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History
Muhammad Ali, Author of "The Greatest Book of All Time"?
The Early 1970s were Hard Times for an American Icon
By
Jonathan Eig
| November 1, 2017
Literary Witches, From Angela Carter to Zora Neale Hurston
Celebrating the Radical Creativity of Five Beloved Writers
By
Taisia Kitaiskia and Katy Horan
| October 31, 2017
Against the "Melting Pot" Metaphor
On Arguments Over Americanization and Homogenized Culture
By
Mike Wallace
| October 30, 2017
The Secret Literary History of Some of Your Favorite Colors
Yellow Books, L. Frank Baum's Emerald, and The Color Purple
By
Kassia St. Clair
| October 27, 2017
Uncovering the History of Slavery in Detroit
"We Owe it to Them, and Ourselves, to Bear Close Witness"
By
Tiya Miles
| October 27, 2017
The Enslaved Man Who Escaped George Washington—Twice
How 30,000 Enslaved People Gained Freedom by
Defecting to the British
By
Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
| October 24, 2017
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
A Pilgrimage to the World's Most Famous Manuscript
By
Christopher de Hamel
| October 24, 2017
When the French Invaded Hanoi, My Brothers Stayed Behind
By
Mai Elliott
| October 20, 2017
Jennifer Egan Makes Friends Across Seven Decades (and Countless Letters)
By
Jennifer Egan
| October 19, 2017
On the Literary Wheelings and Dealings of Ulysses S. Grant and Mark Twain
The World of Publishing, Unchanged for 150 Years
By
Ron Chernow
| October 17, 2017
Mark Twain, Cocaine Kingpin?
"I never was great in matters of detail"
By
Alan Pell Crawford
| October 16, 2017
How a History of Two Pet Chameleons Made a Case for the Animal Soul
On Madeleine de Scudéry’s History of “The Most Beautiful Animal in the World”
By
Peter Sahlins
| October 6, 2017
10 Tales of Manuscript Burning (And Some That Survived)
A Brief History of Bibliocide
By
Emily Temple
| October 4, 2017
The Mess We're In: On the Inevitability of Post-Cold War Chaos
Historian Odd Arne Westad Wonders if it Could Have Been Different
By
Odd Arne Westad
| September 28, 2017
Returning Antoine de Saint-Exupéry to the Skies
On the Origins of
The Little Prince
and Restoring a Classic Plane
By
Douglas R. Dechow and Anna Leahy
| September 26, 2017
Speaking Truth to Power is as American as Apple Pie
America’s First Revolutionary Abolitionist Deserves a Statue in the Middle of Town
By
Marcus Rediker
| September 26, 2017
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Page 208 of 220
6 Thrillers That Reveal the Dark Sides of Fame
January 21, 2026
by
Jessie Garcia
Ellie Levenson on the Beautiful Realism of Ambiguous Endings in Narratives
January 21, 2026
by
Ellie Levenson
Crime on the High Seas: 8 Historical Mysteries with Pirates and Smugglers
January 21, 2026
by
Linda Wilgus
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Sensitive and powerful The women in em This Is Where the Serpent Lives em are…"