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Jul 9, 2017
07/17
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i look at what is out there and one is called blank list which is map that gives you summaries of books and you can take the option of reading or do it by audio. if you are interested in looking at the whole book, you buy the book itself. but it will give you a snap shot and the key message what is the take away from this book. the other one is called curious also where you get an e-mail every day and it has different things from humanities, to science, to music whatever the area might be in. every day it will give you something in one of those areas. those are the ways you have got to keep your mind active especially somebody like myself where i have to go from, you know, foreign affairs to appropriation to mainly issues. when you get on the airplane, fly from loredo to houston to washington you spend a lot of time on the plane and this is where you use some of those apps to make sure you keep your mind active but at the same time you are constantly learning. >> booktv wants to know what you are reading. send us your summer reading list via twitter at booktv or instagram at book unders
i look at what is out there and one is called blank list which is map that gives you summaries of books and you can take the option of reading or do it by audio. if you are interested in looking at the whole book, you buy the book itself. but it will give you a snap shot and the key message what is the take away from this book. the other one is called curious also where you get an e-mail every day and it has different things from humanities, to science, to music whatever the area might be in....
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Jul 6, 2017
07/17
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my previous book have been reviewed at the time. i have to say i've had my most negative review for my second book that came out 2005 which was a useful experience for me as an editor. i know what it's like to be on the other side. as a consequence i try to be careful and respectful of writers in the effort that it takes to write a book and understand that even if her credits didn't appreciate the book to really make sure that we gave it its due in that we wrote about it accurately. when i write a review although currently not writing them, i've always made a point of in the most critical and negative reviews appointing out with the author did right and what they did well. you can't just go after someone like that. writing a book is hard. it takes a long time and sometimes people have one book in them lesser life goal to publish a book. you have to be cognizant of the take it into account. >> host: a new york times bestseller is on the top of that, how do you compile those list and to is that a point of pride that you see as many peo
my previous book have been reviewed at the time. i have to say i've had my most negative review for my second book that came out 2005 which was a useful experience for me as an editor. i know what it's like to be on the other side. as a consequence i try to be careful and respectful of writers in the effort that it takes to write a book and understand that even if her credits didn't appreciate the book to really make sure that we gave it its due in that we wrote about it accurately. when i...
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Jul 1, 2017
07/17
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you can be pulling a book off the shelf and looking at it and thinking that's going be a $20 book and then you find out it's 7.95 instead. so, i think that's unique. >> welcome. here we are in the orange room at the entrance. one of the entrances into the book store. we have seven different color code rooms, over a million books, and in this room, we have our cooking and humor, new arrivals, and over here we have our used book buying counter. we can do a couple of things for you. we're glad we have in almost every room an information counter and then we have a store map, and paul's is famous for its store maps. this gives you an example of how extensive our location is. and our store map also doubles as a poster so you can take it home with you and constantly be reminded of the riches that are in portland, oregon. so i'm going to take you to probably the most popular -- one of the moe pop -- most popular section, the literature section. first we'll go back to the second entrance to the book store. this is the green room. it's another cash register area and also a promotional display.
you can be pulling a book off the shelf and looking at it and thinking that's going be a $20 book and then you find out it's 7.95 instead. so, i think that's unique. >> welcome. here we are in the orange room at the entrance. one of the entrances into the book store. we have seven different color code rooms, over a million books, and in this room, we have our cooking and humor, new arrivals, and over here we have our used book buying counter. we can do a couple of things for you. we're...
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Jul 31, 2017
07/17
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usual lay dozen or so books i'm doing at one time. last year i wrote two books and this is a weird one. if you think this through, wrote 2500 pages of outlines last year and all my outlines are a draft so draft of 2500 page warm it's all imagination, all just making up stories. here's a story and here's hour i see the story going, we have the -- a book i'm doing with president bill clinton,, and its in outline. >> host: you've done the outline? >> guest: oh, yeah. we are halfway through, we meet frequently, talk on the find lot and it's great. he is a good story-teller, too, and he has information about the presidency and the government that other people don't have. so it's going to be a really -- the president is missing, and i'm so proud to be working with him. >> host: so who is the first draft drafter? >> guest: i never get into how it works but that isn't how it works. >> host: when it that due out. >> next summer. >> host: where did alex kroft come from. >> guest: a long time ago but a peace what when is was agreeing up may grand
usual lay dozen or so books i'm doing at one time. last year i wrote two books and this is a weird one. if you think this through, wrote 2500 pages of outlines last year and all my outlines are a draft so draft of 2500 page warm it's all imagination, all just making up stories. here's a story and here's hour i see the story going, we have the -- a book i'm doing with president bill clinton,, and its in outline. >> host: you've done the outline? >> guest: oh, yeah. we are halfway...
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Jul 4, 2017
07/17
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because you can be pulling a book off the shelf and you're looking at it, and you're thinking that's going to to be a $20 book, and you pleasantly surprised to find out it's $7.95 instead. i think that's unique. so welcome. here we are in the orange room at the entrance. one of our two entrances into the bookstore. we have seven different color-coded rooms. we have over a million books, and in this room we have our cooking, and over here we have our used book-buying counter. well, when you come into our store, we're glad to do a couple of things, and we have in almost every room an information counterrer. and then we have a store map. and powell's is pretty famous for its store map. this gives you an example of how extensive our location is. and our store map also doubles as a poster, so you can take it home with you and constantly be reminded of the riches that are in portland, oregon. so i'm going to take you to probably the most popular, one of the most popular sections in the store, and that's our literature section. but first, we're going to go past our second entrance to the boo
because you can be pulling a book off the shelf and you're looking at it, and you're thinking that's going to to be a $20 book, and you pleasantly surprised to find out it's $7.95 instead. i think that's unique. so welcome. here we are in the orange room at the entrance. one of our two entrances into the bookstore. we have seven different color-coded rooms. we have over a million books, and in this room we have our cooking, and over here we have our used book-buying counter. well, when you come...
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Jul 2, 2017
07/17
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that makes us unique because you could be pulling a book off the shelf and looking at it and think that's going to be a $20 book and you are surprised to find out it's $7.95 instead. so welcome, here we are in the orange room at the entrance. one of our two entrances into the bookstore.we have seven different color-coded rooms, over 1 million books and in this room we have our cooking and humor new arrivals and over here we have our used book by encounter. when you come into our store we are glad to do a couple things and first of all we are glad we have in almost every room information counter and a storm that and powells is famous for its store map. this gives you an example of how extensive our location is. and our store map also doubles as a poster so you can take it home with you. andconstantly be reminded of the riches that are in portland oregon . i'm going to take you to probably the most popular section in the store and that's our literature section. but first we're going to go past hour second entrance to the bookstore. this is the green room. it's another cash register area and
that makes us unique because you could be pulling a book off the shelf and looking at it and think that's going to be a $20 book and you are surprised to find out it's $7.95 instead. so welcome, here we are in the orange room at the entrance. one of our two entrances into the bookstore.we have seven different color-coded rooms, over 1 million books and in this room we have our cooking and humor new arrivals and over here we have our used book by encounter. when you come into our store we are...
