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In fact, there has long been a wider support of military hawkishness at play. Before Commentary made its neoconservative turn ...
A few months ago, Norman Podhoretz spotted Joseph Heller in a restaurant in the Hamptons. Heller must have spotted Podhoretz too, because the two did what they have done for many years — they… ...
Norman Podhoretz has made it. On Sunday, the pugnacious, proudly boastful and unquestionably brilliant writer and editor received an award named ­after one of a very few men, living or dead, whom ...
Norman Podhoretz, the neo-conservative and former Commentary editor, is a stocky, confident man whose book-filled Upper East Side apartment features a bronzed wall image of Teddy Roosevelt with a ...
After 50 years, Norman Podhoretz’s memoir Making It, just reissued as part of NYRB’s Classics series, continues to dazzle. That’s pretty damn good.
Norman Podhoretz, who turned 84 on January 16, is usually considered nowadays a commentator on American political, foreign, and religious affairs; with the late Irving Kristol and Daniel Patrick Mo… ...
In The Wall Street Journal, Norman Podhoretz writes that a conventional-weapons attack is preferable to the nuclear war sure to come.
Furthermore, the Norman Podhoretz of recent decades is not entirely at one with the right. A heretic of sorts (to the orthodox left) then, he remains a heretic of sorts (to the orthodox right) today.
The Norman Podhoretz Reader: A Selection of His Writings From the 1950s Through the 1990s, Thomas L. Jeffers, ed., The Free Press, 478 pages ...
Washington — He is alive! Norman Podhoretz is alive, and he agreed to an interview with the Wall Street Journal’s very perceptive Barton Swaim this weekend.