Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
Used book in good and clean conditions. Pages and cover are intact. Limited notes marks and highlighting may be present. May show signs of normal shelf wear and bends on edges. Item may be missing CDs or access codes. May include library marks. Fast Shipping.
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
Fair. This book is a well used but readable copy. Integrity of the book is still intact with no missing pages. May have notes or highlighting. Cover image on the book may vary from photo. Ships out quickly in a secure plastic mailer.
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
Very Good. Very Good condition. Very Good dust jacket. A copy that may have a few cosmetic defects. May also contain light spine creasing or a few markings such as an owner's name, short gifter's inscription or light stamp.
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
Good. Good condition. Good dust jacket. A copy that has been read but remains intact. May contain markings such as bookplates, stamps, limited notes and highlighting, or a few light stains.
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
Good in Fair jacket. 25 cm. ix, [1], 533, [1] pages. Frontis maps. Illustrations. Occasional Footnotes. Appendix. Author's Note. Sources and Notes. Bibliography. Index. Some wear and small tears to DJ edges. Inscribed by author on fep. Front board weak and has been restrengthened with glue. Raymond Bonner is the author of numerous books, an investigative reporter who also been a staff writer at the New York Times, and The New Yorker and contributed to The New York Review of Books. His latest book, Anatomy of Injustice: A Murder Case Gone Wrong, was published by Knopf in February 2012. Bonner is best known as one of two journalists who broke the story of the El Mozote massacre, in which some 900 villagers, mostly women, children and elderly, at El Mozote, El Salvador, were slaughtered by the Atlacatl Battalion, a unit of the Salvadoran army in December 1981. From information found on-line. Bonner is a formidably energetic journalist. He has spared no effort to prove that the entire period of Marcos's "constitutional authoritarianism, " dating from his 1972 invocation of martial law to his 1986 overthrow, was the fault of the U.S. In fact, Bonner is happy to charge that virtually everything wrong with the Philippines over the past ninety years or so can be traced to American desire for strategic advantage (the Clark Air Force and Subic Bay military bases). Perhaps Bonner's most startling accusation is that Marcos's plan to invoke martial law in the Philippines was made known to, and tacitly approved by, President Richard M. Nixon. In Bonner's view, the United States got dictatorship in the Philippines because Washington wanted it, opting at almost every turn for Marcos's brand of authoritarianism over democracy and human rights. This makes the U.S. responsible for poverty in the Philippines and for the growing Communist insurgency.