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Jul 29, 2017
07/17
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>> we've got books up at the front counter, deepak will be up here signing. thank you all. >> booktv recently visited capitol hill to ask members of congress what they're reading this summer. >> congressman, what are you reading this summer? >> it's the life and times of robert kennedy. first of all, robert kennedy was a new york senator, and i'm a representative from new york. schlessinger wrote an incredible book about bobby kennedy's life, his political life, the history of his family, and it's certainly an enjoyable read. >> booktv wants know what you're -- wants to know what you're reading. end us your summer reading list @booktv or instagram at book underscore tv or post it to our facebook page, facebook.com/booktv. booktv on c-span2, television for serious readers. >> and you're watching booktv on c-span2. it's television for serious readers. we're in new york city at the publishers annual trade show, and what we like to do during the summer is preview some of the fall books that are coming out. next up we want to introduce you to zoe quinn the author
>> we've got books up at the front counter, deepak will be up here signing. thank you all. >> booktv recently visited capitol hill to ask members of congress what they're reading this summer. >> congressman, what are you reading this summer? >> it's the life and times of robert kennedy. first of all, robert kennedy was a new york senator, and i'm a representative from new york. schlessinger wrote an incredible book about bobby kennedy's life, his political life, the...
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Jul 30, 2017
07/17
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unless your summer reading list by a twitter at book tv or instagram at book ótv or posted to our facebookpage, facebook.com/book tv. book tv on c-span2: television for serious readers. >> one of the things we like to do on book tv is preview some of the books that will be coming out this fall. joining us now in new york is an author and a photographer whose name is pete souza. mister souza, what do you do for a living? >> right now i'm trying to finish up my book. it's pretty much done but there's still a lot of last-minute production things that we are dealing with. >> what did you do for a living? >> for eight years i was president obama's chief white house photographer. she photographer's role is to document the presidency or history. and what that means depends on the photographer and the president and in this case president obama understood the role of truly visually documenting his presidency so he gave me access to pretty much everything. so i think i was able to create an archive of photographs that will live in perpetuity at the national archives. >> how long has the president ha
unless your summer reading list by a twitter at book tv or instagram at book ótv or posted to our facebookpage, facebook.com/book tv. book tv on c-span2: television for serious readers. >> one of the things we like to do on book tv is preview some of the books that will be coming out this fall. joining us now in new york is an author and a photographer whose name is pete souza. mister souza, what do you do for a living? >> right now i'm trying to finish up my book. it's pretty much...
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Jul 3, 2017
07/17
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>> guest: i hated of the new york times book review and oversee books covered at the "new york times" which extends from reviews in the sunday book review to our daily critics, to reporting on the industry to profiles and features, sort of trying to cover really natalie with the latest is in books but also to cover the way which books intersect with the larger culture and with the news in general. >> host: if somebody gets the sunday new times or the book review separately, can you read just one or do they come in a series? if you pick a point is a like a short story of its own? >> guest: a book review? i think a book review serves multiple purposes. ideally it steatite what's in the book, to get a sense of the writing and offer some kind of judgment. i also think a book review in and of itself is a kind of art form. there is a certain writing that takes place in literary criticism that you wouldn't get in the rest of the new support or even in a feature about a book. because criticism is an art form. often my hope is that people are not dislike for book review to decide whether or no
>> guest: i hated of the new york times book review and oversee books covered at the "new york times" which extends from reviews in the sunday book review to our daily critics, to reporting on the industry to profiles and features, sort of trying to cover really natalie with the latest is in books but also to cover the way which books intersect with the larger culture and with the news in general. >> host: if somebody gets the sunday new times or the book review...
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Jul 23, 2017
07/17
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send us your summer reading list via twitter book tv, or instagram at book -underscore tv, or poster tour facebook page, facebook.com/book tv. book tv on c-span2, television for serious readers. >> and book tv is on location on the campus of ucla. were talking to professors who are also authors and history professor is our guests. she is the co-author of this book "the american war, the history of the civil war era". joan, 1850, give us a snapshot of the united states. >> guest: 1850 was the first year of the decade that brought on the secession crisis led to the civil war. 1850 was the year that california came in to the union. 1850 was also the year that a compromise was forged, it was the last great compromise, they did not know it then, but we know it now that save the union. it was a compromise forged by the north and the south. that involved a number of major changes to the way territories would come into the united states and involved the passage of the new fugitive law act. another compromises that neither side, north or south, pro free labor or slave labor was happy about. bu
send us your summer reading list via twitter book tv, or instagram at book -underscore tv, or poster tour facebook page, facebook.com/book tv. book tv on c-span2, television for serious readers. >> and book tv is on location on the campus of ucla. were talking to professors who are also authors and history professor is our guests. she is the co-author of this book "the american war, the history of the civil war era". joan, 1850, give us a snapshot of the united states. >>...
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Jul 16, 2017
07/17
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new books out with excitement and expectation. but the fact is what we are doing at the new york times is performing triage. nobody has time to read all these books so our role as editors and critics is to sift through everything and to find the books that are truly worth people's time and the ones we think people are looking to "the new york times" to have a seasoned critic weigh in on and offer perspective. ultimately, that really comes down to the book itself. so, you know, you can send us a copy, you know, wrapped in a birthday cake covered with candy kisses and we can have all of the publicity in the world and much fanfare surrounding titles but in the end what we are doing as editors is lifting up the book and seeing if it is worth it. for me, for my book of books, i tend to make my own book choices based on the gut instinct in the moment. it is about what i need intellectually, emotionally at that time. you know, whether it is to state a certain kind of curiosity if there is information i am after or something more of a gut level emotional tug like the need fo
new books out with excitement and expectation. but the fact is what we are doing at the new york times is performing triage. nobody has time to read all these books so our role as editors and critics is to sift through everything and to find the books that are truly worth people's time and the ones we think people are looking to "the new york times" to have a seasoned critic weigh in on and offer perspective. ultimately, that really comes down to the book itself. so, you know, you can...
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Jul 23, 2017
07/17
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everyone has their galleys out, their new books in their search site equipment but what we're doing at the new york times is performing a triage. no one has time to read all of these books. what we see our role as editors and critics is to sift through everything and to find the books that are truly worth's time and the ones we think people are looking to the new york times to have a season critic way and offer perspective on an. ultimately, that comes down to the book itself. you can send us a copy wrapped in a perfect cake covered with candy and we can have all the publicity in the world and there's much fanfare surrounding certain titles but am in the end, what we're doing as editors is looking at the book itself and seeing if it is worth it. for me, for my book of books, i tend to make my own book choices based on an instinct in the moment. for me it's about what i need intellectually, emotionally at that time and whether it's a certain curiosity or information i am after or if it's something that is more of a gut level, emotional tug like the need for a sad story or the need to ge
everyone has their galleys out, their new books in their search site equipment but what we're doing at the new york times is performing a triage. no one has time to read all of these books. what we see our role as editors and critics is to sift through everything and to find the books that are truly worth's time and the ones we think people are looking to the new york times to have a season critic way and offer perspective on an. ultimately, that comes down to the book itself. you can send us a...
