The NYT's Annual Book-List Blacklist of Conservatives

The Times' list of 52 nonfiction books includes six from Times writers and no less than six from other liberal journalists, but zero from avowed conservatives.

This Sunday the Times will release its year-end list of the "100 Notable Books of 2008," both fiction and non-fiction. The 52


nonfiction selections, all reviewed favorably by the Times during 2008, included works by (my count) at least six liberal journalists from outside the paper, including Jacob Heil­brunn's "They Knew They Were Right: The Rise of the Neocons," and New Yorker writer Jane Mayer's "The Dark Side: The Inside Story of How the War on Terror Turned Into a War on American Ideals." Of the 52 books, sixothers werefrom Times writers: four from reporters, one from a columnist, and one from a magazine contributor.



The closest thing to a conservative book I could identify was "The Race Card" by black Stanford Law professor Richard Thompson Ford, described by the Times as a skewering of liberal sacred cows.



The books from Times reporters:


"Condoleezza Rice: An American Life" by Elisabeth Bumiller (reporter)


"The Night of the Gun" by David Carr (reporter)


"The House at Sugar Beach" by Helene Cooper (reporter)


"The Forever War" by Dexter Filkins (reporter)


"The Challenge: Hamdan v. Rumsfeld and the Fight Over Presidential Power" by Jonathan Mahler (magazine writer)


"Hot, Flat, and Crowded" by Thomas L. Friedman (columnist)


Absent from the list: "Bush's Law," by Justice Department reporter Eric Lichtblau, no doubt a result of Times Watch's savaging of it in the New York Post.



OK, maybe not.