Department Index
Books 1997:
Reading between the lines.
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- White Heat Why has James Cagney's star faded?
Dec. 31, 1997 - Gone With the Wind Charles Frazier's Cold Mountain, this year's literary phenomenon, is eminently forgettable.
Dec. 24, 1997 - For Viewers Like You The incredible two-headed network.
Dec. 17, 1997 - Uncool Has hipness become the opiate of the masses?
Dec. 10, 1997 - Uncool Has hipness become the opiate of the masses?
Dec. 10, 1997 - Not-So-Plain Jane Two new biographies richly complicate Austen's life.
Dec. 4, 1997 - What Ambrose Knows The fantasy world of a British hack in Washington.
Dec. 4, 1997 - Hollywood Babylon Dominick Dunne, Gary Indiana, and the whole shebang.
Dec. 3, 1997 - A Deceptively Mild-Mannered Man The genial brilliance of V.S. Pritchett
Nov. 26, 1997 - The Unraveling The tale of the new Nixon tapes.
Nov. 26, 1997 - Nicey-Nicey Esther Dyson's Internet utopia.
Nov. 19, 1997 - The People's Hitler Does Hitler's popularity discredit populism itself?
Nov. 19, 1997 - Survival of the Suspicious Andy Grove and the rise of Intel.
Nov. 12, 1997 - Survival of the Suspicious Andy Grove and the rise of Intel.
Nov. 12, 1997 - Sexual Behavior in the Social Scientist Was Alfred Kinsey a pioneer or a pervert?
Nov. 5, 1997 - Boston vs. Austin The political rivalry that split the nation.
Nov. 5, 1997 - Tales of the City Fred Siegel's The Future Once Happened Here.
Oct. 29, 1997 - Tales of the City Fred Siegel's The Future Once Happened Here.
Oct. 29, 1997 - The Dying of the Light Jamaica Kincaid's memoir of her brother's death leads her, for once, beyond rage.
Oct. 22, 1997 - The Dying of the Light Jamaica Kincaid's memoir of her brother's death leads her, for once, beyond rage.
Oct. 22, 1997 - The Strange Case of Christopher Ruddy And the crime against logic being passed off as a book.
Oct. 19, 1997 - The Glass Is Not Half Full Stephan and Abigail Thernstrom's overly optimistic America in Black and White.
Oct. 15, 1997 - Memories of Underdevelopment J.M. Coetzee's account of his South African boyhood.
Oct. 15, 1997 - Future Shock John Updike's science fiction.
Oct. 8, 1997 - The Wild West Anthony Lukas' Big Trouble.
Oct. 1, 1997 - Folk Jews The mystical world of Bernard Malamud.
Sept. 24, 1997 - Folk Jews The mystical world of Bernard Malamud.
Sept. 24, 1997 - Monkey Business Will Self makes apes of us all.
Sept. 17, 1997 - Consulting the Stars Is management consulting just a lot of hocus-pocus?
Sept. 17, 1997 - The Hipness Is All Nathanael West revisited.
Sept. 10, 1997 - Pop Fiction Donald Barthelme and the death of whimsy.
Aug. 28, 1997 - Why Can't a Woman Be More Like a Man? Deborah Blum's Sex on the Brain.
Aug. 27, 1997 - Why Can't a Woman Be More Like a Man? Deborah Blum's Sex on the Brain.
Aug. 27, 1997 - Sad Sack Superman The Olympian degradation of Frederick Exley.
Aug. 20, 1997 - The German Eye The inventors of the Leica and their strange relationship with photography.
Aug. 13, 1997 - The Ms. Makeover How the magazine repackaged feminism for the middle class.
Aug. 6, 1997 - Cold War Follies The Cuban missile crisis was scarier than we thought.
Aug. 6, 1997 - Hong Kong Phooey Paul Theroux's Kowloon Tong.
July 30, 1997 - Hong Kong Phooey Paul Theroux's Kowloon Tong.