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Jul 9, 2017
07/17
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you have going at one time. >> right now i think i got six books going. >> so. >> how you manage that? >> i don't speak sleep much. >> and you read whatever you're in the mood to read. >> at the doctrine of liberty is in another itself that is her doctrine of liberty within my faith which is the church of latter day saints. jim demint started working with a group to try to get an article v convention to rewrite aspects of the other states constitution which i adamantly opposed to. i used to fight that all the time and debate that. i'm tired of debating. underscored right a book parts i wrote a book and it's called back.com. >> booktv wants to know what you're reading. send us your summer reading list via twitter @booktv or instagram at book underscore booktv or for our facebook page facebook.com/booktv. >> booktv on c-span2, television for serious readers. >> jack unit has been as a journalist in germany since 1994 including more than a decade as a correspondent at business week magazine here he joined "new york times" county joined a times in janu
you have going at one time. >> right now i think i got six books going. >> so. >> how you manage that? >> i don't speak sleep much. >> and you read whatever you're in the mood to read. >> at the doctrine of liberty is in another itself that is her doctrine of liberty within my faith which is the church of latter day saints. jim demint started working with a group to try to get an article v convention to rewrite aspects of the other states constitution which i...
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Jul 9, 2017
07/17
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also that evening, will be in new york at the brooklyn bridge park with former literary editor of the london times, erica wagner's book is a biography of the builder of the brooklyn bridge. on wednesday were back in washington at busboys and poets were georgetown university law professor paul butler will argue that statistics are influencing racial injustice in policing america. also that evening, will be a tattered covered bookstore in denver where radio broadcaster and journalist david baron, reports on the american scientist who studied the solar eclipse of 1878. saturday will be back at politics and prose to hear a story and william randall recover how the united states use the 1812 war to become international independent of great britain. that some of the events that will be coming this week and many of these events are open to the public. look for them to air in the near future on the tv on c-span two. >> stop harassment and take your power back. gretchen carlson is the author. ms. carlson what are you trying to stay with this cover? >> guest: to be fierce. to encourage all women feel like they been put down or
also that evening, will be in new york at the brooklyn bridge park with former literary editor of the london times, erica wagner's book is a biography of the builder of the brooklyn bridge. on wednesday were back in washington at busboys and poets were georgetown university law professor paul butler will argue that statistics are influencing racial injustice in policing america. also that evening, will be a tattered covered bookstore in denver where radio broadcaster and journalist david baron,...
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Jul 1, 2017
07/17
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at that time. lewis never really completely mastered it, but they did bring with them, not just kelly's book, but also lengthy tables and charts of the positions of various astronomical bodies as they would have appeared at different times and that was a way to trace longitude by majoring distances between say the moment and the moon and stars and other bodies, so they never quite fully mastered this technique, but it was key to creating what would eventually be a successful map of the american west that clark put together, so when lewis and clark first arrived in oregon they were understandably ecstatic. this long journey had reached its destination and when clark first saw the pacific ocean, although, it turned out it was not quite the pacific, but they were close and he wrote in his journal famously, oceanview, oh the joy so this was in november 1805. there was a great deal of ecstasy at the time, but as the core discovery spent the next several months in oregon on the coast, a bit inland from the coast they quickly grew disenchanted with its. rainy winter and claimed only seven or eight days had b
at that time. lewis never really completely mastered it, but they did bring with them, not just kelly's book, but also lengthy tables and charts of the positions of various astronomical bodies as they would have appeared at different times and that was a way to trace longitude by majoring distances between say the moment and the moon and stars and other bodies, so they never quite fully mastered this technique, but it was key to creating what would eventually be a successful map of the american...
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Jul 9, 2017
07/17
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book will be glad they did. please join me in welcoming jack ewing. [applause] >> thank you very much, marc and it's great to be at the politics and prose which i understand is quite an institution in the washington area. the way that this book got started was that the editor and chief of norton sent me an e-mail and asking if i ever thought of writing a book about the volkswagen scandal to let them know and i let them know about five minutes later that it would be interested. one of the first things we were taught but have the book should be written, one of the first things that he said to me was jack, i don't care about cars. i'm not a car person. you have to write a book that is to want to read. iced sort of quarrel with what publishers weekly said about this being for a niche audience because i try to make it a deal that's really about ambition, abuse of power. it's a book about how a toxic organizational culture can push ordinary basically decent people to commit crimes. and it's also a tragedy because the whole scandal threatens the jobs of hundreds of thousands come literally hundreds of thousands of volksw
book will be glad they did. please join me in welcoming jack ewing. [applause] >> thank you very much, marc and it's great to be at the politics and prose which i understand is quite an institution in the washington area. the way that this book got started was that the editor and chief of norton sent me an e-mail and asking if i ever thought of writing a book about the volkswagen scandal to let them know and i let them know about five minutes later that it would be interested. one of the...
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Jul 30, 2017
07/17
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send us your list via twitter at book to me or instagram at book -underscore tv. or posted to the facebook page at facebook.com/book tv. [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] >> welcome to the hudson institute. i am john, senior fellow and director of the center for american, culture. hudson promotes american leadership in global engagement for secure, free, prosperous future. we were founded in 1961 by strategist herman con. we challenge thinking and help with transitions of the future through disciplinary studies and defense, international relations, economics, we are delighted to host british journalist, author, think tank or david goodhart. he is currently the head of a demography unit a policy change think tank. his former editor of prospect magazine and former director of the centerleft he most. his previous book successes and failures the postwar immigration was a runner-up. david has written a powerful book, the road to somewhere, the populist revolt of the future politics. you can see on amazon and elsewhere. britain, like the united states is cu
send us your list via twitter at book to me or instagram at book -underscore tv. or posted to the facebook page at facebook.com/book tv. [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] >> welcome to the hudson institute. i am john, senior fellow and director of the center for american, culture. hudson promotes american leadership in global engagement for secure, free, prosperous future. we were founded in 1961 by strategist herman con. we challenge thinking and help with transitions of...
