David Cay Johnston: Have Trump, will travel David Cay Johnston: Have Trump, will travel

Lately, if it’s a day ending in -y, then it’s a day when David Cay Johnston will be out in the world, answering questions and offering context about Donald J.Read more »

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“If you follow the news at all, you’ll know that a number of allegations have recently been raised against GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump…It’s due in good measure to veteran investigative reporter Johnston…that these charges have seen the light of day. Here, without undue breathlessness and certainly without any coyness, he elaborates on those newsworthy sound bites…connecting dots and establishing patterns.”—Kirkus Reviews on The Making of Donald Trump

“Johnston…maintains a crisply matter-of-fact approach throughout this scrupulously detailed and documented chronicle.”—Booklist on The Making of Donald Trump

“A ruthlessly funny, smart, and relentlessly on-point takedown of modern misogyny….Doyle’s debut book places her on the A-list of contemporary feminist writers.”Publishers Weekly starred review of Trainwreck

“Doyle shows the way women in general have been, and very often still are, tried for their very womanness, devoured for their flaws, and respected only once they’ve been reduced to smoldering ash. High-speed and immediately readable, Doyle’s poignant take on the concept of the trainwreck, and its relation to feminism, will provoke much thought and discussion.”Booklist starred review of Trainwreck

“An impressive and well-executed debut novel, toeing the line between mystery, suspense, and sf. Readers who enjoy…Stieg Larsson or Louise Penny will find this title a chilling read.”—Library Journal on The Monster’s Daughter

“A quiet masterpiece. Combines the primal, raw, archetypal vision of José Saramago with the apocalyptic sweep of Cormac McCarthy … Wieringa’s prose is lucid as cut glass, his images stark, his landscape desolate and otherworldly at the same time that it is contemporary. His unalloyed depiction of emigration will reverberate keenly in a Europe facing ever growing numbers of exiles, evacuees, escapees of war. It will reverberate, as well, in a United States muddled by its own border policies…A magnum opus from a leading young writer takes on the meaning of exile, identity, faith, and the limits of endurance.”—Kirkus Reviews starred review of These Are the Names

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