Feed on
Posts
Comments

Tag Archive 'Election Day'

Where To Buy Wolverine Election Day by Peter David At The Lowest Price?

Wolverine Election Day by Peter David

Why Buy A Wolverine Election Day by Peter David?
Theres less than one week to go in the run-up to the nations next general presidential election — a heated political contest pitting the incumbent president against a popular challenger. But all bets are off when a heinous act of domestic terrorism results in a young boy being held hostage before the eyes of America…with the ultimate demands to result in nothing short of changing the face of history. As a nationwide investigation into the boys possible whereabouts is quickly mobilized, military brass requests that the mutant Wolverine become involved as well — theres simply no one more qualified with the tracking skills and vicious talent necessary to uncover the truth, even as the country threatens to descend into chaos….

Features

  • Click here to view our Condition Guide and Shipping Prices
  • Condition: NEW
  • ISBN13: 9781416510765
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Over 5 Five Star Customer Reviews On Amazon!

Too good for it’s own sake.
If you take away all the mutants from this story, you’d be left with a good, action packed suspenseful political thriller. I really think Peter David could have turned this into an original novel if he wanted to.

Re: Quick, great read
Per usual, Peter David meets all expectations with his stories. For anyone intereseted in a solid, quick read that’s true to the central character of Wolverine, unlike many interpretations, this is a fine choice for your bookshelves.

Get Amazon’s Lowest Price Today!

Other Great Products From Amazon
Wolverine: The Nature of the Beast (Wolverine (Mass))
Wolverine: Violent Tendencies (Wolverine (Mass))
Wolverine: Road of Bones
Wolverine: Lifeblood
Spider-Man: Requiem

Read Full Post »

Six Degrees: The Science of a Connected Age (Open Market Edition) by Duncan J. Watts – Save 32% Today!

Six Degrees: The Science of a Connected Age (Open Market Edition) by Duncan J. Watts

Why Buy A Six Degrees: The Science of a Connected Age (Open Market Edition) by Duncan J. Watts?
You may be only six degrees away from Kevin Bacon, but would he let you borrow his car? It depends on the structures within the network that links you. When the power goes out, when we find that a stranger knows someone we know, when dot-com stocks soar in price, networks are evident. In Six Degrees, sociologist Duncan Watts examines networks like these: what they are, how theyre being studied, and what we can use them for. To illustrate the often complicated mathematics that describe such structures, Watts uses plenty of examples from life, without which this book would quickly move beyond a general science readership. Small chapters make each thought-provoking conclusion easy to swallow, though some are hard to digest. For instance, in a short bit on coercive externalities, Watts sums up sociological research showing that:

Conversations concerning politics displayed a consistent pattern …. On election day, the strongest predictor of electoral success was not which party an individual privately supported but which party he or she expected would win.

Six Degrees attempts to help readers understand the new and exciting field of networks and complexity. While considerably more demanding than a general book like The Tipping Point, it offers readers a snapshot of a riveting moment in science, when understanding things like disease epidemics and the stock market seems almost within our reach. –Therese Littleton

Features

  • Click here to view our Condition Guide and Shipping Prices
  • Condition: NEW
  • ISBN13: 9780393325423
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Over 36 Five Star Customer Reviews On Amazon!

awesome read
This book describes networks and every thing about them. Duncan watts makes the subject accessible to everyone. I enjoyed it greatly.

Good Read
I just finished this book, and feel as though I learned a great deal from it. I knew networks were complex but I never looked at them the way Duncan did. He is a very intelligent man and It was great of him to write a book explaining his research. I would recommend it to anyone who has an open mind and likes to learn about the world we live in.

Get Amazon’s Lowest Price Today!

Other Great Products From Amazon
Linked: How Everything Is Connected to Everything Else and What It Means
Nexus: Small Worlds and the Groundbreaking Theory of Networks
The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference
The Structure and Dynamics of Networks: (Princeton Studies in Complexity)
Small Worlds: The Dynamics of Networks between Order and Randomness (Princeton Studies in Complexity)

Read Full Post »

A Long Time Coming by Evan Thomas – Save 60% Today!

