June 16th, 2010 by
Sandra Silberstein focuses on the creation of the national transformations including changes in American identity and national beliefs in post-9/11 by illustrating some examples which reveal U.S’s situation within the time of crises after 9/11 events. Sandra Silberstein is a professor of English at the University of Washington, Seattle.
Source:Book Review on War of Words – Language, Politics and 9-11
Category: Political Books Reviewed |
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June 16th, 2010 by
Comments on two new books. Glenn Beck’s, Common Sense, and Dick Morris and Eileen McGann, Catastrophe. Two, current books, I consider a must read, especially in the times we live in.
Source:Best Political Books
Category: Political Books Reviewed |
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May 28th, 2009 by
Set against the backdrop of the Second World War and Tibet’s impending invasion by China, Harrar pens an evocative account of a country suspended in time. Medieval in many ways, it is a place none-the-less, readers will deeply regret having missed.
Source:Seven Years in Tibet – Heinrich Harrar
Category: Political Books Reviewed |
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May 28th, 2009 by
Up until now, Grisham’s novels have pretty much followed two separate tracks. He has penned thrilling fiction that keeps you hooked, as well as making a few more literary novels that convey a theme. In The Appeal, Grisham has combined the best of both, giving us a “fun” novel with a purpose.
Source:The Appeal
Category: Political Books Reviewed |
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