What We’re Reading
Preeti Aroon: “Rwanda’s ex-U.N. ambassador, who vanished after genocide, resurfaces in Alabama,” by David Bosco in the Washington Post. Former FP senior editor David Bosco investigated the whereabouts of the man who was Rwanda’s U.N. ambassador during the country’s 1994 genocide. The search took him to Opelika, Alabama, where the former ambassador dons a white ...
Preeti Aroon: “Rwanda's ex-U.N. ambassador, who vanished after genocide, resurfaces in Alabama,” by David Bosco in the Washington Post. Former FP senior editor David Bosco investigated the whereabouts of the man who was Rwanda’s U.N. ambassador during the country’s 1994 genocide. The search took him to Opelika, Alabama, where the former ambassador dons a white lab coat and hair net for his job at a company that makes plastic containers for the dairy industry.
Preeti Aroon: “Rwanda’s ex-U.N. ambassador, who vanished after genocide, resurfaces in Alabama,” by David Bosco in the Washington Post. Former FP senior editor David Bosco investigated the whereabouts of the man who was Rwanda’s U.N. ambassador during the country’s 1994 genocide. The search took him to Opelika, Alabama, where the former ambassador dons a white lab coat and hair net for his job at a company that makes plastic containers for the dairy industry.
Rebecca Frankel: “Monkey Business in a World of Evil.” I might be coming to the Curious George table a little late on this but I was surprised to discover that the Reys – the couple that created the series of children’s books — crafted the stories of the mischievous monkey and the man in the yellow hat as they were fleeing Paris before the Nazi invasion. This NY Times article, which details the new exhibit showcasing the Reys’s works and memorabilia at the Jewish museum, offers wonderful details of their subsequent adventures: "Their four-month journey on bicycle, train and boat led them to Lisbon, then to Rio de Janeiro and New York, the drawings offering proof of their occupations when they sought American visas."
Blake Hounshell: The Unforgiving Minute. Author Craig Mullaney is the Pentagon’s principal director for Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Central Asia policy, but before that, he was a West Point plebe, an Army Ranger, a Rhodes Scholar, and a platoon leader in Afghanistan. His memoir offers one of the best accounts I’ve read about what it’s like to go through some of the U.S. military’s most gut-wrenching challenges. Ranger school, in particular, is not for the weak.
Joshua Keating: Underground: The Tokyo Gas Attack and the Japanese Psyche. Based on a recommendation in Tyler Cowen’s own "What I’m Reading" list, I picked up this nonfiction account of the 1995 Aum Shinrikyo sarin attack on the Tokyo subway from legendary novelist Haruki Murakami. (Kafka on the Shore, The Wind-up Bird Chronicle.) It’s a gripping read so far, though not exactly the ideal book for my morning Metro ride.
Britt Peterson: I had read pretty much everything Agatha Christie had written by the time I turned 12, so I’m eagerly reading reviews of Agatha Christie’s Secret Notebooks, a collection of her previously unpublished scribbling, from plot points to what’s for dinner: “in between ominous scraps like ‘Stabbed through eye with hatpin’ and ‘influenza depression virus—Stolen? Cabinet Minister?’ are grocery lists: ‘Newspapers, toilet paper, salt, pepper …’”
Joshua Keating was an associate editor at Foreign Policy. Twitter: @joshuakeating
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