A Long Time Coming by Evan Thomas

Why Buy A A Long Time Coming by Evan Thomas?
Since 1984, Newsweek has been renowned for its vivid, in-depth special election coverage of the ordeal of running for the presidency. A year before the election, Newsweek assigns reporters to get inside the campaigns of the Republican and Democratic candidates. Newsweek promises not to publish any information until after the votes are cast, and in exchange, the reporters receive remarkable access. They travel with the candidates, are there at crucial turning points and confidential meetings, and uncover stories not covered in day-to-day reporting.

In this book, a compelling narrative by Evan Thomas, Newsweek shares the inside stories from one of the most exciting elections in recent history, illuminating the personalities and events that influenced the outcome, and taking stock of the key players and key issues for the new administration. This will be an absorbing read for anyone interested in American politics.

Over 14 Five Star Customer Reviews On Amazon!

inside the election of 2008
Obviously a lot goes on during an election that shouldn’t meet the eye before election day – Newsweek had reporters inside observing everything but embargoed until after the returns were counted – it makes for a great read even tho you know how it came out – and makes you even happier about the result

Get Amazon’s Lowest Price Today!

Other Great Products From Amazon
How Barack Obama Won: A State-by-State Guide to the Historic 2008 Presidential Election (Vintage)
Renegade: The Making of a President
The Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama
The Battle for America 2008: The Story of an Extraordinary Election
The Year of Obama: How Barack Obama Won the White House

Read Full Post »

Seeing by Jose Saramago – Save 22% Today!

Seeing by Jose Saramago

Why Buy A Seeing by Jose Saramago?
On election day in the capital, it is raining so hard that no one has bothered to come out to vote. The politicians are growing jittery. Should they reschedule the elections for another day? Around three o’clock, the rain finally stops. Promptly at four, voters rush to the polling stations, as if they had been ordered to appear.

But when the ballots are counted, more than 70 percent are blank. The citizens are rebellious. A state of emergency is declared. But are the authorities acting too precipitously? Or even blindly? The word evokes terrible memories of the plague of blindness that hit the city four years before, and of the one woman who kept her sight. Could she be behind the blank ballots? A police superintendent is put on the case.

What begins as a satire on governments and the sometimes dubious efficacy of the democratic system turns into something far more sinister. A singular novel from the author of Blindness.

(04/16/2006)

Features

  • Click here to view our Condition Guide and Shipping Prices
  • Condition: USED – LIKE NEW
  • ISBN13: 9780156032735
  • Notes:

Over 30 Five Star Customer Reviews On Amazon!

“The blank vote could be seen as a sign of clear-sightedness on the part of those who used it.”
“Blindness,” Saramago’s most successful novel in America, is a horror story disguised as sociopolitical allegory, while its follow-up, “Seeing,” is a political thriller with a similar allegorical disguise. Both books are set in the same city and they share several characters, but to say that “Seeing” is a sequel is only half-true, since the tone and the themes are quite different. While the original novel is horrifically violent, the follow-up adopts a breezier manner; it’s one of the funniest thrillers I’ve read–at least until Saramago’s trademark cynicism returns full force in the final pages.

In two back-to-back elections in an ostensibly democratic nation, the citizens turn in blank ballots in overwhelming majorities. That is, given choices that seem to be no choice at all, the electorate creates a choice all their own. “The blank vote could be seen as a sign of clear-sightedness on the part of those who used it,” a sentiment that invites the disgust of the ruling patrons. “Rights are not abstractions, retorted the minister of defense, people either deserve rights or they don’t.” And, in the minds of the elected officials (and their media lapdogs), the citizenry not only doesn’t deserve the right to vote, it doesn’t even deserve the right to a government. So the bureaucrats, the police, the army all pack up and leave, surrounding the city and placing it under siege, waiting for the metropolis to implode.

