Here's a joke for you: President Obama nearly bankrupts the country with his out-of-control...
Read OnJust a year after the BP oil spill, America is on the verge of a new golden era of oil exploration...
Read OnAfter two years of public si lence, prominent Midtown business owners are speak ing out over the...
Read OnAmerica has been peopled by vast surges of migration -- from the British Isles in the 18th century,...
Read OnUnions to Obama: Shut up about jets
One of President Obama's most loyal constituencies isn't happy with their champion. "I think it's just insulting,"...EPA serious about politics not protection
The current Enviromental Protection Agency is primarily interested in politics, not protection writes Dr. Gilbert Ross...Doctor government should confiscate fat kids
A Harvard affiliated doctor argues that the solution to obese kids is for the government to take custody of these "at...New poll: Jews won't vote for Obama again
Every presidential election cycle someone somewhere provides proof that, finally, American Jews will stop voting...Money can't buy Palestinian love
The Obama administration went before Congress yesterday claiming that we just have to fund the Palestinian government....Pretty much everyone concedes that New York state's judges deserve a pay raise, given that they haven't gotten one in a dozen years.
New York taxpayers caught a huge break yesterday, when Gov. Cuomo vetoed a bill that would've let school districts borrow to cover pension costs.
Though the decision was entirely expected, it still shocks the conscience.
So here's a cautionary tale.
"Bill Clinton's Racial Slander" (Editorial, July 11) exposes him as yet another hate-mongering leftist.
The liberal Supreme Court that Michael Barone alludes to is no more contorted than the twisted, conservative court that confirmed slavery to be legal ("Liberal Court's Racial Contortions," PostOpinion, July 9).
Aren't we all clueless about jobs ("Clueless About Jobs," Editorial, July 9)? After all, if mankind could manage the economy, the Soviet Union would still be in business. ...
A few years ago, I was teaching a course about rat behavior, and when I began the discussion of the complex, yet predictable, grooming patterns in rats. I reflexively started...
David Bowie: Starman by Paul Trynka Little, Brown and Company A sexual, cultural, political omnivore who reinvented rock ’n’ roll in the ’70s — and himself, reliably, over the...
How do you get to “Camelot”? For John Cullum, the Tony-winning star of stage, screen and TV (“Northern Exposure”), all it took that audition day in 1960 was a bit of the Bard...
Misterioso by Arne Dahl (Pantheon) In the newest Nordic crime fiction from Sweden, the first of Dahl’s Intercrime series, police detective Paul Hjelm has trouble with a hostage...
Dani’s Story A Journey from Neglect to Love by Diane and Bernie Lierow with Kay West Wiley She had never learned to swim. Had rarely bathed. But perhaps the only place that Dani,...
1. Independence was not declared on July 4. Each July 2 my wife and I drag out the grill and invite friends to a cookout to celebrate American independence. Why then and not on...
Not many people pick their passions out of a hat, but Harold Holzer did. The award-winning historian — who’s written, co-written or edited 41 books about Lincoln and the Civil War...
The Astounding, the Amazing, and the Unknown by Paul Malmont (Simon & Schuster) The author of “The Chinatown Death Cloud Peril” mines similar ground in his newest pulp homage, a...
Portrait of a Monster Joran van der Sloot, a Murder in Peru, and the Natalee Holloway Mystery by Lisa Pulitzer and Cole Thompson St. Martin’s Press Joran van der Sloot sits in a...
If there’s one thing Emme wouldn’t mind supersizing, it’s her commute, now that she’s got a Kindle to keep her company. “I take the bus in an hour earlier and just relax,” says...
At The Devil’s Table The Untold Story of the Insider Who Brought Down the Cali Cartel by William C. Rempel Random House Jorge Salcedo watched as a colleague slipped a noose around...
The Declaration of Independents How Libertarian Politics Can Fix What’s Wrong With America by Nick Gillespie and Matt Welch (Public Affairs) To put it mildly, these two Reason...
Martha Stewart’s cultivated much more than heirloom tomatoes: Thanks to her, her only child, Alexis, is an avid reader. “I was told, all the time, to read a book — and I loved...
I didn’t know it was possible to lose your sense of smell. But then I did. It was the summer of 2005; the days hot, muggy and long. I had recently graduated from college, but...
Today the block off 55th Street and 37th Avenue in Woodside, Queens, attracts little notice. There’s a warehouse, a halal poultry shop, a car detailer. But in 1897, a vacant home...
Partitions by Amit Majmudar (Metropolitan Books) Poet (and diagnostic nuclear radiologist) Majmudar’s debut novel is heart-wrenching. Set during the violent 1947 partition of...
My incarceration crept up on me over years, built not in a day, but in millions of moments, one upon the next, as if each were a single brick in some ominous structure of my own...
HBO may have pulled the plug on “In Treatment,” but Gabriel Byrne — its star shrink — is only too happy to analyze the Irish love affair with words. “I suppose it has something to...
He was the Donald Trump of the Gilded Age — flamboyant, ambitious, egregious. He glittered when he walked, his peacock wardrobe shrieking, his diamond rings sparkling, his...
The Language of the Sea by James MacManus (Thomas Dunne) Leo Kemp lives the idyllic life. He’s a well-liked professor of marine studies at an institute on Cape Cod. He has a...
On April 20, 1939, Germany’s Nazi Party celebrated Adolf Hitler’s 50th birthday with an orgy of gift-giving and a display of military firepower unparalleled in the history of the...
On film, she’ll be 16 forever, but Molly Ringwald is now a 43-year-old mother of three, with all the attendant joys and challenges — like trying to explain, to a 7-year-old, why...
CRIME & PUNISHMENT Carte Blanche by Jeffery Deaver (Simon & Schuster, June 14) The actors portraying 007 are always changing, so why not the authors? Deaver (“The Bone...
Lost in Shangri-La by Mitchell Zuckoff Harper When Margaret Hastings found her best friend dead, all she could think about were her shoes. “I ought to have cried,” Hastings wrote...
Lady Blue Eyes My Life With Frank by Barbara Sinatra (Crown) “He considered writing a book himself, but decided against it,” Barbara Sinatra tells Required Reading of her husband...
When told that it’s hard to read his memoir, “An Improvised Life,” without hearing his voice — gruff, semi-sarcastic but wise — in every sentence, Alan Arkin responds in...
A few years ago, the world’s richest arts organization became the epicenter of a scandal that, like revelations of steroid use in baseball, exposed a dirty little secret of the...
Stories My Father Told Me Notes from the Lyon’s Den by Jeffery Lyons Abbeville Press He dined with Alfred Hitchcock in New York’s swankiest restaurants, called Orson Welles his...
The Snowman by Jo Nesbo (Knopf) Fans of Stieg Larsson, rejoice: A serial killer called the Snowman is stalking innocent mothers and wives in Norway. And Nesbo’s anti-hero cop,...
Broadcast legend Larry King has released a new memoir called “Truth Be Told” (Weinstein Books). But anyone who expects his writing to be more coherent than his interview style...