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Reason December 2003 Jesse Walker |
Live From Chapel Perilous Robert Anton Wilson is the unacknowledged elephant in our cultural living room: a direct and indirect influence on popular books, movies, TV shows, music, games, comics, and commentary. Wilson is a primary source for the ironic style of conspiracism.  |
Reason December 2003 Matt Welch |
Balls The joy of watching ideas win -- a review of Michael Lewis's Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game  |
Reason December 2003 Michael Young |
Orient Obsess Douglas Little takes a lackluster look at Americans abroad in American Orientalism: The United States and the Middle East Since 1945.  |
BusinessWeek December 8, 2003 |
The Year's Best Business Books The Innovator's Solution: Creating and Sustaining Successful Growth... Wheels for the World: Henry Ford, His Company, and a Century of Progress... The Maverick and His Machine: Thomas Watson, Sr., and the Making of IBM... etc.  |
BusinessWeek December 8, 2003 Thane Peterson |
A Holiday Feast For The Eyes This year's coffee table books offer goodies for fans of photography, Japanese art, motorcycles, and rock 'n' roll  |
ifeminists November 25, 2003 Carey Roberts |
The Untold Story of Betty Friedan Feminist author Betty Friedan was a long-time participant in the American Communist movement, according to Daniel Horowitz.  |
Wall Street & Technology November 17, 2003 |
Step Wisely Is it difficult for your organization to prioritize projects? According to Ray Trotta, author of the newly published, "Translating Strategy into Shareholder Value," projects should be prioritized according to the shareholder value they can achieve.  |
Entrepreneur December 2003 Nichole L. Torres |
Youthful Optimism Need a dose of inspiration? The stories about young, successful entrepreneurs in Secrets of the Young & Successful will fire you up.  |
AskMen.com November 19, 2003 Steve Richer |
How To: Sell Your Screenplay What does it take to sell your script to Hollywood?  |
| Knowledge@Wharton |
The Big Bang Theory of Advertising In a new book titled, Bang! Getting Your Message Heard in a Noisy World, Linda Kaplan Thaler, CEO of a New York advertising agency, contends that only ideas that are "simply too outrageous, too different, too polarizing to go unnoticed" will break through the "sea of sameness out there."  |
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