But, initially, nothing really happens (and I’ll be deliberately vague about what does happen). There is a suspicious, transparently planned “terrorist” attack, but otherwise the city gets along just fine and its inhabitants quickly learn to govern themselves. Meanwhile, its self-exiled leaders try to sow divisions and mayhem in the city they left behind, but they only entangle themselves in a swamp of bureaucratic bungling, intra-party clashes, and petty personal squabbles. Indeed, it seems the government doesn’t deserve its people.

Faced with the devious subtlety of peaceful resistance, the administration resorts to a plan that avoids painful introspection: pinning the debacle on a scapegoat. Gradually, the Keystone Cops imbroglio of the book’s first half gives way to a menacing, conspiratorial mission led by an undercover police “superintendent” who is sent back into the city but who gradually questions the virtuousness of his task. Into an urban nightmare that could have been imagined by Kafka slips this conflicted agent straight out of a Graham Greene novel.

In the end, I found this novel to be every bit as dark as “Blindness”–and every bit as readable. Beneath the author’s famously intimidating page-long sentences, unpunctuated dialogue, and unnamed characters are two energetic novels of suspense; the intricacy of the prose slows readers down just enough to appreciate the satire and the wordplay. Still, I couldn’t help myself: I rushed through the last 50 pages of its shocking, unexpected finale as if I were reading a Bourne novel.

amazing
Saramago is simply amazing. It won’t be long until I own all of his books.

Get Amazon’s Lowest Price Today!

Other Great Products From Amazon
Blindness (Movie Tie-In)
Death with Interruptions
All the Names
The Cave
The Gospel According to Jesus Christ

Read Full Post »

