Sunday's Notes
Mark M. Smith,"Looking Back: The explosion of sensory history," The Psychologist, October, continues Mark's exploration of sensory history.
Dominique Browning,"If Walls Could Talk," NYT, 8 October, reviews Bill Bryson's At Home: A Short History of Private Life.
Alan Brinkley,"Anatomy of an Uprising," NYT, 8 October, reviews Dick Armey's and Matt Kibbe's Give Us Liberty: A Tea Party Manifesto, Jill Lepore's The Whites of Their Eyes: The Tea Party's Revolution and the Battle Over American History, and Kate Zernike's Boiling Mad: Inside Tea Party America. Elbert Ventura,"Teaism," The Book, 7 October, reviews Zernike's Boiling Mad.
Sam Roberts,"The Rosenbergs Revisited," NYT, 8 October, reviews Walter Schneir's Final Verdict: What Really Happened in the Rosenberg Case and Allen M. Hornblum's The Invisible Harry Gold: The Man Who Gave the Soviets the Atom Bomb.
Dahlia Lithwick,"Getting to Five," NYT, 8 October, reviews Seth Stern's and Stephen Wermiel's Justice Brennan: Liberal Champion.
Edward Rothstein,"An Unseen Evil Still Ensnaring Countless Souls," NYT, 8 October, reviews"Invisible: Slavery Today," an exhibit at Cincinnati's National Underground Railroad Freedom Center.