh terror of the H-bomb. At turns a cultural history, a eulogy, and a provocative commentary on contemporary America, My Pilgrim's Progress confirms Trow's place as one of our most brilliant and incisive social critics.]]>
288 George W.S. Trow 0375701389 Jon 0 4.12 1998 My Pilgrim's Progress: Media Studies, 1950-1998
author: George W.S. Trow
name: Jon
average rating: 4.12
book published: 1998
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<![CDATA[Living Life Without Loving the "Beatles"]]> 11012097 0 Gary Hall 0954392108 Jon 0 0.0 2005 Living Life Without Loving the "Beatles"
author: Gary Hall
name: Jon
average rating: 0.0
book published: 2005
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I read this on my lunch hour, it's that kind of book. I wonder why--with attention spans supposedly at an all-time low--so many books one sees are essentially five-to-10-page articles expanded to 100 or 200 pages? Hall, a Liverpool native, does do a nice job of teasing Anglophile American Beatlemaniacs who have "red pillar box syndrome." (He himself seems to have the reverse syndrome--he loves Bob Dylan, John Fogerty, Townes van Zandt, Emmylou Harris, Gram Parsons, and loads of other American artists.) He also does a note-by-note bashing of the admittedly cringe-worthy "Maxwell's Silver Hammer" that's fun to read. But the most (albeit inadvertently) interesting thing in the book for me was a quote supposedly from Yoko Ono discussing her reaction the first time John Lennon played her "Yellow Submarine" in person. She hadn't even met him at the time that song came out, so she must be lying if she really said that. Hall seems to be a talented writer, maybe someday he'll write something memorable, but this book isn't it, just another Beatles book we didn't need.
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<![CDATA[Paraliterary: The Making of Bad Readers in Postwar America]]> 34524625 We should, Emre argues, think of such readers not as non-literary but as paraliterary—thriving outside the institutions we take as central to the literary world. She traces this phenomenon to the postwar period, when literature played a key role in the rise of American power. At the same time as American universities were producing good readers by the hundreds, many more thousands of bad readers were learning elsewhere to be disciplined public communicators, whether in diplomatic and ambassadorial missions, private and public cultural exchange programs, multinational corporations, or global activist groups. As we grapple with literature’s diminished role in the public sphere, Paraliterary suggests a new way to think about literature, its audience, and its potential, one that looks at the civic institutions that have long engaged readers ignored by the academy.
Ěý]]>
304 Merve Emre 022647397X Jon 0 3.58 Paraliterary: The Making of Bad Readers in Postwar America
author: Merve Emre
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<![CDATA[Within the Context of No Context]]> 323366 119 George W.S. Trow 0871136740 Jon 0 3.76 1980 Within the Context of No Context
author: George W.S. Trow
name: Jon
average rating: 3.76
book published: 1980
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<![CDATA[The Peanuts Papers: Charlie Brown, Snoopy & the Gang, and the Meaning of Life]]> 44300078
Peanuts, Charles Schulz's beloved comic strip, has given the world a cast of characters for the ages--Charlie Brown, Snoopy, and Lucy among them. Here, in an unprecedented collection of thirty-two essays, artists and writers ranging from Ann Patchett to Chris Ware consider the deeper truths of Peanuts, its influence on their lives and on the culture more broadly, and the lessons it can teach us about disappointment, melancholy, and those fleeting moments of warm-puppy happiness. The contributors reflect on the experience of discovering Peanuts as a child, their identification with its characters and predicaments, and, for the artists in the book, the momentous effects of their encounters with the strip on their later careers. Taken together, the essays and comics of The Peanuts Papers enrich our understanding of the Peanuts gang and its world, with contributions not only about Charlie Brown and Snoopy but also Linus, Sally, Pigpen, and Peppermint Patty. The Peanuts Papers is an enchanting, poignant gathering of responses to the greatest American comic strip, enabling us to see it anew in fresh and revealing ways.]]>
352 Andrew Blauner 1598536168 Jon 0 reviewed 3.72 2019 The Peanuts Papers: Charlie Brown, Snoopy & the Gang, and the Meaning of Life
author: Andrew Blauner
name: Jon
average rating: 3.72
book published: 2019
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My favorite pieces in this collection were the one about Vince Guaraldi and the one discussing Percy Crosby's SKIPPY and its influence on Schulz. I was hoping one of the contributors would make the devil's-advocate case that the earliest strips, from circa 1950-55, were the peak of PEANUTS, which is what I've thought ever since I discovered the very first PEANUTS collection at the beach house we used to rent every summer in Rehoboth, Del. (Note: This is the kind of boring personal detail too many contributors to this book include, at much more painful length.) None of them did, though...
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Play It As It Lays 1408756
Maria Wyeth is an emotional drifter who has become almost anesthetized against pain and pleasure. She finds herself, in her early thirties, radically divorced from husband, lovers, friends, her own past and her own future. Actress, daughter, wife, mother, she has played each role to the sound of one hand clapping.

