Yet another dose of self-congratulatory blogging
Lavish praise for FP on the Washington Post's style section today. After reviewing the advice the May/June issue doles out to celebrity activists (sorry, subscription required) and presidents alike, staff writer Peter Carlson tells it like it really is: Foreign Policy is a controversial, unpredictable and eclectic magazine. This issue also contains stories on Google, ...
Lavish praise for FP on the Washington Post's style section today. After reviewing the advice the May/June issue doles out to celebrity activists (sorry, subscription required) and presidents alike, staff writer Peter Carlson tells it like it really is:
Lavish praise for FP on the Washington Post's style section today. After reviewing the advice the May/June issue doles out to celebrity activists (sorry, subscription required) and presidents alike, staff writer Peter Carlson tells it like it really is:
Foreign Policy is a controversial, unpredictable and eclectic magazine. This issue also contains stories on Google, Japanese cartoons and India's attempt to stop Westerners from pirating classic yoga poses.
FP won a National Magazine Award in 2003, and it's a finalist for another one in the competition that will be held tonight. Win or lose, it's the foreign affairs mag that even non-wonks can love.
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