I don't think it would come as any surprise that Tyler Cowen of George Mason University and
Marginal Revolution knows something I don't -- it's probable he knows quite a bit I don't -- but I am surprised to find that one fantasy I've enjoyed
is, instead, fact:What were the most blogged about books in 2005?
Here is
a New York Times list, no
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ROFL at the imagery.
Now I'm going to have to imagine the HP crowd intruding at random into people's house to ask if their is a horscrux, in a Brazil/Time Bandit fashion.
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Btw, did you read Collapse orBlink?
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I've read Collapse, and I've read some of the material Gladwell developed into Blink in The New Yorker and perhaps The New York Times Magazine. Collapse had a lot of interesting anthropological detail, which I liked, but there was a lot of tedious repetition within those 700 pages. I'd definitely recommend both Guns, Germs and Steel and The Third Chimpanzee over it.
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Your link was a by product. Trying to scrap up things Ben might be willing to write about for his Econ. class, that being the current fretty point. He dislikes the teacher intensely and has decided to fail the class. Le sigh. I mostly failed mine through laziness. each generation devlopes a new... Glad you liked it though!
(I am not going to ask you to dance, I think. Looks painful.;)
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On a side note, I was disheartened (though not surprised) to read, in a recent CCT featurette on summer reading, that a certain Dean Yatrakis cited The World Is Flat as her #1 read of Summer 2005, calling Friedman "brilliant" and claiming that he "writes beautifully." No wonder my Columbia undergrads can't construct a lucid argument to save their souls.....
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