Play It As It Lays is set in a place beyond good and evil, literally in Los Angeles and Las Vegas and the barren wastes of the Mojave, but figuratively in the landscape of an arid soul. Two decades after its original publication, it remains a profoundly disturbing novel.]]>
214 Joan Didion 0374521719 Jon 0 reviewed 3.79 1970 Play It As It Lays
author: Joan Didion
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average rating: 3.79
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Didion's 1970 novel of Hollywood anomie may have provided some of the inspiration for Bret Ellis' LESS THAN ZERO, published about 15 years later. Too bad Ellis lacked Didion's skill, talent, and ability to make the reader sympathize with characters you'd walk (or drive) miles to get away from if you encountered them in reality. While New Yorker Nathanael West and Englishman Gavin Lambert each viewed LA from the perspective of an outsider (an anthropologist, even), California native Didion knew it inside out and used that knowledge effectively in this excellent novel. If you like it chances are you'll love THE WHITE ALBUM, probably her best nonfiction collection.
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Glued to the Box 757706 London Observer during the period between 1979 and 1982. This is a paperback edition of a volume first published by Jonathan Cape in 1983. Clive James' earlier volumes of TV criticism include Visions Before Midnight (1977 & 1981) and The Crystal Bucket (1983). They have been published in a single volume with a new introduction and index as Clive James on Television (1991).]]> Clive James 0330281747 Jon 0 3.98 1982 Glued to the Box
author: Clive James
name: Jon
average rating: 3.98
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<![CDATA[The Cult of Trump: A Leading Cult Expert Explains How the President Uses Mind Control]]> 43261495
Over the past two years, Trump’s behavior has become both more disturbing and yet increasingly familiar. He relies on phrases like, “fake news,� “build the wall,� and continues to spread the divisive mentality of us-vs.-them. He lies constantly, has no conscience, never admits when he is wrong, and projects all of his shortcomings on to others. He has become more authoritarian, more outrageous, and yet many of his followers remain blindly devoted. Scott Adams, the creator of Dilbert and a major Trump supporter, calls him one of the most persuasive people living. His need to squash alternate information and his insistence of constant ego stroking are all characteristics of other famous leaders� cult leaders.

In The Cult of Trump, mind-control and licensed mental health expert Steven Hassan draws parallels between our current president and people like Jim Jones, David Koresh, Ron Hubbard and Sun Myung Moon, arguing that this presidency is in many ways like a destructive cult. He specifically details the ways in which people are influenced through an array of social psychology methods and how they become fiercely loyal and obedient. Hassan was a former “Moonie� himself, and he draws on his forty years of personal and professional experience studying hypnosis and destructive cults, working as a deprogrammer, and a strategic communications interventionist. He emphasizes why it’s crucial that we recognize ways to identify and protect ourselves and our loved ones.

The Cult of Trump is an accessible and in-depth analysis of the president, showing that under the right circumstances, even sane, rational, well-adjusted people can be persuaded to believe the most outrageous ideas. Hassan’s book is essential reading for anyone wanting to understand the Trump phenomenon and looking for a way forward.]]>
320 Steven Hassan 1982127333 Jon 0 4.07 2019 The Cult of Trump: A Leading Cult Expert Explains How the President Uses Mind Control
author: Steven Hassan
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McLuhan 1274986
As well as writing about McLuhan, Jonathan Miller has recently directed several plays (including The Merchant of Venice and The Tempest) and a film. He is also well known for his part in the famous review Beyond the Fringe; for his film of Alice in Wonderland; and as a TV director and editor. He has contributed to a wide variety of periodicals including the New Yorker and the New York Review of Books. But all Miller's many activities (he was trained as a doctor and is a member of the Royal Society study group in non-verbal communication) are guided by one - a passion for ideas and their ancestry, as his book clearly shows.]]>
140 Jonathan Miller 0006324282 Jon 0 2.93 1971 McLuhan
author: Jonathan Miller
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average rating: 2.93
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<![CDATA[The Crystal Bucket: Television Criticism from "The Observer," 1976-79]]> 2223867 237 Clive James 0330267450 Jon 0 4.01 1981 The Crystal Bucket: Television Criticism from "The Observer," 1976-79
author: Clive James
name: Jon
average rating: 4.01
book published: 1981
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<![CDATA[Hate Inc.: Why Today's Media Makes Us Despise One Another]]> 44579900 Part tirade, part confessional from the celebrated Rolling Stone journalist, Hate Inc. reveals that what most people think of as "the news" is, in fact, a twisted wing of the entertainment business

In this characteristically turbocharged new book, celebrated Rolling Stone journalist Matt Taibbi provides an insider's guide to the variety of ways today's mainstream media tells us lies. Part tirade, part confessional, it reveals that what most people think of as "the news" is, in fact, a twisted wing of the entertainment business.

