On the reading list…

Kevin Drum recently wrote, “I’ve been reading an unusually large number of current events books lately (aka ‘books that publishers send me for free’), and although there have a couple of clunkers in the lot, several of them have been very good. I’ve been remiss in not writing them up on the blog, but at the very least I feel like I ought to give them at least a brief mention.”

I tend to agree with just about everything Kevin writes, but this paragraph was absolutely perfect in capturing a post I’ve been meaning to put together.

Here are a few of the books I’ve been reading (and enjoying) lately:

* Nixonland, by Rick Perlstein. This is, quite simply, the must-read political book of the year. This may sound hyperbolic, but Perlstein’s book on contemporary political trends that began in the 1960s may be one of the best books on politics in a generation. Buy it.

* The Court and The Cross, by Frederick Lane. I love reading about the Supreme Court and I love reading about the religious right. Fred has put the two together in a fascinating, well-research, persuasive text. Perhaps most importantly, Fred helps explain why these rulings matter.

* So Wrong For So Long, by Greg Mitchell. The subtitle for the book, “How the press, the pundits — and the president — failed on Iraq,” sums up Mitchell’s fine work quite well.

* Right is Wrong, by Arianna Huffington. I liked this one even more than I thought I would, and not just because Arianna quoted me twice in the book. The book reads like a powerful indictment of everything wrong with the modern conservative movement.

* Confessions of a Political Hitman, by Stephen Marks. Ever wonder what some of these Republican hatchetmen are thinking? Marks was one of those hatchetman and he writes about exactly what he was thinking. It’s painful to read, but surprisingly engaging, particularly for me, given my fascination with the New Hampshire phone-jamming scandal, which Marks was directly involved with.

* Free Ride, by David Brock and Paul Waldman. I know I’ve mentioned this one before, but this book, about John McCain and the media, is extremely well written and well researched, and raises poignant observations that have a unique salience in the midst of the presidential campaign.

And in the world of TV…

* Recount, by HBO. I broke down and watched it, and as frustrating as it was to be reminded of what transpired, it was actually really good.

* John Adams, by HBO. I missed this one the first time around, but it’s out now on DVD, and it’s absolutely worth watching. I’ve never been entirely impressed with Adams’ presidency, and tend to think he was overrated as Founding Fathers go. But what makes the miniseries so brilliant is that it’s not just about Adams; it’s a fascinating look at the personalities of the era.

So, what’s on your reading list?

Nothing Political.

The Bible
Asimov’s Guide to the Old Testament
Foundation and Earth
Medical Detectives
Sandman – The Doll’s House
The Dancing of the Wu-Li Masters
Pickwick Papers
Why Building Fall Down/Stand Up
Washington Checkbook
The Diamond Throne
Frederick Douglass

  • Must Read:

    The Prosecution of George W. Bush for Murder

    This is from a conservative attorney that has been involved in major prosecutions for over 35 years. He states that he has it all laid out – a “cookbook” approach that will make it possible for one of up to 1,000 or more prosecutors around the nation to get the ball rolling.

    If it can be shown that dur chimpfurher took this nation to war with lies, then ALL killings are MURDER and any federal, state, or local prosecutor with a soldier killed in that jurisdiction has legal jurisdiction. Once they claim jurisdiction for one, they have right to claim for ALL.

    The mainstream media “burying” this story with silence – please listen to what Vincent Bugliosi has to say (each video is less than 10 minutes):

    Part 1
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PcLhoq0xzRk

    Part 2
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YPM9yglfXC0

    Part 3
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BNqYJMmBY5Y

  • “Great American Hypocrites: Toppling the Big Myths of Republican Politics” — Glenn Greenwald

    Haven’t read it yet, but I did get a chance to hear Greenwald speak about it at U Maryland while on his book tour, and the guy spoke for 50 minutes before taking a breath (and then took questions). In it, he illustrates and debunks the stereotypes that conservatives have created over the decades, myths that are now so engrained into public discourse that conservatives simply plug in new names and run the next campaign. Should be a must read for all journalists and TV talking heads.

  • Recount, by HBO.

    I finally saw this today. I was particularly curious because of Howard Kurtz’s review. Kurtz claimed Warren Christopher was described as a fool, and said that Jim Baker was especially pleased by the movie. I thought Christopher was portrayed as cautious but principled, while Baker looked like a fool, especially at the end when he said he switched from Dem to Rep because of GHW Bush, and was confident the best man (Bush 43) won. As he smiled smugly at the end, I couldn’t help but think in a few short years, he would be on the Iraq Study Group, trying to repair the damage he was so much a part of creating.

    I also found myself thinking several times about tomorrow when the Dem Rules Committee will be sorting out the FL/MI issues while Hillary supporters protest. At one point in the movie, Gore’s people are repeating “Make every vote count” and Bush’s people were saying, “he doesn’t want to count every vote, he only wants to vote Gore votes.”

