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Behind the Oval Office: Winning the Presidency in the Nineties
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,
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by Dick Morris (Random House). To hear the critics bash him, the former White
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House political adviser's entire life has been a dalliance with prostitution.
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As a professional, he was an amoral whore; as a husband and a public figure, he
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was done in by the thing itself; then there's Behind the Oval Office .
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"The book is priced at $25--one-eighth of prostitute Sherry Rowlands' hourly
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fee--and ... will give the author a chance to peddle his wares," notes Jennifer
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Harper in the Washington Times . Ad hominems are the order of the day.
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"Dick Morris's problems began early. Like the day he was born," says the
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Washington Post 's Charlotte Hays. The book is said to have its uses,
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however. "It is a ... revealing book," says the Weekly Standard 's Andrew
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Ferguson, though only unintentionally. Morris' descriptions of Clinton's temper
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tantrums, says Ferguson, make them sound like "the kind normally associated
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with autistic children--except in the president's case they are overlaid with
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self-righteousness and megalomania." The New York Times ' Richard
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Bernstein is just about the book's only fan: "We owe it to Mr. Morris, whose
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book is lively, readable and anecdotally rich, for his insider's account of the
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way the game is played." (Jacob
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Weisberg skewers the book in Slate. Also, check out the Random House page for the book, which includes an excerpt.)
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Movie
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The
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Whole Wide World
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(Sony Pictures Classics). Critics see this biopic
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about Robert E. Howard, the author of the Conan the Barbarian stories, as an
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occasion to wax confessional, particularly on the subject of the writing life:
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"It's rare to see the basic conditions of a writer's existence--the solitude,
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the panic, the neediness, the unhealthy self-absorption--portrayed so starkly,"
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says The
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New Yorker 's Terrence Rafferty. The film "touches on
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things of the mind and of the heart: writing, cultural hunger in rural America,
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the roots of violence in art, the mystery of personality," says the Wall
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Street Journal 's Joe Morgenstern. Not everyone is charmed. The Village
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Voice 's Gary Dauphin complains that the film is mired in sentimental
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cutesiness: "I can dig the urge to know the man behind Conan's bulging biceps,
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but I don't know if Wide World 's annoying, nutjob-cum-romantic-misfit
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take on the subject was what I, Howard, or the world really needed."
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Event
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The
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Inauguration of William Jefferson Clinton (Washington, D.C.). Expectations
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were low--second inaugurals are not supposed to top the first--but reviews are
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negative nonetheless. Rhetorically, the speech is deemed to have been
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unsuccessful. Presidential historian William Leuchtenburg was quoted by Todd
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Purdum in the New York Times as saying that it was the "most banal
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address by an American President I have ever heard." The problem, says Purdum,
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was that the president spent too much time "pouring over past Presidential
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speeches and anthologies of poetry." The upside was the speech's
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uncharacteristic brevity--22 minutes, according to NBC's Tom Brokaw. Reviews of
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inaugural pomp (appearances by celebrities Jessye Norman, Antonio Banderas, and
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Hootie and the Blowfish, as well as a parade) range from outrage at the
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"unseemly excess" (the Washington Post 's Tom Shales) to boredom, though
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Norman's rendition of "Amazing Grace" was praised in the Post as
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"stirring." Television coverage struggled to make something out of nothing,
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says Shales: "Directors of live historical events appear to think they are
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making documentaries about the events rather than transmitting them into
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American homes." (For more reactions to the inaugural, see the "Dispatches"
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from Jacob Weisberg and Karenna
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Gore.)
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Book
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One
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World, Ready or Not: The Manic Logic of Global Capitalism
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, by William
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B. Greider (Simon & Schuster). The latest manifesto from the Rolling
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Stone editor ( Who Will Tell the People? ) condemns the globalization
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of markets and leads reviewers to reconsider their own enthusiasm for free
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trade. Greider brings "the global economic beast to life in all its splendor
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and horror" (Matthew Miller, in the New York Times ). The passion of his
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polemic recalls Rousseau and Martin Luther (Walter Russell Mead, Foreign
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Affairs ). But few are persuaded by Greider's conclusions. Critics have
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three main complaints: 1) his shoddy economics (see Paul Krugman in the
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Washington Post and in Slate); 2) his tired
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prescriptions--regulation, taxation, and protectionism; 3) his continued
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bashing of the Federal Reserve Board (a repetition of the theme of his 799-page
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Secrets of the Temple ). "This is a book that graduate students and
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coffeehouse dissidents everywhere will enjoy," says Mead. (Also, see John Judis'
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favorable review in Slate.)
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CD
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Idomeneo
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, by
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Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, performed by Placido Domingo and the Metropolitan
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Opera Orchestra and Chorus, conducted by James Levine (Deutsche Grammophon).
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Placido Domingo's appearance "on the package, compellingly photographed in
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costume as the ancient King of Crete," (Anthony Tommasini, the New York
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Times ) is the main selling point for this new recording of one of Mozart's
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more obscure operas--a fact that does not make critics happy. "Mr. Domingo is
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no Mozartean," writes Tommasini. "He misses some of the lightness and agility
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demanded by florid passages." But reviewers agree that the recording
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succeeds--in spite of Domingo, and in spite of James Levine's "overblown
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conducting" (Alan Blyth, the Daily Telegraph )--mainly because of the
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cast, which includes soprano Cecilia Bartoli and Thomas Hampson. "[F]rom the
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moment Cecilia Bartoli's vibrant Idamante arrives on stage, the performance
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takes wing, her luscious, tight vibrato perfectly capturing the adolescent
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trauma of the young prince," says the Independent 's Mark Pappenheim.
