Posted By Blake Hounshell Share

Preeti Aroon:

Mike Boyer:

  • "Not Compassionate, Not Conservative: A political traditionalist critiques our pseudo-conservative president," by Ethan Fishman in the Winter issue of The American Scholar. Fishman slams the administration's conceit that "the executive branch can interpret laws any way it wants."
  • How the left led us into 9/11, The Los Angeles Times. The op-ed version of Dinesh D'Souza's new book is the laziest piece of pseudo-academia I've seen in quite some time. It's especially disappointing considering his previous works held some merit. I generally like the folks at the Hoover Institution, but this is an embarrassment.

Christine Chen:

  • Literary Ambition Without Borders. Vikram Chandra's new novel, Sacred Games, is "the latest, fattest example of what might be called literary globalization — a 900-page manifestation of the worldwide trend toward culture, commerce and seemingly everything else becoming interconnected," writes Bob Thompson in Monday's Washington Post.

Blake Hounshell:

Carolyn O'Hara:

  • Blood Oil, by Sebastian Junger. Vanity Fair, February 2007. Junger meets the militants who are wreaking havoc on Nigeria's oil supplies.
  • The Invisible Enemy in Iraq, by Steve Silberman. Wired, February 2007. Think insurgents are dangerous? Meet the drug-resistant supergerm infecting U.S. troops.
  • As if on cue, a new Kleenex tissue fights germs ... via mild pesticides. From Can a Re-Engineered Kleenex Cure a Brand's Sniffles? in the Wall Street Journal, Jan. 22, 2007. 

Kate Palmer:

 
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