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Joel Wendland, 05/20/2005
Contextualizing the history of US involvement with Iraq and its determined efforts to establish military control in the region, Mahajan describes a roughly 25-year history of US support for the dictatorship, then its turn against the Hussein regime, the subsequent period of the sanctions and ultimately Bush's war.
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Thomas Riggins, 05/16/2005
This month we introduce a new feature of our on-line edition;The Book Round Up...In addition to our regular reviews we will now have this occasional feature which consists of short notices from many sources of reviews of books that we have not been able to review.
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Thomas Riggins, 05/16/2005
This month we introduce a new feature of our on-line edition; the book round up...In addition to our regular reviews we will now have this occasional feature which consists of short notices from many sources of reviews of books that we have not been able to review.
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Joel Wendland, 05/16/2005
A transvestite dressed in red silk is discovered strangled in a Havana park. The death of this son of a high-placed Cuban government official has Lieutenant Mario Conde off of official suspension and on the case in this first novel of Padura’s four-part series.
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Stephen Wilkinson, 04/13/2005
After years of success across Europe, the detective novels of Cuban author Leonardo Padura Fuentes have finally started to appear in English.
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Seth Sandronsky, 04/02/2005
Are liberals in control? Do they really hurt the people they try to help? How you answer depends on your definition of the "L" word.
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John Green, 04/02/2005
Steven Ozment is concerned that German history is overshadowed by Hitler and the Holocaust and that this tends to distort one's perspective.
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Thomas Riggins, 01/04/2005
Anthropologist Jared Diamond offeres some thoughts on why societies don't survive in his latest book. Their ruling classes do not concern themselves with the consequences of their own excesses.
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Michael Adam Reale, 12/02/2004
The American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) is a Quaker Organization and as such prepared a report for its Peace Education Division back in 1969. Although the book was written and published over 30 years ago it does a remarkable job in explaining why Communism is still mistrusted in the United States today.
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Thomas Riggins, 11/16/2004
The Motorcycle Diaries: Notes on a Latin American Journey was written by Ernesto Guevara (he had not yet become "Che") from notes he made when he was 23 years old and traveling from Cordoba in Argentina to Caracas in Venezuela in late 1951 through the summer of 1952 with his friend Alberto Granado on the latter’s motorcycle.
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Tony Zaragoza, 11/09/2004
Race War! breaks through pervasive amnesia by telling how for a time the Japanese empire was able to use its claim to be the "champion of the colored races" as a "powerful mobilizing tool in a world comprised overwhelmingly of Asians, Africans, and Latin Americans." What’s more, through this history Horne contributes to a fuller global and historic understanding of racism.
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Anna Bates, 10/27/2004
I made more trips by plane this year than normal. Here are reviews of a couple of books that I picked up in airport bookstores
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Thomas Riggins, 10/20/2004
This short book [ Bertrand Russell in 90 Minutes by Paul Strathern, Chicago, Ivan R. Dee, 2001] of 92 pages is one of many (24 at the time it was published) Strathern’s 90 Minutes series. If you know absolutely nothing about Russell, perhaps the greatest English speaking philosopher (bourgeois) of the 20th century, you could begin with this book – but you will need more than it provides to really understand Russell.
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Norman Markowitz, 10/15/2004
James Bovard might be called a libertarian conservative. In Terrorism and Tyranny, he has written a valuable answer to those in the Bush administration who advocate something like the worst of pre World War II imperialism as a policy to fight "international terrorism" in the world, regardless of its effects on the rights of Americans or the lives of the world’s people.
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Gerald Horne, 10/14/2004
One of the most remarkable aspects of contemporary international affairs has been the sharp deterioration of relations between the United States and the European Union, particularly the leaders of this grouping: Germany and France. A motor driving the EU over the years has been France, which over the years has not accepted wholly why its brand of imperialism should be subordinate to that of the U.S.
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Akinbola E. Akinwumi, 10/13/2004
We should be careful not become guilty of blowing out of proportion and then tagging hastily the causalities of the 9/11 attacks. Now, this is not to minimize the tragicness of the events or to create room for a loose framework for deterrence. Rather, it is to ensure that in the process of dealing with those groups lazily called American enemies we don’t end up becoming just like the people we hate to be like.
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Thomas Riggins, 09/28/2004
In a recent book, The Puppet and the Dwarf: The Perverse Core of Christianity the Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Zizek puts forth the view that Marxists can no longer make a frontal attack on the institutions of imperialism, thus a feint under the cover of Christianity is necessary.
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Don Sloan, 09/28/2004
Jim Hightower, the populist Texan author and politico, has often said that he has drawn one conclusion while crisscrossing America seeking to expose the George W Bush cabal—THESE PEOPLE ARE NUTS! Justin Frank, MD, a Washington- based practicing psychiatrist and colleague, has put George W on his proverbial couch and proven it.
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Norman Markowitz, 09/23/2004
Muravchik, and a long-time resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute (well funded interference runners for big business), has produced a melodramatic history of socialism that would make my old anti-Soviet City College teacher quite happy, along with readers of the National Review and Fox News viewers.
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Gerald Horne, 09/17/2004
The book at hand is at the top of the best-seller list and has been for some time. It consists of the report and analysis of the President Commission appointed to investigate the tragedy of September 11, 2001. That this book has sold so well and attracted so much attention bespeaks the proliferating interest in foreign policy that is now sweeping the nation.
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