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Cover to Cover.Navigation: Main page Author: Healy, BenjaminSchwarz, Benjamin Section: THE CRITICS: Books, Manners, Mores
A guide to additional releases CURRENT AFFAIRSThe Mighty and the Almighty~~~~~~~~ by Madeleine Albright with Bill Woodward (HarperCollins) The former secretary of state muses on the intersection of religion and foreign policy. The Sack of Rome~~~~~~~~ by Alexander Stille (Penguin Press) Silvio Berlusconi, the author argues, is part Bill Gates, part Rupert Murdoch, part George Steinbrenner â€" and almost entirely awful. Temptations of the West~~~~~~~~ by Pankaj Mishra (FSG) A travelogue covering Bollywood, Afghanistan, Nepal, and points in between. The Coged Virgin~~~~~~~~ by Ayaan Hirsi Ali (Free Press) An outspoken Dutch-Somali politician makes the case for women's rights and democracy within Islam. U.S. HISTORYThe Civil War as a Theological Crisis~~~~~~~~ by Mark A. Noll (North Carolina) Both the Union and the Confederacy thought God was on their side. Something had to give. When the Astors Owned New York~~~~~~~~ by Justin Kaplan (Viking) How family rivalry, the Titanic, and the Jazz Age brought the Astors low. The American Home Front~~~~~~~~ by Alistair Cooke (Atlantic Monthly) A previously unpublished account of the late BBC correspondent's travels in America after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. Blind Oracles~~~~~~~~ by Bruce Kuklick (Princeton) A look at the often obtuse â€" and occasionally catastrophic â€" contributions of intellectuals to foreign policy from World War II to Vietnam. The Bystander~~~~~~~~ by Nick Bryant (Basic) John F. Kennedy was a dynamic, inspirational leader, albeit one with a shallow and cynical record on civil rights. Tiger Force~~~~~~~~ by Michael Sallah and Mitch Weiss (Little, Brown) The story of a rogue detachment of U.S. soldiers who massacred civilians during the Vietnam War, based on a Pulitzer Prize-winning newspaper investigation. WORLD HISTORYMoral Capital~~~~~~~~ by Christopher Leslie Brown (North Carolina) Slavery was an accepted feature of the British Empire until â€" in the late 1780s â€" it suddenly wasn't. Empires of the Atlantic World~~~~~~~~ by J. H. Elliott (Yale) A comparative study of Britain's and Spain's colonial holdings, covering the period between the late fifteenth and nineteenth centuries. The Wake of Wellington~~~~~~~~ by Peter W. Sinnema (Ohio) The Duke of Wellington's funeral lured a million and a half visitors to London and sparked a cultural outpouring that captured the very essence of Englishness, circa 1852. Agincourt~~~~~~~~ by Juliet Barker (Little, Brawn) English soldiers â€" outnumbered nearly six to one â€" won at Agincourt in 1415, slaying in the process "almost the whole nobility among the soldiery of France." A balanced look at St. Crispin's Day. BIOGRAPHYRealistic Visionary~~~~~~~~ by Peter R. Henriques (Virginia) A biography of George Washington focusing on his religious convictions, romantic entanglements, and views on slavery. Richard Hofstadter~~~~~~~~ by David S. Brown (Chicago) A biography of the influential historian who, the author reveals, had a paranoid style all his own. The Short Life and Long Times of Mrs. Beeton~~~~~~~~ by Kathryn Hughes (Knopf) Isabella Beeton died at age twenty-eight, but not before writing the book that would define Victorian housewifery. Art Czar~~~~~~~~ by Alice Goldfarb Marquis (MFA) A life of Clement Greenberg, the most influential American art critic of the twentieth century. SOCIETY and CULTUREPostmortem~~~~~~~~ by Stefan Timmermans (Chicago) A sociologist examines the world of medical examiners, a life-and-death realm where little is black and white. Doing Nothing~~~~~~~~ by Tom Lutz (FSG) A cultural history of idleness, surveying contributions to the field from Samuel Johnson, Oscar Wilde, Maynard G. Krebs, and others. This Land~~~~~~~~ by Anthony Flint (Johns Hopkins) A look at the long odds faced by the "smart growth" movement as suburban sprawl goes unchecked and its negative consequences become increasingly clear. When Sex Goes to School~~~~~~~~ by Kristin Luker (Norton) A sociologist examines the fate of sex education in America, from the early twentieth century to the present. The Central Liberal Truth~~~~~~~~ by Lawrence E. Harrison (Oxford) An attempt to isolate the cultural values and practices most responsible for successful civilization. Literacy, education, and transparency loom large. The Bourgeois Virtues~~~~~~~~ by Deirdre N. McCloskey (Chicago) The first of four volumes that aim to defend the integrity of capitalism and the innate goodness of the middle class. RELIGIONBasilica~~~~~~~~ by R. A. Scotti (Viking) The construction of St. Peter's in Rome required the combined efforts of Michelangelo, Raphael, and more than twenty popes, not to