In the Internet age, the press have mastered the art of monetizing anger, paranoia, and distrust. Taibbi, who has spent much of his career covering elections in which this kind of manipulative activity is most egregious, provides a rich taxonomic survey of American political journalism's dirty tricks.

Heading into a 2020 election season that promises to be a Great Giza Pyramid Complex of invective and digital ugliness, Hate Inc. will be an invaluable antidote to the hidden poisons dished up by those we rely on to tell us what is happening in the world.]]>
380 Matt Taibbi 1949017257 Jon 0 4.11 2019 Hate Inc.: Why Today's Media Makes Us Despise One Another
author: Matt Taibbi
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average rating: 4.11
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<![CDATA[Justice on Trial: The Kavanaugh Confirmation and the Future of the Supreme Court]]> 44321368
Justice on Trial, the definitive insider’s account of Kavanaugh’s appointment to the Supreme Court, is based on extraordinary access to more than one hundred key figures—including the president, justices, and senators—in that ferocious political drama.

The Trump presidency opened with the appointment of Neil Gorsuch to succeed the late Antonin Scalia on the Supreme Court. But the following year, when Trump drew from the same list of candidates for his nomination of Brett Kavanaugh, the justice being replaced was the swing vote on abortion, and all hell broke loose.

The judicial confirmation process, on the point of breakdown for thirty years, now proved utterly dysfunctional. Unverified accusations of sexual assault became weapons in a ruthless campaign of personal destruction,Ěýculminating in the melodramatic hearings in which Kavanaugh’s impassioned defense resuscitated a nomination that seemed beyond saving.

The Supreme Court has become the arbiter of our nation’s most vexing and divisive disputes. With the stakes of each vacancy incalculably high, the incentive to destroy a nominee is nearly irresistible. The next time a nomination promises to change the balance of the Court, Hemingway andĚýSeverino warn, the confirmation fight will be even uglier than Kavanaugh’s.

A good person might accept that nomination in the naïve belief that what happened to Kavanaugh won’t happen to him because he is a good person. But it can happen, it does happen, and it just happened. The question is whether America will let it happen again.]]>
375 Mollie Ziegler Hemingway 1621579832 Jon 0 4.43 2019 Justice on Trial: The Kavanaugh Confirmation and the Future of the Supreme Court
author: Mollie Ziegler Hemingway
name: Jon
average rating: 4.43
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<![CDATA[Audience of One: Television, Donald Trump, and the Fracturing of America]]> 43726540 An incisive cultural history that captures a fractious nation through the prism of television and the rattled mind of a celebrity president.

Television has entertained America, television has ensorcelled America, and with the election of Donald J. Trump, television has conquered America. In Audience of One, New York Times chief television critic James Poniewozik traces the history of TV and mass media from the Reagan era to today, explaining how a volcanic, camera-hogging antihero merged with America’s most powerful medium to become our forty-fifth president.

In the tradition of Neil Postman’s masterpiece Amusing Ourselves to Death, Audience of One shows how American media have shaped American society and politics, by interweaving two crucial stories. The first story follows the evolution of television from the three-network era of the 20th century, which joined millions of Americans in a shared monoculture, into today’s zillion-channel, Internet-atomized universe, which sliced and diced them into fractious, alienated subcultures. The second story is a cultural critique of Donald Trump, the chameleonic celebrity who courted fame, achieved a mind-meld with the media beast, and rode it to ultimate power.

Braiding together these disparate threads, Poniewozik combines a cultural history of modern America with a revelatory portrait of the most public American who has ever lived. Reaching back to the 1940s, when Trump and commercial television were born, Poniewozik illustrates how Donald became “a character that wrote itself, a brand mascot that jumped off the cereal box and entered the world, a simulacrum that replaced the thing it represented.� Viscerally attuned to the media, Trump shape-shifted into a boastful tabloid playboy in the 1980s; a self-parodic sitcom fixture in the 1990s; a reality-TV “You’re Fired� machine in the 2000s; and finally, the biggest role of his career, a Fox News–obsessed, Twitter-mad, culture-warring demagogue in the White House.

