Mises Review, now online, is a quarterly review of the literature in economics, politics, philosophy, and law. Edited by David Gordon.
Original Intentions: On the Making and Ratification of the United States Constitution, by M.E. Bradford
By profession M. E. Bradford was a literary scholar, and Original Intentions, issued shortly after his untimely death, manifests his sure touch for the nuances of words.
Catholic Intellectuals and Conservative Politics in America, 1950-1985, by Patrick Allitt
Patrick Allitt's excellent book may be approached at two levels.
“Why Intellectual Conservatism Died,” by Michael Lind
Michael Lind maintains that intellectual conservatism collapsed over the past decade.
Dead Right, by David Frum
David Frum has identified a central problem affecting much of the American Right.
The Case Against The Fed, by Murray Rothbard
Murray Rothbard begins this outstanding book by calling attention to a paradox.
Knowledge and Persuasion in Economics, by Donald McCloskey
This is a most peculiar book. As a glance at McCloskey's enormous bibliography suffices to reveal, our author appears to have read everything.
The Market Process: Essays in Contemporary Austrian Economics, by Peter Boettke and David Prychitko
Tertullian famously asked, "what has Athens to do with Jerusalem?"fter reading The Market Process one can but inquire, "What has bad philosophy to do with Austrian economics?"