Iraq at the End of the Surge by Michael Totten What will happen when we leave Iraq? Good things and bad, triumphs and setbacks. But the country's days as a…
9/11 and the Novelists by Cheryl Miller The national calamity has been food for neither the imagination nor the moral faculty of fiction writers.
An Obama Realignment? by John Podhoretz The new president's dazzling success does not suggest a new national hunger for left-liberal policy solutions.
Beecham! by Terry Teachout No individual did more to transform England's classical-music culture than this eccentric, flamboyant, and tireless professional.
Chosenness and Its Enemies by Jon D. Levenson Few religious doctrines have attracted more virulent criticism than the idea of the chosen people.
Hysteria in Four Acts by Paul McHugh A little history, medical and otherwise, helps in understanding such contemporary epidemics as multiple-personality disorder and reports of childhood sexual…
Sderot Under Siege by David Keyes David Keyes reveals the everyday horror of life in an Israeli community under constant attack.
The California Cover-up by Jennifer Rubin At the prestigious state-run universities, officials seem determined to resist, evade, and even violate the law.
The Passion of Emma by David Gelernter You know why I am sitting at my typewriter in this Montevideo hotel room with its dirty rug & air…