Tag Archives: andrew ohehir

Not Carved in Stone

Andrew O’Hehir at Salon reviews Archie Brown’s The Rise and Fall of Communism.

This is still an exceptionally difficult subject for Americans to confront with any clarity, I think. Our political life remains haunted in peculiar ways by the specter of Communism, which has become (to mix metaphors) an all-purpose ideological cudgel to use against one’s enemies.

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An Understandable Disorder

In reviewing two new family memoirs–The Sisters Antipodes by Jane Alison and When Skateboards Will Be Free by Saïd Sayrafiezadeh–Andrew O’Hehir at Salon appropriately begins with Larkin.

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Dephlogisticated Air

For Salon Andrew O’Hehir reviews Steven Johnson’s The Invention of Air.

Although Johnson does his best to view the rest of Priestley’s life and career through an optimistic prism, other authors might indeed paint it more sardonically. After making a discovery so big no living person could understand it, he was first driven out of England by monarchist, Anglican thugs (as amusing as that concept may sound today) and then demonized as a French spy and nearly deported from the United States under the notorious Alien and Sedition Acts signed by his former friend John Adams.

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