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                                          History and Current Events January 2021  
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             | 		Slanted: How the News Media Taught Us to Love Censorship and Hate Journalism	 by Sharyl AttkissonWhat it is: a sobering and provocative investigation into the ways in which modern news media is manipulated.
  About the author: Sharyl Attkisson is a five-time Emmy Award-winning journalist and a recipient of the Edward R. Murrow Award. 
  Is it for you? Readers may see Attkisson's discussion of Donald Trump's presidential misdeeds as apologia.   |  
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  | 		The Killer's Shadow: The FBI's Hunt for a White Supremacist Serial Killer	 by John Douglas and Mark OlshakerWhat it's about: serial killer Joseph Paul Franklin's three-year crime spree, which began with a shooting at a St. Louis synagogue in 1977.
  Read it for: FBI profiler John Douglas' breakneck pursuit of Franklin; the pair's confrontation once the latter was imprisoned. 
  Reviewers say: "This is a must read for those looking for insight into the minds of those instigating racial violence today" (Publishers Weekly).   |  
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  | 		Fevers, Feuds, and Diamonds: Ebola and the Ravages of History	 by Paul FarmerWhat it is: medical anthropologist and Partners in Health cofounder Paul Farmer's chronicle of the 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa.
  What's inside: a disturbing (and often gruesome) firsthand account of a public health crisis spurred by government neglect, bureaucracy, resource exploitation, and colonialism.
  Featuring: heartrending testimonies from Ebola survivors and first responders; an epilogue detailing Farmer's work combatting COVID-19.    |  
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  | 		Bag Man: The Wild Crimes, Audacious Cover-Up, and Spectacular Downfall of a Brazen...	 by Rachel Maddow and Michael YarvitzStarring: disgraced vice president Spiro Agnew, who resigned in 1973 after he was caught committing tax fraud and running a bribery and extortion ring in his office. 
  Why you might like it: This well-researched examination of a lesser-known political scandal, which happened concurrently (but unrelatedly) with Watergate, offers striking parallels to current events.
  Media buzz: Bag Man is an engaging expansion of the authors' podcast of the same name, which was nominated for a Peabody Award in 2018.   |  
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  | 		The Nine Lives of Pakistan: Dispatches from a Precarious State	 by Declan WalshWhat it is: an incisive debut exploring the tumult of modern Pakistan, written by Guardian and New York Times journalist Declan Walsh, who spent nearly a decade living and reporting in the country.
  What sets it apart: Walsh's profiles of nine individuals (the titular "nine lives") whose experiences offer illuminating perspectives on Pakistan's ongoing ails.
  Reviewers say: "This masterfully reported account deserves a wide readership" (Publishers Weekly).   |  
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  | 		The Harlem Hellfighters	 by Max Brooks; illustrated by Caanan WhiteWhat it is: a well-researched, lightly fictionalized account of the Harlem Hellfighters, the highly decorated all-Black Army regiment who fought in World War I.   
  Art alert: Caanan White's dark and detailed artwork doesn't shy away from gory imagery, starkly conveying the chaos and violence of war.
  Book buzz: This New York Times bestseller from World War Z author Max Brooks was named a Library Journal Best Graphic Novel in 2014.  |  
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  | 		Tetris: The Games People Play	 by Box BrownWhat it is: the complicated origin story of Tetris, "the game that escaped the USSR" in 1984 after its Russian creator smuggled it out of Moscow. 
  Why you might like it: Bestselling author and illustrator Box Brown (Andre the Giant: Life and Legend) presents the tale in a whimsical and engaging narrative.
  Art alert: Straightforward illustrations feature hard edges and minimal coloring meant to evoke the visuals of the game's earliest iterations.  |  
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  | 		Verax: The True Story of Whistleblowers, Drone Warfare, and Mass Surveillance	 by Pratap Chatterjee; illustrated by KhalilWhat it's about: post-9/11 American surveillance and drone warfare.  
  Art alert: Vivid black-and-white illustrations, including informative charts and diagrams, make the subject accessible to general readers.   
  Try this next: For another graphic history exploring America's surveillance state, read Ivan Greenberg's The Machine Never Blinks.   |  
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  | 		Rolling Blackouts: Dispatches from Turkey, Syria, and Iraq	 by Sarah GliddenWhat it's about: Accompanying two journalist friends and an Iraq War veteran during a Middle East trip to report on the impact of the war, cartoonist Sarah Glidden grappled with ethical quandaries as she learned about the complexity of the journalistic process.
  Art alert: Delicate pastel watercolors complement Glidden's thought-provoking and empathetic insights into life in conflict-riven areas.  |  
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  | 		Showa: A History of Japan, 1926-1939	 by Shigeru Mizuki; translated by Zack DavissonWhat it is: the first of a four-part series exploring the personal and political history of Japan's Showa era (1926-1989), written and illustrated by beloved manga artist Shigeru Mizuki. 
  Topics include: the author's childhood in rural Sakaiminato; the Nanjing Massacre; Japan's entry into World War II.
  Art alert: Mizuki contrasts realistic illustrations (for newsworthy events) with cartoony ones (for scenes of everyday life); fans of his previous works will enjoy the appearances from GeGeGe no Kitaro's Rat Man.  |  
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Contact your librarian for more great books!
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            Huntington Memorial Library 62 Chestnut St. Oneonta, New York 13820  607-432-1980  hmloneonta.org/ |  
  
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