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Monday, April 4, 2011

Political tales are found @ your library

A Simple Government: Twelve Things We Really Need from Washington (and a Trillion That We Don't!) by Mike Huckabee




From Barnes & Noble -



Former Arkansas governor, former (and perhaps future) presidential candidate, and bestselling author Mike Huckabee (Do the Right Thing; A Simple Christmas) wants our federal government to go back to basic. In A Simple Government, he lays out his critique about what's gone wrong in Washington and counts out a dozen standards that right it. Straightforward and good spirited, A Simple Government might just serve as the prelude for an upcoming Huckabee Washington run.







Against All Odds: My Life of Hardship, Fast Breaks, and Second Chances by Scott Brown




The Washington Post - Steven Levingston


In unsentimental prose, he describes a Dickensian childhood of poverty, sexual predators and brutal stepfathers…Brown's early life was so horrible, it seems a marvel that he surmounted it. No matter your political affiliation, a reader will get an everything's-finally-right-with-the-world thrill from his success in life…













The Longest War: The Enduring Conflict between America and Al-Qaeda by Peter L. Bergen



Publishers Weekly -



Bergen (The Osama bin Laden I Know), CNN's national security analyst, revisits the personality and career of the al-Qaeda leader and his immediate circle, while delving into the conflict between al-Qaeda and associates and the U.S. and its coalition. Much of the narrative conforms in outline to other recent books on the conflict, but Bergen adds much detail and contour to his analyses. He finds serious miscalculations on the part of the terrorist organization, and sees the "surge" in Iraq signaling a larger decline in al-Qaeda's potency. At the same time, he argues that the widespread backlash in the Middle East against the September 11 attacks confirms it is mainstream Islam that poses the greatest "ideological threat" to al-Qaeda. The U.S., meanwhile, has let incompetence and a misguided obsession with Iraq undermine its efforts to extinguish al-Qaeda and the enduring influence of bin Laden, who, Bergen argues, is still alive. Drawing on vast firsthand knowledge of the region and mining a huge stock of primary and secondary material, including his own interviews with combatants, the book's depth of detail and breadth of insight make it one of the more useful analyses of the ongoing conflict.





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