mention countless others. Double Crossed~~~~~~~~ by Kenneth Briggs (Doubleday) There are nearly 100,000 fewer nuns in the United States than there were forty years ago, and those that remain are systematically ill-served by the Catholic Church, argues a former religion editor of The New York Times. The Devil Is a Gentleman~~~~~~~~ by J. C. Hallman (Random House) A neo-Jamesian look at contemporary religious experience in all its variety, from Scientologists to Druids to Christian pro wrestlers. Seminary Boy~~~~~~~~ by John Cornwell (Doubleday) The author of Hitler's Pope recalls an adolescence spent training for the priesthood in 1950s England. Peter, Paul, and Mary Magdalene~~~~~~~~ by Bart D. Ehrman (Oxford) A historical study of three of Jesus' most famous followers finds almost no evidence that Mary Magdalene was a prostitute, that Paul worked miracles, or that Peter was crucified upside down. BUSINESS and ECONOMICSThe New Argonauts~~~~~~~~ by AnnaLee Saxenian (Harvard) How Silicon Valley entrepreneurs from China, Taiwan, India, and Israel have boosted their home countries' economies. Treasure Hunt~~~~~~~~ by Michael J. Silverstein with John Butman (Portfolio) A leading management consultant examines how our competing tastes for luxury and thrift are hollowing out the vast middle of the global market. More Than You Know~~~~~~~~ by Michael J. Mauboussin (Columbia) A top investment strategist's multidisciplinary guide to the world of finance. Reluctant Capitalists~~~~~~~~ by Laura J. Miller (Chicago) The sociology of bookselling â€" and the culture-versus-commerce, indie-versus-megastore battle lines that define it. SCIENCENature Revealed: Selected Writings, 1949-2006~~~~~~~~ by Edward O. Wilson (Johns Hopkins) A lifelong study of ants informs ecology, sociobiology, and biogeography in this collection of essays from the Harvard entomologist. After Dolly~~~~~~~~ by Ian Wilmut and Roger Highfield (Norton) The man behind Dolly the sheep discusses cloning's human potential, concluding that "as much damage can be done by failing to exploit the beneficial applications of a technology as by promoting the applications of that technology which are risky or harmful." ESSAYSReportingby fay David Remnick (Knopf) Al Gore, Mike Tyson, and Natan Sharansky stand shoulder to shoulder in this collection from the editor of The New Yorker. The Din in the Head~~~~~~~~ by Cynthia Ozick (Houghton Mifflin) Assessments of Saul Bellow, Susan Sontag, Sylvia Plath, Isaac Babel, and others, as well as a fictional interview with Henry James. Crime Beat~~~~~~~~ by Michael Connelly (Little, Brown) A collection of newspaper articles from the mystery novelist's former career as a police reporter. NOVELS and SHORT STORIESThe Unfinished Novel and Other Stories~~~~~~~~ by Valerie Martin (Vintage) Writers, painters, and actors confront the challenges of their work and of loving one another. Theft~~~~~~~~ by Peter Carey (Knopf) A has-been artist is living quietly with his brother in rural Australia until a mysterious woman appears on the scene, in this novel from the two-time Booker Prize winner. Triangle~~~~~~~~ by Katharine Weber (FSG) The memories of the last living survivor of the 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist fire are probed by her granddaughter, a composer, and a historian. The Possibility of an Island~~~~~~~~ by Michel Houellebecq (Knopf) A comedian falls in with a techno-cult, leaving his successive clones to reap the dystopian rewards, in this novel from the author of The Elementary Particles. Telegraph Days~~~~~~~~ by Larry McMurtry (Simon & Schuster) A young woman and her sheriff brother make their way through the twilight of the Old West. Blue Water~~~~~~~~ by A. Manette Ansay (William Morrow) After the death of their son, a man and woman take to sea in a sailboat, attempting to come to terms with their loss. MYSTERY one/SUSPENSEThe Poe Shadow~~~~~~~~ by Matthew Pearl (Random House) A literary thriller from the author of The Dante Club probes the mysterious circumstances of Edgar Allan Poe's death. Two Little Girls in Blue~~~~~~~~ by Mary Higgins Clark (Simon & Schuster) Telepathic twins are kidnapped in this, the author's twenty-fifth thriller. Promise Me~~~~~~~~ by Harlan Coben (Dutton) Entertainment agent Myron Bolitar finds himself mired in mystery after the disappearance of a teenage girl. The Shape Shifter~~~~~~~~ by Tony Hillerman (HarperCollins) The discovery of a long-lost rug drags Joe Leaphorn out of retirement and into a once-closed investigation. Eye Contact~~~~~~~~ by Cammie McGovern (Viking) An autistic boy is the only witness to a murder. ~~~~~~~~ By Benjamin Healy and Benjamin Schwarz in the Fair Use guidelines of the 1976 U.S. Copyright Act. info [at] singlearticles.com Powered by CommonSense |
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