| Book Reviews
by Michael Fumento
Maybe
Not Such a Paradox After All (The Claremont Institute, February 1,
2005)
Breaking
Rank (The New York Post, February 8, 2004)
The Bacterium that Changed History (The Claremont
Review of Books, Winter 2002)
Good News, Bad News (Reason, June 2000)
The Myth of Male-evolent Medicine (April 22, 1999)
More for Less (Reason Magazine, April 1999)
Science Reporting Under a Microscope (The Wall Street Journal, February 24, 1999)
Yesterday's Tomorrows: 1968-1998, Books that Got the
Future Right – and Wrong (Reason Magazine, December 1998)
One Nation Under Blob: What's
Gotten Into Us? ( The American Spectator, January 1997)
Our Stolen Future? Not Even Misplaced (1996)
Virus Hunters: Life in the Real Hot Zone, Doctors Give Gripping Account of Exotic-Disease Fight (The Washington Times, August 18, 1996)
Racial Politics Make Strange Enemies (1996)
Lying With Numbers (1994)
Heretic: Rethinking AIDS (Commentary Magazine, July 1993)
What You Can Do to Avoid AIDS (Washington Monthly, December 1992)
Greedy Lawyers and `Expert' Witnesses (The Wall Street Journal, October 9, 1991)
Safe Blood: Purifying the Nation's Blood Supply in the Age of
AIDS (1991)
Trouble in the Tropic of Cancer (Reason Magazine, April 1991)
Exacerbating the AIDS Panic (1990)
Liability: The Legal Revolution and its Consequences (The American Spectator, March 1989)
Destroying Democracy: How Government Funds Partisan Politics (1988)
And the Band Played On (The American Spectator, February 1988)
Less Fun All the Time (National Review, July 18, 1986)
With the Contras: A Reporter in the Wilds of Nicaragua (National Review, June 6, 1986)
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