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Jul 3, 2017
07/17
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her new book, "this fight is our fight" is a call to action pic in the new times paul krugman called at a muscular unapologetic book and that's right. it relentless examines the reasons why the middle class is under siege and now we can't and must fight to save it. it demands with all pay attention. senator warren, we're here to tell good, we are listening and we are ready. please help me welcome in senator elizabeth warren. [cheers and applause] >> thank you. thank you. thank you. thank you. thank you all. that's fiv fabulous. wow, a room full of people who i can come out and who liked books and a ready to get into a fight. i'm ready. i'm ready. the cystitis. i am so glad you are here tonight. what i thought i would do is i would read you some from the book and tell you the bit about the argument in the book, and read a little more and then take as many questions as we possibly can. i think you are asked to do questions on the way in and we have whole stack of them and i'll try to do as many of them as i can. i'm going to start in the middle of the book, start here in washington. peopl
her new book, "this fight is our fight" is a call to action pic in the new times paul krugman called at a muscular unapologetic book and that's right. it relentless examines the reasons why the middle class is under siege and now we can't and must fight to save it. it demands with all pay attention. senator warren, we're here to tell good, we are listening and we are ready. please help me welcome in senator elizabeth warren. [cheers and applause] >> thank you. thank you. thank...
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Jul 16, 2017
07/17
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and really when you think about the books at the old manse it is the heart and soul of the house and all the people that touched these books and used these books and some of them have inscriptions. up on the second floor we have them in bookshelves that handles on the side so they could easily be removed in case of a fire and needed to take up this wonderful books. we have many of the near and, in fact, we just finished a conservation project to look at the books and take the 250 books that predated even 1750 and three houston. we're really proud of the collection here and continue to look at it. many of the books are inscribed such as this one that was inscribed from emerson to his friend sarah ripley. they were related come same family line, and sarah ripley was his amazing woman that lived here. she was a mother, some wonderful anecdotes talk about her where she would be rocking a crater with one foot in reading a book in sanskrit with the other. so for emerson their friendship was really an important thing. they share the intellectualism, the interest in the outdoors, writing in l
and really when you think about the books at the old manse it is the heart and soul of the house and all the people that touched these books and used these books and some of them have inscriptions. up on the second floor we have them in bookshelves that handles on the side so they could easily be removed in case of a fire and needed to take up this wonderful books. we have many of the near and, in fact, we just finished a conservation project to look at the books and take the 250 books that...
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Jul 29, 2017
07/17
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book. a little bit of a joke. spoiler alert here but i did get the girl. [laughter] for. >> if you read the story you'll realize it was a long shot at that point. [laughter] >> she's been with me every step of the way as i wrote this book first of all saying, are you kidding. you know, it's better than i thought it would be so we are making progress. thank you, thank you for your support. you know, i was trying to think about a lot of ways i could talk about the book with you all and why i wrote the book and i brought a little prop that helps keep focus because when you think about adult, medicine and bradley talked about all the different adult hospitals, children's hospitals, i want to get you focused on something. i think this prop might help and that is this, this is a little -- >> it's a 3d printer, replica of a baby's heart. i tell the story in the book about a girl and i was with her today on television if anybody was watching channel 7 this morning, tanisha was with me and she was shot in the heart, now, when she came in i operated on her in the emergency department because her heart lad stopped, big round. but this is a baby's heart and
book. a little bit of a joke. spoiler alert here but i did get the girl. [laughter] for. >> if you read the story you'll realize it was a long shot at that point. [laughter] >> she's been with me every step of the way as i wrote this book first of all saying, are you kidding. you know, it's better than i thought it would be so we are making progress. thank you, thank you for your support. you know, i was trying to think about a lot of ways i could talk about the book with you all...
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Jul 29, 2017
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here is a look at some of the books house speaker paul ryan has on his summer list. e is reading washington:a life by best-selling biographer ron chernow. it is an in-depth look at the first president of the united states. also on this list is strong fathers, strong daughters by pediatrician he and doctor meg meeker who highlights the importance of the father/daughter relationship. >> booktv wants to know what you are reading, send your summer reading list via twitter at booktv or instagram at book/tv or posted to our facebook page, facebook.com/booktv. ok
here is a look at some of the books house speaker paul ryan has on his summer list. e is reading washington:a life by best-selling biographer ron chernow. it is an in-depth look at the first president of the united states. also on this list is strong fathers, strong daughters by pediatrician he and doctor meg meeker who highlights the importance of the father/daughter relationship. >> booktv wants to know what you are reading, send your summer reading list via twitter at booktv or...
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Jul 3, 2017
07/17
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we look at this and we realize that this was a very long ago. this book, again the notices, i think it's 1831 the notices go up to. but again slavery existed in the south until the 1860s, and i think it was sometime in the 1930s the wpa went around and actually took oral interviews. there upon the libra congress. they have been transcribed and you can get a picture how people were treated at that time. we don't have that in the north because there was a very slow, a very slow, gradual -- i think it was sometime, i think it's july in 1799 the gradual law was passed which says that anyone who has come in the woman that gives birth to a baby that's enslaved, according to the mother, the baby will have 25 years to serve if she's a girl, 28 years to serve the master of her mother, 20 years to serve if the baby is a male. and the loss kept changing. but at the time if you kept that child, you were entitled to $3.50 a month from the state of new york for the upkeep of the child. but many people what the widget is they would take the baby comes you would have to
we look at this and we realize that this was a very long ago. this book, again the notices, i think it's 1831 the notices go up to. but again slavery existed in the south until the 1860s, and i think it was sometime in the 1930s the wpa went around and actually took oral interviews. there upon the libra congress. they have been transcribed and you can get a picture how people were treated at that time. we don't have that in the north because there was a very slow, a very slow, gradual -- i...
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Jul 29, 2017
07/17
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here is a look at some of the books house speaker paul ryan has on his summer list. he is reading washington:a life by best-selling biographer ron chernow. it is an in-depth look at the first president of the united states. also on this list is strong fathers, strong daughters by pediatrician he and doctor meg meeker who highlights the importance of the father/daughter relationship. >> booktv wants to know what you are reading, send your summer reading list via twitter at booktv or instagram at book/tv or posted to our facebook page, facebook.com/booktv. booktv on c-span2, television for serious readers. [laughter] >> good morning. my name is kirsten carter, senior archivist at the presidential library. on behalf of the library i would like to welcome you to the roosevelt reading festival. fdr planned for the library to become the premier research institution for studying the entire roosevelt era. the library research room is consistently one of the busiest of all the presidential libraries and is europe's group of authors reflect the wide variety of research done her
here is a look at some of the books house speaker paul ryan has on his summer list. he is reading washington:a life by best-selling biographer ron chernow. it is an in-depth look at the first president of the united states. also on this list is strong fathers, strong daughters by pediatrician he and doctor meg meeker who highlights the importance of the father/daughter relationship. >> booktv wants to know what you are reading, send your summer reading list via twitter at booktv or...