  • I’m wading through(1100 pages, small print) Robert Caro’s 1975 book The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York. What an accomplishment! It is so full of amazing, telling anecdotes and quotations as to challenge the greatest memory. It is a history lesson and a cautionary tale about power par excellence.

  • right now I’m going through Begala and Carville’s “Take it Back.”

    Next up is the Assault on Reason and Krugman’s Conscience of a Liberal

  • Does the user’s guide for Grand Theft Auto IV count? How’s about National Geographic and Sports Illustrated, since I read those both cover to cover?

    😉

    I have to be honest: After getting a degree in Literature, I haven’t read a whole lot in the past 12 years. Plowing through a few hundred books in a couple of years will do that to a person (especially when Joseph Conrad is involved — sheesh his writing is dense).

    But in the past year or so I’ve managed to squeeze in the following political items

    The Audacity of Hope, Barack Obama — I know, I know … but it really is an interesting look at how Obama views politics, and at times is quite inspirational. Sadly, I’m not sure if he’ll be able to change about 200 years of ingrained culture.

    Island, Isaac Asimov — A really good book about how greed tends to overpower intelligence, caring and living a calm, communal existence. Given the rain forest-dwelling tribe discovered recently in South America, a few folks should probably read the book, then stay the hell away from the tribe.

    Television:

    Bill Moyers is a must-see each week, but his piece on the media’s actions in the run-up to Iraq should be required viewing in every single J-school in America. He recently did a follow-up on it that’s outstanding.

    Other than that, we just got satellite a few weeks ago and spend most of the time on History, Discover and Noggin. Add in my writing of one book and editing of another for a friend, and there just isn’t enough time in the day …

  • …and Noggin. -Mark D

    My daughter has an unhealthy addiction to Yo Gabba Gabba. As a result, I too know every song by heart.

  • I’ve got two projects going this summer:
    1: I’m trying to read Anton Chekhov’s short stories, more or less in chronological order – I bought 12 of the 14 volumes of Constance Garnett’s translation from various on-line used book stores about a month ago, and a Norton Critical collection to get me started on the “critical apparatus.”

    2. I read Thomas Kuhn’s Structure of Scientific Revolutions back in April, and now i’m hoping to read 3-4 surveys of history of science over the summer. I’m a writing tutor at MIT and have been working with STS (Science and Technology in Society) courses lately, so this last is semi-professional self-improvement. I’m much more of a humanities type than science, so I feel like I’m stepping across some kind of barrier.

  • Better than watching the HBO series, read the original book, “John Adams.” I too was once a denigrator of Adams, but after you read the book, you understand just how important he really was as a Founding Father. At least he wasn’t the kind of hypocrite the over-rated Jefferson was.

    Another good one is “1776,” a good reminder of where we came from.

    And brand new hot off the press is “The Family,” by Jeff Sharlet, the story of the Christian Right’s most powerful, most shadowy, most terrifying organization and what they are doing in Washington D.C. over the past 30 years.

  • Matthew Yglesias’s “Heads in the Sand: How the Republicans Screw Up Foreign Policy and Foreign Policy Screws Up the Democrats.”

  • “The Closing of the Western Mind” Charles Freeman
    How faith took over from reason 1700 years ago

    “After the Ice” Steven Mithen
    a tour of the mesolithic world

  • Kevin Phillips’ “American Theocracy: The Peril and Politics of Radical Religion, Oil, and Borrowed Money in the 21st Century”

    Political commentator and former Republican strategist Phillips addresses just about every reason that BushCo REALLY invaded Iraq, and everything that’s wrong with America’s energy-religion-fiscal policies.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/19/books/review/19brink.html

    I’m also in the middle of an 800~ish page biography of Alexander Hamilton when I’m not neck deep in law homework. John Adams is next. ^_^

  • Hey, you forgot one:
    How Bush Was Right About Everything and Why the Dirty F-ing Hippies Owe Him a Big Fat Apology” written by No One.

    It’s the best book that will never be written.

  • I just finished Paul Krugman’s Conscious of a Liberal. There’s a lot about the history of ‘movement conservatism’ that I didn’t know and I found the book consistently interesting.

  • Scott Rosenberg’s Dreaming in code :two dozen programmers, three years, 4,732 bugs, and one quest for transcendent software. Not very political but it’s about the same number of bugs Bush has had in his presidency.

    Waiting for Nixonland to come in. I love “filling in the gaps” about times I was only vaguely aware of.

  • Perhaps you remember the diagram Kevin Drum posted a year or so ago that showed that conservatives read nothing but conservative books and progressives read nothing but progressive books and there is little overlap in reading across the divide. I see that phenomenon in CB’s list. Reading things that confirm your own beliefs is a waste of time, but I’m sure it feels good.

    Kevin’s virtue is his eclecticism.

  • two books i found relevant and entertaining…
    They Knew They Were Right [The Rise of the Neocons] by Jacob Heilbrunn
    Curveball [Spies, Lies, and the Con Man Who Caused a War] by Bob Drogin

    Allow me to add myself to the list of people praising Nixonland

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