AltWeeklies Wire

Sebastian Junger's Gripping Chronicle of Afghanistannew

Sebastian Junger's meditations on fear, killing and love—and on the intoxicating allure of combat for one group of young men—will no doubt earn WAR a well-deserved spot among the great works of combat journalism.
INDY Week  |  Bronwen Dickey  |  06-10-2010  |  Nonfiction

'Our Noise' Tells the Story of Merge Records, and Tells it Wellnew

The book is remarkably candid; it thoroughly examines interpersonal and financial problems, not just triumphs. Because of the candor, we believe the portrayal of Merge as a genuinely noble label, with an uncommon blend of ethics, frugality and business savvy.
INDY Week  |  Brian Howe  |  09-18-2009  |  Nonfiction

In 'The Big Rewind,' Nathan Rabin Uses His Pop-Saturated Memory as a Window into His Lifenew

Did I mention that most of this book is extremely funny? Rabin is aware that there are plenty of hard-luck stories out there, and he's just as hard on himself as he is on such targets as a video store boss, several girlfriends from hell and a Movie Club co-commentator married to the guy who wrote Soul Plane.
INDY Week  |  Zack Smith  |  08-28-2009  |  Nonfiction

New Anthology 'Love Is a Four-Letter Word' Examines Relief, Regret and Repentancenew

This anthology of "true stories of breakups, bad relationships and broken hearts" included stories from well-known writers like Junot Diaz, Gary Shteyngart, George Singleton, Lynda Barry and well-linked lit blogger Maud Newton. The book's epigraph, from Oscar Wilde, captures the complexities of the book's tone nicely; the heart, the Irish satirist tells us, was made to be broken.
INDY Week  |  Gerry Canavan  |  08-21-2009  |  Nonfiction

Suzanne Simons Gives Us a New -- and Timely -- Biography of the Man Behind Blackwaternew

Heroic in Master of War's opening pages, Simons ends her portrait with Erik Prince sputtering in impotent rage against a media he believes has unfairly maligned his company.
INDY Week  |  Gerry Canavan  |  08-14-2009  |  Nonfiction

New Book Looks at How Billy Graham Shook Up the Solid Southnew

Billy Graham played a key role in shaping the American political landscape of the second half of the 20th century, as confidante to presidents and adviser on domestic issues (particularly civil rights) and foreign policy (Communism and the Cold War).
INDY Week  |  John Sinclair  |  07-17-2009  |  Nonfiction

'The Book of Dads' Elicits Pungent Prose from Nearly All of its Contributorsnew

It seems appropriate that both The Book of Dads and Father's Day arrive at the onset of summer, when dads and kids head for the shore. A handful of these 20 essays take place on the water, and an aquatic vacation might be the best time to give your favorite father this enlightened, enlightening book.
INDY Week  |  Adam Sobsey  |  06-18-2009  |  Nonfiction

Man and Myth: The Flood of Lincoln Books Goes Onnew

The 11 essays Eric Foner has gathered attempt to wrestle from the mists of history and hagiography a balanced picture of the man who is almost certainly America's most sacred martyr: a sad-eyed, dour man in a stovepipe hat and beard that every schoolchild knows saved the country a long time ago.
INDY Week  |  Gerry Canavan  |  02-05-2009  |  Nonfiction

Paul Maliszewski Examines Literary Fraudstersnew

Fakers, a collection of essays that comes mostly from Maliszewski's contributions to Bookforum, Harper's, The Paris Review and other publications, examines not just the counterfeiters themselves, but those who publish, promote and read their work.
INDY Week  |  Sam Wardle  |  01-22-2009  |  Nonfiction

Author Justin Catanoso Discovers His Family's Remarkable Legacynew

My Cousin the Saint is a reminder that the word "work" is as crucial as "miracle" in the phrases they share.
INDY Week  |  Adam Sobsey  |  10-16-2008  |  Nonfiction

A New Southern Strategy in Bob Moser's 'Blue Dixie'new

In Blue Dixie, Moser argues that the Democrats' efforts to win without seriously contesting the South is flawed in tactical terms, profoundly misguided in strategic terms, and indefensible in moral terms.
INDY Week  |  Thad Williamson  |  09-18-2008  |  Nonfiction

'The World Without Us' Offers the Anti-Apocolypsenew

This was not the first time Alan Weisman had examined nature's resilience in the absence, nor near-absence, of humans.
INDY Week  |  Gerry Canavan  |  09-11-2008  |  Nonfiction

How Conservatives are Dismantling the Federal Governmentnew

Fresh off listening to Republican presidential nominee John McCain's acceptance speech last week, it was cathartic to visit with Thomas Frank's The Wrecking Crew: How Conservatives Rule.
INDY Week  |  Bob Geary  |  09-11-2008  |  Nonfiction

Do Today's Children Hear the Call of the Wild?new

The Audubon medal-winning writer Richard Louv has just released an updated version of his 2005 book, Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children From Nature-Deficit Disorder to create a movement of sorts to get kids outside.
INDY Week  |  Marc Maximov  |  04-17-2008  |  Nonfiction

'Crossing the Waters' Offers a Peek into the Afro-Cuban Religionnew

The book's charismatic protagonist is Santiago Castaneda Vera, a spiritual practitioner who "works" the spirits of the dead and whose sacred oricha is Yemaya, the mother of the waters.
INDY Week  |  Sylvia Pfeiffenberger  |  04-10-2008  |  Nonfiction

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