Non-fiction

All in the Family? All in the Family?

Despite decades of battering by divorce and the proliferation of single-parent households, the family remains a source of inexhaustible fascination.

May 6, 2004 / Books & the Arts / Stanley Aronowitz

Native Son Native Son

At the height of the Great Game, when adventure-crazed young men from Britain and Russia stealthily documented the wild miles and tribes of Central Asia, an American and an Eng...

May 6, 2004 / Books & the Arts / Leela Jacinto

The Unfinished Revolution The Unfinished Revolution

I was 25 when I and the rest of black South Africa were eligible to vote for the first time. South Africa celebrated the tenth anniversary of that event this April.

Apr 29, 2004 / Books & the Arts / Sean Jacobs

The Descent Into Barbarism The Descent Into Barbarism

Few of those who followed the David Irving libel trial held in London three years ago could avoid being struck by the calm but towering presence of the British historian Richar...

Apr 22, 2004 / Books & the Arts / Abraham Brumberg

Human, All Too Human Human, All Too Human

Humanism, like democracy, is a word that labors under an excess of meaning. It can mean acknowledging the value of human beings, or denying the existence of God.

Apr 22, 2004 / Books & the Arts / Terry Eagleton

The National Insecurity State The National Insecurity State

Keen to control the flow of information, the Bush political machine has labored day and night to obstruct public oversight of US foreign policy. But the basic reality cannot be...

Apr 22, 2004 / Books & the Arts / Stephen Holmes

Woodward Returns Woodward Returns

Correction: "The Man" is the term Dick Cheney uses to refer to George W. Bush, not the term used by other officials to refer to Cheney. (6/1/04)

Apr 22, 2004 / Books & the Arts / Eric Alterman

Why the Bubble Popped Why the Bubble Popped

This clutch of books offers an excellent retrospective on the recent stock-market crash, which wiped out $8.5 trillion in market value.

Apr 15, 2004 / Books & the Arts / Robert Sherrill

Wishful Thinking Wishful Thinking

In early 1966, Leonard Bernstein threw a birthday party for Dmitri Shostakovich in Lincoln Center's Philharmonic Hall.

Apr 15, 2004 / Books & the Arts / Paul Mitchinson

Eugene McCarthy: 1916-2005 Eugene McCarthy: 1916-2005

Eugene McCarthy, the Senate dove who in 1968 challenged Lyndon Johnson's conduct of the Vietnam War, died Saturday at the age of 89. In this 2004 review of Dominic Sandbrook's biog...

Apr 15, 2004 / Books & the Arts / Jon Wiener

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