Poniewozik deconstructs the chaotic Age of Trump as the 24-hour TV production that it is, decoding an era when politics has become pop culture, and vice versa. Trenchant and often slyly hilarious, Audience of One is a penetrating and sobering review of the raucous, raging, farcical reality show—performed for the benefit of an insomniac, cable-news-junkie “audience of one”—that we all came to live in, whether we liked it or not.]]>
304 James Poniewozik 1631494422 Jon 0 4.18 2019 Audience of One: Television, Donald Trump, and the Fracturing of America
author: James Poniewozik
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average rating: 4.18
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<![CDATA[The Soul of the First Amendment]]> 32073323
The right of Americans to voice their beliefs without government approval or oversight is protected under what may well be the most honored and least understood addendum to the US Constitution—the First Amendment. Floyd Abrams, a noted lawyer and award-winning legal scholar specializing in First Amendment issues, examines the degree to which American law protects free speech more often, more intensely, and more controversially than is the case anywhere else in the world, including democratic nations such as Canada and England. In this lively, powerful, and provocative work, the author addresses legal issues from the adoption of the Bill of Rights through recent cases such as Citizens United . He also examines the repeated conflicts between claims of free speech and those of national security occasioned by the publication of classified material such as was contained in the Pentagon Papers and was made public by WikiLeaks and Edward Snowden.
Ěý]]>
176 Floyd Abrams 0300190883 Jon 0 3.74 2017 The Soul of the First Amendment
author: Floyd Abrams
name: Jon
average rating: 3.74
book published: 2017
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<![CDATA[The Making of the English Working Class]]> 947848 "Thompson's book has been called controversial, but perhaps only because so many have forgotten how explosive England was during the Regency & the early reign of Victoria. Without any reservation, The Making of the English Working Class is the most important study of those days since the classic work of the Hammonds."--Commentary
"Mr Thompson's deeply human imagination & controlled passion help us to recapture the agonies, heroisms & illusions of the working class as it made itself. No one interested in the history of the English people should fail to read his book."--Times Literary Supplement]]>
848 E.P. Thompson 0394703227 Jon 0 4.20 1963 The Making of the English Working Class
author: E.P. Thompson
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average rating: 4.20
book published: 1963
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Summer 269528
With its frank treatment of a woman's sexual awakening, Summer created a sensation upon its 1917 publication. Edith Wharton � the author of Ethan Frome and a peerless observer and chronicler of society � completely shattered the standards of conventional love stories with this novel's candor and realism. The Pulitzer Prize-winning author declared Summer a personal favorite among her works, and liked to refer to it as "the Hot Ethan." Over a century later, it remains fresh and relevant.]]>
127 Edith Wharton Jon 0 3.68 1917 Summer
author: Edith Wharton
name: Jon
average rating: 3.68
book published: 1917
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<![CDATA[Patty's Got a Gun: Patricia Hearst in 1970s America]]> 3938908
With Patty’s Got a Gun, the first substantial reconsideration of Patty Hearst’s story in more than twenty-five years, William Graebner vividly re-creates the atmosphere of uncertainty and frustration of mid-1970s America. Drawing on copious media accounts of the robbery and trial—as well as cultural artifacts from glam rock to Invasion of the Body Snatchers—Graebner paints a compelling portrait of a nation confused and frightened by the upheavals of 1960s liberalism and beginning to tip over into what would become Reagan-era conservatism, with its invocations of individual responsibility and the heroic. Trapped in the middle of that shift, the affectless, zombielike, “brainwashed� Patty Hearst was a ready-made symbol of all that seemed to have gone wrong with the sixties—the inevitable result, some said, of rampant permissiveness, feckless elitism, the loss of moral clarity, and feminism run amok.

By offering a fresh look at Patty Hearst and her trial—for the first time free from the agendas of the day, yet set fully in their cultural context�Patty’s Got a Gun delivers a nuanced portrait of both an unforgettable moment and an entire era, one whose repercussions continue to be felt today.]]>
228 William Graebner 0226305228 Jon 0 reviewed 3.35 2008 Patty's Got a Gun: Patricia Hearst in 1970s America
author: William Graebner
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average rating: 3.35
book published: 2008
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In this book Graebner mentions the Ramones, but for some reason doesn't mention their song ("Judy Is A Punk") that mentioned the Symbionese Liberation Army, the radical group that kidnapped Patty Hearst. In his tangent about the CBGB punk rock scene, he ALSO fails to mention Patti Smith's first record, which was a reworking of the rock standard "Hey Joe" as a tribute to Hearst! What's up with THAT?
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The Muses Are Heard 226925 182 Truman Capote 0394437322 Jon 0 3.98 1946 The Muses Are Heard
author: Truman Capote
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average rating: 3.98
book published: 1946
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Old New York 5256
In False Dawn (1840s), Mr. Halston Raycie sends his son Lewis to Europe to buy art, as Mr. Raycie aims to ascend to the upper crust of society by means of a well-respected art collection. But when Lewis returns from Europe with daring pieces by artists unknown to the New York socialites and tastemakers, his appalled father disinherits him, only to discover, too late, the wisdom of his son's intuition.