July 30, 1997 - Pharmaceutical Realism Gabriel García Márquez's News of a Kidnapping.
July 16, 1997 - Pharmaceutical Realism Gabriel García Márquez's News of a Kidnapping.
July 16, 1997 - Nothing to Declare The Declaration of Independence wasn't all that independent.
July 9, 1997 - Trouble in Paradise Splendor and sadness in Derek Walcott's The Bounty.
July 9, 1997 - He-Who-Speaks Enrique Krauze on the Aztec tendencies in Mexican history.
June 25, 1997 - Sex Without Apologies Naomi Wolf's Promiscuities.
June 18, 1997 - The Book of Ruth At last, Cynthia Ozick joins the Jewish Hall of Fame.
June 18, 1997 - The Book of Ruth At last, Cynthia Ozick joins the Jewish Hall of Fame.
June 18, 1997 - Bohemian Rhapsody Why Prague fascinates the world.
June 11, 1997 - The Prosecution Never Rests The inextinguishable Lawrence Walsh.
June 4, 1997 - A Modern Woman Hermione Lee discovers Virginia Woolf's radicalism.
June 4, 1997 - Hungry for Love Jonathan Rosen's anorexic first novel.
May 29, 1997 - Luce Canon The apotheosis of a memorable bitch.
May 28, 1997 - Love Bomb The mysterious motives of Hitler's would-be assassin.
May 22, 1997 - Innocence Lost Philip Roth's American fulminations.
May 21, 1997 - I Was Wrong Nathan Glazer comes to terms with multiculturalism.
May 15, 1997 - Keystone Nazis The German resistance considered as farce.
May 14, 1997 - All Work, No Play Arlie Russell Hochschild on why we can't stand to stay home.
May 8, 1997 - Z. Pynchon's tiresome mind games.
May 7, 1997 - Jesus Wept Norman Mailer takes on Christ.
April 30, 1997 - The Mirror Stage Jacques Lacan and biography.
April 23, 1997 - Redundancy Muriel Spark on human pointlessness.
April 23, 1997 - Celtic Pride Yeats' literary nation-building.
April 16, 1997 - Judicial Restraint Sol Wachtler's worthy sentiments on prison.
April 16, 1997 - Cafe Sociology What made Studio 54 great?
April 9, 1997 - How the West Won John Lewis Gaddis rethinks the Cold War.
April 2, 1997 - Little Boxes The cloistered life and fantastic art of Joseph Cornell.
March 26, 1997 - Crime and Truth Who could be against more "truth" in the law? Read on.
March 26, 1997 - A Kiss Is Just A Kiss Truth can be less interesting than fiction.
March 19, 1997 - Valley Boys A computer industry roman à clef.
March 19, 1997 - The Rules Time-tested secrets for becoming father of our country.
March 12, 1997 - Sisters Under the Mink Claire Bloom and Mia Farrow do deserve compassion.
March 5, 1997 - Psycho Dramas The Chambers-Hiss trials, the Cold War.
Feb. 26, 1997 - Queen Katharine From ugly duckling to hard-ass swan.
Feb. 19, 1997 - Lies the Doctor Told Us Unraveling the Bettelheim legend.
Feb. 12, 1997 - The Anti-Economist Robert Kuttner shops for a less dismal science.
Feb. 7, 1997 - The Other L-Word Libertarianism is no longer afraid to speak its name.
Jan. 31, 1997 - Case Study The curiosity of Oliver Sacks.
Jan. 29, 1997 - Judge Dread Antonin Scalia explains why we should fear men in robes.
Jan. 22, 1997 - STOP the World, I Want to Get Off William Greider demystifies global capitalism.
Jan. 15, 1997 - Can We Really Feed the World? The problem with humanitarian intervention.
Jan. 8, 1997 - Those Little-Town Blues Thomas Mallon's Dewey Defeats Truman offers up midcentury middle America at its cutest.
Jan. 1, 1997
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