More Noted Things
Richard Overy,"A Short, Sharp War," Literary Review, February, reviews Adam Zamoyski's Warsaw 1920: Lenin's Failed Conquest of Europe.
Brent Holman,"Priorities," Airminded, 5 February, is critical of plans for the future of England's Bentley Priory that are indifferent to its historical significance.
Philip L. Fradkin,"A Classic, or a Fraud," LA Times, 3 February, looks at the fascinating question of plagiarism in Wallace Stegner's Angle of Repose, a 1972 winner of the Pulitzer Prize. Hat tip.
Scott McLemee's"Blue Skies Ahead?" IHE, 6 February, looks at essays on Katrina and New Orleans by Lawrence Powell and Ari Kelman in the recent JAH.
"The Copeland/Huckabee Love Affair," Wittenburg Door, 27 January, exposes the bankrupt alliance of popular evangelicalism and prosperity gospel in the United States. Don't get me wrong. I'm an evangelical and so is the Wittenburg Door, but its lampoons of corrupt religion are well-earned and well-placed. Hat tip.