
Volume III, Issue 33
February 7 - February 14, 2000

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Murderous Memories [2]
Sinclair Browning's Apache P.I. unearths another Tucson crime scene in "The Sporting Club."
Christine Wald-Hopkins, TUCSON WEEKLY

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Blank Theories [3]
"Conspiranoia!: The Mother of All Conspiracy Theories" is more encyclopedia than exposé.
Ben Winters, NEWCITY CHICAGO
Kinship Without Condescension [4]
Ian Frazier's On the Rez.
Dorothy Cole, WEEKLY ALIBI
Book Reviews [5]
When "dinosaurs" ruled New York's Upper West Side, and a tale of grief.
MEMPHIS FLYER
Now What? [7]
Love to read? Need some clever ideas? Our library of resources and staff picks are guaranteed to turn on plenty of mental light bulbs via your electrified eye sockets.
WEEKLY WIRE

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LETTER FROM THE EDITOR:
mpathy, perception and a few words of Sioux are no substitute for kinship and life experience, but Ian Frazier is honest and realistic about his relationship to his Indian friends and their culture, and he is able to write about them honestly and realistically.
Sinclair Browning's new Tucson-based mystery novel features smart writing, a lively voice, rich settings, and a compelling heroine in Twinkie-scarfing private investigator Trade Ellis.
The truth may be out there, but the facts can be terribly difficult to come by. More encyclopedia than exposé, "Conspiranoia!" is not a grand narrative but a simple glossary of fringe thought.
Also, New York's "dinosaurs," rain in the desert, and more.

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Speed Reader [6]
"Lluvia en el Desierto/Rain in the Desert."
Ann Peterpaul, WEEKLY ALIBI
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