Archive for March, 2006

Jeffery Deaver’s “Copycat” - Part 4

This week in Serial Blogging - part four of Jeffery Deaver’s “Copycat,” which was first published in A New Omnibus of Crime. Read from the beginning of the story by clicking here!

Monthly Gleanings

By Anatoly Liberman
This blog column has existed for a month. It was launched with the idea that it would attract questions and comments. If this happens, at the end of each month the rubric “Monthly Gleanings” will appear. Although in March I have not been swamped with the mail, there is enough for a full [...]

Brown vs. Baigent

Bart Ehrman weighed in today on the ‘Da Vinci Code lawsuit’ brought by Holy Blood, Holy Grail author Michael Baigent. You know, the brou-ha-ha that has been grabbing headlines for the last few weeks. Ehrman proposes it is much ado about nothing.
From the Reuters article:
[Ehrman] dismisses the more controversial theories put forward [...]

Why Dubai’s Geography Matters

By Harm de Blij
The debate over the prospective takeover of several U.S. port operations by a company based on the Arabian Peninsula is over. Both sides marshaled powerful arguments. Proponents favored rewarding a progressive, modernizing Arab ally in the struggle against terrorism. Opponents cited dangers of infiltration and security risks. The opponents prevailed. President Bush [...]

A Democratic Agenda

As The New York Times reported yesterday, Jacob Hacker presented his view that middle-class families face “a harsh new world of economic insecurity” to former Democratic Vice Presidential candidate John Edwards last week. Edwards, who did pretty well in the 2004 race by talking about “two Americas,” one for the rich and one for [...]

Serial Blogging: “Copycat” - Part 3

This week in Serial Blogging - part three of Jeffery Deaver’s “Copycat,” which was first published in A New Omnibus of Crime. Read from the beginning of the story by clicking here!

Pre-Word History,
Or, Does the Buck Stop Here?

by Anatoly Liberman
Modern English is swamped with words borrowed from other languages. One does not have to be a specialist to notice the presence of the Romance element in it or to guess that samovar has come from Russian and samurai, from Japanese. It is the details that, as usual, pose problems. Not only does [...]

Ew-La-La

Witold Rybczynski, the architecture columnist at Slate.com and Oxford author, noted in a column yesterday a disturbing trend towards “conspicuous architecture” in very exclusive zip codes. On a recent trip to Palm Beach, FL, Rybczynski was shocked to find its posh beachfront filled with “some of the least graceful buildings [he'd] seen in a [...]

Watchin’ the Bird

by Brian Priestley
It was a strange experience, watching a recent television documentary on Charlie Parker and the music I immersed myself in for nearly two years. Originally, I hoped my book would be finished in time for the 50th anniversary last year of its subject’s premature death. Instead, the U.S. release of my [...]

Serial Blogging: “Copycat” - Part 2

In our second Serial Blogging post, part two of “Copycat” by famed mystery writer Jeffery Deaver. The story was first published in A New Omnibus of Crime. Read last week’s installment by clicking here!

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