The Old Maid (1850s), the best known of the four novellas, follows the life of Tina, a young woman caught between the mother who adopted her--the beautiful, upstanding Delia--and her true mother, her plain, unmarried aunt Charlotte, who gave Tina up to provide her with a socially acceptable life. The three women live quietly together until Tina's wedding day, when Delia's and Charlotte's hidden jealousies rush to the surface.

Then in The Spark (1860s), Mr. Hayley Delane recounts how his life has turned out since he was wounded in the Civil War, where, during his rehabilitation, he chances to meet a certain American poet whose memory stays with him all his life.

And finally in New Year's Day (1870s), Mrs. Lizzie Hazeldean's suspected affair with the unmarried Henry Prest is the center of scandal and gossip in the city, but the true nature of the relationship is not what it may seem.]]>
296 Edith Wharton 0671023365 Jon 0 4.03 1924 Old New York
author: Edith Wharton
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average rating: 4.03
book published: 1924
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<![CDATA[Secret Empires: How the American Political Class Hides Corruption and Enriches Family and Friends]]> 38237119 336 Peter Schweizer 0062569384 Jon 0 4.12 2018 Secret Empires: How the American Political Class Hides Corruption and Enriches Family and Friends
author: Peter Schweizer
name: Jon
average rating: 4.12
book published: 2018
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<![CDATA[The Stockbroker, the Bitter Young Man, and the Beautiful Girl: A novel]]> 2459845 158 Alfred Hayes 0575014938 Jon 0 2.50 The Stockbroker, the Bitter Young Man, and the Beautiful Girl: A novel
author: Alfred Hayes
name: Jon
average rating: 2.50
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The Black House 97123 The Black House, a masterful collection of short stories, written during a particularly dark time in Patricia Highsmith's life. As readers will discover, the work eerily evokes the warm familiarities of suburban life: the manicured lawns, the white picket fences, and the local pubs, each providing the backbone for her chilling portraits. Seemingly small indiscretions and infidelities—along with love affairs and murder—consume the characters that commit them. Cycles of destructive jealousy overwhelm the cheating protagonists of "Blow It" and "When In Rome," and the title story explores small-town male camaraderie and the destructive secret it masks. This enthralling collection of eleven stories presents Highsmith at her finest: melancholy, suspenseful, and sizzling with a powerful awareness of human emotion.]]> 272 Patricia Highsmith 0393326314 Jon 0 3.55 1981 The Black House
author: Patricia Highsmith
name: Jon
average rating: 3.55
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<![CDATA[Nothing That Meets the Eye: The Uncollected Stories of Patricia Highsmith]]> 85781
If only Patricia Highsmith (1921-1995) had been alive to see the thunderous critical response to the publication of the best-selling 'The Selected Stories of Patricia Highsmith' in 2001. Now the Highsmith renaissance continues with this brilliant collection of 28 short stories, a great majority of which have never been seen before. The stories assembled in 'Nothing That Meets the Eye', written between 1938 and 1982, are vintage Highsmith: a gigolo-like psychopath preys on unfulfilled career women; a lonely spinster's fragile hold on reality is tethered to the bottle; an estranged postal worker invents homicidal fantasies about his coworkers.

While some stories anticipate the diabolical narratives of the Ripley novels, others possess a Capra-like sweetness that forces us to see the author in a new light. From this new collection, a remarkable portrait of the American psyche at mid-century emerges, unforgettably distilled by the inimitable eye of Patricia Highsmith.

