Things Noted Here and There
Charles McGrath's"A Debunker on the Road to World War II," NYT, 4 March, gave advance warning of controversy about Nicholson Baker's Human Smoke: The Beginnings of World War II, the End of Civilization; and Baker's"The Charms of Wikipedia," NYRB, 20 March, signaled his own charms as a writer. But, in challenging popular notions of World War II as"the good war," Baker's got a tough uphill battle. Early reviews of Human Smoke are in: Mark Kurlansky gives it a thumbs up in the LA Times, 9 March; and Glenn C. Altschuler gives it a thumbs down in the Boston Globe, 9 March. Hat tip.
Janet Maslin,"The Amazing Adventures of the Midcentury Comic Book Trade," NYT, 10 March, reviews David Hajdu's The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic-Book Scare and How It Changed America. Hajdu,"The Ten-Cent Plague," BookForum, February/March, is an excerpt from the book.
Finally,"The world's 50 most powerful blogs," Guardian's Observer, 9 March, counts several friends of Cliopatria, including: 7. Josh Marshall's Talking Points Memo, 33. Crooked Timber, and 40. Andrew Sullivan's The Daily Dish. Thanks to Scott McLemee at Crooked Timber for the tip.