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A Brisk History of How Greed Became Good
A Brisk History of How Greed Became Good

Bloomberg

time18-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Bloomberg

A Brisk History of How Greed Became Good

Paul Vigna's The Almightier: How Money Became God, Greed Became Virtue, and Debt Became Sin (St. Martin's, July 22) bats .333 on its subtitle, which is all-star level in baseball and good enough for this book. In tracing how greed became virtue, or at least not obviously sin, Vigna implores his readers to look freshly at the world and to move through it in a mode other than blind acquisition. 'The idea that greed is a bad, dark impulse indulged in only by bad, dark people is deeply embedded in our most revered moral tales and religious texts,' Vigna writes. 'And yet greed endures.'

Lioness Le Tissier revisits Guernsey roots to inspire new players
Lioness Le Tissier revisits Guernsey roots to inspire new players

BBC News

time25-06-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

Lioness Le Tissier revisits Guernsey roots to inspire new players

Four young footballers from the Guerney's St Martin's AC have had the chance to meet Lioness Maya Le Tissier. The Guernsey-born member of the England women's national football team - the Lionesses - wore the shirt of her first club, St Martin's, while training at Staffordshire's St George's Park with her teammates ahead of next month's Euros in rest of the squad also wore kit representing the teams that gave them their individual start in sport. Among the budding players to visit Le Tissier was nine-year-old Olivia Cooper, who described the day as "amazing", adding that she hoped to be as good on the pitch as her idol one day. The Lionesses were all wearing the shirts of their formative clubs to reflect on their own humble beginnings and to help inspire a new generation of young players."Maya is my favourite and it was really cool seeing her wear a St Martin's shirt," said Olivia, who was there with her mother Nikki."I also got an England shirt signed by her and am going to get it framed and put it above my bed when I get home."Olivia added that one of her dreams is to play in the Muratti Vase, the annual men and women's football competition, inaugurated in 1905, between teams representing the Channel Islands."I want to be as good as Maya when I'm older," she said. During her celebrated career, 23-year-old Le Tissier became the first person from Guernsey to win an FA Cup final in nearly 65 was centre-back for Manchester United Women's team when they beat Tottenham Hotspur 4-0 at Wembley Stadium in May 2024, and she proudly carried the island's flag when she climbed the steps to receive her last time someone from the island won the trophy was in 1959, when Bill Whare helped Nottingham Forest beat Luton Town 2-1.

In a New Book, E. Jean Carroll Chronicles Her Legal Battles With Trump
In a New Book, E. Jean Carroll Chronicles Her Legal Battles With Trump

New York Times

time13-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

In a New Book, E. Jean Carroll Chronicles Her Legal Battles With Trump

E. Jean Carroll, the journalist who accused President Donald Trump of sexually assaulting her and won two multimillion dollar judgments against him, is publishing a behind-the-scenes account of her legal entanglements with the president. Carroll's new book, 'Not My Type: One Woman vs. a President,' is due out on Tuesday. The book, which Carroll spoke about in an interview with New York magazine, is described by her publisher as a 'hilarious, hopeful, revelatory behind-the-scenes account' that 'puts you in a better seat than the jury box.' Carroll sold the book in March 2024, and she and her publisher went to unusual lengths to keep it secret. Booksellers were required to sign nondisclosure agreements, and Carroll and her editor sometimes communicated over Signal, an encrypted messaging platform, according to Elisabeth Dyssegaard, the executive editor at St. Martin's. Carroll's account of the trial is delivered in her idiosyncratic, buoyant style. The memoir opens with a Trump attorney asking her to list all of the people she's ever slept with ('As I am excessively fond of my lovers, my answers to her question give me several minutes of happiness,' she writes), and includes courtroom transcripts that are peppered with her colorful commentary. She describes being cross-examined about why she didn't scream during the assault — she didn't want to make a scene, she explained — and the intense moment when she and Trump locked eyes in the courtroom. In a phone interview on Friday, Carroll said she decided to write about the trial because, as a reporter, she couldn't resist the chance to narrate a surreal experience and major story. 'I found myself, an old journalist, in the middle of a high comedy surrounded with characters that not even Jonathan Swift himself could have created,' she said, evoking the famous satirist. 'I just could not help myself.' Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Axed and Answered: Deep Cuts From a History of Gruesome Crimes
Axed and Answered: Deep Cuts From a History of Gruesome Crimes

