AltWeeklies Wire

A Mad Insurrectionnew

Fifty years ago this week, James Meredith integrated Ole Miss, causing violent upheaval. Here are three books from men in the thick of the uprising.
Jackson Free Press  |  Donna Ladd  |  10-01-2012  |  Nonfiction

'Mississippi is Mine'new

What James Meredith did not only changed a university, but also a state and a nation.
Jackson Free Press  |  Joe Atkins  |  09-16-2012  |  Nonfiction

Jihad, Definednew

Casual readers may view How to Win a Cosmic War, the second book by acclaimed religious scholar Reza Aslan, as a defense of Islam. In part, this is an accurate assessment.
Jackson Free Press  |  Cheree Franco  |  07-09-2009  |  Nonfiction

New Book Reveals Calivinist Truths About Standing Up for Social Justicenew

The Good Doctors: The Medical Committee for Human Rights and the Struggle for Social Justice in Health Care portrays fallible human beings who didn't always get along, didn't always know what they were doing, and still managed to accomplish something.
Jackson Free Press  |  Tom Head  |  07-09-2009  |  Nonfiction

Parting the Curtain: 'Devil's Sanctuary' Tells the Story of Mississippi's Racismnew

Magnolia State residents "have a long history of being against whatever the rest of the nation is for," the authors write in Devil’s Sanctuary: an Eyewitness History of Mississippi Hate Crimes. Their self-evident truths did not include equality—not for the slaves imported into the state and not for the Native Americans exported out.
Jackson Free Press  |  Ronni Mott  |  07-09-2009  |  Nonfiction

'Appetite for Self-Destruction' Looks at the Collapse of the Record Industrynew

If you take one jewel of wisdom away from this book, it is this: The reason many crappy musicians have gotten the limelight, the reason most people turned off their radios and stopped watching the Grammys and instead started downloading music from the internet, is money.
Jackson Free Press  |  Andi Agnew  |  06-26-2009  |  Nonfiction

A Very Well-Behaved Record of Fearless Womennew

Laurel Thatcher Ulrich provides a window through which to view the social injustices faced by three of history's famous women. Just don't be surprised if their struggles look a lot like our own.
Jackson Free Press  |  Brandi Herrera Pfrehm  |  05-11-2009  |  Nonfiction

A 'Graphic History' of Intellectual Delinquencynew

This graphic anthology of "Beats" biographies mostly tells the intertwining stories of Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg and William S. Burroughs, featuring those written by alternative comics king, Harvey Pekar.
Jackson Free Press  |  Darren Schwindaman  |  04-24-2009  |  Nonfiction

'If I Could Choose Yesterday'new

In his memoir, Bill Miles provides an astute life-long observer's view of pivotal historic events in the Magnolia State and the politics that make up Mississippi.
Jackson Free Press  |  Jere Nash  |  04-24-2009  |  Nonfiction

'Alphabet Juice' Is a Sesquipedlaian Delightnew

Reading Alphabet Juice is like chaperoning a jungle gym full of words at play; you attentively watch them run among and slip and slide as you sit back and enjoy the cool evening breeze.
Jackson Free Press  |  Sarah Litvin  |  04-16-2009  |  Nonfiction

Eclipsing Slave History: 'Sugar of the Crop'new

Sana Butler set out to tell the stories of the children of slaves in America. Her book, however, is all about her, which is a shame.
Jackson Free Press  |  Walter Biggins  |  04-16-2009  |  Nonfiction

Veering Out of the Fast Lane: 'See You in a Hundred Years'new

Logan Ward and his family left Manhattan for rural Virginia, where they lived without electricity, phones or laptops for a year. To heal our planet, we can all use a little of what they learned, even without giving up our reading lamps.
Jackson Free Press  |  Kelly Bryan Smith  |  04-09-2009  |  Nonfiction

David C. Korten Proposes a New Economic Modelnew

His Agenda for a New Economy is a departure from the same old rehashed economic theories of the past. It doesn't just nibble around the edges of the current economic crisis.
Jackson Free Press  |  Ronni Mott  |  03-27-2009  |  Nonfiction

Ted Gioia's 'Delta Blues' Catalogs the Bluesnew

Delta Blues rambles from Mississippi to Memphis, from Chicago to New York and across Europe, just like the musicians it documents.
Jackson Free Press  |  Walter Biggins  |  02-19-2009  |  Nonfiction

Disaster: A Growth Industrynew

Klein exposes—with razor-sharp investigative reporting—the damage done by the fundamentalist economic theories of Nobel Prize winner Milton Friedman, who said: “Only a crises actual or perceived produces real change.”
Jackson Free Press  |  Ronni Mott  |  08-29-2008  |  Nonfiction

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