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Movie
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Albino Alligator
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(Miramax). Has the post-Tarrantino crime flick
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lost its charm? Reviews of the latest one suggest the answer is yes. Critics
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are unimpressed with first-time director (and Academy Award-winner) Kevin
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Spacey's attempts at stylishness, particularly the relentless allusions to film
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noir. The movie "reeks of film-student overkill" (Susan Wloszczyna, USA
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Today ). It would only be allowed to "ooz[e] out of Miramax's storeroom" in
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the otherwise fallow month of January, says the Village Voice 's Amy
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Taubin: "[I]ts devices are too shopworn to allow for a personal or original
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point of view." The New York Times ' Janet Maslin says the film works
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precisely because it is derivative--its stars, Matt Dillon and Gary
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Sinise, emulate the characters in The Usual
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Suspects , which gives
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them "extraordinary opportunities to preen." (Miramax's
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site for Albino Alligator has video and stills.)
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Television
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The Naked
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Truth
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(NBC). ABC canceled this sitcom last year, but NBC revived it and
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put it in the slot after Seinfeld and before ER . Critics wonder
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whether the show can live up to its scheduling. Will its star, Tea Leoni
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( Flirting With Disaster ), "blossom into this generation's Lucille Ball"
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(David Bianculli, the New York Daily News )? Are her comic skills on a
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par with her sex appeal? ("[W]hen she does a wobbly fall in a tight skirt and
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heels, it's like the moment in Bambi when the little deer fumbles and
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skitters across a patch of ice," says Ken Tucker in Entertainment
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Weekly .) Or is the show dreary and cliché-ridden? The New York
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Times ' Caryn James calls the first episode "dangerously lame." Shales, in
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the Washington Post , says, "NBC has recycled garbage and gotten only new
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garbage in return." He suggests another title: The Ugly Truth . (NBC plugs the show at its site.)
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Updates
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In the
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New York Review of Books , Oxford Professor of Poetry James Fenton
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attacks The New Yorker 's Adam Gopnik for attacking John
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Richardson's biography of Picasso and for attacking Picasso himself. "The
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man in the long skirt with the cloche hat, doling out these white feathers to
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artists of the past, and hitting them over the head with his parasol, is Adam
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Gopnik. ... As so often with Gopnik, the bad style leads the sense by the
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nose." ... In The
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New Yorker , Gary Wills, a classicist by
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training, praises Robert Fagles' translation of The
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Odyssey
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("Fagles is the best living translator of ancient Greek drama, lyric poetry,
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and epic into modern English, and [ The
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Odyssey ] ... is his finest
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work so far"). He attributes its success to feminism or, more specifically, to
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"its entry into the psychological subtlety with which Homer presents women."
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... The Weekly Standard 's Philip Terzian on Walter
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Cronkite's memoirs: "Anyone tempted to romanticize the American people
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should be reminded that for nearly twenty years, 'the most trusted man in
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America' was a TV news reader with a mustache and mellifluous baritone named
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Walter Cronkite."... Despite the Golden Globes, Evita
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racks up more bad reviews. The New Republic 's Stanley Kauffmann on
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Madonna: "She can sing, though there are too many times when she asks her
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country not to cry for her. She can't act."
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Recent
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"Summary Judgment" columns:
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Jan.
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15: La Cérémonie (MK2 Productions/Prokino Filmproduktion); The
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Prospect Before Her: A History of Women in Western Europe, 1500-1800 , by
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Olwen Hufton (Knopf); King of the Hill (Fox); and Tokyo International
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Forum (Ralph Viñoly, Japan).
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Jan.
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8: Beavis and Butt-Head Do America (Paramount); Slouching to
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Gomorrah: Modern Liberalism and American Decline , by Robert Bork
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(ReganBooks/HarperCollins); Politically Incorrect With Bill Maher
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(weeknights at 12:05 a.m. on ABC); Mother (Paramount Pictures); Some
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Mother's Son (Castle Rock); Christian Dior: The Man Who Made the World
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Look New , by Marie-France Pochna, translated by Joanna Savill (Arcade); and
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Yves Saint Laurent: A Biography , by Alice Rawsthorn (Nan A.
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Talese/Doubleday).
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Jan.
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1: Evita (Hollywood Pictures); Portrait of a Lady (Gramercy);
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Life of Picasso, Volume 2: 1907-1917 , by John Richardson, with the
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collaboration of Marilyn McCully (Random House); Once Upon a Mattress
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(The Broadhurst Theatre on Broadway); Hamlet (Columbia); and The
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Odyssey , by Homer, translated by Robert Fagles (Viking).
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Dec.
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18: The People vs. Larry Flynt (Columbia Pictures); Marvin's
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Room (Miramax); The New Fowler's Modern English Usage , edited by
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R.W. Burchfield (Oxford University Press); A Reporter's Life , by Walter
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Cronkite (Knopf); Alias Grace , by Margaret Atwood (Nan A.
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Talese/Doubleday); and Whistle Down the Wind (National Theatre,
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Washington, D.C.).
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--Compiled by Franklin
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Foer and the editors of Slate .
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