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Opinionated talk show host and columnist Michael Smerconish has
been chronicling local, state, and national events for the
Philadelphia Daily News and the Philadelphia Inquirer for more than
15 years. He has sounded off on topics as diverse as the hunt for
Osama bin Laden and what the color of your Christmas lights says
about you. In this collection of 100 of his most memorable columns,
Smerconish reflects on American political life with his
characteristic feistiness. A new Afterword for each column provides
updates on both facts and feelings, indicating how the author has
evolved over the years, moving from a reliable Republican voter to
a political Independent. Clowns to the Left of Me, Jokers to the
Right covers the post-9/11 years, Barack Obama's ascension, and the
rise of Donald Trump. Smerconish describes meeting Ronald Reagan,
having dinner with Fidel Castro, barbequing with the band YES in
his backyard, spending the same night with Pete Rose and Ted
Nugent, drinking champagne from the Stanley Cup, and conducting
Bill Cosby's only pretrial interview. He also writes about local
Philadelphia culture, from Sid Mark to the Rizzo statue.
Smerconish's outlook as expressed in these impassioned opinion
pieces goes beyond "liberal" or "conservative." His thought process
continues to evolve and change, and as it does, he aims to provoke
readers to do the same. All author proceeds benefit the Children's
Crisis Treatment Center, a Philadelphia- based, private, nonprofit
agency that provides behavioral health services to children and
their families.
Opinionated talk show host and columnist Michael Smerconish has
been chronicling local, state, and national events for the
Philadelphia Daily News and the Philadelphia Inquirer for more than
15 years. He has sounded off on topics as diverse as the hunt for
Osama bin Laden and what the color of your Christmas lights says
about you. In this collection of 100 of his most memorable columns,
Smerconish reflects on American political life with his
characteristic feistiness. A new Afterword for each column provides
updates on both facts and feelings, indicating how the author has
evolved over the years, moving from a reliable Republican voter to
a political Independent. Clowns to the Left of Me, Jokers to the
Right covers the post-9/11 years, Barack Obama's ascension, and the
rise of Donald Trump. Smerconish describes meeting Ronald Reagan,
having dinner with Fidel Castro, barbequing with the band YES in
his backyard, spending the same night with Pete Rose and Ted
Nugent, drinking champagne from the Stanley Cup, and conducting
Bill Cosby's only pretrial interview. He also writes about local
Philadelphia culture, from Sid Mark to the Rizzo statue.
Smerconish's outlook as expressed in these impassioned opinion
pieces goes beyond "liberal" or "conservative." His thought process
continues to evolve and change, and as it does, he aims to provoke
readers to do the same. All author proceeds benefit the Children's
Crisis Treatment Center, a Philadelphia- based, private, nonprofit
agency that provides behavioral health services to children and
their families.
In The Eclipse I Call Father: Essays on Absence, David Axelrod
recalls a balmy night in May 1970 when he vowed to allow no one and
nothing he loves to pass from this life without praise, even if it
meant praising the most bewildering losses. In each of these
fourteen essays Axelrod delivers on that vow as he ranges across
topics as diverse as marriage, Japanese poetry, Craftsman design,
Old English riddles, racism, extinction, fatherhood,
mountaineering, predatory mega-fauna, street fighting, trains, the
Great Depression, and the effects of climate change-accretions of
absence that haunt the writer and will likewise haunt readers. The
essays in this collection grew from a ten-year period when the
author found himself periodically living and working abroad,
wondering why foreign landscapes haunted him more than the familiar
landscapes of the inland Pacific Northwest he called home. Each
place had a long history of habitation, but at home he was blind,
unable to see past the surfaces of things. Axelrod examines many
aspects of that phenomenon in these pages, framing surface
realities and imagining the scale and scope of that surface, but
also trying to sense what is absent or changed, and how, despite
its absence, the unseen accretes to ever-greater densities and
persists as something uncanny. Curious, alert, and keenly
observant, these essays probe the boundaries between what is here
and what is gone, what is present and what is past, in elegant
prose. Readers familiar with Axelrod's poetry will find a new facet
of his lyrical gifts, while those encountering his work for the
first time will be richly rewarded by the discovery of this
Northwest literary talent.
Producer, arranger, and engineer David Axelrod made his mark with
Cannonball Adderley, Lou Rawls, and the Electric Prunes. Song of
Innocence made critics turn their heads in its day, regarding it as
a visionary curiosity piece; today it's simply a great, timeless
work of pop art that continues to inspire over three decades after
its initial release. EMI. 1999.
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