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Jul 1, 2017
07/17
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you can watch any program you see here online at boot-- book twiki.org
you can watch any program you see here online at boot-- book twiki.org
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Jul 9, 2017
07/17
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there are different apps and so i always look at what's out there and one will give you summaries of books and you can either take the option of reading or do it by audio and then if you are interested in looking at the whole book but it will give you a snapshot and at the end it will give you the message what is the take away from this book and they had different things from humanities test plans so everyday i will give you something so those are the ways you've got to keep your mind active and especially somebody like myself where i have to go from foreign affairs to appropriations and then when you get on the airplane in flight from houston to washington you spend a lot of time on the plane so this is where you use some of those to make sure you keep your mind active and at the same time you are constantly learning. send your reading list on booktv or insta graham at booktv or post it to the facebook page facebook.com/booktv. >>> former nixon white house aide pat buchanan. [inaudible conversations] >> good afternoon and welcome to the new nixon library. i am the president of the richard
there are different apps and so i always look at what's out there and one will give you summaries of books and you can either take the option of reading or do it by audio and then if you are interested in looking at the whole book but it will give you a snapshot and at the end it will give you the message what is the take away from this book and they had different things from humanities test plans so everyday i will give you something so those are the ways you've got to keep your mind active...
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Jul 9, 2017
07/17
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book was the universality of physics. i kind of knew this but it was striking. there's at least 42 devices i talk about in the book and to understand them you only need to know handful. once you have them then you see the same physics get used again and again. for example magnetic induction electric currents create magnetic field. we know because there's electromagnet on the larger the currents is the greater the magnetic field. an electrical current is a moving charge and generates a moving field. beautiful symmetry of physics is moving magnetic field can induce electrical current. this gets exploited in the senior credit card. that has your account information is presented on the front is a series of numbers but also on the back of your card in this black stripe which is actually a region of magnetized material and you either have a north pole up or down and so on. this is a one, zero one and zero. but now how do i read it, how do i get this information that is where you use magnetic information. i don't have the demo here but i don't need it because of the internet that
book was the universality of physics. i kind of knew this but it was striking. there's at least 42 devices i talk about in the book and to understand them you only need to know handful. once you have them then you see the same physics get used again and again. for example magnetic induction electric currents create magnetic field. we know because there's electromagnet on the larger the currents is the greater the magnetic field. an electrical current is a moving charge and generates a moving...
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Jul 16, 2017
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book too weak a lot of speers. and she is just fun to read. that is important for the next generation take a look at this book with the of bibliography and they're all different others you can pursue but it is important to get the young generation motivated to get to work. and the kids coming now don't know what this is. the price for the cost for the profit so the of a classical education if you're teaching in english class every day we do what everybody takes for granted but i hope we have these kids prepared to go out into a the work world because we're paying 14 grand for year for 13 years so we should be doing this and also it is interesting rainouts that is one of the reasons i highlight the book we don't teach that judeo-christian and decision and i taught all of those philosophers and those ethics the live in now that system with indian friends so those are the people but they don't have that moral theory cater 12 and that is kind of shocking and to to share some ideas which you base for doing that for us. [inaudible conversations] welcome to tonight's program of we are very pleased and is a
book too weak a lot of speers. and she is just fun to read. that is important for the next generation take a look at this book with the of bibliography and they're all different others you can pursue but it is important to get the young generation motivated to get to work. and the kids coming now don't know what this is. the price for the cost for the profit so the of a classical education if you're teaching in english class every day we do what everybody takes for granted but i hope we have...
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Jul 3, 2017
07/17
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and wraps up our look at do best selling nonfiction books according to the washington post was i was told to come alone o
and wraps up our look at do best selling nonfiction books according to the washington post was i was told to come alone o
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Jul 15, 2017
07/17
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MSNBCW
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at check-in. yeah. like i said. book now at choicehotels.com (flourish spray noise) (flourish spray noise) (flourish spray noise) (flourish spray noise) the joy of real cream in 15 calories per serving. enough said. reddi-wip. (flourish spray noise) share the joy. >>> i can't believe you're 35. you're a winner, a champ, you're great at real estate and boy, can you entertain. >> we're learning more about the relationship between them. and then agalarov is a russian pop singer who says he first met trump about four years ago when he traveled to las vegas to discuss hosting the miss universe pageant at his family owned home in moscow. traveling with him, a real estate develop we are close ties to vladimir putin who has built a fortune thanks on construction projects. the agalarovs appear to have grown close to trump and his family. that's them partying together at miss universe in moscow in 2013. donald trump jr. sought this week to downplay the relationship. >> successful real estate developers over there. that's the exten
at check-in. yeah. like i said. book now at choicehotels.com (flourish spray noise) (flourish spray noise) (flourish spray noise) (flourish spray noise) the joy of real cream in 15 calories per serving. enough said. reddi-wip. (flourish spray noise) share the joy. >>> i can't believe you're 35. you're a winner, a champ, you're great at real estate and boy, can you entertain. >> we're learning more about the relationship between them. and then agalarov is a russian pop singer who...
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Jul 1, 2017
07/17
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i had a few second attempts at books that didn't make it to the finish line, and so i'veer in discussed the existence of this book project until it was finished, because i didn't believe i would finish it. i don't believe -- any of the long-term writing projects have engaged in, never talk about until they're done because i have -- no one has less faith in my ability to complete a long-term writing project than i do. but we have this one don. >> host: coming out in november 0 of of u of this year, employ playing with fire: the 1968 election and the transformation of american politics." >> guest: thank you very much. >> booktv on twitter and facebook, and we want to hear from you.
i had a few second attempts at books that didn't make it to the finish line, and so i'veer in discussed the existence of this book project until it was finished, because i didn't believe i would finish it. i don't believe -- any of the long-term writing projects have engaged in, never talk about until they're done because i have -- no one has less faith in my ability to complete a long-term writing project than i do. but we have this one don. >> host: coming out in november 0 of of u of...
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Jul 15, 2017
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if you read about the place in the book and look at the forecasts. was going talk about a couple books. these are some i've collected. winston churchill and the first autobiographyy i read was a book by winston churchill called "my earl life" and i love his way of writing, uses a lot of transitive verbs, very expressive. and i tried to emulate him without much success because he is a great writer. abraham lincoln's autograph. a. lincoln, member of congress. a copy of a fountain i got from the library of congress that's the copy on the only photograph of lincoln when he was in office. and i love lincoln and i have read just about every biography. i read one by thomas that won the pulitzer prize so might be a recommendation there on the bomb is an autograph. james mad -- madison, to remind me what we're doing here. and he is not as well known others other president but one of this did indicated -- dedicated individuals who started our country and is a great president. now to get to the answer to your question, what have i read recently, yesterday mornin
if you read about the place in the book and look at the forecasts. was going talk about a couple books. these are some i've collected. winston churchill and the first autobiographyy i read was a book by winston churchill called "my earl life" and i love his way of writing, uses a lot of transitive verbs, very expressive. and i tried to emulate him without much success because he is a great writer. abraham lincoln's autograph. a. lincoln, member of congress. a copy of a fountain i got...
