Current Affairs


Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Snark; It's Mean, It's Personal And It's Ruining Our Conversation

By David Denby

"It's snide, it's sarcastic, it's snark, and you hear it everywhere it our culture. Now a noted critic fights back."
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Why GM Matters; Inside the Race To Transform An American Icon


By William Holstein

"Argues that not only does General Motors play too big a role in the economy of the United States to fail, but it has also made such substantial changes and such an effort to modernize its products, that it does not deserve to."
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Thursday, February 19, 2009

The Gamble: General David Petraeus and The American Military Adventure In Iraq 2006-2008


By Thomas E. Ricks
"Draws on interviews with top officers in Iraq to document the war as it has unfolded in recent years, focusing on the unorthodox strategies of General David Petraeus, from his work with foreign advisors to the ways in which his officers disagreed with key decisions."
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Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Body Of War; A True Story Of An Anti-War Hero


A Film By Phil Donahue and Ellen Spiro

"Tomas Young is another casualty of the war in Iraq. After less than a week on duty, a bullet wound to his back left him paralyzed. This emotional documentary follows the veteran as he returns home and undergoes a transformation, becoming one of the many voices protesting the war. Directed by Phil Donahue and Ellen Spiro, Body of War features two original songs performed by Eddie Vedder."

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We Can Have Peace In The Holy Land


By Jimmy Carter
"In his latest, President Carter has written a review of the history of the conflict between Israel and its neighbors, including his own 35-year involvement in the peace process, in the hope that the new president will follow his lead with direct diplomacy and a dedication to creating peace. Acknowledging that his analysis (especially in 2007's Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid) has gotten him labeled "an anti-Semite, senile, a liar, a plagiarist, a racist, unfamiliar with the region and a supporter of terrorism," Carter doesn't spare any of the region's players from criticism,... Though unafraid to ruffle feathers, Carter is illuminating and inspiring in this knowledgeable insider's history. "

Scratch Beginnings: Me, $25, And The Search For The American Dream

By Adam Shepard
"Recent college graduate Shepard is tired of hearing people complain about what they don't have. In this rebuttal to Barbara Ehrenreich's Nickel and Dimed and Bait and Switch, he sets off to see how far he can get by starting in Charleston, SC, with $25 and the clothes on his back. His goal is to finish 365 days later with a functioning car, a furnished apartment, and $2500 and be in a position to continue improving his circumstances. Along the way, he lives in a homeless shelter, befriends some interesting characters, and learns things the hard way." Check Our Catalog

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Securing The City;Inside America's Best Counterterror Force

By Christopher Dickey

"With an informed eye on the history of New York City as a leading target of world terrorism, Dickey, Newsweek’s Paris bureau chief and Middle East regional editor, chronicles the effectiveness and resources of the high-tech intelligence operation of the New York Police Department. He speaks without bias of hard-nosed veterans Raymond Kelly, the pragmatic NYPD police commissioner, and David Cohen, a former CIA analyst, who formed the counterterrorism division, which watches over the city with more than 600 cops and operatives stationed stateside and around the world. As Cohen says: “There’s a plot taking shape on New York City every day of every week since 9/11.” Dickey examines the history of terrorism in the city, but poses the thorny question of surveillance vs. civil liberties (e.g., helicopters whose cameras can look directly into specific apartments) since the 2001 World Trade Center tragedy and the Madrid and London bombings."

The Forever War


By Dexter Filkins

"Filkins, a New York Times prize–winning reporter, is widely regarded as among the finest war correspondents of this generation. His richly textured book is based on his work in Afghanistan and Iraq since 1998. It begins with a Taliban-staged execution in Kabul. It ends with Filkins musing on the names in a WWI British cemetery in Baghdad. In between, the work is a vivid kaleidoscope of vig-nettes. Individually, the strength of each story is its immediacy; together they portray a theater of the absurd, in which Filkins, an extraordinarily brave man, moves as both participant and observer. Filkins does not editorialize—a welcome change from the punditry that shapes most writing from these war zones."
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Thursday, February 5, 2009

Michelle


By Liza Mundy

"Michelle Obama's life story is inspiring - from working class Chicago roots to Ivy League education and high-powered career - but she has triggered as much controversy on the campaign trail as any other element in the life of her husband, Barack Obama. ......Mundy sees Michelle with a kind of survivor's guilt that she has been given so many opportunities that others have not, a feeling that has pushed her from corporate law firms to work for nonprofits, coping with racism and sexism and balancing career and family life....Readers who want reassurance that Michelle Obama is up to the job of First Lady and those who just want to know more about her won't be disappointed."
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Wednesday, February 4, 2009

American Grit: What It Will Take To Survive and Win in the 21st Century


By Tony Blankley
"Argues that the liberal policies of President Obama will result in a decline of the economy, a lessening of the resolve to fight Islamic terrorism, and a government unable to counteract the aggressive policies of Russia, Iran, and Venezuela."

Little Pink House: A True Story of Defiance and Courage


By Jeff Benedict
"Investigative journalist Benedict explores the drama behind a controversial Supreme Court ruling on eminent domain.In a country where home ownership is an unofficial article of faith, the prospect of the state seizing private property to make room for a highway or school is grudgingly tolerated at best. But Benedict's painstaking reconstruction shows the city of New London, Conn., successfully pushing the definition of "public use" to new extremes by condemning a collection of small homes in a low-income neighborhood as a means of generating more tax dollars. Once reclaimed, this prime waterfront land would become a corporate campus for pharmaceutical giant Pfizer. The author brings his highly technical subject to life through the passion of his central characters: two women who scarcely met but spent years locked in conflict."