Books from Interlink Publishing

  • 9/11 Ten Years Later
    By David Ray Griffin

    87 Jonathan Barnett , Ronald R. Biederman , and Richard D. Sisson , Jr. , “ An Initial Microstructural Analysis of A36 ... in which the authors , Stephen W. Banovic and Timothy Foecke , referred to “ the analysis of the steel from WTC 7 ...

  • America and World War I: A Traveler's Guide
    By Mark D. Van Ells

    No trace of the spruce mill survives, though interpretive panels indicate its location, and the Spruce Mill Trail crosses the field where the mill once stood. Just to the east of the mill site is Pearson Field, named for a World War I ...

  • Cracked Open: Liberty, Fertility and the Pursuit of High Tech Babies
    By Miriam Zoll

    More recently we read about singers Mariah Carey and Celine Dion delivering twins at forty-one and forty-two, and actresses Courtney Cox and Marcia Cross became mothers at forty-three and forty-five, respectively. From where we stood, ...

  • The New Pearl Harbor Revisited: 9/11, the Cover-Up, and the Exposé
    By David Ray Griffin

    This second edition contains a 30-page Afterword with additional material on the alleged hijackers, controlled demolition of the WTC, Sibel Edmonds, and the 9/11 Commission, plus a discussion of whether Standard Operating Procedures had ...

  • The Mysterious Collapse of World Trade Center 7
    By David Ray Griffin

    In August 2008, NIST (the National Institute of Standards and Technology) issued its report on WTC 7, declaring that "the reason for the collapse of World Trade Center 7 is no longer a mystery" and that “science is really behind what we ...

  • Reel Bad Arabs: How Hollywood Vilifies a People
    By Jack G. Shaheen

    Opening credits state that director Horne plays the chief of the Riff-Raff, “Abul Kasim K'Horne.” Scene: The desert. Stan and Ollie arrive at the Legion fort. An Arab warns the Colonel that Bedouin “are preparing to make an attack.

  • Voice Male: The Untold Story of the Pro-Feminist Men's Movement
    By Rob A. Okun

    MacMillan. Winter. 2002. I hear seventeen-year-old Daniel, tall, shaving now, the water in the bathroom turning on and off, on and off, as I lie in bed this morning: high school nals this week, college visits this summer.

  • Miami: A Cultural History
    By Anthony P. Maingot

    In discussing the development of culture in Miami, master developer Craig Robbins, whose company Dacra owns 60 percent of Miami's Design District's 700,000 square feet of mixed-use commercial property, told the Miami Herald columnist ...

  • Sicily: A Cultural History
    By Joseph Farrell

    Alexander, Alfred, Giovanni Verga London: Grant & Cutler, 1972. Battaglia, Letizia, Passion, Justice, Freedom: Photographs of Sicily. ... Leighton, Robert, Sicily Before History. London: Duckworth, 1999. Loud, G. A., e Age of Robert ...

  • Capitalism Hits the Fan: The Global Economic Meltdown and What to Do About It
    By Richard D. Wolff

    CAPITALISM HITS THE FAN The Global Economic Meltdown and What to Do About It YLES QPAMERIC 10 Richard D. Wolff LEDS UPANIERI TALISTIS UINTERIO *********** ***** CB OSB001361 L ... CP DZ Capitalism Hits the Fan CAPITALISM HITS THE FAN ...

  • Chomsky and Dershowitz: On Endless War and the End of Civil Liberties
    By Howard Friel

    Through the lens of a careful assessment of the political views of MIT’s Noam Chomsky and Harvard’s Alan Dershowitz—the two protagonists of a Cambridge-based feud over the past forty years—author Howard Friel chronicles an American ...

  • Leading Men: Presidential Campaigns and the Politics of Manhood
    By Jackson Katz

    The question is why? In Leading Men, Jackson Katz argues that racial politics and economic anxieties are not enough to explain the dramatic gender divide in American voting patterns.

  • Understanding the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict: A Primer
    By Phyllis Bennis

    If you have ever wondered “Why is there so much violence in the Middle East?”, “Who are the Palestinians?”, “What are the occupied territories?” or “What does Israel want?”, then this is the book for you.

  • Salmagundi: A Celebration of Salads from around the World
    By Sally Butcher

    Heavily punctuated with Sally's trademark mixture of folklore and anecdotes, this is an essential update for the foodie bookshelf.

  • Damascus Nights
    By Rafik Schami

    Rafik Schami's award-winning novel. In the classical Arab tradition of tale-telling, here is a magical book that celebrates the power of storytelling, delightfully transformed for modern sensibilities by an award-winning author.

  • Love Made Visible: Scenes from a Mostly Happy Marriage
    By Jean Gibran

    Accompanying the memoir are a summary of the sculptor Gibran’s work, brief biographical sketches of many mid-twentieth-century artists and personalities who populated Boston and Provincetown, and commentaries by art historian Charles ...

  • The House of Jasmine
    By Ibrahim Abdel Meguid

    Within the humor of this classic novel is nestled an indicting eyewitness account of this essential period of Egyptian history.

  • Guilty: Hollywood's Verdict on Arabs after 9/11
    By Jack G. Shaheen

    “Nothing will be the same again.” Americans scarred by the experience of 9/11 often express this sentiment. But what remains the same, argues Jack Shaheen, is Hollywood’s stereotyping of Arabs.

  • The Putin Mystique: Inside Russia's Power Cult
    By Anna Arutunyan

    Strong, popular local plant managers like Sofyin and Badalyants can serve as a key to understanding local attitudes ... the boss could enjoy the privileges provided by his caste as long as he never neglected to care for his workers.

  • Always Coca-Cola
    By Alexandra Chreiteh

    Critics in Lebanon have called the novel “an electric shock.”