Novel predicated on using the draft to avoid a Vietnam combat zone lacks vitality.
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Book Review: The Last Train from Hiroshima: The Survivors Look Back by Charles Pellegrino
Individuals who survived both the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and of Nagasaki help frame history of the events and their aftermath.
Read More »Book Review: Dangerously Funny: The Uncensored Story of “The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour” by David Bianculli
A in-depth yet readable look at the influence of this short-lived prime time network television series.
Read More »Book Review: The Appointment by Herta Müller
Bleak internal monologue awaits English readers of most recently translated work of this year's Nobel Literature laureate.
Read More »Book Review: Sashenka by Simon Montefiore
Historian's skills and experience are suffused through a novel dealing with three tumultuous periods in Russian history.
Read More »Book Review: The Country Where No One Ever Dies by Ornela Vorpsi
Novel's well written vignettes of life in Communist Albania ultimately fall short of creating broad insight into its people.
Read More »Book Review: But Beautiful: A Book About Jazz by Geoff Dyer
Geoff Dyer's fact-based but impressionistic fictional essays about great jazz musicians are a form of literary jazz.
Read More »Book Review: Tomorrow! by Philip Wylie
Reissued 1954 novel immerses reader in the feel of the Cold War era.
Read More »Book Review: Invisible by Paul Auster
Paul Auster's writing skills draw in and hold readers of his 15th novel.
Read More »Book Review: In Search of My Homeland: A Memoir of a Chinese Labor Camp by Er Tai Gao
Chinese intellectual's memoir reflects how even aesthetics are perceived as a threat by totalitarian regimes.
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