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Reason April 2004 Glenn Garvin |
Fools for Communism In Denial: Historians, Communism and Espionage, by John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr. Chilling and often perversely funny, it details the intellectual sleight of hand to which many American historians of communism and the Soviet Union have resorted as newly revealed archives in Moscow and Washington suggest they were, well, fools.  |
Reason April 2004 Ronald Bailey & Nick Gillespie |
Transcendental Goods Charles Murray discusses art, accomplishment, faith, and doubt in his book.  |
Reason April 2004 Charles Paul Freund |
Artifact: Text Lit This winter, a French writer named Phil Marso published a short novel aimed at young readers and written entirely in France's own intricately developed cellphonic argot.  |
Reason April 2004 Charles Paul Freund |
Option Overload According to Barry Schwartz's book The Paradox of Choice: Why More Is Less (Ecco), the costs to consumers of market choices can outweigh the apparent benefits, and not merely in terms of time.  |
Reason April 2004 Julian Sanchez |
Soundbite Alfred Kahn writes a book on the deregulation of telecommunications and airlines.  |
The Motley Fool April 2, 2004 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Trashing Eisner's "Camp" Is Eisner's new book a case of bad timing or a chance for perfect comedic timing?  |
CIO April 1, 2004 Prewitt & Moore |
When Parts Don't Make a Whole A book that outlines what causes a company to become "stuck".  |
CIO April 1, 2004 |
Off the Shelf - Reputation Protection In an era of companies behaving badly, a good reputation can be worth its weight in gold. These books reveal how to keep your company's reputation bright.  |
| Industrial Physicist |
Book List A list of new Physics books: Analysis and Design of Vertical Cavity Surface Emitting Lasers... Breakup of Liquid Sheets and Jets... Computational Fluid Dynamics 2002... etc.  |
BusinessWeek April 5, 2004 Heather Green |
Creativity In Chains In Free Culture: How Big Media Uses Technology and the Law to Lock Down Culture and Control Creativity, the author insists that our very ability to make cultural products is newly endangered.  |
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