Book Club: Democratic Politics

Chasing Ghosts: A Soldier's Fight for America from Baghdad to Washington


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John's picture

"Chasing Ghosts: A Soldier's Fight for America from Baghdad to Washington" by Paul Rieckhoff is a riveting account of life as an infantry combat soldier in Iraq.

Rieckhoff pulls no punches. The read is brutal, thought-provoking, at at times depressing. Depressing because our policy-makers have failed to learn the lessons of earlier generations.

In many ways, "Chasing Ghosts" follows in the footsteps of William Broyles, Jr.'s Vietnam classic, "Brothers in Arms." It also has the strong emotional rips found in Dan Freedman and Jacqueline Rhode's editing of "Nurses in Vietnam: The Forgotten Veterans." Joan Thomas and Shirley Menard, both nurses in Vietnam who contributed chapters to Rhode's book, and I worked on a project with Bill Broyles in 1991. To this day I remember standing in a light rain before several of the panels of the Vietnam War Memorial with Joan and Shirley. While I had been to the Memorial many times before, this one was special. Thinking back on that day, and reflecting on Paul's book...times haven't changed all that much.

CCN Book Club Wes Recommended Books for July...so far


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CarolNYC's picture

To start this month, we have four very good and interesting recommendations from General Clark.

1) Spy Handler: Memoir of a KGB Officer : The True Story of the Man Who Recruited Robert Hanssen and Aldrich Ames
by Victor Cherkashin with Gregory Feifer

Written by retired senior KGB officer Victory Cherkashin, working with former Moscow correspondent for Radio Free Europe, Gregory Fiefer, this book has been called “a gripping but soberly written expose on the Cold War spy game” by Publisher’s Weekly. Cherkashin relates how he recruited and handled disgruntled CIA officer Aldrich Ames and FBI special agent Robert Haussen. While focussing on Soviet spy craft, the book also gives details on US spying and counter spying, providing an insiders view of the spy business from just after World War II through the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991.

"Netroots Rising" by Lowell Feld and Nate Wilcox


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Stan4Clark's picture

Draft Clark stalwart Lowell Feld collaborated on a book on the rise of the blogosphere (in the largest sense) on politics.  Lowell founded the popular RaisingKaine blog and worked as an Internet director in the Jim Webb campaign.  The book is called Netroots Rising: How a Citizen Army of Bloggers and Online Activists Is Changing American Politics, by
Lowell Feld and fellow Virginian and blogger Nate Wilcox.

Saving General Washington


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cover of Saving General Washington

Saving General Washington

Rating:
Binding: Paperback
List price: $12.95 USD
Amazon price: $7.77 USD

Buy this book at Amazon.com

Wanted to share this with you all. This is an exceptional and entertaining work that compares current leadership to the founding fathers. Norton uses humor and a firm grasp on the issues to show us how vastly unprincipled our current leaders are. He makes a great case as to how the founders were radical progressives and how todays modern progressive movement is very much allinged with the founders own beliefs and ideals.

This is a MUST read. Simple as that. You want a look in to who the guys who founded this nation really were? You want to laugh while doing it? This is the book for you.

BOOK CLUB: Foxes in the Henhouse - Jarding & Saunders


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CarolNYC's picture

Foxes in the Henhouse by Steve Jarding and Mudcat Saunders is one of the books Wes recommended we read and boy, I hope I'm not the only one reading this one. It's a good one. I also hope that Wes isn't the only Democrat paying attention to what these guys are selling.

I'm not quite through the book yet but here are a few initial thoughts.

First of all, these guys are so irreverent...You would all love them. Ann Coulter described as a "mendaciously painted lady who looks more like Bullwinkle J. Moose in a tight skirt and cheap wig than the blond bombshell to which she aspires"....lol! Rummy, Bush and Cheney (who is likened to Ignatius J. Reilly in A Confederacy of Dunces, another book everyone should read) as Larry, Curly and Moe.....and so on....These guys are funny...and they're angry too. I can relate. I think a lot of us can.

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