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...their eyes--a little ignition of trench-coat wanderlust, their minds flickering in black and white for a moment, a few frames of '30s movies. Daniel Pearl, I gather, had the gleam. A sheer avidity to know things is the most endearing trait of any journalist. Long ago, the novelist and journalist John Hersey wrote in a sketch of Henry Luce, "He was amazed and delighted to learn whatever he had not known before." Curiosity is the noblest form of intellectual energy; in any case, your mind goes nowhere without it--except maybe to fanaticism...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Gleam Of A Pearl | 3/4/2002 | See Source »

...their eyes - a little ignition of trench-coat wanderlust, their minds flickering in black and white for a moment, a few frames of '30s movies. Daniel Pearl, I gather, had the gleam. A sheer avidity to know things is the most endearing trait of any journalist. Long ago, the novelist and journalist John Hersey wrote in a sketch of Henry Luce, "He was amazed and delighted to learn whatever he had not known before." Curiosity is the noblest form of intellectual energy; in any case, your mind goes nowhere without it - except maybe to fanaticism...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Gleam of a Pearl | 2/26/2002 | See Source »

...contrast to the Irish situation, many potential peacemakers are themselves filled with despair. "There is so much ill will that neither side believes compromise is possible," says Orhan Pamuk, a prominent novelist who had offered his services as a negotiator in late 2000. Echoed Yucel Sayman, head of the Istanbul Bar Association: "Both sides have decided that death is the only solution." Local journalists say the public has lost heart and lost interest in the "death fast" and its cultish embrace of morbidity. The strikers appear to have mastered the science of dying, taking liquid and vitamins at a rate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hunger Strikes | 2/18/2002 | See Source »

...hack. Not exactly the same as being caught after dark in a pet cemetery, but chilling enough to make King, 54, decide to stop publishing at year's end. As he revealed to the Los Angeles Times, his greatest "nightmare" is "finish[ing] up like Harold Robbins," the novelist who churned out books into his 80s. King said he worries about repeating himself, which seems inevitable, since he's published at least a book a year since 1974. He plans to finish the last three novels in his "Dark Tower" series and this fall publish From a Buick Eight, about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Feb. 11, 2002 | 2/11/2002 | See Source »

This week TIME.com is publishing an excerpt from novelist and military historian CALEB CARR's new book, The Lessons of Terror. In the book, a provocative history of warfare against civilians from Roman times to the present, Carr argues that such tactics have always failed--and are destined to fail again. Chat with him about the war on terror on Monday...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TIME.com This Week FEBRUARY 4-10 | 2/11/2002 | See Source »

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