Renegade: The Making Of A President By Richard Wolffe

Renegade: The Making Of A President By Richard Wolffe

From The Washington Post
From The Washington Posts Book World/washingtonpost.com Reviewed by Ted Widmer Given how often Barack Obama has been compared to John F. Kennedy, it makes sense that we now have a Camelot-style report on the great campaign of 08. Kennedys election was a literary as well as a political watershed, inspiring writers whose taut and sardonic style mirrored that of JFK himself. Not long after the election, Theodore White broke big with the publication of The Making of the President, 1960, a classic of political reporting that covered the campaign with a novelists sense of drama and a stenographers sense of detail. It has been imitated many times since, including by White himself, who dutifully put himself through the same paces every four years, sweating out similar books all the way through 1972 but never duplicating the caffeinated energy of the original. Despite hundreds of campaign books since then, no one else has either. More consciously than most, Richard Wolffe has now entered the Teddy White sweepstakes with Renegade: The Making of a President. The connection is right there in the title, and from the very first words there is little doubt what he is up to. Wolffe covered the Obama campaign for Newsweek, and at times he seems to be channeling White (who had been a Time reporter), referring to his protagonist as the candidate and deploying short, dramatic sentences that heighten the air of mystery about the transfer of power. Wolffes first sentence (Election day starts, in the small hours, where the candidate has spent most of his last 626 days: on a plane.), like Whites (It was invisible, as always.), comes straight out of Hemingway 101. Renegade stakes an audacious claim to its own importance and largely lives up to it. Like White, Wolffe was lucky in several ways, beginning with the fact that the campaign he chose to cover was exceptionally historic. But he was also granted unusual access to the candidate, and one of the books more interesting episodes reveals that it was Obama who came up with the idea of Wolffes project, nudging him forward with a casual remark (Why cant you write a book about it? Like Theodore White. Those are great books.) Renegade tells the whole amazing story, restating how unlikely it seemed, only two years ago, that President Obama would ever be identified as such. When the campaign started, he was 99th out of 100 senators in seniority. In 2000, he couldnt even gain admission to the Democratic convention, and his credit card was declined when he tried to rent a car in L.A. Wolffe explores all of the ups and downs of 2008, relaying anecdotes both new and familiar. There are not quite as many flashbulb revelations as I expected, beyond a horrifying glimpse into just how directionless the Bush White House was at the time of the economic collapse last fall and some provocative suggestions that the Obama marriage was in trouble around 2000, when his political ambitions were surfacing. But the book is clear, concise and well written, effectively retelling a story that still astonishes us, even after we all lived through it last year. Which is not quite to say that this is The Making of the President, 2008. Wolffe lacks the voracious appetite for detail that characterized Whites books, and he spends almost no time on the other aspirants. He also deviates from Whites model of telling the story the old-fashioned way, from beginning to end. The chapters are lively and well-informed, but some continuity is missing, and quite a few state primaries are ignored or dumbed down. White spent a great deal of attention on the power structures of each region: the urban bosses who would deliver votes in return for backroom promises, the Southern overlords of the Democratic party, the fissures within the Republican Party. This book lacks that sort of comprehensive detail, focusing instead on its protagonist, who is admittedly fascinating — but so was JFK, and White went well beyond him. No particular light is shed on the big efforts in Pennsylvania and North Carolina — and none at all in less scrutinized places like Missouri, where Obama narrowly beat Hillary Clinton with 49 percent of the vote to 48 percent, a crucial step on the way to his victory. The chief drama revolves around Obama-Clinton more than Obama-McCain, and we are shown glimpses of the agitation that Clintons perseverance was causing inside the Obama team. But we are told little of the genuine policy differences that separated them or of the random factors (the spike in gas prices) that also entered into the complex calculus of 2008. Still, the book will please the millions who lived and died with every test of the campaign and should satisfy a hunger to know more about the person at the center of these gravity-defying events. To some extent, Wolffe faces a problem that all writers about Obama have, namely, that it is difficult to write better about the man than Obama himself has already done. But he effectively explores the paradox of the quiet renegade (Obamas Secret Service handle) who rewrote all of the rules of American politics while barely breaking a sweat. Obama, the son of an anthropologist, offers gnomic observations about the political process (interestingly, he admires Ronald Reagan), keeps his head when those around him have lost theirs and retains his likeability throughout, even when complaining that all media scrutiny reminds him of a public colonoscopy. If so, this book will signal a return to the proctologist, but only for a relatively harmless check-up. Like White, Wolffe obviously favors the man he dubs the candidate. But to his credit, he points out the occasional imperfection (some fudging on the issues of campaign finance and NAFTA, for example) and reveals a politician ready to play very hard to win, even while claiming to be above the politics of anger. Wolffe flavors the book with his own opinions — including the arresting thought that the intemperate sermons of Obamas then-pastor, Jeremiah Wright, might easily have been discovered before the Iowa caucus, which would likely have boxed in Obama at the start. Near the beginning of their collaboration, Obama asked Wolffe whether there would be enough drama in a story that merely reflected a successful realization of a vision (What happens if we just had a plan and then went out and said, lets execute it?). That, in a nutshell, is exactly what happened in 2008. But, yes, there is enough drama, and then some, in Renegade. It is surely not the final word — but it is as close as we are likely to get until Obamas aides begin to write their version of an extraordinary American story that is still unfolding.
Copyright 2009, The Washington Post. All Rights Reserved. –This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Review
“The first of the President Obama books–and a good one–insightful, thorough, and straight.”
—Ben Bradlee, Washington Post

“If you really want to know what happened inside the Obama campaign, this is the one book that will take you there. My jaw dropped time and time again reading details that, despite the coverage, were never revealed in the long campaign. A clear-eyed, up-close look at the campaign, Renegade is the one Obama book that should not be missed.”
—Michele Norris, All Things Considered

“A superb achievement. With an almost painterly eye, compelling insights, and extraordinary access to Barack Obama and his inner circle, Richard Wolffe’s Renegade tells the hidden, dramatic story of the 2008 campaign and also reveals much we did not know about the 44th president’s life before politics. Wolffe’s brisk, well-written narrative is fully in the tradition of Theodore White and Richard Ben Cramer, capturing a pivotal presidential

Why Buy A Renegade: The Making Of A President By Richard Wolffe?
Before the White House and Air Force One, before the TV ads and the enormous rallies, there was the real Barack Obama: a man wrestling with the momentous decision to run for the presidency, feeling torn about leaving behind a young family, and figuring out how to win the biggest prize in politics.

