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Home > Resources > "To Be Read" Book Review Column |
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"To Be Read" Book Review Column
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Search "To Be Read" Book Review Column
View all "To Be Read" Book Review Column
Recent "To Be Read" Book Review Column
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John E. (Jack) Becker
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06/27/07
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Autobiography or novel, this is the harrowing story of Deng's flight from the holocaust in Sudan, under constant threat of bombings, beasts, and human murderers, struggling to survive on whatever he could find to eat.
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John E. (Jack) Becker
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03/20/07
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Tyerman lays out the New Testament tradition at the beginning of his treatise on the Crusades, raising the immediate question: how did Crusaders manage to square war with the New Testament?
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John E. (Jack) Becker
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10/01/04
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Should we have gone to war with Iraq? Having gone, were we at all prepared for the reception we got? What do we need to do when what we are doing seems to make no sense at all? We need what these two books, each in its own forceful and important way, help us to do. We need to step back, look into the past, and see how we got into this mess.
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John E. (Jack) Becker
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06/01/04
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Andrew Greeley reappears now at a moment when I, and I suspect others, really need him, addressing a question that has been bothering me for some time. Just what became of the Second Vatican Council, anyway?
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John E. (Jack) Becker
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03/01/04
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This is an environmental jeremiad with a difference. No complaining here, no direct appeal for a harmony between humankind and nature. Matthews’s eye is cold and clinical. Nature, she tells us, is everywhere--and nature is not at risk. We are.
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John E. (Jack) Becker
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01/01/04
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It seems a good idea to distinguish science and religion as two separate, mutually non-interfering teaching authorities. Popular science writer Stephan Jay Gould (1941-2002) suggested this approach in a 1997 article for Natural History Magazine. He later expanded the idea in his book Rocks of Ages.
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John E. (Jack) Becker
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12/08/03
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Religion, I think most of us would say, isn't about much if it isn't about
belief in a personal God... Religion is founded on the assertion that human
beings are not living out a massive and dreary accident. We live and make our
choices because an infinite creator chose to create us. That belief is the first
and fundamental belief.
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John E. (Jack) Becker
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11/03/03
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Bacevich argues that America is an empire on the basis of the events of recent decades. His narrative argument is nicely complemented by Chua’s thoughtful evidence of the impossible task confronting an American imperium. The satisfying clarity of the argument in both cases leaves us wondering if, being an empire, we understand our limits, or whether there can ever be an empire
which understands its limits.
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John E. (Jack) Becker
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10/01/03
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Scruton contrasts the structure of Western political life with Islam. Islam then becomes his paradigm for “the rest.” In the West, he says, religion and the state remain essentially distinct. Thus diverse groups can live together peacefully under the secular rule of law. But as for "the rest," they see all law, social identity, and loyalty as coming from a religious source, and therefore cannot truly become part of Western political culture.
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John E. (Jack) Becker
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09/01/03
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Is there an environmental role for nature writing whose aim is primarily esthetic? Is there a role, in other words, for esthetic experience in the life of a dedicated environmentalist? The difference I see between the two books under review is that Buell doesn’t confront this question and Jonathan Bate does.
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John E. (Jack) Becker
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12/02/02
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Kitcher cuts a clear path between those who worship science as a religion and those who fashionably insist that science is merely a set of arbitrary constructs masking power and greed. Against the universal skepticism of post-modernism he argues that science does, indeed, produce knowledge.
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John E. (Jack) Becker
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11/01/02
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Woodruff doesn't lament the absence of reverence in our life; he asks us to discover it where it already is. We could not live in society unless we had already taught ourselves reverential patterns of civility and unless we felt some nostalgia for lost traditions.
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John E. (Jack) Becker
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10/01/02
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"Lilla’s book summarizes the thought of some of the most important philosophers of the twentieth century, some of whom are well known but others of whom are new, at least to me. His book is exciting. Ideas leap out from the page."
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John E. (Jack) Becker
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09/02/02
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Cahill tells two stories, the story of the papacy and the story of John XXIII. The first gives context to the second. And that context--the two-thousand-year-old sweep of papal history--makes John XXIII look very much like a saint.
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John E. (Jack) Becker
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08/01/02
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Reading the story of the transcontinental railroad, looking back at the relentless advance of European immigration across the North American continent, it seems that the forces at work are beyond morality, beyond the power of choice of any individual or group of individuals.
View all "To Be Read" Book Review Column
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Highlights from Carnegie Council events are now available on our YouTube channel.
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Will people associate U.S. power with "global misery" or with the opportunity and pluralism that Obama's victory represents?
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Devin Stewart interviews Seth Kaplan on his new book, which lays out a new paradigm for development.
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"Corporate Social License and Community Consent," by Keith Slack.
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Go to the Journal for articles on ethics and foreign policy.
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