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How the Allies Learned to Win the Second World War

How the Allies Learned to Win the Second World War

From the We Have Ways of Making You Talk Podcast

By We Have Ways of Making You Talk | October 13, 2022

The Trailblazing Illustrator and Mountaineer Who Explored the Wild North

The Trailblazing Illustrator and Mountaineer Who Explored the Wild North

Pamela Henson on Mary Vaux Walcott’s Wildflowers

By Pamela Henson | October 12, 2022

How the Red Army’s Campaign of Terror Helped Cement Communist Control

How the Red Army’s Campaign of Terror Helped Cement Communist Control

Antony Beevor on the Bloody Birth of the Soviet Union

By Antony Beevor | October 12, 2022

Confronting Colonial Amnesia: Dredging Up the Sunken History of the Transatlantic Slave Trade

Confronting Colonial Amnesia: Dredging Up the Sunken History of the Transatlantic Slave Trade

Sean Kingsley in Conversation with Andrew Keen on Keen On

By Keen On | October 12, 2022

On the Interpreters Whose Words Directed Chinese and British History

On the Interpreters Whose Words Directed Chinese and British History

Henrietta Harrison on a Key Episode in Diplomatic History

By Henrietta Harrison | October 12, 2022

That Fictional Summer in Berlin: When a British Aristocrat, and Her Camera, Revealed the Truth About the Nazi Regime

That Fictional Summer in Berlin: When a British Aristocrat, and Her Camera, Revealed the Truth About the Nazi Regime

Lecia Cornwall in Conversation with Andrew Keen on Keen On

By Keen On | October 12, 2022

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • They
  • This Is Not About Us
  • Eradication: A Fable
  • The Boundless Deep: Young Tennyson, Science and the Crisis of Belief
  • The Last Kings of Hollywood: Coppola, Lucas, Spielberg—And the Battle for the Soul of American Cinema
  • End of Days: Ruby Ridge, the Apocalypse, and the Unmaking of America

How Women Writers Speculated Fictional Futures Free From Patriarchal Control

By Lisa Yaszek | October 11, 2022

How Retelling Indigenous Histories Create a More Just Future

By Emergence Magazine | October 11, 2022

The Wisdom of the Hidden Folk: How Iceland’s Elves Can Save the Earth

By Keen On | October 11, 2022

Reza Aslan: How to Become a Nation of Baskervilles

Reza Aslan: How to Become a Nation of Baskervilles

From Micro, a Podcast for Short But Powerful Writing

By Micro Podcast | October 11, 2022

What Progressives Can Learn From the Failure of the American State to Address the Legacy of Slavery After the Civil War

What Progressives Can Learn From the Failure of the American State to Address the Legacy of Slavery After the Civil War

Dale Kretz in Conversation with Andrew Keen on Keen On

By Keen On | October 11, 2022

Brainwashed: A New History of Thought Control

Brainwashed: A New History of Thought Control

Daniel Pick in Conversation with Andrew Keen on Keen On

By Keen On | October 7, 2022

Playwright Jeanne Sakata and Attorneys from the <em>Korematsu v. United States</em> Case Discuss <em>For Us All<em>

Playwright Jeanne Sakata and Attorneys from the Korematsu v. United States Case Discuss For Us All

Featuring the Japanese American Civil Liberties Collection from LA Theatre Works

By Audiobook Break | October 7, 2022

Forbidden Cities: How Palestinians Manage To Cross Occupation Lines

Forbidden Cities: How Palestinians Manage To Cross Occupation Lines

Ahed Tamimi and Dena Takruri on Visiting a Fractured Homeland

By Ahed Tamimi and Dena Takruri | October 6, 2022

David Dennis, Jr.: Why American Civil Rights Activists Should Be Treated as War Veterans

David Dennis, Jr.: Why American Civil Rights Activists Should Be Treated as War Veterans

David Dennis, Jr., in Conversation with Roxanne Coady on Just the Right Book

By Just the Right Book | October 6, 2022

Sex and the 16th Century: How John Donne Learned To Write Love Poetry

Sex and the 16th Century: How John Donne Learned To Write Love Poetry

Katherine Rundell on Love and Literature in the Elizabethan Era

By Katherine Rundell | October 5, 2022

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    • Valerie Wilson Wesley on the Harlem Renaissance and Writing Historical MysteriesFebruary 19, 2026 by Alex Dueben
    • The Best International Crime Fiction of February 2026February 19, 2026 by Molly Odintz
    • Baltimore, 1979: N Luv Wit a StripperFebruary 19, 2026 by Michael Gonzales
    • They
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "a succession of nine quietly horrifying stories from a dystopian pastorally radiant England The novella…"
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