Archive for 2012
Steve Coll, Barbara Ehrenreich
May 15 . 2012
In Private Empire Steve Coll investigates the largest and most powerful private corporation in the United States, revealing the true extent of ExxonMobil’s power. Later, author Barbara Ehrenreich talks about The Animal Cure in The Baffler magazine.
Nancy Gibbs, Michael Duffy
May 14 . 2012
In The Presidents Club, journalists and presidential historians Nancy Gibbs and Michael Duffy offer a new tool to understand the presidency by exploring the club as a hidden instrument of power that has changed the course of history.
Col. Thomas J. Foley
May 11 . 2012
The news of the notorious gangster Whitey Bulger’s capture—after sixteen years on the FBI’s Most Wanted list—swept the nation Col. Thomas J. Foley tells what happened in Most Wanted.
Bay Buchanan, Bill Press
May 10 . 2012
In Bay and Her Boys, conservative political analyst, Bay Buchanan takes the reader on a candid trip into the world of single working motherhood. Then liberal radio host and author, Bill Press talks bout The Obama Hate Machine and how the Right has taken rhetoric to slanderous new levelsin attacking president.
Roy Saltman
May 9 . 2012
Roy Saltman responds to the new atheists in Sacred Humanism Without Miracles.
Eric Berkowitz
May 8 . 2012
Eric Berkowitz uses flesh-and-blood cases to evoke the entire sweep of Western sex law, from the savage impalement of an Ancient Mesopotamian adulteress to the imprisonment of Oscar Wilde in 1895 for “gross indecency” in Sex and Punishment.
R. Andrew Chesnut
May 1 . 2012
R. Andrew Chesnut shows how Santa Muerte, a skeleton saint with millions of devotees, has become the patron saint of drug traffickers in Devoted to Death.
Jim Robbins
April 30 . 2012
The Man Who Planted Trees is not a detailed how-to guide to planting; it is a touching story of Elzéard Bouffier, who devoted his entire life to reforesting a desolate portion of Provence, in southern France.
Mathew Barrett, Mel Gilles
April 27 . 2012
Jim Gullo, Tim Wendel
April 26 . 2012
Trading Manny is Jim Gullo’s moving story of how a father and his young son recaptured their love of baseball—a winning testament to why the game matters and how it can still bring us together in spite of itself. Later, Tim Wendel tells the extraordinary story of the 1968 baseball season—when the game was played to perfection even as the country was being pulled apart at the seams in Summer of ’68.
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