AltWeeklies Wire

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

Considering Dominique Green, Capital Punishment, and Justicenew

Dominique Green's execution and short life--he was arrested, convicted, and sent to Death Row at age 18--is the subject of popular history writer Thomas Cahill's remarkable new book.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Michael Corbin  |  04-21-2009  |  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

Roger Clemens's Rise and Fallnew

A career once on a par with those of Christy Mathewson, Warren Spahn, and Sandy Koufax now rests with Pete Rose and Shoeless Joe.
Boston Phoenix  |  George Kimball  |  04-02-2009  |  Nonfiction

A New Study Storms the Barriers Between Punk and Metalnew

Whether you agree with the author or not, This Ain't the Summer of Love considerably raises the bar for engaged exploration of music subcultures.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Bret McCabe  |  03-31-2009  |  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

The Romance of Decay in Photosnew

Cheer up and don't let this dust-to-dust business slow you down. That's something to keep in mind when confronting the work of Jerry Berndt and Eugene Richards, two photographers with Boston ties adept at making art from what a lot of people consider ugly, untouchable things.
Boston Phoenix  |  Clif Garboden  |  03-05-2009  |  Nonfiction

Exhaustive Book Tells Us How a Group of TV Innovators Got to 'Sesame Street'new

Michael Davis' Street Gang: The Complete History of Sesame Street is broad in scope yet exercises a meticulous attention to detail. This meticulousness turns out to be essential because of the number of story threads that are un-teased to paint Davis’ picture.
San Antonio Current  |  Molly O'Donnell  |  03-04-2009  |  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

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

'My Private War': The Things They Carrynew

Norman Bussel's beautifully constructed, emotionally devastating account of being a prisoner of war in Germany during WWII is a tale too rarely told, one whose import should have immediate and direct consequences on current U.S. policy.
Eugene Weekly  |  Suzi Steffen  |  01-22-2009  |  Nonfiction

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