Patricia Highsmith is the author of such classics as 'Strangers on a Train' and 'The Talented Mr. Ripley'. Born in Fort Worth, Texas, she died in 1995 in Locarno, Switzerland.]]>
466 Patricia Highsmith 0393325008 Jon 0 4.17 2002 Nothing That Meets the Eye: The Uncollected Stories of Patricia Highsmith
author: Patricia Highsmith
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average rating: 4.17
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Eleven 385077 Contains:
-The Snail-Watcher
-The Birds Poised to Fly
-The Terrapin
-When the Fleet was in at Mobile
-The Quest for "Blank Claveringi"
-The Cries of Love
-Mrs. Afton, Among Thy Green Braes
-The Heroine
-Another Bridge to Cross
-The Barbarians
-The Empty Birdcage]]>
169 Patricia Highsmith 087113327X Jon 0 3.88 1970 Eleven
author: Patricia Highsmith
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average rating: 3.88
book published: 1970
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<![CDATA[A City Possessed: The Christchurch Civic Creche Case]]> 3510089

A City Possessed is a strong, compelling and shocking story about one of New Zealand's most high-profile criminal cases - a story of child abuse allegations, gender politics and the law. In detailing the events and debates leading up to and surrounding the Christchurch Civic Creche case, Lynley Hood shows how such a case could happen, and why. Her penetrating analysis of the social and legal processes by which the conviction of Peter Ellis was obtained, and has been repeatedly upheld, has far-reaching implications - not only for our justice system, but for the way in which we see ourselves.

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672 Lynley Hood 1877135623 Jon 0 4.13 2001 A City Possessed: The Christchurch Civic Creche Case
author: Lynley Hood
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average rating: 4.13
book published: 2001
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THE GOLDWATER CAPER 39266215 198 Richard H. Rovere 1376999587 Jon 0 0.0 THE GOLDWATER CAPER
author: Richard H. Rovere
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<![CDATA[Namedropping: Mostly Literary Memoirs]]> 22763009 How long ago seems knowing, too: when I first meet Isaac Singer he asks me, Who is Mr. Saul Bellow?
We re on the Upper West Side in his apartment next to the funeral parlor. A yellow parakeet hops around on Singer s bald forehead. Singer s great comic story of faith, Gimpel the Fool, has only recently been published from Yiddish into English in a translation by Saul Bellow. They re both still a long way from Stockholm.
Do you know him? Can you tell me who this Mr. Bellow is? he asks. It was not always possible to guess Singer s motives in acting as though he was not impressed with worldly reputations. His features of a medieval Polish saint, even to a faint white-haired tonsure effect around the crown of his skull, were backlit by the glowing monitor from his mischievous incubus. from the Preface
These are Richard Elman s candid snapshots in prose of the various, mostly literary celebrities he encountered during his four decades as a working writer and journalist among them Isaac Bashevis Singer, Tillie Olsen, Bernard Malamud, Faye Dunaway, Hunter S. Thompson, and other important artists and writers who were Elman s teachers and, occasionally, adversaries. Engagingly written and never superficial, these portraits and anecdotes in many cases strike to the center of each subject s art. To many readers, these persons are just names; Elman brings them to life while never simplifying or overdramatizing their work."]]>
259 Richard Elman 0585053375 Jon 0 0.0 1998 Namedropping: Mostly Literary Memoirs
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'This posthumously published book has lots of great stories about Elman (a semi-famous radio personality, sci-fi novelist, and author of the scathing autobiographical work FREDI & SHIRL & THE KIDS) and other writers, but the editing is problematic. (At one point the obscure Depression-era comedian Joe Penner's name appears as "Joe Penna", suggesting that Brooklyn native Elman was dictating or recording this book or portions thereof and the transcriber failed to translate from his New York-ese.) Always entertaining, often insightful, fun but as the title implies, not too deep. The chapter about the other Richard Ellmann, the biographer of James Joyce, is particularly amusing, especially if you share your name with someone famous, as I do. If you're interested in 20th-century literature and have a weakness for literary namedropping, you'll like this.
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<![CDATA[Golden Hits of the Shangri-Las]]> 40230022
This book examines the still-elusive validation of 1960s girl-groups as a whole, but also paradoxically aims to free the Shangri-Las from that category, viewing them instead with the sort of individuality traditionally afforded to rock groups. They were somehow able to challenge the status quo under the guise of sticky-sweet pop, a feat not many pop groups can achieve, but which they do fleetingly but not insubstantially in Golden Hits of the Shangri-Las.]]>
136 Ada Wolin 1501331744 Jon 0 reviewed 3.58 2019 Golden Hits of the Shangri-Las
author: Ada Wolin
name: Jon
average rating: 3.58
book published: 2019
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This book suggests the limitations of the 33 1/3 series. It's about a singles band but deals only with material on their original best-of LP, thus leaving out discussion of some of their finest songs, such as "Dum Dum Ditty" (which verges on self-parody of the S-L's "we love tough guys" image), "He Cried" (their gender-bending, male-dominating take on the Jay & the Americans hit) and "What's a Girl Supposed To Do?" (which says as much as Grace Paley's short stories about the increased sexual freedom women attained in the 60s). Mary Weiss' solo comeback is critiqued here, so why not S-L's tunes that weren't on GOLDEN HITS? Also, Wolin mentions references to the S-L's songs in other pop songs but somehow forgets Joe Jackson's hit "Is She Really Going Out With Him?" She also discusses James Hilton's novel LOST HORIZON, source of the group's name, but not the movie version the girls were more likely to have been familiar with (curled up by the TV with some outer-borough bad boy no doubt). For S-L's fans, the CD MYRMIDONS OF MELODRAMA is the one to have, and those fans will enjoy this, as I did, but it could have been better...
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<![CDATA[American Predator: The Hunt for the Most Meticulous Serial Killer of the 21st Century]]> 43231095
When journalist Maureen Callahan first heard about Israel Keyes in 2012, she was captivated by how a killer of this magnitude could go undetected by law enforcement for over a decade. And so began a project that consumed her for the next several years--uncovering the true story behind how the FBI ultimately caught Israel Keyes, and trying to understand what it means for a killer like Keyes to exist. A killer who left a path of monstrous, randomly committed crimes in his wake--many of which remain unsolved to this day.

