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To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Novelist Jonathan Lethem's new book is called "You Don't Love Me Yet." It's the story of an alternative rock band in Los Angeles trying to find success and themselves.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Poet Laure-Anne Bosselaar edited an anthology of verse called “Urban Nature.”  She talks about it with Jim Fleming and reads some of her favorites.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Richard Hand describes several of the programs that made that period the Golden Age of radio.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Julie Norem is the author of “The Power of Negative Thinking.”  She tells Jim Fleming about her strategy of “defensive pessimism,” and explains the good it can do.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Liaquat Ahamed talks about the parallels between the recent financial meltdown and the events that led up to the Great Depression. Both situations involved bubbles, and errors by the Federal Reserve System.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Jason Hartley talks about his book, "The Advanced Genius Theory: Are They Out of Their Minds or Ahead of Their Time?"

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Alan Turing was only 41 when he committed suicide. Filmmaker Patrick Sammon's film, Codebreaker, tells the story of Turing's brilliant life and of his persecution by British authorities for the crime of being homosexual. When he spoke to Anne Strainchamps a few years ago, he said Turing was a victim of the prejudice and paranoia of the time.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Writer and activist Yasmin Nair's Dangerous Idea? Writers should always 

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