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Monday, June 2,2008

Disappearing Destinations: 37 Places... (Vintage)

by Kimberly Lisagor and Heather Hansen

By David Luhrssen
The problem with unspoiled holiday destinations is that we run the risk of spoiling them by going there. Consider the Incan city of Machu Picchu, whose stones are eroding under the footsteps of backpacking tourists. Disappearing Destinations examines 37 endangered natural and human-made wonders. Aside from . . .
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Monday, June 2,2008

Hyphenated Life

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By Aisha Motlani
“To hyphenate or not to hyphenate” is a question that sometimes perplexes even the most seasoned writer or editor. What’s more, the use of hyphens to express a dual identity has been a source of contention for nearly a century. Those who oppose hyphenated ethnic terms, whether Latin-American . . .
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Tuesday, May 27,2008

Prague in Danger: The Years of German Occupation, 1939-45

(Farrar, Straus & Giroux), by Peter Demetz

By David Luhrssen
Prague had long been a cultural, multiethnic city at the heart of Central Europe. When the Nazis occupied Czechoslovakia in 1939, the city’s inhabitants were faced with the possibility of collaboration, passive or active resistance, imprisonment, death, escape or simply trying to carry on as best they could. Literary . . .
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Tuesday, May 27,2008

Hunting for Clues

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By Aisha Motlani
Racial tensions between the white and Hmong communities came to light in Wisconsin’s 2004 hunting season. And the recent discussions surrounding the hunting of wolves, which were removed from the federal endangered species list just this year, have sharpened conflicts between those who feel hunting is an . . .
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Monday, May 26,2008

Cokie Roberts’ Ladies of Liberty

The women behind the rise of America

By Rex Rutkoski
More than two centuries after the birth of America, our nation’s founders still transfix us, says broadcaster and author Cokie Roberts. “They are so much part of our fabric as a people that I was dying to know more about them,” says Roberts, who was named one of the 50 greatest women in the history of broadcasting by the American Women in Radio and Television. The results are found in Ladies of Liberty (Morrow), the follow-up to Roberts’ best-selling book, Founding Mothers (2004), in which she examines the lives and times of some of the women who helped shape America. The author says that even though women were central to the survival of the country, female contributions have been overshadowed by the Founding Fathers.
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Tuesday, May 20,2008

Age of Consent?

The youngest P.O.W.

By Reuel S. Amdur
“For me, Omar’s age has always been the greatest factor,” says Michelle Shephard, a Toronto Star reporter who authored Guantanamo’s Child: The Untold Story of Omar Khadr (John Wiley & Sons). When Omar Khadr was captured in Afghanistan in 2002, he was 15 years old, a child soldier. While international sympathy has gone out to child soldiers in Sierra Leone, Uganda, Sri Lanka and other countries, American and Canadian sympathy for Khadr has been far more muted.
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Tuesday, May 20,2008

Milwaukee Ghosts (Schiffer Books)

by Sherry Strub

By Tom Hammer
From North Avenue to the South Side, from Shorewood to Brookfield, the Milwaukee area has ghosts—or so says Sherry Strub in Milwaukee Ghosts. Strub takes the reader from place to place—homes, cemeteries, historic sites and even the hallowed Pfister Hotel—in a trek around the area. The interviews and stories are interesting, but they lack a sense of authority and spookiness. Accounts of people saying, “I had this
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Tuesday, May 20,2008

The Right to Return

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By Aisha Motlani
For some, the adage “home is where the heart is” is a hackneyed platitude; for others, it’s a wrenching expression of an almost filial bond. In Milwaukee native Sandy Tolan’s 2006 nonfiction book, The Lemon Tree: An Arab, A Jew and the Heart of the Middle East, a Palestinian returning to his ancestral home in Ramla uses such visceral terms to describe his connection to the land from which he was expelled 20 years earlier.
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Tuesday, May 13,2008

Lady of Spain

Discovering gazpacho

By Kenya C. Evans
Many young girls dream of being the most popular, adored girl in school. But the truth is, only a tiny fraction of them end up as the cool and popular ones, while the rest of us are left to find a different way in the social ranks, a way to define who we truly are inside. In the deliciously twisted memoir Kinky Gazpacho: Life, Love and Spain (Atria), Lori L. Tharps, a native Milwaukeean now living in Philadelphia, takes readers down the winding roads of her journey of love and self-discovery across the Iberian Peninsula and back again.
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Tuesday, May 13,2008

The Great Arab Conquests: How the Spread of Islam Changed . . .

Book Review

By David Luhrssen
Muhammad may have been the prophet of one of the world’s great religions, but little-known developments after his death set the direction for human events even today. “The future history of much of the world was decided by the actions of a small number of men arguing and debating in the city of Medina,” writes Hugh Kennedy. In The Great Arab Conquests, the British historian investigates how the disunified Arab tribes and towns . . .
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Search in Events
2008-10-07 6:00-7:30 PM
General
ThereŽs more to wine than Cabernet & Chardonnay! Expand your horizons and join Thief Wine proprietor Phil Bilodeau for an informative seminar featuring some of the worldŽs underknown and underappreciated varietals and regions. YouŽll discover just how vast and exciting the world of wine is as you taste through three whites and three reds and learn about the specific wines, the grape varietals, the regions, and what makes each wine
Location: Central Milwaukee


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