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Jul 30, 2017
07/17
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at this time, landsberg. he followed and was researching a previous book. he discovered these files in nuremberg fleamarket, which probably had been stolen or at least they end up in the free market, the director of landsberg prison had been robbed and somehow ended up years later at the fleamarket and everybody visited the prison. you go in and you get to stay . so that was a wonderful surprise . i got in my topic, the trial opened february 26, 1974 and in the signing hall of the military academy because they didn't have a room big enough or secure enough then this. there's a massive undertaking . nothing like in germany for years, there are about a dozen defense lawyers, a team of judges, 24 days of proceedings, reporters came from all over germany and europe, france, switzerland, and the navy and elsewhere to cover the sensational trial. it seemed endless from the get-go. and hitler takes the stand, chief defendant hour after hour and it was this very guttural voice. he's not quite shrieking as we are used too it seems but again, the press covered this in
at this time, landsberg. he followed and was researching a previous book. he discovered these files in nuremberg fleamarket, which probably had been stolen or at least they end up in the free market, the director of landsberg prison had been robbed and somehow ended up years later at the fleamarket and everybody visited the prison. you go in and you get to stay . so that was a wonderful surprise . i got in my topic, the trial opened february 26, 1974 and in the signing hall of the military...
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Jul 15, 2017
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that was also preordained by the conflicts that were in resolvable. >> here's a look at authors recently featured on book tvs afterwards. motherboard senior editor brian merchant retreats the creation and development of the iphone. temple university professor keith davis looked at gender identity and rachel snyder and jonathan moore .-dot reported how low and moderate income families manage money. in the coming weeks journalist cheryl acta said will report on how smear tactics are used. connecticut congresswoman will discuss her congressional work and this weekend on afterwards, naomi klein provides her analysis of the term presidency and what it means for the future of american politics. >> i think there's a case to be made that foreign governments are deciding to stay and have expensive events at trump properties to ingratiate themselves to the presidents and hopefully get into his good gracious. but, there are other things to look at as well including the fact that chinese government has been granting a wave of trademarks to trams to sell their products in china what i most disturbed by is that the ch
that was also preordained by the conflicts that were in resolvable. >> here's a look at authors recently featured on book tvs afterwards. motherboard senior editor brian merchant retreats the creation and development of the iphone. temple university professor keith davis looked at gender identity and rachel snyder and jonathan moore .-dot reported how low and moderate income families manage money. in the coming weeks journalist cheryl acta said will report on how smear tactics are used....
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Jul 15, 2017
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we have many of them here and we finished a conservation project to look at the books, and the 250 books 1750 and rehouse them. and continued to look at it and many of the books are inscribed such as this one that was inscribed from emerson to his friend sarah ripley. and ripley was this amazing woman who lived here. she was a mother, wonderful anecdotes talk about her, rocking a cradle with 1 foot and reading a book in sanskrit with the other. for emerson and their friendship was an important thing. they shared the interest in the outdoors, writing and reading and learning. a book like this described by emerson is one of the many ones we had in the collection, they have taken notes as they have gone through and books back and forth to different individuals, tells us a lot about using these books through history. when we are standing in the study, you have to look at the views, the landscape, from these windows in this room that back during the revolutionary period, the emerson family first looked out and saw the commotion over the northbridge, the shot heard around the world so they tal
we have many of them here and we finished a conservation project to look at the books, and the 250 books 1750 and rehouse them. and continued to look at it and many of the books are inscribed such as this one that was inscribed from emerson to his friend sarah ripley. and ripley was this amazing woman who lived here. she was a mother, wonderful anecdotes talk about her, rocking a cradle with 1 foot and reading a book in sanskrit with the other. for emerson and their friendship was an important...
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o'connell told what they had to do now the book at the. bottom of bullshit email. she. was off gonna be. found a year to definite how. they don't know what i want of me. and i don't know why he. believes. them and we should she stood up and become the city of the studies that even. if. i believe it was not lazy on the decide this is. the least something to feel. special. because she seems. to. be able became one of the someone on the phone to you sweetie and my mom to wish you. the phone number on the from. the computers are a bit off plus all of these are going to come up to. find out what the fish. came about that and what have actual stuff you shot up. about it mr guffey just sold it at the last minute. as. a film about it was cut off. by no i'm always up on. the net. sort of. here's what people have been saying about rejected a knighthood to us exactly just pull along. the only show i go out of my way to launch you know what it is that really packs a punch at least yampa is the john oliver of hearty americans do the same we are apparently better than food the things
o'connell told what they had to do now the book at the. bottom of bullshit email. she. was off gonna be. found a year to definite how. they don't know what i want of me. and i don't know why he. believes. them and we should she stood up and become the city of the studies that even. if. i believe it was not lazy on the decide this is. the least something to feel. special. because she seems. to. be able became one of the someone on the phone to you sweetie and my mom to wish you. the phone number...
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Jul 31, 2017
07/17
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CNBC
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the point is it could stay at a material discount and still see huge price increase. >> it's at book an improving global economy. >> any time you say you're basically saying it was really, really ugly and now it has good make up on it so it deserves to trade at 1.7. >> no it's 8 years since the end of the financial crisis. what josh was talking about with the balance sheet, sorry steve was, that is the natural roll off of all of the crummy loans they made ten years ago. it's been 8 years. they allowed them to roll off. they're not plague game with the balance sheet here it's just time >> and you will never find ceos. >> you need interest rates to actually get a descent spread. you guys are in a love fest with this sector. thank goodness i'm here to bring reality. we have done fairly well here. i think they're fuller to the point of view that the interest rate environment and banking regulation and all the stuff is not materialized now maybe they will. okay maybe in the first quarter of next year all of a sudden we'll get deregulation and everything else meanwhile the loan books are m
the point is it could stay at a material discount and still see huge price increase. >> it's at book an improving global economy. >> any time you say you're basically saying it was really, really ugly and now it has good make up on it so it deserves to trade at 1.7. >> no it's 8 years since the end of the financial crisis. what josh was talking about with the balance sheet, sorry steve was, that is the natural roll off of all of the crummy loans they made ten years ago. it's...
