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Miller’s
Centrist Tale
Matthew Miller doesn’t mention Germany in his clever new book
The 2% Solutionbut Schroeder’s ideologically ambiguous reforms seem
to be the exact template Miller espouses for change in the U.S..
Read
David Gratzer's full review.
Barreling
Around in Central Asia
The New Great Game impresses. Author Lutz Kleveman risked
his neck traveling across Central Asia to interview a diverse cast of
characters: diplomats and mullahs, businessmen and border guards.
Read
Carlos Ramos-Mrosovsky's full review.
Providence
Lost and Found?
Francis Beckwith’s judicious, important book Law, Darwinism
and Public Education deserves a wide audience. As he makes
abundantly clear, the establishment clause of the First Amendment applies
also to atheism, scientific materialism, and secular humanism.
Read
M.D. Aeschliman's full review.
Pandora
Revisited
With War Against the Weak, Edwin Black has written what may well
be the best book ever published about the American eugenics movement and
the horrific events it spawned.
Read
Wesley J. Smith's full review.
Some
Victory
Will Saletan, author of Bearing Right and a friend of mine,
has written a thoughtful and engaging book on the politics of abortion.
His distinction between pro-choice conservatism and liberalism explains
important features of the politics of abortion.
Read
Ramesh Ponnuru's full review.
Horror
Show
Joe Bob Briggs, author of Profoundly Disturbing, is the Zagat
of the Z-movie, the one indispensable guide for those who like slaughter,
sex, and lethal household tools with their popcorn. He wallows in the
movies that other critics flee.
Read
Andrew Stuttaford's full review.
The
Kids Arent Alright
Brian Robertson’s determination to confront the child-care
establishment with hard facts is certainly matched by the depth of commitment
of the villains in his story: The 'day care deception' is one project
that finds liberals arguing to boost the profits of big business and expand
tax cuts for the rich.
Read
Kate O'Beirne's full review.
Tidal
Wave
Victor Davis Hanson is far from ready to accept categorization as
a military specialist. Mexifornia: A State of Becoming is a deeply
informed study of the impact of Mexican immigration on the U.S., and it
will make you reflect wisely and soberly on the problems this influx is
causing.
Read
William Rusher's full review.
Annals
of Ignominy
Mona Charens new book, Useful Idiots, looks back at
the Cold War, recording excruciatingly and mercilessly who
said or did what, when. This is supposed to be verboten. Taboo. Its
no fair, this going back.
Read
Jay Nordlinger's full review.
Shyster
Heaven
The Rule of Lawyers is not a story for the faint of heart.
Walter K. Olson begins the book by looking back on an amazingly prescient
essay written in 1976 by Beverly C. Moore Jr., a onetime Naderite lawyer.
Read
Doug Bandow's full review.
The
War for Islam
Bernard Lewis is justly regarded as the worlds premier
living authority on the history of the Middle East and the Arab world.
But in his new book, The Crisis of Islam, Lewis meets the particular
needs of a new generation of readers.
Read
Michael Potemra's full review.
How
the Right Was Won
Getting It Rights real protagonist is the author himself,
Willam F. Buckley Jr., and one happily roots for him throughout. The story
begins with Woodroe Raynor, a Mormon who becomes a spokesman for the John
Birch Society.
Read
Austin W. Bramwell's full review.
The
Rakes Progress
Richard Brookhiser, in Gentleman Revolutionary, has once
again demonstrated his mastery of the elogy, a portrait in which all that
is superfluous is banished, and in which a judicious art has yielded the
essence of a life.
Read
Michael Knox Beran's full review.
Recognize
Anyone?
In her charming nove, amanda bright@home, Danielle Crittenden
gives us a year in the life of Amanda Bright: mother of two, wife of Bob
Clarke, and resident of Washington, D.C. NR readers will recognize some
of the characters.
Read
Sarah Maserati's full review.
Paradise,
No
In Of Paradise and Power, Robert Kagan argues that Europe
and America are divided by a power gap and an ideology gap that reinforce
each other. At the core of the division is an overwhelming disparity
in military-technological power.
Read
John Fonte's full review.
Not
Old School
Last summer, the Supreme Court issued a sweeping endorsement of
school choices constitutionality. Clint Bolicks Voucher
Wars is an engaging memoir of this remarkable legal achievement.
Read
John J. Miller's full review.
The
Terror State
Anne Applebaum, author of Gulag, has interviewed survivors
and made full use of archival material now available in Russia. In clear
but heartfelt prose, she examines all aspects of a horror which has left
its stamp on humanity forever.
Read
David Pryce-Jones's full review.
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