| Old Articles: <Older 261-270 Newer> |
 |
Salon.com September 14, 2000 Elizabeth Judd |
"Into the Tangle of Friendship" by Beth Kephart A memoir that celebrates the most ubiquitous, least definable passion.  |
Salon.com September 14, 2000 Janelle Brown |
Robots "R" us Why are roboticists building machines in their own image? "Robo Sapiens" introduces a homemade population and the egos behind the bots.  |
Fast Company October 2000 William C.Taylor |
You Say You Want a Revolution? We all want to change the world. But does business change really require revolutionary zeal? Two important new books offer sharply competing perspectives on the virtues of business bolshevism.  |
Salon.com September 13, 2000 |
What to read: September fiction From a surreal, carnal coming-of-age set on Coney Island to a wicked, gossipy story of the literary life, our critics pick the best books.  |
Salon.com September 13, 2000 Jonathan Miles |
"Noodling for Flatheads" by Burkhard Bilger A tribute to moonshiners, squirrel-brain eaters, cockfighters and other Southern holdouts against a bland and uniform national culture.  |
Salon.com September 12, 2000 Karen Houppert |
"The Blind Assassin" by Margaret Atwood The novelist's latest masterwork blends mystery, futuristic fantasy and family saga.  |
Salon.com September 11, 2000 Jennifer Hanawald |
Armless (and legless) in Japan A 22-year-old author born without limbs has taken his homeland by storm.  |
Salon.com September 8, 2000 Geoffrey O'Brien |
Not seen on TV The author of "The Browser's Ecstasy" picks five 19th century novels that "Masterpiece Theatre" missed.  |
Finance & Development September 1, 2000 |
Book reviews Without a Map: Political Tactics and Economic Reform in Russia by Andrei Shleifer and Daniel Treisman evaluates the reforms of the 1990s... Money and Markets: A Wall Street Memoir by Henry Kaufman both inspirational and educational...  |
Salon.com September 7, 2000 Charles Taylor |
"Pagan Babies" by Elmore Leonard In his latest black-comic thriller, the peerless crime novelist takes his wisecracking swindlers from post-massacre Rwanda to downtown Detroit.  |
| <Older 261-270 Newer> Return to current articles. |