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Salon.com June 26, 2002 Ken Foster |
Have you seen Fluffy? A collection of lost-pet posters offers a sad, evocative and sometimes very strange glimpse of love and loss between humans and animals.  |
Salon.com June 26, 2002 Douglas Cruickshank |
Lord Buckley rides again! The new biography of the Hip Messiah gives us a quintessentially American character worthy of a Mark Twain novel.  |
Salon.com June 25, 2002 Christopher Dreher |
Random numbers If you think bestseller lists are based on solid facts, guess again. But a new technology is promising to improve the hot-book scorecard.  |
Salon.com June 25, 2002 Katharine Mieszkowski |
Remember when we had no e-mail? James Gleick, author of "What Just Happened," explains what he got right, and wrong, over the last ten years.  |
Salon.com June 24, 2002 Suzy Hansen |
"The Emperor of Ocean Park" by Stephen L. Carter The million-dollar novel just picked by the "Today" show book club melds a fascinating portrait of the black upper class to a less than thrilling thriller plot.  |
Salon.com June 20, 2002 |
What to read in June Novels about working on Wall Street and for the Secret Service, tales of wannabe American bohemians in Prague, a mystery set in ancient Greece and more in the month's best fiction.  |
Salon.com June 19, 2002 Gavin McNett |
"Why Smart People Can Be So Stupid," by Robert J. Sternberg Scholars finally tackle the question that has plagued humanity since time immemorial.  |
| Knowledge@Wharton |
Don Quixote de la Software Sam Williams' Free as in Freedom: Richard Stallman's Crusade for Free Software is at once a meditation on freedom, a biography of a man, and a story about technology.  |
Salon.com June 18, 2002 Laura Miller |
Before Baghdad burns The author of a new book on Iraq cautions that a U.S. invasion to get rid of Saddam Hussein could be even more dangerous than his weapons of mass destruction.  |
Salon.com June 17, 2002 Scott Rosenberg |
"Unmasking Deep Throat" John Dean, on a decades-long quest to identify history's most elusive news source, brings new evidence to the fore in his new book.  |
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