Mark Mardell: Best reads of the week
If you are anything like me you will find there is too much to read, too much to absorb.
So, as a consumer - a reader - I have really enjoyed BBC Magazine's Seven of the Week's Best Reads.
I would never have stumbled across Peter Thomas Ryan's fabulous article on the hunting and eating of squirrels on my own.
So, in the same spirit, I am going to have a go at making my own list at the end of each week. Or most weeks. Depending on the week. Or perhaps just today. Heavy on the politics. But not just politics.
As with all links and tweets, I hardly need to say that I am not endorsing any views contained within my picks. But I am saying they are worth a read.
1. Romney's campaign woes
The article of the week was Politico's tremendous report on the blame game that has already started within the Romney campaign.
The article drove the week in some ways and I am told this well-informed piece was a major weapon in an internal coup aimed at reigning in Mr Romney's chief strategist, Stuart Stevens.
By the end of the week, it is obvious that those urging more focus and discipline have won.
Mr Romney's problems did not end there, and were compounded by the publication of a secret video.
You could not throw an online stone without hitting a commentator arguing his characterisation of 47% of non-tax paying Americans was a huge blunder, so it is worth reading Red State for the alternative view.
2. #MuslimRage
The hashtag #MuslimRage became a Twitter meme, mocking the Newsweek cover. But the protests in the Middle East made their way into the election campaign.
While there were plenty of articles lambasting President Barack Obama for a policy failure or mocking Mr Romney for a shallow world view, only a few takes tried to step back from partisan politics and argue neither man wanted to talk about the real problems.
Robert Wright's was about the best.
3. Neil Young profile
Turning away from politics, there is a great New York Times article on one of rock's survivors, Neil Young. Unlike many stars in their 60s, he is still a creative force, exciting and experimental.
Learn about the comfort he finds in his remote ranch and his relationship with his half-century old guitar "old black" and his severely disabled son.
4. Was Jesus Married?
But my favourite read of the week has been a Smithsonian take that dives behind the fascinating but facile headline Was Jesus Married?
It profiles the theologian Karen King, who brought to light the papyrus that raises that question.
It is about how some early Christians gave a much more central role to women and asks why those traditions were suppressed.
Happy reading.
~RS~q~RS~~RS~z~RS~21~RS~)




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Comment number 230.
Party In The Slum23rd September 2012 - 0:59
This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the house rules. Explain.
Link to this (Comment number 230)
Comment number 229.
All for All23rd September 2012 - 0:57
Chryses @227
In the spirit…
He that doth
They that do
Rise to challenge, on faith?
If we cannot or will not address substance, what hope 'humanity'?
Yes. I know, many refereencs and links give: and to 'explore the future' is another world... but it has 'importance', immediate and remote
Link to this (Comment number 229)
Comment number 228.
Billythefirst23rd September 2012 - 0:49
Is Romney a flipaholic or a flopaholic - shall we be mean and ask him to decide?
Link to this (Comment number 228)
Comment number 227.
Chryses23rd September 2012 - 0:48
Party In The Slum (223),
“… 220 boring illogical retorts are not refuting except in your own little mind …”
Were they boring, you'd not react. As you do react, you are not bored. Your ignorance =/= illogic.
Billythefirst (225),
“… Those that snipe without offering their own views ...”
Methinks those that mistake corrections of errors for sniping doth protest too much
Link to this (Comment number 227)
Comment number 226.
All for All23rd September 2012 - 0:47
Party in The Sun @223
Some post!
Non-partisan
All "US Election Lobbies"
Meaning 'live by, die by'?
Our friend may live in some retreat, addressing precision but avoiding self-examination, suffering from some past trauma and deepening internal contradiction, his service here 'a cry for help', as true perhaps of us all
Hope only in 'care & conscience', in 'scripture' some clues and many pitfalls
Link to this (Comment number 226)
Comments 5 of 230