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David Stearns, splendid as always, looking at a couple of biographies of Orson Welles, including volume 2 of Simon Callow's: Pinning down the slippery Citizen Welles.
Katie Haegele is thrilled with Elaine Terranova's latest poetry collection: 'Not To' collection reveals poet playing with permutations.
Chuck Leddy is impressed with Gabor Boritt's The Gettsburg Gospel:
Gettysburg Address as 'civic gospel'.
Kate Atkinson may have won Susan Balée over to crime fiction: Road-rage attack reverberates in assortment of Scots' lives.
Sarah Weinman makes come characteristically canny observations about Fred Vargas's latest: Clever crime fiction with French twist.
Speaking of characteristica, Carlin Romano takes a provocative look at Taner Akcam's A Shameful Act: Armenia genocide in brave detail.
Sandy Bauers listens as 'Peter Pan' flies again and again in two narrators' versions.
It's not a book review, but since I'm one of those who thinks that Picasso is among the most over-rated artists of all time (I'll take a Braque over a Picasso any day), I thought I'd also link to art critic Ed Sozanski's column as well: Spanish painting through centuries.
During the week, these ran:
Amy Rosenberg sang the praises of Kim McLarin's Jump at the Sun: Struggling to find her fit in the annals of motherhood.
And Kristin Granero was moved by Nordie's at Noon: Book Review Lessons in living with cancer when you're 'too young'.
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