Books and Ideas

Tangled in Table Talk Tangled in Table Talk

Candidates are eager to "keep all options on the table," but where's the table?

Apr 17, 2007 / Feature / Eric Kenning

God Bless You, Mr. Vonnegut God Bless You, Mr. Vonnegut

Kurt Vonnegut, who passed away Wednesday, will be remembered for his brilliant, cynical and often depressing humor.

Apr 13, 2007 / Books & the Arts / John Leonard

The Necessary Miracle The Necessary Miracle

The following speech was delivered this spring at Mark Twain's house in Hartford.

Apr 12, 2007 / Feature / Kurt Vonnegut

Humboldt’s Gift Humboldt’s Gift

The comic novel Measuring the World re-imagines the lives of two of the nineteenth century's greatest scientists.

Apr 12, 2007 / Books & the Arts / Mark M. Anderson

Mission Impossible Mission Impossible

Three Empires on the Nile, a lively retelling of Britain's colonial exploits in Africa, conjures up images of wild-eyed Arabs waging jihad in the desert.

Apr 12, 2007 / Books & the Arts / Maya Jasanoff

Inevitable Revolutions Inevitable Revolutions

In William Dalrymple's The Last Mughal, the 1857 Uprising against British rule in India is recast as a cross-border friendship gone sour.

Apr 12, 2007 / Books & the Arts / Gyan Prakash

Hiss in History Hiss in History

Although many historians have condemned Alger Hiss as a Soviet spy, the facts of his story remain obscure.

Apr 12, 2007 / Editorial / Victor Navasky

On John McCain’s Much-Ridiculed Attempt to Use His Shorja Market Visit as Proof That Baghdad Is Being Pacified On John McCain’s Much-Ridiculed Attempt to Use His Shorja Market Visit as Proof That Baghdad Is Being Pacified

McCain bought himself trouble in his visit to Baghdad.

Apr 12, 2007 / Column / Calvin Trillin

Katrina vs. Colbert Katrina vs. Colbert

Katrina vanden Heuvel appears on The Colbert Report to debate the host on the question of truthiness and much more.

Apr 10, 2007 / Books & the Arts / Katrina vanden Heuvel and Stephen Colbert

The Semiwarriors The Semiwarriors

By creating an atmosphere of perpetual crisis, Presidents have expanded their powers and hidden their actions from the public eye.

Apr 5, 2007 / Books & the Arts / Andrew J. Bacevich

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