American Predator is the ambitious culmination of years of interviews with key figures in law enforcement and in Keyes's life, and research uncovered from classified FBI files. Callahan takes us on a journey into the chilling, nightmarish mind of a relentless killer, and to the limitations of traditional law enforcement.]]>
285 Maureen Callahan 052542864X Jon 0 4.07 2019 American Predator: The Hunt for the Most Meticulous Serial Killer of the 21st Century
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<![CDATA[Selected Short Stories of Edith Wharton]]> 344253 416 Edith Wharton 0684193043 Jon 0 3.65 2012 Selected Short Stories of Edith Wharton
author: Edith Wharton
name: Jon
average rating: 3.65
book published: 2012
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Mermaids on the Golf Course 396351 Mermaids on the Golf Course, first published in 1985, are among Highsmith's most mature, psychologically penetrating works. Published in the latter part of her career, these stories reveal Highsmith's mastery of the short story form. Moving between locales as various as France, Mexico, Zurich, and New York, Highsmith transforms the mundane features of everyday life into an eerie setting for her chilling portrayals of violence, secrecy, and madness.

In "The Stuff of Madness," Christopher Waggoner, increasingly dismayed by his wife's habit of preserving dead pets in their garden, enacts a devious revenge by adding a bizarre new exhibit to their collection; in the title story, an eminent economist's brush with death endows his once-familiar desires with tragic consequences; and in "A Shot from Nowhere," a young painter who witnesses a gruesome death on a vacant Mexican street becomes trapped in an unimaginable nightmare. In these piercing stories, Highsmith creates a world all the more frightening because we recognize it as our own.

The great revival of interest in Patricia Highsmith continues with this work that reveals the chilling reality behind the idyllic facade of American suburban life.]]>
238 Patricia Highsmith 0393324567 Jon 0 3.57 1970 Mermaids on the Golf Course
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average rating: 3.57
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Certain People 3378439 108 Edith Wharton 1848309082 Jon 0 3.90 2008 Certain People
author: Edith Wharton
name: Jon
average rating: 3.90
book published: 2008
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Xingu 1862884 48 Edith Wharton 1419195131 Jon 0 3.83 1916 Xingu
author: Edith Wharton
name: Jon
average rating: 3.83
book published: 1916
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Slowly, Slowly in the Wind 396350 Slowly, Slowly in the Wind brilliantly assembles many of Patricia Highsmith's most nuanced and psychologically suspenseful works.

Rarely has an author articulated so well the hypocrisies of the Catholic Church while conveying the delusions of a writer's life and undermining the fantasy of suburban bliss. Each of these twelve pieces, like all great short fiction, is a crystal-clear snapshot of lives both static and full of chaos. In "The Pond" Highsmith explores the unforeseen calamities that can unalterably shatter a single woman's life, while "The Network" finds sinister loneliness and joy in the mundane yet engrossing friendships of a small community of urban dwellers. In this enduring and disturbing collection, Highsmith evokes the gravity and horror of her characters' surroundings with evenhanded prose and a detailed imagination.]]>
222 Patricia Highsmith 0393326322 Jon 0 3.70 1979 Slowly, Slowly in the Wind
author: Patricia Highsmith
name: Jon
average rating: 3.70
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<![CDATA[Tales of Natural and Unnatural Catastrophes]]> 715383 In this eerily up-to-date collection, Highsmith’s incisive prose chronicles a world gone slightly mad, its catastrophes precipitated by human folly and excess. From the White House under siege by the homeless to a 190-year-old woman perpetually near death and dimly glowing, each tale unfolds the illogical extremes of humanity in the late twentieth century. Highsmith transmogrifies the face of daily existence to lay bare its manifold dark motives. These stories leave us haunted with “afterimages that will tremble—but stay—in our minds� (The New Yorker).

