This week on nybooks.com:
Maurice Sendak, Burma, drone strikes, John Irving, child welfare,
new fiction, and how the bankers got away with it.
Also Bruce Chatwin, lying politicians, the Catholic Church, the Greek mess, and the Dalai Lama.
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Politics
Getting Away with ItPaul Krugman and Robin Wells
Why has the Obama adminstration’s response to the financial crisis been so lopsided and inadequate?
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Reportage
Burmese DaysChristian Caryl
Burma
is a changed country. A little over a year ago, Aung San Suu Kyi was
still an unperson; merely mentioning her name was to invite trouble with
the authorities. Today she is a member of the country’s highest
lawmaking body.
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Counterterrorism
Obama and Terror: The Hovering QuestionsDavid Cole
How
should we assess President Obama’s first term as a national security
president from the standpoint of civil liberties and the rule of law?
Unlike his predecessor, has steered clear of the politics of fear. Yet
he has also steered clear of the politics of defending our ideals.
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Appreciation
‘Something Wonderful Out of Almost Nothing’Alison Lurie
Only
a few people have been both great writers and great illustrators of
children’s books. In the nineteenth century there was Edward Lear, and
in the twentieth Dr. Seuss and—perhaps the most gifted of them
all—Maurice Sendak.
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Story
Cross Off and Move OnDeborah Eisenberg
I
was preparing to eat. I’d plunked an omelet onto a plate, sat down in
front of it, folded the paper in such a way that I could maneuver my
fork between my supper and my mouth and still read, and up fetched
Cousin Morrie’s picture, staring at me.
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Instead of a quiz this week, we present a contest: How many words have been published in The New York Review of Books
since its founding in 1963? Send your answer to web@nybooks.com before
July 1 with the subject line “word count.” If your guess is closest to
the actual number you’ll win a year’s subscription to the online
edition.
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Fiction
Brute Force...HumanismCharles Baxter
John
Irving doesn’t mind assaulting his reader with full-frontal sentiment
until that reader finally gives up or capitulates. Reading his novels is
like spending the night in a bed-and-breakfast filled with Victorian
furniture and being mugged in the middle of the night.
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Child Welfare
New York: The Besieged ChildrenHelen Epstein
Troubled families are found everywhere, but 95 percent of all children
in foster care in New York are black or Hispanic. In 1996, over 10
percent of all black children in central Harlem were in foster care, a
rate of child removal thirty-six times higher than in white
neighborhoods, even though the most frequent reason for child
removal—drug use—is similarly common among blacks and whites.
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Also in the July 12 Fiction issue
Christopher Benfey on Toni Morrison, Michael Dirda on Richard Ford, Charles Simic on Steven Millhauser, Michael Chabon on Finnegans Wake, John Gray on Slavoj Žižek, Martin Filler on the Barnes Foundation, Thomas Powers on Gail Collins, and more.
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Footsteps
Walking with ChatwinRory Stewart
The publication of Bruce Chatwin’s The Songlines in 1987 transformed English travel writing; it made it cool.
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Religion
Keller to Nuns: Get OutGarry Wills
In the New York Times, Bill Keller praised William Donohue’s new book, Why Catholicism Matters.
What he particularly liked is the way Donohue argues that half of
Catholics should just leave the church they pretend to believe in.
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Culture and Ethics
Downing Street Liars’ ClubGeoffrey Wheatcroft
The
last few weeks of the Leveson inquiry have been notable for utterly
contradictory testimony from different witnesses, several of them
present or former leaders of Britain.
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The Euro Crisis
Greece and the Rest of Us: A DiscussionPaul Krugman, Edmund Phelps, Jeffrey Sachs, George Soros
How
did Greece get into its current mess? Are other countries at risk of
falling into the same predicament? These questions were explored in a
panel discussion at the Metropolitan Museum earlier this year.
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China
Why the Dalai Lama is HopefulJonathan Mirsky
“I
told President Obama the leaders of the Chinese Communist Party are
missing a part of the brain, the part that contains common sense,” the
Dalai Lama said to me during our conversation in London last week.
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Everyday of Freedom is an Act of Faith for my writings ============> http://robertoscaruffi.blogspot.com for something on religions ===> http://scaruffi1.blogspot.com