Michael Terry
The Imperfect Storm
By Michael TerrySebastian Jungers newest book, War, is the story of his time spent with an American platoon in Afghanistan. Over the course of a year, Junger made five visits to the Korengal Valley, perhaps the most fiercely contested area in the entire country.
Thanks for the Memories
By Michael TerryIf it were not so perfectly in line with expectations, George W. Bushs presidential memoir Decision Points would have to be considered an absolute insult to the readers intelligence.
A New Deal Flop
By Michael TerryC. J. Maloneys debut book, Back To The Land: Arthurdale, FDRs New Deal, and the Costs of Economic Planning, is a compelling history of one of the governments most radical, if largely forgotten, domestic programs.
Red Legacies
By Michael TerryIn The S Word: A Short History of an American Tradition...Socialism, John Nichols begins with the story of an aging Walt Whitman and his daily meetings with a young writer named Horace Logo Traubel. In Camden, New Jersey, the two had a series of conversations that would lead to a book itself, detailing the thoughts of one of Americas great poets.
After the Revolutions
By Michael TerryIn a recent post on his website, author Corey Robin claimed that in writing The Reactionary Mind: Conservatism from Edmund Burke to Sarah Palin, his goal was to understand the rightnot to criticize it or show why its wrong, but to get inside its head, to examine its leading ideas, and bring its sense and sensibility into focus.
LETTER FROM THE TRAIL: Atwaters Ghost
By Michael TerryOn the outskirts of Columbia, South Carolina, in a well-manicured and deserted Greenlawn Memorial Park, lies the body of one Harvey (Lee) Atwater. What fate has met his soul is of course unknown, but the infamous political assassin was the sort of man for whom even the most ardent atheist could wish a hell.
Mitt Aint Got It
By Michael TerryAfter watching the way he is limping, bloodied and weary, to the Republican presidential nomination, one may be shocked to remember that Willard Mitt Romney has been running for the White House for over half a decade.
Barack In A Weary Land
By Michael TerryIn 2000, a clinical designation for a hangover was coined: veisalgia. Derived from the Norwegian word kveis (uneasiness after debuachery) and the Greek root -algia (pain, grief), the word came just in time for the Bush presidency and, two terms later, it was nice to be able to diagnose the sickness of a nation whose moral authority, global standing, and economic health had come off the rails.
Giving it All for Ron Paul
By Michael TerryTypically, the tail end of a losing campaign for a major party nomination is filled with equal parts desperation, sadness, and finally, some form of acceptance. As the front-runner pulls ahead and the math becomes next to impossible to ignore, the candidate moves robotically through a stump speech no longer worth tinkering with, halfheartedly shilling for votes that won’t matter.
RALLYING THE FREE (but not too Brave)
By Michael TerryIt was the first day of the Conservative Political Action Conference, and over ten thousand of Americas staunchest right-wingers had trekked in from all around the country to speak of freedom and fear, optimism and doom. Few appeared to notice the news from Egypt.
The Santorum Syndrome
By Michael TerryFor most of last year, former Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum cut a lonely figure. Driving through Iowa in his black pickup truck, he visited every county in the state, confident that his constant presence there would lead to a vital victory in the nations first nomination contest.
Taibbis Shark Hunt
By Michael TerryIn July 2009, Matt Taibbi caused a stir with his controversial article The Great American Bubble Machine, which offered a brutal assessment of the role of Goldman Sachs in Americas economic crisis. Taibbi was lauded and criticized in equal parts, and the Rolling Stone writer, who to that point had focused primarily on the absurdity of American political theater, launched himself wholly into analysis of our deeply broken financial system.
A China Hand
By Michael TerryIn On China, Henry Kissinger makes a broad attempt to tell the story of Chinas history, in the hope of being able to provide much-needed context to one of the leading global issues of the early 21st century: the essential yet confusing relationship between the United States and the rising Asian giant.
Moulitsas vs. The Fundamentalists
By Michael TerryIn American Taliban, author Markos Moulitsas, founder of the left-wing weblog Daily Kos, attempts to highlight what he considers to be important similarities between Americas radical right and the Islamic fundamentalists with whom they have been waging a war with for the past decade.
Against the Underdogs
By Michael TerryMichael Prells new book, Underdogma, is the latest in an increasingly long line of books either articulating or examining Americas recent right-wing resurgence.
Future Shocks
By Michael TerryPhysics of the Future is clearly meant for those of us with little to no knowledge of science and technology, an effort by Kaku to let the commoners prepare for the radical planetary alterations that await them.
Amongst the Ruins
By Michael TerryPaul Clemenss new book, Punching Out: One Year In a Closing Auto Plant, is a personal, upfront look at the desertion of the Motor City, and the effect that the automobile industrys outsourcing has had on the city and the people on whose backs its wealth was created.