Animal House Meets Vietnam: Thomas A. Barnico’s ’77 War College
Digital Editor Lintaro P. Donovan reviews the story of an intelligence operative and college student during the turbulent Vietnam War Era.
Digital Editor Lintaro P. Donovan reviews the story of an intelligence operative and college student during the turbulent Vietnam War Era.
The Review’s Editor-in-Chief reviews Leon Burr Richardson’s seminal chronicle of the College and her town.
The Review reviews Emily Katz Anhalt ’80’s newest book.
Dartmouth alumnus Jake Tapper ‘91 is known mainly for his work as an anchor on CNN. His earlier career as an author tended to focus…
`The global monetary system often goes unnoticed by an American public whose concern over the economy usually only extends to gas prices, unemployment numbers, and…
A New Idea of India, written by Harsh Madhusudan (’09) and Rajeev Mantri provides a fascinating vision of an India informed by a free-market, secularist…
In less than 25 years from now, white people will become a minority in America. Keith Boykin ’87 connects this fact to what he argues is a latent racism in white Americans that will ignite a racial civil war in Race Against Time: The Politics of a Darkening America, a digestible and at times revelatory but ultimately unconvincing synopsis of the trajectory of race in America.
Matthew O. Skrod reviews Professor Vaughn Booker’s recent, innovative study of jazz and African American religious authority.
This divergence between the right to possess and carry around a weapon as expressed in the Constitution and its recognition (or lack thereof) by individual states serves as the topic of The Right to Bear Arms: A Constitutional Right of People or a Privilege of the Working Class?, the newest analysis of Second Amendment history by noted appellate lawyer and scholar Stephen Halbrook.
Matthew O. Skrod reflects on William F. Buckley’s first book, seventy years on, and comments on the present state of affairs at Dartmouth.