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189 Patricia Highsmith 0747554358 Jon 0 3.55 1987 Tales of Natural and Unnatural Catastrophes
author: Patricia Highsmith
name: Jon
average rating: 3.55
book published: 1987
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Small g: A Summer Idyll 1321742 Finally published in the United States ten years after Patricia Highsmith's death, Small g, in the words of her biographer Andrew Wilson, is an "extended fairy tale suggesting that…happiness is precarious and…romance should be embraced."

In unmistakable Highsmithian fashion, the novel opens in a seedy Zurich bar with the brutal murder of Peter Ritter. Unraveling the vagaries of love, sexuality, jealousy, and death, Highsmith weaves a mystery both hilarious and astonishing, a classic tale executed with her characteristic penchant for darkness. Small g is at once an exorcism of Highsmith's literary demons and a revelatory capstone to a wholly remarkable career. It is a delightfully incantatory work that, in the tradition of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, shows us how bizarre and unpredictable love can be.]]>
310 Patricia Highsmith 0393059235 Jon 0 3.36 1994 Small g: A Summer Idyll
author: Patricia Highsmith
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average rating: 3.36
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All Thy Conquests 30759071 295 Alfred Hayes Jon 0 4.25 All Thy Conquests
author: Alfred Hayes
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The Girl on the Via Flaminia 1264076 Robert is an American soldier in occupied Rome during the final months of World War II. Lisa is a young woman obliged to work in Mamma Adele's on the Via Flaminia. The passion they feel for one another is fueled by their separate and equally desperate needs. But can love between victor and vanquished ever blossom? This classic story of a poignant love affair informed by the aftermath of war is as relevant and moving today as when it was first published. Alfred Hayes' screenplay for Paisan, directed by Roberto Rossellini, was nominated for an Academy Award.]]> 147 Alfred Hayes 1933372249 Jon 0 3.66 1949 The Girl on the Via Flaminia
author: Alfred Hayes
name: Jon
average rating: 3.66
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The Temptation of Don Volpi 45441928 175 Alfred Hayes Jon 0 3.75 The Temptation of Don Volpi
author: Alfred Hayes
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<![CDATA[Golden Girl : The Story of Jessica Savitch]]> 26437
Based on more than 300 interviews with Jessica Savitch's lovers, colleagues, friends and psychiatrists, this sensational biography gives an accurate, fascinating portrait of her public and private lives, and for the first time pays tribute to a woman who beat the odds to triumph in her profession... but paid the ultimate, terrifying price.]]>
413 Alanna Nash 0061010014 Jon 0 3.97 1988 Golden Girl : The Story of Jessica Savitch
author: Alanna Nash
name: Jon
average rating: 3.97
book published: 1988
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<![CDATA[Listen, Liberal: Or, What Ever Happened to the Party of the People]]> 25666062 From the bestselling author of What's the Matter With Kansas, a scathing look at the standard-bearers of liberal politics -- a book that asks: what's the matter with Democrats?

It is a widespread belief among liberals that if only Democrats can continue to dominate national elections, if only those awful Republicans are beaten into submission, the country will be on the right course.

But this is to fundamentally misunderstand the modern Democratic Party. Drawing on years of research and first-hand reporting, Frank points out that the Democrats have done little to advance traditional liberal goals: expanding opportunity, fighting for social justice, and ensuring that workers get a fair deal. Indeed, they have scarcely dented the free-market consensus at all. This is not for lack of opportunity: Democrats have occupied the White House for sixteen of the last twenty-four years, and yet the decline of the middle class has only accelerated. Wall Street gets its bailouts, wages keep falling, and the free-trade deals keep coming.

With his trademark sardonic wit and lacerating logic, Frank's Listen, Liberal lays bare the essence of the Democratic Party's philosophy and how it has changed over the years. A form of corporate and cultural elitism has largely eclipsed the party's old working-class commitment, he finds. For certain favored groups, this has meant prosperity. But for the nation as a whole, it is a one-way ticket into the abyss of inequality. In this critical election year, Frank recalls the Democrats to their historic goals-the only way to reverse the ever-deepening rift between the rich and the poor in America.]]>
320 Thomas Frank 1627795391 Jon 0 4.17 2016 Listen, Liberal: Or, What Ever Happened to the Party of the People
author: Thomas Frank
name: Jon
average rating: 4.17
book published: 2016
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