In his new book, They Knew They Were Right: The Rise of the Neocons, Jacob Heilbrunn examines the state of the neoconservative movement in the wake of the Iraq War.
Books, Culture & the Arts
Accounting for Kristol
What was The New York Times thinking when it hired neocon propagandist Bill Kristol for its op-ed pages?
Dying Did Not Become Her
David Rieff’s memoir of the terminal illness of his mother, Susan Sontag, shows the consolations of philosophy deserting her and the denial of truth sustaining her as death approached.
Michael’s Poor Almanac
How Michael Barone made The Almanac of American Politics irrelevant.
Personal Finance Gets Political
Self-help finance guru Suze Orman has had an epiphany: Lending institutions could use some regulation.
Faith-Based History
Hugh Heclo’s history of Christianity in America overlooks the factional, temporal, and profane concerns of the nation’s churches.
The Great Enabler
In his unguarded, unmediated moments, Alan Greenspan the economist has begun repudiating Alan Greenspan the (anti) regulator. Will anyone notice?
TAP Talks to Paul Krugman
Paul Krugman’s latest book is The Conscience of a Liberal, echoing Paul Wellstone’s book of the same title. TAP sat down with Krugman earlier this week to talk about Wellstone, inequality, and the rise of progressive politics.
Shift Happens
Why is American’s health-care system collapsing? Three books, three good answers.
Faith in the Center?
John DiIulio’s fascinating book takes religious moderation too far.

