The next issue of the Claremont Review of Books will be out soon for subscribers, and we're confident they'll agree it's one of our best—and biggest—issues yet.
New York Times bestselling author Andrew Roberts graces the cover with his piece, "The Churchill of the Middle East," a trenchant review of Benjamin Netanyahu's recently released autobiography, Bibi.
"Besides being a blood-and-guts page-turner more reminiscent of a film script than of the memoirs of Israel’s longest-serving prime minister," writes Roberts, "it also deserves a place as one of history’s great Zionist texts."
Dr. Leonard Sax, another bestselling author, as well as physician and acclaimed education consultant, argues that "we're teaching the Holocaust all wrong" in his essay on human nature and the unintended consequence of oversimplifying our moral judgment when teaching one of history's darkest periods.
Subscribers will also enjoy essays by Christopher Caldwell on India, Jeffrey Anderson on redesigning the GOP presidential nominating process, Diana Schaub on manliness in the age of woke gender identity politics, Myron Magnet on the end of meritocracy, and William Voegeli on California’s drought and crisis politics, among others.
Among the reviews in this issue, you'll find contributions by some of America's most thoughtful and original writers and scholars such as Helen Andrews, Spencer Klavan, Joseph Epstein, Robert Reilly, Michael Knowles, Mark Helprin, Allen Guelzo, David Azerrad, and Arthur Herman on books shaping American political thought today.
We invite you to browse the table of contents of the new issue and, if you're not already a subscriber, we encourage you to become one today!