By Ray Hartwell - Special to The Washington Times
As Christian Adams chronicles in his powerful book, “Injustice,” President Obama and his attorney general, Eric H. Holder Jr., have mounted an alarming assault on the rule of law in this country. Across federal agencies, evenhanded law enforcement has given way to our president’s explicitly stated goal of “punishing” enemies and “rewarding” friends. Published October 12, 2011 Comments
By Victor Davis Hanson - Special to The Washington Times
Paul Johnson has written several concise biographies for general audiences about a wide array of landmark historic figures such as Churchill, Jesus, Napoleon and George Washington. In these minibiographies, he certainly has demonstrated a proven knack for distilling complex biographical issues into accessible stories of about 200 pages. Published October 12, 2011 Comments
By Joseph C. Goulden - Special to The Washington Times
One of the more contentious relationships of World War II was that between French Gen. Charles de Gaulle on one side and President Franklin D. Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill on the other. Indeed, scorn for de Gaulle was so deep at one point that Roosevelt and Churchill considered a military occupation of France at war’s end - pending free elections - rather than putting the country into the hands of de Gaulle. Published October 10, 2011 Comments
By Ryan L. Cole - Special to The Washington Times
The political memoir has become the natural product of all modern presidencies. After walking though the White House gates one last time, a handful of opportunistic appointees always rush to their computers to settle scores or embellish their own significance. Published October 7, 2011 Comments
By CAROL HERMAN
Halfway through “The Book of Man,” William Bennett’s delightful survey of writings on what it means to be a man, the author treats readers to a segment titled “Hunting the Grisly - Theodore Roosevelt” in which he writes the following: “By now you have noticed that Theodore Roosevelt appears frequently in this book. That is because Roosevelt’s manliness is impossible to doubt.” Published October 7, 2011 Comments
By Gary L. Larson - Special to The Washington Times
Life matters. No matter if you believe in or doubt eternity in any form, your existence in time and space, forgotten as it will inevitably be, makes weird sense. David Horowitz makes the point lyrically, almost poetically, in his “A Point in Time: The Search for Redemption in This Life and the Next.” Published October 7, 2011 Comments
By Muriel Dobbin - Special to The Washington Times
Agatha Christie probably would be happy in the idyllic little Canadian village of Three Pines, where murder seems to be the cottage industry Published October 7, 2011 Comments
By Tom Bethell - Special to The Washington Times
Stockbrokers will tell you that predicting the future is risky. Max Singer's method in "History of the Future" is to assume the future will be like the past, which skirts a multitude of pitfalls. He worked with Herman Kahn at the Rand Corp., and his book, in its optimism, would have met with Kahn's approval. Later they founded the Hudson Institute together. Published October 3, 2011 Comments
By Claude R. Marx - Special to The Washington Times
Writing about interesting, though not major, historical figures can be a challenge for even the most talented of authors. For example, it takes a gifted writer to prompt a reader to spend a lot of time with a book in which James Garfield is the main character. Candice Millard has done that. Published September 30, 2011 Comments
By Corinna Lothar - Special to The Washington Times
British writer Margaret Drabble writes about the souls of women. In "A Day in the Life of a Smiling Woman," a collection of 14 exquisite short stories published between 1964 and 2000, she exposes the secret longings, hearts and minds of her female characters. Published September 30, 2011 Comments
By Emily Colette Wilkinson - Special to The Washington Times
What are little girls made of? In Elissa Schappell's latest short-story collection as novel, "Blueprints For Building Better Girls," they are not made of all that's nice. Little and not-so-little, these girls are anorexics, rape victims, betrayed and self-betraying wives and girlfriends, battered party girls, femme fatales wounded by their own sexual power and frustrated, unfulfilled mothers. Published September 30, 2011 Comments
By Angela Logomasini - Special to The Washington Times
In Edward Humes' "Force of Nature: The Unlikely Story of Wal-Mart's Green Revolution," the idealistic environmental consultant Jib Ellison pledges to "remake" Wal-Mart and other "corporate scions" into "environmentally sound powerhouses." His strategy: Force executives to peer through the "lens of sustainability" - changing their worldviews "permanently." Published September 30, 2011 Comments
By David C. Acheson - Special to The Washington Times
Sir Ian Kershaw is a prize-winning historian who has devoted himself to the study of Hitler and his time. In "The End," he has produced more than a history. Rather, he has performed a detailed anatomy of the conclusion of World War II in Europe from the post-D-Day breakout to the surrender of Germany. It is grim reading, stupefying in its detail of the horrible Nazi and Russian atrocities visited upon civilians. Published September 28, 2011 Comments
By John M. Taylor - Special to The Washington Times
Most battles grow out of an army's attempt to destroy the forces of its enemy or to occupy its terrain. The siege of Leningrad in World War II was different, for Hitler's armies were stretched too thin to capture the city that had been the cradle of the Bolshevik Revolution. Published September 27, 2011 Comments
By Peter Hannaford - Special to The Washington Times
Prescience has been the hallmark of Georgie Anne Geyer's writing over the course of nearly 50 years as a foreign correspondent, syndicated columnist and author of 10 books. In "Predicting the Unthinkable," she has assembled her columns to show how the world keeps changing and that it will not soon run out of human folly. Published September 26, 2011 Comments
By Nicole Russell - Special to The Washington Times - The Washington Times
In the efforts to illuminate our nation's beginnings either via epic cable series or expertly written biographies - it seems James Madison, proverbial "Father of the Constitution," often gets pushed to the sidelines. Published September 23, 2011 Comments
By Joseph C. Goulden - Special to The Washington Times
At anti-war rallies in the 1960s and '70s, ragtag leftists rejoiced in belting out a song they learned from such "progressive" folk singers as Joan Baez and Pete Seeger: "I dreamed I saw Joe Hill last night/ Alive as you and me./Says I, "But Joe, you're ten years dead."/"I never died," says he./"I never died," says he. Published September 23, 2011 Comments
By Marion Elizabeth Rodgers - Special to The Washington Times
''Life is something you dominate if you are any good," F. Scott Fitzgerald observed. During the 1920s, he dominated the Jazz Age with hits including "This Side of Paradise" and "The Great Gatsby" - the latter ranking as one of the most widely read American novels of the 20th century. Published September 23, 2011 Comments
By Emily Miller - The Washington Times
Most single girls have a secret stash of books on dating and relationships. The books are dog- eared as a virtual time capsule marking bad dates, questionable mates, love-life lulls and breakups. The stash is carefully hidden - under the bed, behind proper nonfiction on a shelf - so male visitors are not scared off by the subject matter. Published September 23, 2011 Comments
By Tim Devaney - The Washington Times
Congress passed three free-trade agreements Wednesday night with South Korea, Colombia and Panama in what ...
By Jerry Seper - The Washington Times
The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee issued a sweeping subpoena Wednesday.
By Patrick Hruby - The Washington Times
Coming off its most successful season in recent memory, professional basketball faces a work stoppage ...