Remote and Recent
Thomas Bartlett,"The Betrayal of Judas," CHE, 30 May, is a classic story of major institutions, mega-bucks, and academic superstars coalescing to get an important piece of ancient history wrong.
Susann Cokal,"‘Poor, Obscure, Plain and Little'," NYT, 25 May, reviews Ruth Brandon's Governess: The Lives and Times of the Real Jane Eyres.
Matthew Power,"The Other Half," NYT, 25 May, reviews Bonnie Yochelson's and Daniel Czitrom's Rediscovering Jacob Riis: Exposure Journalism and Photography in Turn-of-the-Century New York.
Andrew Stuttaford,"A Cabinet of Soviet Curiosities," NY Sun, 21 May, reviews Paul R. Gregory's Lenin's Brain and Other Tales from the Soviet Archives.
Mark Walker,"A 20th-Century Faust," American Scientist, May/June, reviews Michael J. Neufeld's Von Braun: Dreamer of Space, Engineer of War. Hat tip.
Christopher Caldwell,"The 54 of Us," NYT, 25 May, reviews Steve Coll's The Bin Ladens: An Arabian Family in the American Century.
A. N. Wilson,"V. S. Naipaul, master and monster," TLS, 21 May, reviews Patrick French's The World Is What It Is: The authorised biography of V. S. Naipaul.
Michael Shermer,"Fight for the Life Of the Mind," NY Sun, 21 May, reviews Alan Sokal's Beyond the Hoax.
Brendon Boyle,"Siege of the Ivory Tower," NY Sun, 21 May, reviews Mary Lefkowitz's History Lesson: A Race Odyssey.
Randal Jelks,"Obama, Wright, and Trinity," The Immanent Frame, 19 May, takes another look at Chicago's retired black pastor. Hat tip.
Sean Wilentz,"Barack Obama and the Unmaking of the Democratic Party," Huffington Post, 23 May, continues his argument for the nomination of Hillary Clinton. Thanks to Chris Bray for the tip.