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Salon.com September 26, 2000 Alan Deutschman |
Wall Street schmooze and spin Media author Howard Kurtz says financial journalists are more powerful and morally bereft than Washington's political pundits.  |
Salon.com September 26, 2000 Jill Wolfson |
You're an excellent host Parasites can slip into your body, rewrite your DNA and, sometimes, change your mood. Science writer Carl Zimmer's new book, "Parasite Rex: Inside the Bizarre World of Nature's Most Dangerous Creatures," introduces readers to some of nature's most sinister characters...  |
Salon.com September 26, 2000 Melissa Hantman |
Helen Gurley Brown In a tempestuous era, her Cosmopolitan magazine grappled with how women should define themselves, and reconcile liberation with their interest in men.  |
Salon.com September 25, 2000 Lisa Zeidner |
Fresh fruit Though she didn't start the memoir craze, Mary Karr feeds the frenzy with "Cherry."  |
Salon.com September 22, 2000 Ann Marlowe |
Wages of sin Are Candace Bushnell's heroines looking for love or practicing the world's oldest profession?  |
Salon.com September 22, 2000 James Surowiecki |
Skin trade Welcome to the new world of dating, where everyone's out to get the best deal they can. In Candace Bushnell's new novella collection, "4 Blondes," which sex and commerce are inextricably linked.  |
Salon.com September 21, 2000 Jane Hamilton |
Bummer lit The author of "A Map of the World" picks five great books about depressed teenagers.  |
Salon.com September 20, 2000 Stephen Lemons |
Apocalypse culture vulture The end time is upon us: Feral House publisher Adam Parfrey is about to administer the coup de grace to Western civilization.  |
Salon.com September 20, 2000 Julia Gracen |
Andrea Dworkin in agony The anti-porn feminist's strange tale of drugged rape in a European hotel has even her allies wondering.  |
Salon.com September 20, 2000 Jake Tapper |
The other Gore Writer, pundit and "gadfly" Gore Vidal talks about his new book, the little difference between his distant cousin Al and George W. Bush, and how Ralph Nader became boring.  |
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