New York Times

time21-05-2025

  • New York Times

Axed and Answered: Deep Cuts From a History of Gruesome Crimes

You might think that writing about axe murder is morbid. 'But, really, it's the history of civilization!' says Rachel McCarthy James, whose new book, 'Whack Job' (St. Martin's), chronicles the bloody and fascinating history of this versatile tool and the people who wield it. In a video interview, James spoke about her favorite axe murderers, the banality of chain saws and Paul Bunyan. Her answers have been edited and condensed. Who was your first? What got you interested in axe murder? Well, it really started when I moved back to Kansas after college. My dad [the noted true-crime and baseball writer Bill James] was working on the book that would become 'The Man from the Train,' and hired me as a research assistant. Pretty quickly, it became clear that I was going to be a coauthor. So, definitely, the first axe murderer for me would be the subject of that book. The axe was not quite a central part of the case; it was one of many elements, although the fact that all the serial murders were committed with the back of an axe was certainly something the newspapers [in 1911 and 1912] focused on. So how, exactly, are you defining 'axe murderer?' It's such an interesting phrase, isn't it? We don't say 'knife killer' or 'gun shooter.' Culturally, it's very broadly defined — axes are used around the world, and I explore their use as weapons of war, and as tools of execution and human sacrifice. It's really entwined with different versions of how we experience, and how we commit, violence. In the case of William Tillman, which I write about, who was a free man trying to escape enslavement, that was self-defense. He wasn't acting out of revenge or rage; he was trying to save his own life, save his own freedom. And a lot of these killers weren't especially fixated on axes; it's just what was around. Do you distinguish between hatchets and axes? Not explicitly, because in both cases, what makes it interesting is that it's a tool as much as it is a weapon. The axe has been crucial to the development of human civilization in so many ways, in terms of altering landscape, allowing us to build houses. And with progress, almost inevitably, comes grisly brutality. Working together means coming into conflict with each other. What's one of the most intriguing axe murders you came across in your research? I was fascinated by the 1980 case of Candy Montgomery, who murdered Betty Gore with a huge, three-foot axe. At the time I wrote the proposal, that story seemed kind of forgotten. Then maybe two months after I signed my book deal, there were two different warring TV series! Which do you think is more accurate? I like the Hulu one quite a bit better. You end up taking a surprising line on Lizzie Borden. I put that in the book proposal almost out of obligation. I wasn't that excited about it until I actually got into the story and understood how deep the puzzle goes and why it's so transfixing to just so many people — beyond the catchy rhyme. And now I'm quite convinced that the case is far more complicated than we've been led to believe. While you get into global history, it struck me reading your book that the axe has a very particular relationship to the American mythos. It does embody American colonial self-visions in a lot of ways. An axe was something that any pioneer knew how to wield — there were so many different uses for it, building homes, shingles, as a cleaver, even shoeing horses — and I think it was part of how they saw themselves earning the land, even though, of course, it wasn't really earned. But many of the people who came over, like George Washington's grandfather, were not used to tilling the land themselves. They were using enslaved people to do a lot of that work for them. Putting axes in their hands as well, which could be a key to rebellion. Recently I came across a vintage hatchet cookie-cutter, and realized it could have been intended for Washington or Lincoln's birthday. Yes, it's just an odd fact that both these February presidents have the hatchet association. It's clearly about self-reliance. We associate it with Paul Bunyan, too. Paul usually has a double-sided axe, which is interesting because that's kind of traditionally considered a feminine tool. Logging is a big part of the axe story. Of course, logging now is all about sawmills and chain saws, which have also become symbols of gruesome violence, but the chain saw is, really, a tool. It doesn't have a history as a weapon, the way that the axe does. It really is just for cutting wood and, you know, occasionally you see it in real-life murders for dismembering. 'The Texas Chainsaw Massacre' stands out. I mean, how many people really know how to use a chain saw? You make the point that because everyone once had axes lying around — and did know how to use them — it was often the weapon of choice in a crime of opportunity. But nowadays, it's a more exotic tool. Does an axe murder today imply a greater level of intention and derangement? Here in Lawrence, with homelessness growing as it is in so many places, there have been a number of incidents of people in encampments threatening each other with axes. Again, they have it as a tool, and when things escalate, it's there. How are you at wielding an axe? Not very good at all. I'm OK at throwing axes, but not great at swinging them. My boss's husband collects axes, and we went to their property so I could get a little practical knowledge. I was sore for a week after about 45 minutes of swinging the axe. It made me realize how hard it would be to actually murder someone. Just to get it high enough to have the leverage — not to be morbid — is a feat. I mean, you need to be in shape. Or you'd have to be driven by an almost superhuman rage.

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