
Native America Calling - Thursday, December 26, 2024 – 38 + 2: Healing and reconciliation

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Russian antiaircraft fire may be to blame for the Azeri jetliner disaster. A cab crashes into a midtown Manhattan crowd. Mega millions balloons beyond a billion. CBS News Correspondent Peter King has those stories and more on today's World News Roundup.
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Some people read books to escape. Others turn to them for instruction. As the new year looms, our correspondents – and listeners – consider which titles can help forecast what’s coming next. Picks include “Rainbows End” by Vernor Vinge, “Nuclear War” by Annie Jacobsen, “Not the End of the World” by Hannah Richie and “Orbital” by Samantha Harvey.
This is a full list of the books mentioned in the show:
“Rainbow’s End, A Deepness in the Sky and A Fire upon the Deep” by Vernor Vinge
“Ageless” by Andrew Steele
“War” by Bob Woodward
“Nuclear War: A Scenario” by Annie Jackobson
“1984” by George Orwell
“On Freedom and On Tyranny” by Timothy Snyder
“A Psalm for the Wild-Built” by Becky Chambers
“Qualityland” from Marc-Uwe Kling
“Ministry of the Future” by Kim Stanley Robinson
“Severance” by Ling Ma
“Land of Milk and Money” by C Pam Zhang
“The Broken Earth Trilogy” by NK Jemisin
“Not the End of the World" by Hannah Ritchie
“Orbital” by Samantha Harvey
“The Heart is a Lonely Hunter” by Carson McCullers
“Ancillary Justice” (The Imperial Rasch Series) by Ann Leckie
“The Battle of Dorking” by Sir George Chesney
“War of the Worlds" by HG Wells
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This Daily Detail features excerpts from interviews this year with
Dr. Jordan Vaughn of Alabama
and Robert Kennedy Jr. of New York
re: covid, vaccines, Trump's MAHA nominees and America's need for accurate and honest medical research and information
Aviva Siegel has not seen her husband Keith in a year, a separation made more painful by the fact that she knows firsthand what her husband is going through. Siegel was hostage in Gaza with her husband for 51 days before being freed in a hostage deal. Kept underground in Hamas tunnels, Siegel describes her capacity as “hell.”
“I touched death, and that's one of the hardest things on earth,” Siegel said. “While we were lying there, I was trying to think, what is it going to feel like? Am I going to die before Keith? And just prayed that I'd die first because I did not want to see Keith suffer.”
Siegel sits down with The Daily Signal to share her harrowing experience as a hostage in Gaza, and to call for her husband’s freedom.
Following the conversation with Siegel, Yarden Gonen and Amit Levy join the show to share about their siblings, Romi Gonen, 24, and Naama Levy, 20, who were taken hostage on Oct. 7. The two young women are among 10 females still believed to be alive and being held hostage by Hamas.
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How do ordinary people write the stories of their lives? In A Hundred English Working-Class Lives, 1900-1945 (Palgrave MacMillan, 2024), Rebecca Ball, a lecturer in history at Manchester Metropolitan University, presents the microhistory of a series of working-class autobiographies. Ranging from childhood experiences, through education, work, marriage and death, the book draws on the hundred voices to paint a rich and evocative picture of working-class life. These lives are lived against the backdrop of huge global events, not least of which are two world wars. Yet what comes through is the sense of continuity of everyday life even in the face of such huge social change. Offering theoretical reflection for historians as well as being accessible to general readers, the book is essential reading for anyone interested in understanding life in the first half of the twentieth century.
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