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JOE KENNEDY, the famous father, was said to be a Nazi sympathizer, an anti-Semite, a bootlegger, and a Wall Street swindler. Only some of that is true, says DAVID NASAW — his new book THE PATRIARCH: THE REMARKABLE LIFE AND TURBULENT TIMES OF JOSEPH P. KENNEDY, was named one of the ten best books of the year by the New York Times.
Plus: What will Barack Obama do with his second term? Cut military spending, and a mount frontal attack on global warming? The far right thinks so; TOM FRANK doesn’t agree. His column in the new Harper’s is “Second Chance”. Read The Baffler on gun culture HERE.
Also: LEONARD COHEN‘s songs combine intense emotion and impressive intelligence with a rich musicality. SYLVIE SIMMONS talks about his life and unforgettable work — her new book is I’M YOUR MAN: THE LIFE OF LEONARD COHEN.
Playlist: “Suzanne”; “I’m Your Man”; “Tower of Song”; “Democracy”; and of course “Hallejulah.”
Jon Wiener: Your new book is not just a collection of verse from your Deadline Poet contributions to The Nation—it’s a 150-page narrative poem.
Oliver Sacks is the legendary neurologist and New Yorker essayist whose books include the classic The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat. His new book is Hallucinations.
“How We Forgot the Cold War: A Historical Journey across America.”
C-SPAN Book TV: live from the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books “Cold War Hollywood” panel with Steve Ross and Richard Schickel, April 21, 2013:
How We Forgot the Cold War: A Historical Journey Across America, at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books at USC.
Plus: Oliver Stone’s
Day Lewis deserves the Oscar for best actor for his wonderful portrayal of Lincoln in the new Steven Spielberg movie. But while the acting is great, there’s a problem with the film: it is dedicated to the proposition that Lincoln freed the slaves. Historians say that’s not quite right. The end of slavery did not come because Lincoln and the House of Representatives voted for the Thirteenth Amendment. . . .
