As Romney takes command, Democrat boots it on working women
Winners and Losers: A Democratic consulant's lame remark about Ann Romney was bad enough to make Joe Biden blush.
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Winners and Losers: A Democratic consulant's lame remark about Ann Romney was bad enough to make Joe Biden blush.
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How did We the People dwindle into We the Taxpayers? Author Marilynne Robinson is making waves nationally with her new book about American society and our democratic faith in the potential of every person.
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A documentary on PBS this Tuesday night, based on an earlier book by Blaine Harden about the Grand Coulee Dam, prompts him to reflect on ironies and some hopeful new developments on the mighty 'River Lost.'
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Jon Wells writes well and has thoroughly documented the repeated bumbling and cavalier disregard for achieving a championship among the leadership of a franchise that is mediocre or worse. But can fans take the pain of remembering?
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Crosscut's guide to a culturally enriching weekend in the city. Or at least some fun.
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A sad young heart's disillusionment with America holds this collection together. It's a thin personal thread for the weighty subject of Hanford during the Cold War and after.
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Crosscut's guide to a culturally enriching weekend in the city. Or at least some fun.
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A new book by Diana Butler Bass, who will be speaking in Seattle on Friday, puts a hopeful spin on the future of religion. Crosscut writer Anthony Robinson isn't so sure.
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Crosscut's guide to a culturally enriching weekend in the city. Or at least some fun.
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How one unique, beloved man made a richer community out of all of us.
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A visiting author is bringing Seattle a message about the wisdom of French parenting practices. Maybe we could have better behaved American kids, and adults.
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What happens when a Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright takes on a Newberry Award-winning author's story about 12th century Korea, "A Single Shard'? Something refreshing.
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A wonderfully positive new book takes readers back to the kind of hard-times cooking that inspired Seattle's culinary revolution.
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Sushi legend, Shiro Kashiba, and seafood buff, John Howie, have published new books about life, good eating, and the philosphy of food and hospitality.
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Marcellus Turner, Seattle's new City Librarian, talks about why Seattleites love their libraries and how he plans to keep things that way. Even in the midst of budget cuts.
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From today on and throughout the summer, the Seattle Public Library combines two things Seattleites love in their new program: libraries and bikes.
Many, like Seattle's, now think of themselves as shells that can adapt rapidly to changing demands. Inspiring places to read books they are not so much anymore.
Prison gave her a lot of time to read. One book that influenced here was Marilynne Robinson's "Housekeeping," which taught her about loneliness and alienation.
"I find Gatsby aesthetically overrated, psychologically vacant, and morally complacent; I think we kid ourselves about the lessons it contains. None of this would matter much to me if Gatsby were not also sacrosanct."
How does she create such riveting books from such mundane frauds, trials and transcripts?
Thanks to the perils of the book publishing industry, the Review has very few ads. What can its life expectancy be?
Amazon's list puts Alexandria, Va, and Knoxville as the top two.
A reported $4 million advance produces a book with only a few tidbits of new information.
"While saying she was the victim of bias and mistreatment by Italian authorities, Ms. Knox also writes that her own mistakes contributed to her conviction."