The Future of Conservatism by Charles W. Dunn (ed.)
Few things are as popular among conservatives as internecine philosophical battles. In magazines, Op-Eds, and book length treatises conservatives of various str...
Few things are as popular among conservatives as internecine philosophical battles. In magazines, Op-Eds, and book length treatises conservatives of various str...
The opening paragraphs of David Frum’s review (sub. req.) of Nixon and Kissinger: Partners in Power by Robert Dallek is something I wish I had written. It...
Anyone interested in rare or antique books might be interested to know I have two items for sale at eBay. OK, I don’t really know how rare they are, but t...
I am finding it hard to post on all the interesting things that find their way to my inbox – I have no idea how bloggers with serious traffic sort through...
It is not easy to label Michael Marshall’s latest book. Is it a mystery? A psychological thriller? Science Fiction? Horror? As you might have guessed, it ...
In his farsical “review” of The Essential Russell Kirk Alan Wolfe dedicated a chunk of his time to a description of Kirk’s most popular book T...