There are several books that have been published this season to mark the event. For this months booktv club we want to know what book you are reading. Throughout the month joining other readers to discuss the books published this year. Simply go to booktv. Org and click on the book club enter the chat room. You can check out the Book Club Resources that we have posted including book reviews and videos are booktv archives and you can login as a guest or through your facebook or twitter account to post your thoughts on the kennedy books that you are reading. Then join booktv on saturday november 30 at 11 a. M. Eastern for a wide google plus chat to describe the books on the 35th president. Contact booktv over facebook or twitter to sign up for the live chat. This full booktv is marking the 50th anniversary. And this weekend we look back at 2,008 our tenth year on the air. That year the New York Times book review best nonfiction books included this republic of suffering by Drew Gilpin Faust as well as nothing to be frightened of. First of all it gives me a sense that i am performing a service, which is informing the public about something that i think that they really need to know about and i feel the core of why people like me become reporters, and the second thing is it was an obsessive kind of puzzle even from the beginning when i start on the story about the rendition. I couldnt believe people were being snatched off the streets in europe and elsewhere in the world by our own government officials wearing black hoods and putting these people on to a gulfstream jet taking them to dungeon someplace where there would be no lawyer, no due process or charges and potentially where they could be tortured forever and some of them died. It just was the most unamerican thing ive ever heard of. I absolutely couldnt believe it was for real when we started out on this and the more i learned, the more i realized that it was a worldwide puzzle and there were reporters around the world piecing little bits of it together which made it incredibly interesting. Booktv continues with robert spoo. Mr. Spoo talks with clashes between authors, publishers and literary pirates over copyrights going back to 1790 and discusses how the clashes have shaped the copyright laws that we have today. This is about one hour. As dean indicated, both of us and a large number of legal scholars you might be surprised to learn are interested in not the law that is areas in which something that is not compelled by law, something that is very organized has grown up to fill various needs and various cracks in the walls of the law. Im going to be talking about one of the laws of the 19th century in the United States and particularly on the authors and publishers in america really from the 1820s and 30s up until the end of the century where you will see its really kind of turned upside down when publishing