Saturday, September 07, 2019

COMING UP FOR FRESH AIR: Vasily Grossman, chronicler of Soviet crimes

YOU WERE LIKE COMING UP FOR FRESH AIR. IT'S LIKE I WAS DROWNING AND YOU SAVED ME.
  —DEREK SHEPHERD, GREY'S ANATOMY


Too old for president? Health and fitness a better question AP



A Society Is Only As Free As Its Most Troublesome Political Dissident Caitlin Johnstone


Legacy of Chernobyl




Why Do The Same Images Show Up On Book After Book?


The book cover design world, it turns out, has something of an all-star squad of stock and archival image that show up on book covers time and time again. James Morrison, an editor, designer, and avid reader who lives in Adelaide, Australia, has been tracking the squad for about two decades. – Eye On Design


Telegraph Obituaries, via The Telegraph
Next, she rang the second secretary at the embassy: “The war has begun.” “Are you sure, old girl?” he asked. “Listen!” she commanded, holding the receiver outside the window. “Can’t you hear it?”


John le Carre, the author of the classic spy thrillers “Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy” and “The Spy Who Came in From the Cold,” called Ben Macintyre’s book “The best true spy story I have ever read.”
Now out in paperback, Mr. Macintyre’s “The Spy and the Traitor: The Greatest Espionage Story of the Cold War” is the true story of Oleg Gordievsky, a KGB colonel who spied for the British and later defected to the United Kingdom in 1985.

The spy is the good guy …

BOOK REVIEW: 'The Spy and the Traitor' - Washington Times




Georges Simenon wrote nearly 200 novels. Hitchcock telephoned one day and was told, "Sorry, he’s just started a novel." "I’ll wait,’ came the reply... Hitchcock "I’ll wait'


Vasily Grossman, chronicler of Soviet crimes, was also a master of psychological complexity and sensory detail... Cold River 


On March 27, 1961, Paul Robeson was found in the bathroom of a Moscow hotel with slit wrists and a razor blade in hand. Why did he try to kill himself?... Razors and Hammers   



Anecdote huckster and faux intellectual, or a genius sharing novel insights? Malcolm Gladwell reaches a professional tipping point ... Blind Spots 



Klaus Fuchs was a brilliant, high-minded nuclear physicist. He was also history’s most dangerous spy... KGB and CIA 



When should novelists hang it up? Consider the increasingly wobbly, bloated work of Salman Rushdie, a writer in  Free Fall  

How to lose weight with intermittent fasting: Alternate day fasting benefits Today