Sunday Books: coverage for June 19, 2011
- 1
Mexico must shed self-defeating habits if it hopes to take its place among the world’s leading nations, Jorge Castañeda writes.
- 2
The author traces anarchism and capitalism in the late 19th century, culminating in Leon Czolgosz’s assassination of President William McKinley.
- 3
In this science-fiction tale of semiotics, the focus on language can leave the characters seeming alien.
- 4
An author works on a book while he is beset with responsibility and the realization that time is no longer on his side.
- 5
A girl from Russia has a hard time fitting in as an American teenager in Vera Brosgol’s graphic novel.
- 6
‘The Summer of the Bear’ by Bella Pollen, ‘Sex and the River Styx’ by Edward Hoagland and ‘Children and Fire’ by Ursula Hegi
- 7
The book examines the East’s effect on the West, beginning with Emerson, Thoreau and Whitman.
- 8
‘Breaking Up With God’ by Sarah Sentilles; ‘Waiting’ by Marya Hornbacher.