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D-Lib July 2001 |
Featured Collection: Geoffrey Chaucer A collection rich with resources not only literary -- as you would expect from a web site devoted to Geoffrey Chaucer -- but also with historical, linguistic, and artistic materials, the featured collection this month is the Chaucer collection at Harvard University...  |
Fast Company August 2001 Polly LaBarre |
What Comes Next? Michael Lewis has a knack for tapping the business zeitgeist. In Next: The Future Just Happened, Lewis explores a new frontier defined by the fringe dwellers of the Web: teenage misfits, social deviants, hackers, and pseudoentrepreneurs...  |
Salon.com July 13, 2001 Emily Jenkins |
"The Fourth Hand" by John Irving In the novelist's latest, a studly newscaster loses a limb but gains a deeper understanding of sex...  |
Salon.com July 13, 2001 Josh Karp |
Joe Queenan The former Spy writer and paid bastard hates the baby boomers with all his funny guts. Their legacy? The male ponytail...  |
Salon.com July 12, 2001 Lauren Sandler |
Throbbing hearts and thumping Bibles Christian authors are staking their claim on pop culture's steamiest preserve: Romance novels...  |
Salon.com July 10, 2001 Suzy Hansen |
"Nothing human left" A journalist who disguised herself as a Chechen woman talks about the atrocities of the war, the cowardice of Western journalists and the dim hopes for peace...  |
Salon.com July 9, 2001 Laura Miller |
"Back When We Were Grownups" by Anne Tyler The praises Anne Tyler sings to the stepped-on, unappreciated nurturers of the world are starting to strike a sour note...  |
Salon.com July 9, 2001 Christopher Kemp |
Irvine Welsh The author of "Trainspotting" discusses his new novel, "Glue," real bad bastards and the Brontes...  |
Salon.com July 4, 2001 Gary Kamiya |
Against the law Two new books make it clear that the Supreme Court's notorious Bush vs. Gore ruling wasn't as bad as it seemed at the time. It was worse...  |
Salon.com July 4, 2001 Charles Taylor |
"The Betrayal of America" by Vincent Bugliosi Prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi accuses the Supreme Court's conservative majority of criminal conduct bordering on treason...  |
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