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History
This Year’s NBCC Award Finalists:
Island on Fire
by Tom Zoellner
Carlin Romano on One of the Finalists for Nonfiction
By
Carlin Romano
| March 9, 2021
Read the newly announced inscription for the Barack Obama Presidential Library.
By
Walker Caplan
| March 8, 2021
Writing at the Edges of Holocaust Kitsch
Leora Fridman on Takis Würger’s Controversial Novel,
Stella
By
Leora Fridman
| March 8, 2021
Modern Parents Could Learn a Lot From Hunter-Gatherer Families
Michaeleen Doucleff on Childcare Throughout Human History
By
Michaeleen Doucleff
| March 8, 2021
The Publisher Who Transformed the Careers of Wallace Stevens and William Carlos Williams
Alan M. Klein on the Mystery of Ronald Lane Latimer
By
Alan M. Klein
| March 5, 2021
New and Noteworthy Nonfiction to Read This March
Remaking the World, Remembering Black Excellence, Wandering Mexico City, and More
By
Literary Hub
| March 5, 2021
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
The Long Silencing of Women in Science Continues Today
By
Olivia Campbell
| March 5, 2021
You Need to Read These Writers to Understand Native American Comedy
By
Kliph Nesteroff
| March 5, 2021
How Ida B. Wells Brought the Truth About Lynching to National Attention
By
Alex Tresniowski
| March 5, 2021
Beasts, Bears, Seeds, and Spring: Your Climate Readings
for March
Amy Brady Recommends Five New Books That Engage with
the Climate Crisis
By
Amy Brady
| March 4, 2021
A breakthrough technology allows researchers to see inside sealed centuries-old letters.
By
Walker Caplan
| March 3, 2021
D.H. Lawrence was the king of innuendo—but wouldn't admit it.
By
Walker Caplan
| March 2, 2021
The Story of Pan Am’s First
Black Stewardesses
Julia Cooke on Hazel Bowie and the Struggle for Open Skies
By
Julia Cooke
| March 2, 2021
When Fiction Bears Witness to a Crime Against Humanity
Kim Echlin on Telling Stories of the Unthinkable
By
Kim Echlin
| March 1, 2021
Thank You, Lawrence Ferlinghetti
Alysia Abbott Remembers the Abiding Spirit of North Beach
By
Alysia Abbott
| February 26, 2021
When Tennessee Williams was 16, he won a writing contest by pretending to be a disgruntled divorcee.
By
Walker Caplan
| February 25, 2021
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Elevate Your January Weekend Viewing with a Crime Movie set in the South of France
January 9, 2026
by
Olivia Rutigliano
"The Stephen King of His Time": Richard Matheson's Remarkable Career on Page and Screen
January 9, 2026
by
Keith Roysdon
8 Cozy Mysteries Perfect for Middle Grade and Young Adult Readers
January 9, 2026
by
Taryn Souders
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Poignant Tender The final line of em The Rest of Our Lives em is by…"