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Richard Stone Reeves
  • Language: en

Richard Stone Reeves

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1985
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  • Publisher: Unknown

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Legends
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 143

Legends

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1989
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  • Publisher: Unknown

A retrospective look at the life and work of Richard Stone Reeves, a painter of thoroughbred horses. It is a sequel to Classic Lines and Decade of Champions, and includes an account of the artist's distinguished career.

Crown Jewels of Thoroughbred Racing
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 200

Crown Jewels of Thoroughbred Racing

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1997-09
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  • Publisher: Unknown

This book contains beautiful portraits of champions in the exotic settings of 24 racecourses around the world. In addition, 21 world-class turf writers paint word portraits of the racecourses they love. Mr. Reeves adds his comments for each of the paintings.

Belmont Park
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 204

Belmont Park

World-renowned equine artist Richard Stone Reeves celebrates the 100th anniversary of Belmont Park iwth portraits and essays of seventy champion racehorses.

Dream Hoarders
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 206

Dream Hoarders

Dream Hoarders sparked a national conversation on the dangerous separation between the upper middle class and everyone else. Now in paperback and newly updated for the age of Trump, Brookings Institution senior fellow Richard Reeves is continuing to challenge the class system in America. In America, everyone knows that the top 1 percent are the villains. The rest of us, the 99 percent—we are the good guys. Not so, argues Reeves. The real class divide is not between the upper class and the upper middle class: it is between the upper middle class and everyone else. The separation of the upper middle class from everyone else is both economic and social, and the practice of “opportunity hoar...

Crown Jewels of Thoroughbred Racing
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 209

Crown Jewels of Thoroughbred Racing

  • Categories: Art

Includes articles about twenty five of the world's most famous racetracks, along with paintings of many of the world's most famous race horses.

Infamy
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 369

Infamy

A LOS ANGELES TIMES BESTSELLER • A NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW EDITOR'S CHOICE • Bestselling author Richard Reeves provides an authoritative account of the internment of more than 120,000 Japanese-Americans and Japanese aliens during World War II Less than three months after Japan bombed Pearl Harbor and inflamed the nation, President Roosevelt signed an executive order declaring parts of four western states to be a war zone operating under military rule. The U.S. Army immediately began rounding up thousands of Japanese-Americans, sometimes giving them less than 24 hours to vacate their houses and farms. For the rest of the war, these victims of war hysteria were imprisoned in primitive c...

Chasing the Light
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 373

Chasing the Light

In this powerful and evocative memoir, Oscar-winning director and screenwriter, Oliver Stone, takes us right to the heart of what it's like to make movies on the edge. In Chasing The Light he writes about his rarefied New York childhood, volunteering for combat, and his struggles and triumphs making such films as Platoon, Midnight Express, and Scarface. Before the international success of Platoon in 1986, Oliver Stone had been wounded as an infantryman in Vietnam, and spent years writing unproduced scripts while taking miscellaneous jobs and driving taxis in New York, finally venturing westward to Los Angeles and a new life. Stone, now 73, recounts those formative years with vivid details of...

The Particularistic President
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 251

The Particularistic President

As the holders of the only office elected by the entire nation, presidents have long claimed to be sole stewards of the interests of all Americans. Scholars have largely agreed, positing the president as an important counterbalance to the parochial impulses of members of Congress. This supposed fact is often invoked in arguments for concentrating greater power in the executive branch. Douglas L. Kriner and Andrew Reeves challenge this notion and, through an examination of a diverse range of policies from disaster declarations, to base closings, to the allocation of federal spending, show that presidents, like members of Congress, are particularistic. Presidents routinely pursue policies that allocate federal resources in a way that disproportionately benefits their more narrow partisan and electoral constituencies. Though presidents publicly don the mantle of a national representative, in reality they are particularistic politicians who prioritize the needs of certain constituents over others.