books
I appreciated Margaret Renkl's ode to the university press. That's not so much because of the academic writing that gets published at university presses, which is so key to all.
Time for my year-end list of what I've read. Here are the past lists: 2020; 2019; 2018; 2017; 2016. Let me use the same language explaining this as last year:.
I was very happy to write the conclusion for the new book of essays organized and edited by Aviva Chomsky and Steve Striffler, Organizing for Power: Building a 21st Century.
It is time for my annual report on what I read last year. First, past lists: 2019; 2018; 2017; 2016. Let me use the same language explaining this as last.
With one bizarre exception, this is a useful list of once famous books that are, in fact, awful, many because of their eye-rolling toxic masculinity. The bizarre exception is Mao's.
So, um, yeah. I've been pretty AWOL for... a while. Among other things, Alex Cooley and I got the reviews back from Oxford University Press for our book. Because it.
By nearly any metric, the litigator-turned-venture-capitalist Bruce Gibney counts as one of the clear-cut winners to emerge from the terrifying corporate-tech duopoly of the past three decades. An early investor.
ca. 1950General Motors contract settlement- first partially paid hospitalization and medical program at union shop. J.W. Livingston, T.A. Johnstone, Irving Bluestone, Guy Nunn, Walter Reuther, Harry.
