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Knot For All

Marriage, a History: From Obedience to Intimacy, or How Love Conquered Marriage by Stephanie Coontz (Viking, 448 pages, $25.95) Gay Marriage: Why It Is Good for Gays, Good for Straights, and Good for America by Jonathan Wauch (Times Books, 224 pages, $22.00) Marriage is a shape-shifting institution if there ever was one. Those […]

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A Real Killing

Death by a Thousand Cuts: The Fight Over Taxing Inherited Wealth by Michael J. Graetz and Ian Shapiro (Princeton University Press, 392 pages, $29.95) This book about the unlikely success of a small band of the anti-tax rich and their hired hands in attacking the estate tax, the most progressive element of the federal […]

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Snapped Judgments

The views of the loser do not typically fill prominent chapters in the history books. We know what Julius Caesar thought of the barbarous tribes in Gaul and Britannia, but almost nothing about what they thought of him. His descriptions of savage resistance to his military campaigns suggest just how much the latter wanted to […]

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Street Fights

Every Man a Speculator: A History of Wall Street in American Life by Steven Fraser (HarperCollins, 752 pages, $29.95) Can the New Deal be repealed? Is America’s welfare state, incomplete though it is, so out of sync with the nation’s individualistic ideology and the political power of business that George W. Bush can […]

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Freedom Freely Imagined

Liberty and Freedom: A Visual History of America’s Founding Ideas by David Hackett Fischer (Oxford University Press, 851 pages, $50.00) George W. Bush used the word “freedom” 24 times during his second inaugural address. After the president’s handlers rushed out and denied that he was looking to start more wars, George Bush Senior […]

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Liberals, Think Big

Return to Greatness: How America Lost Its Sense of Purpose and What It Needs to Do to Recover It by Alan Wolfe (Princeton University Press, 224 pages, $22.95) In recent years, the sociologist Alan Wolfe has emerged as one of America’s most astute thinkers about religion, politics, and society. Unlike so many generalists who […]

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A Different Equality

Perfect Madness: Motherhood in the Age of Anxiety by Judith Warner (Riverhead, 304 pages, $23.95) The Career Mystique: Cracks in the American Dream by Phyllis Moen and Patricia (Roehling Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 304 pages, $22.95) The Other Women’s Movement: Workplace Justice and Social Rights in Modern America by Dorothy Sue Cobble (Princeton University Press, […]

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Hello, Henhouse? Fox Calling

“Should we have affirmative action for conservatives?” This question, arresting enough by itself, becomes all the more so when the “we” in that question is The New York Times. It cropped up during a January 17 meeting in a nicely paneled Times conference room, billed as an “informal forum” at which various Times editors and […]

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The Fat and the Fire

Generation Extra Large: Rescuing Our Children from the Epidemic of Obesity by Lisa Tartamella, Elaine Herscher, and Chris Woolston (Basic Books, 272 pages, $25.00) Our Overweight Children: What Parents, Schools, and Communities Can Do to Control the Fatness Epidemic by Sharron Dalton (University of California Press, 292 pages, $24.95) Consuming Kids: The Hostile […]

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The Good Book

It has been almost 80 years since novelist Sinclair Lewis set his most iconic fictional creation, a hell-raiser turned hellfire preacher named Elmer Gantry, loose on an unsuspecting America. For a clergyman in his 70s, Gantry has proven to be remarkably hale and hearty. Op-ed writers and columnists lean continually on Lewis’ parson to represent […]

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