Three hundred thousand new books get published in the U.S. each year, and Zócalo showcases the authors of many of the best of them in person and on the Web. As the year winds down, we want to give a shout-out to the books that incited our passions, changed our minds, or made proselytizers out of us. Their subjects range from politics to baseball, Mexico to video games. Our top ten of 2011 are the books and ideas we think people should be talking about in 2012 and beyond. …
Readings
Readings: Archives
Legislating Better Teachers
Class Warfare: Inside the Fight to Fix America’s Schools
On October 25, 2011America’s public education system is foundering. U.S. test scores in most subjects are significantly lower than those of students in other developed countries: “The brutal truth [is] that we’re being out-educated,” U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan has said. But more often than not, the search for solutions is bringing teachers, policymakers, administrators, and parents into conflict rather than bringing real change to the students who need it most. Media mogul and writer Steven Brill visits Zócalo to discuss how much of the blame rests on the shoulders of teachers’ unions, and to offer his own prescription for how to save the country’s public schools. The following is an excerpt from the first chapter of Brill’s new book, Class Warfare: Inside the Fight to Fix America’s Schools. …
Give Me Power
The Quest: Energy, Security, and the Remaking of the Modern World
On October 10, 2011As global demand for energy keeps increasing, so does the potential for conflict. In The Quest: Energy, Security, and the Remaking of the Modern World, Pulitzer Prize-winning author Daniel Yergin lays out the challenges and the stakes of our pursuit of energy. Yergin visits Zócalo on October 11th to discuss what energy security means and whether we ever can have it…
A Little Dabba Will Do Ya
The Miracle of India’s Food-Delivering Dabbawallas
On October 4, 2011
Few nations are as difficult to understand as India, home to dozens of languages, hundreds of tribes, and billions of people. One writer who has tried to make sense of the place is Patrick French, author of India: A Portrait, an ambitious book that draws on years of reporting and observation. French visited Zócalo on October 6th to discuss whether India, subject of so many narratives, is really rich or poor. …
Obama the Timid
The Persistence of the Color Line: Racial Politics and the Obama Presidency
On September 7, 2011
The election of Barack Obama, while a milestone in race relations, also set off extensive debate over racial identity and politics in the United States. On Thursday, September 8th, Harvard law professor Randall Kennedy visits Zócalo to discuss how race continues to shape American politics and the presidency of Barack Obama…



