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Salon.com October 23, 2002 Bomani Jones |
"Oh Pleez GAWD I can't handle the success!" Excerpts from Kurt Cobain's journals (published in Newsweek) reveal an oddball genius battling severe physical pain -- and imagining a Nirvana reunion tour sponsored by Depends.  |
Salon.com October 23, 2002 Ann Marlowe |
The all-too-female cluelessness of "I Don't Know How She Does It" When you make $750,000 a year, you don't sweat the domestic details. But this latest hit novel about a miserable working mom is too ignorant and dishonest about money to deal with that.  |
Salon.com October 23, 2002 Damien Cave |
Dying for God The author of "The Martyrs of Columbine" on the strange and sometimes violent collision of religion and politics.  |
| Knowledge@Wharton |
One Author's Path to Profitability: Repackaging Earlier Insights In writing The Art of Profitability, Adrian Slywotzky is practicing what he preaches. He is seeking greater profits.  |
Salon.com October 22, 2002 Laura Miller |
The lost adventure of childhood Michael Chabon, author of "The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay," talks about his new kids book, "Summerland," and the freedom he fears is vanishing from children's lives.  |
Salon.com October 21, 2002 Charles Taylor |
"The Crimson Petal and the White" by Michel Faber Praised by critics as an erotic Victorian page-turner, this literary hit is addictive, it's true -- but its attitude toward sex is disturbing.  |
Salon.com October 16, 2002 Suzy Hansen |
The land where terror won Author and activist Daniel Wilkinson talks about the atrocities committed in Guatemala, the people too frightened to speak of it and America's shameful support of the perpetrators.  |
CIO October 15, 2002 Christopher Koch |
Making Change Real John P. Kotter and Dan S. Cohen's The Heart of Change has had more impact than most management books. If you're looking for a more in-depth, intellectual explanation for how to make change happen, read Leading Change.  |
CIO October 15, 2002 Daintry Duffy |
The Weakest Link Humans are the weak link in any corporation's carefully crafted security perimeter. That's the prevailing theme of Kevin Mitnick's new book, The Art of Deception: Controlling the Human Element of Security.  |
Salon.com October 15, 2002 Allen Barra |
"Jesse James: Last Rebel of the Civil War" by T.J. Stiles The latest and best-ever biography of Jesse James tears down the myth to reveal not a latter-day Robin Hood, but a greedy, press-savvy bandit.  |
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