Monthly Archives: January 2009

Anxiety and Bliss

For the Financial Times, Anna Metcalfe chats with Patrick McCabe.

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Headsman's Quirk

The Complete Review covers the end of the Washington Post‘s Book World section.

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Cultural Polarization

In The New Republic Jerry A. Coyne, author of Why Evolution Is True and professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolution at the University of Chicago, explains why science and religion can never be reconciled.

It would appear, then, that one cannot be coherently religious and scientific at the same time. That alleged synthesis requires that with one part of your brain you accept only those things that are tested and supported by agreed-upon evidence, logic, and reason, while with the other part of your brain you accept things that are unsupportable or even falsified. In other words, the price of philosophical harmony is cognitive dissonance.

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The Feminine Part

What compels a man, 63, to run a side business in publishing books mainly of poems, as well as reprints of classics, in the year 2009? Not money.

Ian Shapira of the Washington Post profiles Roger Lathbury, principal of Orchises Press.

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Titan of American Letters

CNN reports that John Updike has died.

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This Kind of Break

GalleyCat notes layoffs at Publishers Weekly.

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Savage and Merciless Energy

The New York Times has Martin Walker’s review of Jonathan Brent’s Inside the Stalin Archives: Discovering the New Russia.

If one hero emerges from “Inside the Stalin Archives” it is Aleksandr Yakovlev, a former Columbia University graduate student and Soviet ambassador to Canada, and perhaps the real intellectual author of glasnost and perestroika. Yakovlev, badly wounded in the Nazi siege of Leningrad, was a traditional Russian intellectual who had a bumpy career in the party until Gorbachev brought him onto the Polit buro to be its most liberal voice. After Gorbachev’s fall, Yakovlev continued to campaign for full disclosure of the Soviet past, and he tells Brent of one of the pivotal moments in the last days of the Soviet regime. In the winter of 1991, when Lithuanian crowds began demonstrating against Soviet rule, Gorbachev asked Yakovlev, “Should we shoot?”

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Meditations in Green by Stephen Wright

Meditations in Green by Stephen Wright

Highly recommended.

Buy Buy

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