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My Friend Dahmer

MY FRIEND DAHMER By Derf Backderf Being a large, affluent, suburban nation (at least for most of the second half of the twentieth century), the U.S. is in love with its roads. Going “on the road” is...

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American Serial Killers

AMERICAN SERIAL KILLERS: THE EPIDEMIC YEARS 1950 – 2000 By Peter Vronsky Most true crime books are timely, flexed-out reportage, cashing in on the notoriety of a headline-grabbing trial and doing...

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Technological Slavery

TECHNOLOGICAL SLAVERY: THE COLLECTED WRITINGS OF THEODORE J. KACYNSKI Ed. by David Skrbina Theodore Kaczynski knows how a revolutionary manifesto is supposed to begin. You don’t beat around the bush....

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A Promised Land

A PROMISED LAND By Barack Obama Former U.S. president Barack Obama wants you to know that he still believes in America. Believing in America, he also believes in such patriotic American staples as...

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Hatchet Job

HATCHET JOB By Mark Kermode The title is catchy, but a bit misleading. British film critic Mark Kermode has mellowed over the years, even to the point where he’s wondering if, at mid-life, it’s been...

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We Should Have Seen It Coming

WE SHOULD HAVE SEEN IT COMING By Gerald F. Seib Over the past few years I’ve reviewed many books on the Trump phenomenon. Gerald Seib’s falls somewhere in the middle of the pack, but it does address,...

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Bland Fanatics

BLAND FANATICS: LIBERALS, RACE, AND EMPIRE By Pankaj Mishra It’s a paradox, but Pankaj Mishra’s collection of essays critiquing the dominant political ideology of our time and the cheerleading done for...

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The Year of Lear

THE YEAR OF LEAR: SHAKESPEARE IN 1606 By James Shapiro The Year of Lear is a direct sequel to A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare: 1599, picking up the Bard’s story five or so years later. I...

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My Friend Dahmer

MY FRIEND DAHMER By Derf Backderf Being a large, affluent, suburban nation (at least for most of the second half of the twentieth century), the U.S. is in love with its roads. Going “on the road” is...

View Article


The Tyranny of Merit

THE TYRANNY OF MERIT: WHAT’S BECOME OF THE COMMON GOOD? By Michael Sandel In my review of Christopher Hayes’ Twilight of the Elites I talked about how hard it is to define just what is meant by a...

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Landslide, I Alone Can Fix It, and Peril

LANDSLIDE: THE FINAL DAYS OF THE TRUMP PRESIDENCY By Michael Wolff I ALONE CAN FIX IT: DONALD J. TRUMP’S CATASTROPHIC FINAL YEAR By Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker PERIL By Bob Woodward and Robert...

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Impostors

IMPOSTORS: HOW REPUBLICANS QUIT GOVERNING AND SEIZED AMERICAN POLITICS By Steve Benen At the 2020 Republican National Convention, gearing up for that year’s presidential election, the Republican Party...

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On Consolation

ON CONSOLATION: FINDING SOLACE IN DARK TIMES By Michael Ignatieff Even the happiest life is filled with disappointments, heartaches, and the thousand natural shocks that flesh is heir to. And in such...

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Liar’s Circus

LIAR’S CIRCUS By Carl Hoffman I wasn’t expecting much out of Liar’s Circus, a bit of investigative and immersive journalism by Carl Hoffman that recounts his time spent on the road attending a series...

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Speaking of Universities and The Tyranny of Virtue

SPEAKING OF UNIVERSITIES By Stefan Collini THE TYRANNY OF VIRTUE: IDENTITY, THE ACADEMY, AND THE HUNT FOR POLITICAL HERESIES By Robert Boyers Headlines about universities, and the Humanities in...

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Making Darkness Light

MAKING DARKNESS LIGHT: A LIFE OF JOHN MILTON By Joe Moshenska When the biographer Edmund Morris was given the job of writing an authorized life of Ronald Reagan he found himself at a bit of a loss as...

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Reign of Terror

REIGN OF TERROR: HOW THE 9/11 ERA DESTABILIZED AMERICA AND PRODUCED TRUMP By Spencer Ackerman Most of the time, when people speak of American exceptionalism they mean it as something to be proud of, if...

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The Year of Lear

THE YEAR OF LEAR: SHAKESPEARE IN 1606 By James Shapiro The Year of Lear is a direct sequel to A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare: 1599, picking up the Bard’s story five or so years later. I...

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My Friend Dahmer

MY FRIEND DAHMER By Derf Backderf Being a large, affluent, suburban nation (at least for most of the second half of the twentieth century), the U.S. is in love with its roads. Going “on the road” is...

View Article

The Tyranny of Merit

THE TYRANNY OF MERIT: WHAT’S BECOME OF THE COMMON GOOD? By Michael Sandel In my review of Christopher Hayes’ Twilight of the Elites I talked about how hard it is to define just what is meant by a...

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