Books
- Dirty Secrets, Dirty War: The Exile of Editor Robert J. Cox, by David Cox (2008).
- The Ministry of Special Cases, by Nathan Englander (2007), novel.
- La Historia Official (English: The Official Story), by Nicolás Márquez (2006), revisionist critique.
- Guerrillas and Generals: The Dirty War in Argentina, by Paul H. Lewis (2001).
- Suite argentina (English: Argentine Suite. Translated by Donald A. Yates. Online: Words Without Borders, October 2010) Four short stories by Edgar Brau (2000).
- God's Assassins: State Terrorism in Argentina in the 1970s by M. Patricia Marchak (1999).
- A Lexicon of Terror: Argentina and the Legacies of Torture, by Marguerite Feitlowitz (1999).
- Una sola muerte numerosa (English: A Single, Numberless Death), by Nora Strejilevich (1997).
- The Flight: Confessions of an Argentine Dirty Warrior, by Horacio Verbitsky (1996).
- Argentina's Lost Patrol: Armed Struggle, 1969–1979, by María José Moyano (1995).
- Dossier Secreto: Argentina's Desaparecidos and the Myth of the "Dirty War", by Martin Edwin Anderson (1993).
- Argentina's "Dirty War": An Intellectual Biography, by Donald C. Hodges (1991).
- Behind the Disappearances: Argentina's Dirty War Against Human Rights and the United Nations, by Iain Guest (1990).
- The Little School: Tales of Disappearance & Survival in Argentina, by Alicia Partnoy (1989).
- Argentina, 1943–1987: The National Revolution and Resistance, by Donald C. Hodges (1988).
- Soldiers of Perón: Argentina's Montoneros, by Richard Gillespie (1982).
- Guerrilla warfare in Argentina and Colombia, 1974–1982, by Bynum E. Weathers, Jr. (1982).
- Prisoner without a Name, Cell without a Number, by Jacobo Timerman (1981).
- Guerrilla politics in Argentina, by Kenneth F. Johnson (1975).
Read more about this topic: Maria Eugenia Sampallo
Famous quotes containing the word books:
“The exercise of letters is sometimes linked to the ambition to contruct an absolute book, a book of books that includes the others like a Platonic archetype, an object whose virtues are not diminished by the passage of time.”
—Jorge Luis Borges (18991986)
“There is no luck in literary reputation. They who make up the final verdict upon every book are not the partial and noisy readers of the hour when it appears; but a court as of angels, a public not to be bribed, not to be entreated, and not to be overawed, decides upon every mans title to fame. Only those books come down which deserve to last.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
“In an extensive reading of recent books by psychologists, psychoanalysts, psychiatrists, and inspirationalists, I have discovered that they all suffer from one or more of these expression-complexes: italicizing, capitalizing, exclamation-pointing, multiple-interrogating, and itemizing. These are all forms of what the psychos themselves would call, if they faced their condition frankly, Rhetorical-Over-Compensation.”
—James Thurber (18941961)