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Jul 15, 2017
07/17
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a glimpse of the lake would add to that effect, so she got what she asked for if you look at the book you can see the additions. again, it's this interconnection , dovetailing a material that is really what we do. we are not looking just to collect hot spots and names. 's has been things that fit together and allow a good story to be told. >> we are at the old north bridge at minute man national in massachusetts were seized and is learning more about that literary scene. next speak with
a glimpse of the lake would add to that effect, so she got what she asked for if you look at the book you can see the additions. again, it's this interconnection , dovetailing a material that is really what we do. we are not looking just to collect hot spots and names. 's has been things that fit together and allow a good story to be told. >> we are at the old north bridge at minute man national in massachusetts were seized and is learning more about that literary scene. next speak with
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Jul 9, 2017
07/17
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underscore tv or posted to her facebook page book tv on c-span2, television for serious readers. >> know about tv i want to introduce you to english professor at the university of minnesota. it's called -- in america on freedom. what is your goal of this book? >> my goal was to figure out the set of stories that i found
underscore tv or posted to her facebook page book tv on c-span2, television for serious readers. >> know about tv i want to introduce you to english professor at the university of minnesota. it's called -- in america on freedom. what is your goal of this book? >> my goal was to figure out the set of stories that i found
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Jul 3, 2017
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on twitter at book tv or he'll email us at book tv ads c-span.org. >> we are delighted to have camille paglia here and i will do a more formal introduction than usual but bear with me on that because it's not my usual ramble. camille paglia is the university professor of humanities and media studies at the university of arts in philadelphia where she has taught since 1984. she received her ba from binghamton in 1968 and her masters in philosophy and phd degrees from yale university in 1971 and 1974 respectively. her prior books or our sexual persona, which came out in 1990. sex, art and american culture , vamps and tramps, new essays which came out in 1994, the birds: a study of alfred hitchcock published by the british film institute. great road burns, camille paglia reads 43 of the worlds best poems and glaring images of the books she was here last year with five years ago including a journey through art from egypt to star wars. she is here this evening with her seventh book, free women free men. sex, gender feminism. a cycle selection of her most notable lectures on the subject. her
on twitter at book tv or he'll email us at book tv ads c-span.org. >> we are delighted to have camille paglia here and i will do a more formal introduction than usual but bear with me on that because it's not my usual ramble. camille paglia is the university professor of humanities and media studies at the university of arts in philadelphia where she has taught since 1984. she received her ba from binghamton in 1968 and her masters in philosophy and phd degrees from yale university in...
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Jul 16, 2017
07/17
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mountains or glimpse of the lake would add to the effect so she got what cf four and if you look at the book you can see the addition is in the new lori and up in the version in the book but again, it's this interconnectedness, the feeling of material that is really what we do. we're not looking just to collect spots and as names, it's got to be things that fit together and allow a good story to be told. >> we're at the old north bridge at minuteman national historic park in concorde
mountains or glimpse of the lake would add to the effect so she got what cf four and if you look at the book you can see the addition is in the new lori and up in the version in the book but again, it's this interconnectedness, the feeling of material that is really what we do. we're not looking just to collect spots and as names, it's got to be things that fit together and allow a good story to be told. >> we're at the old north bridge at minuteman national historic park in concorde
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Jul 19, 2017
07/17
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FOXNEWSW
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she's wanted to write a book's since she was little. i think at that joke, greg. to write a book. she won a contest at her school. 28 pages long. my mom loved it. it's a mystery. it's available on amazon. she actually got a book published. congratulation, mckenzie jones. >> greg: dana? no, juan. >> juan: i'm very proud of you. the g.o.p. failure to repeal and replace obamacare is seen as a broken promise but guess what? it's not the only broken promise, remember canada trump trashing the iran nuclear deal? he called it the worst deal ever made. here he is three months ago. >> it's one of the worst deals i've ever seen. >> greg: oops! [laughter] >> juan: too bad. the trump administration says they will recertify the deal. they agreed that iran is complying with its terms. wait, what happened? unbelievable. >> greg: they did a political story on "one more thing." poo poo. >> kimberly: all right, this is quite charming. a 90-year-old grandmother. 2,000 tiny hats for newborns, she has made them. her name is barbara lowe. it took four hours to do each hat. in mayfield h
she's wanted to write a book's since she was little. i think at that joke, greg. to write a book. she won a contest at her school. 28 pages long. my mom loved it. it's a mystery. it's available on amazon. she actually got a book published. congratulation, mckenzie jones. >> greg: dana? no, juan. >> juan: i'm very proud of you. the g.o.p. failure to repeal and replace obamacare is seen as a broken promise but guess what? it's not the only broken promise, remember canada trump...
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Jul 15, 2017
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i read both books at the same time and i like to read fiction and all they banned derek got. at was an interesting read. i'm also reading market disciplines, marketing disciplines. it's an old book from 1985 that talks about branding and brand management and i'm finishing a book called against the tide which is about economics prior to adam smith wealth of nations and then after. all of them our role into whatever i'm doing and whatever i'm working on at the moment. >> you have to economic books in there. why is that? >> oneness with nafta and trade and nafta is important with my district. it's always good to have a grounding in some of the basics and it's interesting to hear what people are saying prior to 1776. sounds a lot like what people are saying now which are one of the takeaways and the other one is i think it's important to read something about your craft and being an elected official my job is to get a message out. i tried to read about things like marketing and branding and communications. >> is there a biography or history book that you have read in the past that
i read both books at the same time and i like to read fiction and all they banned derek got. at was an interesting read. i'm also reading market disciplines, marketing disciplines. it's an old book from 1985 that talks about branding and brand management and i'm finishing a book called against the tide which is about economics prior to adam smith wealth of nations and then after. all of them our role into whatever i'm doing and whatever i'm working on at the moment. >> you have to...
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Jul 2, 2017
07/17
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coming up over the fourth of july holiday on the spent two's's book tv, monday at 8:30 p.m. eastern, and author discusses his book, talking back, talking black. to see if i could make the general public have a more positive view of the dialect that most black americans use in casual situations. at seven: 15 a.m. eastern, author and puts her prize winning historian with his book, "the american spirit." down, youget knocked do not whimper and wine. you get back up on your feet and continue on. something we all need to be reminded of. and we aren't marked -- reminded of it by the examples in this story of our own country. >> utah senator mike lee with his book, written out of history, forgotten founding fathers who fought big government." they readt -- unless both sides of the argument. unless you read from the antifederalists's, it appears to tilt more in the direction of federal power than they in fact do. sisters first,, stories from our wild and wonderful life. >> we felt unbelievably protective of them. people thought it was odd how protective we were. but it is not. we saw
coming up over the fourth of july holiday on the spent two's's book tv, monday at 8:30 p.m. eastern, and author discusses his book, talking back, talking black. to see if i could make the general public have a more positive view of the dialect that most black americans use in casual situations. at seven: 15 a.m. eastern, author and puts her prize winning historian with his book, "the american spirit." down, youget knocked do not whimper and wine. you get back up on your feet and...
