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The complete Open Letters Monthly Archive.

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December 31, 2007

December 2007 Issue

December 31, 2007/ Open Letters Monthly
December 2007 Issue

Open Letters Monthly December 2007 Issue—Cover Photo "Northern Lights" by Christer Mattson

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December 31, 2007/ Open Letters Monthly/
Monthly Cover
December 2007
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December 27, 2007

Proper Read Stuff

December 27, 2007/ Steve Donoghue
Proper Read Stuff

Fed up with the abuses of book reviewers, Gail Pool in her book Faint Praise advises editors to supply freelancers with a list of writing guidelines they would have to sign and abide by. Steve Donoghue isn’t quite ready to put his name on the dotted line.

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December 27, 2007/ Steve Donoghue/
Literary Criticism
December 2007, fiction, literary criticism, Steve Donoghue
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December 24, 2007

The Right Man for the Job

December 24, 2007/ Greg Waldmann
The Right Man for the Job

Does Al Gore’s The Assault on Reason really tell us anything we didn’t already know about our dying national dialogue? Greg Waldmann’s answer is yes.

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December 24, 2007/ Greg Waldmann/
Politics & History
December 2007, greg waldmann, history, politics
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December 21, 2007

Landfall at Last

December 21, 2007/ Panagiotis Polichronakis
Landfall at Last

It was a long wait, but, as Panagiotis Polichronakis reports, The Landmark Herodotus is finally here in all its definitive glory.

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December 21, 2007/ Panagiotis Polichronakis/
Politics & History
December 2007, history, Panagiotis Polichronakis
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December 19, 2007

The Latest from Yasnaya Polyana

December 19, 2007/ Steve Donoghue
The Latest from Yasnaya Polyana

With so many versions of War and Peace to choose from, is there anything that translators can do to set themselves apart? Yes, says Steve Donoghue, they can make old mistakes.

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December 19, 2007/ Steve Donoghue/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
December 2007, fiction, literary criticism, Steve Donoghue
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December 17, 2007

Whispers Through the Curtain

December 17, 2007/ Karen Vanuska
Whispers Through the Curtain

For fifteen years a British and a Soviet family built a friendship by slipping letters past KGB censors. Karen Vanuska celebrates From Newbury with Love, a collection of their rich correspondence.

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December 17, 2007/ Karen Vanuska/
Politics & History
December 2007, fiction, history, Karen Vanuska
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December 14, 2007

The Uncertainty Principle

December 14, 2007/ Joanna Scutts
The Uncertainty Principle

Joanna Scutts reviews Soldier’s Heart by West Point professor Elizabeth D. Samet, whose memoir accomplishes the impressive feat of finding common ground between Army officers and English majors.

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December 14, 2007/ Joanna Scutts/
Politics & History
December 2007, history, Joanna Scutts, politics
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December 13, 2007

Two From No Tell Books

December 13, 2007/ Jeffrey Eaton
Two From No Tell Books

Jeffrey Eaton absorbs himself in the weirdly familiar and the familiarly weird worlds of Shafer Hall’s Never Cry Woof and PF Potvin’s The Attention Lesson.

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December 13, 2007/ Jeffrey Eaton/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
December 2007, Jeffrey Eaton, literary criticism, Poetry, P. F. Potvin, Shafer Hall
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December 11, 2007

Proper Red Stuff

December 11, 2007/ Steve Donoghue
Proper Red Stuff

There was no popular conception of the serial killer in Victorian England in 1888. Jack the Ripper was self-made man, and, as Steve Donoghue writes, no one knows who he was.

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December 11, 2007/ Steve Donoghue/
Politics & History
December 2007, history, Steve Donoghue, Jack the Ripper
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December 07, 2007

Descent

December 07, 2007/ Clayton Eshleman
Descent

A poem by Clayton Eshleman.

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December 07, 2007/ Clayton Eshleman/
Poetry
Clayton Eshleman, December 2007, Poetry
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December 05, 2007

Denying Absurdity

December 05, 2007/ David Gregory Moser
Denying Absurdity

The bestselling New Atheists presume that a simple faith in reason will make short work of the longing for God. David G. Moser takes them to task for what Nietzsche would have called their “complacent rationality.”

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December 05, 2007/ David Gregory Moser/
Politics & History
December 2007, history, politics
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It’s a Mystery book reviews by Irma Heldman

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