The NCSE has changed how they publish RNCSE. Content from the latest issue is up online, inlcluding a book review by me:
NCSE is pleased to announce the second issue of Reports of the National Center for Science Education in its new on-line format. The issue — volume 31, number 2 — includes Matt Cartmill’s “Turtles All the Way Down: The Atlas of Creation“; Alice Beck Kehoe’s “The Lost Civilizations of North America Found … Again!”; and, in his regular People and Places column, Randy Moore’s “Billy Sunday: 1862-1935,” discussing the creationism of the ballplayer-turned-evangelist.
Plus a flurry of Darwinalia: Michael D. Barton reviews John van Wyhe’s The Darwin Experience
; Steven Conn reviews James Lander’s Lincoln and Darwin
; Piers J. Hale reviews David N. Reznick’s The Origin Then and Now
; Allen D. MacNeill reviews James T. Costa’s The Annotated Origin
; Michael Ruse reviews Phillip Prodger’s Darwin’s Camera
and Barbara Larson and Fae Brauer’s The Art of Evolution
; and Keith Thomson reviews Julia Voss’s Darwin’s Pictures
.
All of these articles, features, and reviews are freely available in PDF form from http://reports.ncse.com. Members of NCSE will shortly be receiving in the mail the print supplement to Reports 31:2, which contains, in addition to summaries of the on-line material, news from the membership, a new column in which NCSE staffers offer personal reports on what they’ve been doing to defend the teaching of evolution, and more besides. (Not a member? Join today!)