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Jul 1, 2017
07/17
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at microsoft. sory read from this chapter. also give you a taste of what the book is -- the flavor of the book and it's a chapter called dream it, do is, open, confidence coaches. don in was wearing leopard and owning it. was midnight in downtown seattle and the renaissance woman was in the element on -- in her element on a giant sound stage. she was hosting the world's first hole low hack, a brain storming session for 100 techy us, filmmakers, 3d artists and sound inning engineer to try to make the first app for microsoft augmented real device. a head asset that enables 3d images called holograms to leave from computer screens into life and being manipulated with the swipe of a finger. she is is a software geek and fashion designer and a novellest and is reading the outreach program, confirming her status as a rising star at microsoft. it's hard to believe she failed her first computer scienceclass but the did and her store of resilience is one she tells often when the travels the country, inspiring young women to charge ahead in engineering studies and hanging on
at microsoft. sory read from this chapter. also give you a taste of what the book is -- the flavor of the book and it's a chapter called dream it, do is, open, confidence coaches. don in was wearing leopard and owning it. was midnight in downtown seattle and the renaissance woman was in the element on -- in her element on a giant sound stage. she was hosting the world's first hole low hack, a brain storming session for 100 techy us, filmmakers, 3d artists and sound inning engineer to try to...
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Jul 29, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
tv
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send us your summer reading list by a twitter at book tv or instagram at bookótv or posted to our facebookpage, facebook.com/book tv. tv on c-span2: television for serious readers. >> good morning, welcome to the heritage foundation and the douglas and sarah allison auditorium. welcome to those joining us on our heritage.org website and on c-span tv. for those and ask how we would ask our mobile devices have been silenced or turned off. for those wanting online or in the future you are welcome tosend questions or comments , see simply emailing speaker@heritage.org. we will host a program on the heritage home page for everyone to reference. leading our discussion is daniel curtis, danielle is our policy analyst in european affairs and the margaret thatcher center for freedom, he focuses on transatlantic security issues. his writings featured in real clear world, foxnews.com, breitbart .com and he's provided analysis in over 100 radio and television appearances. he has also served as a panelist at the transatlantic think tank conference in brussels belgium and provided parliamentary evidence
send us your summer reading list by a twitter at book tv or instagram at bookótv or posted to our facebookpage, facebook.com/book tv. tv on c-span2: television for serious readers. >> good morning, welcome to the heritage foundation and the douglas and sarah allison auditorium. welcome to those joining us on our heritage.org website and on c-span tv. for those and ask how we would ask our mobile devices have been silenced or turned off. for those wanting online or in the future you are...
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Jul 22, 2017
07/17
by
CSPAN2
tv
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book tv on c-span two television for serious readers. here is a look at some of the current but -- best selling books according to indy bound a group of independent bookstores who are members of the american booksellers association. topping the list is that physicists and the exploration of the universe. with the rust belt town in ohio. fourth is a collection. finding that. with sheryl sandberg. on moving forward after facing setbacks. they reveal the lifelong struggle with food and body image and hunger. you don't have to say you love me. it retired u.s. navy admiral provides advice for self-improvement and make your bed wrapping up our look at the best selling nonfiction books according to indy bound. it recounts a battle that changed the american approach to the vietnam war. many of these authors have or will be appearing on book tv. you can watch them on our website. hello everybody. welcome to the 33rd annual i would like to give a special thank you to all of our sponsors today's program will be broadcast live if there is time at the end of the q&a s
book tv on c-span two television for serious readers. here is a look at some of the current but -- best selling books according to indy bound a group of independent bookstores who are members of the american booksellers association. topping the list is that physicists and the exploration of the universe. with the rust belt town in ohio. fourth is a collection. finding that. with sheryl sandberg. on moving forward after facing setbacks. they reveal the lifelong struggle with food and body image...
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Jul 10, 2017
07/17
by
MSNBCW
tv
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at check-in. yeah. like i said. bookt choicehotels.com bounty is more absorbent,mom" per roll so the roll can last 50% longer than the leading ordinary brand. so you get more "life" per roll. bounty, the quicker picker upper >>> hello and welcome back to "dateline extra". paul zumot's defense was about to portray he and jennifer schipsi's relationship in a whole new light. here again is keith morrison. >> reporter: defense attorney mark geragos has made a name for himself defending clients in difficult and highly celebrated cases, not the least, the scott peterson trial. but defending paul zumot would present its own set of challenges. zumot was accused of killing his girlfriend jennifer schipsi and then trying to hide that fact by burning the house down. but as the trial began, he had also been paid by the prosecution as an abuser, a violent man, an image geragos set out to change. >> they both were passionate, romantic at times, hot at times, as you would characterize it. i don't think it was a one-way street, by any m
at check-in. yeah. like i said. bookt choicehotels.com bounty is more absorbent,mom" per roll so the roll can last 50% longer than the leading ordinary brand. so you get more "life" per roll. bounty, the quicker picker upper >>> hello and welcome back to "dateline extra". paul zumot's defense was about to portray he and jennifer schipsi's relationship in a whole new light. here again is keith morrison. >> reporter: defense attorney mark geragos has made a...
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Jul 15, 2017
07/17
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 109
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when you book direct at choicehotels.com. book now. >>> welcome back to erbil.s the beating heart of a unique little area here in northern iraq. the kurds who live here have been largely protected from iraq's recent chaos. in fact, this city has prospered in the relative safety while baghdad has become poorer and more violent. for years kurds followed the american plan and participated in the iraqi government. now they say it's time to go. >> i think we have had enough, and we believe that our hopes to build a new democratic federal iraq where all the iraqis could live together peacefully, that is a mirage. >> he's one of the most recognizable politicians in this part of the world. he represented iraq on the international stage. first as foreign minister. then as deputy be prime minister. but he has retreated to the large estate in the hills above this city. and says the time has come to bury the dream of a democratic united nation ever zblierk i spent the last 14 years in my politic life defending this country, its unity, how to reis integrate it into the inter
when you book direct at choicehotels.com. book now. >>> welcome back to erbil.s the beating heart of a unique little area here in northern iraq. the kurds who live here have been largely protected from iraq's recent chaos. in fact, this city has prospered in the relative safety while baghdad has become poorer and more violent. for years kurds followed the american plan and participated in the iraqi government. now they say it's time to go. >> i think we have had enough, and we...
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Jul 24, 2017
07/17
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 84
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i urge all of you to buy his book at the end of this talk he will sign books out there when he is finished because it is a great book. but partly because you should pay full price for books. [laughter] you should never pay a discount if you can possibly avoid it because it is really damaging for those to do the hard work trying to produce literature and in journalism in this country. "harper's" magazine is independent and that book culture is very much engaged with that independent media and fought in the conglomerate consolidation of publishing is really beginning to close-up outlets like this one that came to us for a democratic debate and conversation. and this has become a neighborhood center for this type of conversation. if you buy books full price we can keep doing that. so i welcome all of you. so tonight i can introduce this event as a bookstore owner but i also can interview stephen clifford with multiple hats as a journalist and ceo. not on his level but and i a man interested citizen getting the conversation started but when i unfinished interviewing him c-span is recording so
i urge all of you to buy his book at the end of this talk he will sign books out there when he is finished because it is a great book. but partly because you should pay full price for books. [laughter] you should never pay a discount if you can possibly avoid it because it is really damaging for those to do the hard work trying to produce literature and in journalism in this country. "harper's" magazine is independent and that book culture is very much engaged with that independent...