Book Review
When Horses Had Wings
by John Senger
Estill has an ear for the language of her characters, making this story come alive. "When Horses Had Wings", the first novel by Diana Estill, brings to mind Hemingway’s explanation of his own writing: “You see I’m trying in all my...
Book Review
Between Myth and Mandate
by John Senger
Nathanson challenges the Jews’ historic claim to exclusive sovereignty in the “Promised Land” between the Jordan and the Mediterranean. Michael Nathanson, author of Between Myth and Mandate: Geopolitics, Pseudohistory, and the...
Book Review
The Mourning After
by John Senger
Full, realistic characters advance the themes of death and love in this meaningful story. In the novel "The Mourning After", Edward Fahey thoroughly and artfully explores his Irish family’s approach to death, as expressed in the...
Book Review
Black Diamond Destiny
by John Senger
A nineteenth-century Virginia coal mine is the backdrop for this exciting story of greed, fortune, and family. An axiom, often credited to Balzac, states that behind every great fortune lies a crime. This aptly describes the story...
Book Review
Economic Fascism
by John Senger
In the language of Mussolini and his compatriots, often rich and absorbing, these documents open a window into world economic history. Economic Fascism: Primary Sources on Mussolini’s Crony Capitalism, edited by Carlo Celli, a...
Book Review
The 90s Club and the Whispering Statue
by John Senger
Ninety-somethings team up in a mystery-solving club, the fully developed characters illuminating the process of aging and the abilities seniors still maintain. Eileen Haavik McIntire, author of the mystery "The 90s Club and the...
Book Review
The Radical Party An Idea for America
by John Senger
This well-organized book attempts to lay out the reasons for a viable third party in the United States. David Sebastian Aschinberg, a Chicago attorney, has written "The Radical Party An Idea for America", which he calls the core beliefs...
Book Review
The Man Who Made Love to More Women Than Casanova
by John Senger
Baccala has valiantly tried to offer mature observations of, and commentary on, the contemporary sexual social culture in America. If judged by the length of its title, The Man Who Made Love to More Women Than Casanova: And the...