This book is the previously untold and epic story of how a political newcomer with no money and an alien name grew into the world’s most powerful leader. But it is also a uniquely intimate portrait of the person behind the iconic posters and the Secret Service code name Renegade.

Drawing on a dozen unplugged interviews with the candidate and president, as well as twenty-one months covering his campaign as it traveled from coast to coast, Richard Wolffe answers the simple yet enduring question about Barack Obama: Who is he?

Based on Wolffe’s unprecedented access to Obama, Renegade reveals the making of a president, both on the campaign trail and before he ran for high office. It explains how the politician who emerged in an extraordinary election learned the personal and political skills to succeed during his youth and early career. With cool self-discipline, calculated risk taking, and simple storytelling, Obama developed the strategies he would need to survive the onslaught of the Clintons and John McCain, and build a multimillion-dollar machine to win a historic contest.

In Renegade, Richard Wolffe shares with us his front-row seat at Obama’s announcement to run for president on a frigid day in Springfield, and his victory speech on a warm night in Chicago. We fly on the candidate’s plane and ride in his bus on an odyssey across a country in crisis; stand next to him at a bar on the night he secures the nomination; and are backstage as he delivers his convention speech to a stadium crowd and a transfixed national audience. From a teacher’s office in Iowa to the Oval Office in Washington, we see and hear Barack Obama with an immediacy and honesty never witnessed before.

Renegade provides not only an account of Obama’s triumphs, but also examines his many personal and political trials. We see Obama wrestling with race and politics, as well as his former pastor Reverend Jeremiah Wright. We see him struggling with life as a presidential candidate, a campaign that falters for most of its first year, and his reaction to a surprise defeat in the New Hampshire primary. And we see him relying on his personal experience, as well as meticulous polling, to pass the presidential test in foreign and economic affairs.

Renegade is an essential guide to understanding President Barack Obama and his trusted inner circle of aides and friends. It is also a riveting and enlightening first draft of history and political psychology.

From the Hardcover edition.

Customer Reviews & Opinions

The Campaign BEHIND The 2008 Presidential Campaign
Having watched the events as they actually unfolded, I did not expect to be so moved by RENEGADE — but even in the era of the 24/7 news cycle, there are still nuggets which don’t surface until after the fact. They’re all here.

Exemplary reporting and graceful writing do not always walk hand-in-hand — and from my own journalistic experience, I know how difficult it is not to “fall in love” with a compelling subject. Mr. Wolffe does a superb job of placing you, the reader, in the position of the proverbial fly-on-the-wall … and succeeds mightily in answering the question on so many people’s minds: “Who Is Barack Obama?”

Great food for a political jukie
Okay before I review this book, I will state I am one of the Kool aid drinkers. I am a political junkie and I am a huge Obama supporter. So, I got what I expected when I picked this book up. I found it so interesting, the behind the scenes look at the campaign, the depth and understanding of President Obama, and the excitement of reliving the campaign that had the right ending in my perspective.

Mr. Wolffe takes the reader from the very beginning, the decision to run, the people saying he couldn’t win, all the ups and downs of the campaign, and then tries to explain how and why it was just the right person for the time and place…I don’t know, just a good book, worth the read if you are interested in politics and may teach you something about our system if you are not.

Get Amazon’s Lowest Price Today!

Other Great Products From Amazon
How Barack Obama Won: A State-by-State Guide to the Historic 2008 Presidential Election (Vintage)
Idiot America: How Stupidity Became a Virtue in the Land of the Free
Losing Mum and Pup: A Memoir
The Year of Obama: How Barack Obama Won the White House
Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance

Read Full Post »

Older Posts »