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History
When Tracker Tilmouth and the Warlpiri People of Central Australia “Invaded” Europe
Alexis Wright on Aboriginal Leader Tracker Tilmouth’s Trip to the United Nations in Geneva
By
Alexis Wright
| October 22, 2025
From Martinique to New York: On the Trailblazing Career of Paulette Nardal
Keisha N. Blain Considers the Pioneering Black Women Who Fought For Human Rights On a Global Stage
By
Keisha N. Blain
| October 22, 2025
How Oscar Wilde finally got his library card back.
130 years after the British Library revoked his card-carrying privileges, Wilde's grandson got his.
By
Brittany Allen
| October 20, 2025
Barf, Funk, Tug, and Other Etymological Mysteries
Joshua Blackburn Explores the Centuries-Long Evolution of the English Language
By
Joshua Blackburn
| October 20, 2025
The Mild Mannered Englishman Who Was the World’s Most Prolific Ghost Hunter
Ben Machell on Paranormal Investigator Tony Cornell
By
Ben Machell
| October 20, 2025
How Black Labor Unions Impacted the Creation of the Stanzaic Blues Poem
Kristin Grogan on the Poetry of Langston Hughes and Sterling Brown
By
Kristin Grogan
| October 20, 2025
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Five Essential Books For Understanding Haitian History
By
Marlene L. Daut
| October 20, 2025
A Palestinian Daughter’s Search for Connection with Her Father, Her Past, and Her Homeland
By
Mai Serhan
| October 17, 2025
Singing For Freedom: How Those Fleeing Slavery Found New Lives in the North
By
Tom Zoellner
| October 17, 2025
Anatomy of a Lynching: Racist Retribution in Owensboro, Kentucky
Sonya Lea Chronicles a Notorious Case of White Supremacist Violence in the American South
By
Sonya Lea
| October 16, 2025
Anna North Thinks About the Roman Empire All the Time
The Author Explores How Learning Latin Helps Her Untangle History With the Present
By
Anna North
| October 15, 2025
Why is America’s First Great War of Empire Barely Remembered at Home?
Joe Jackson on the Legacy of the United States' Involvement in the Spanish-American War and the Philippine Revolution
By
Joe Jackson
| October 15, 2025
On the Terrible Toll of the Last Bloody Year of WWII
David Nasaw Delves Into the Physical and Mental Trauma of the Second World War
By
David Nasaw
| October 14, 2025
On the Mysteries, Real and Imagined, Surrounding Christopher Columbus
Matthew Restall on the Familiar Political Battleground of Columbus
By
Matthew Restall
| October 13, 2025
How a 1977 Czech Writers’ Manifesto Applies to the Stark Realities of America in 2025
What We Can All Learn From the Courage of Charter 77
By
Jonny Diamond
| October 10, 2025
How Close Did We Come to Losing
Beowulf
Forever?
Robert Bartlett on a Vital Work of the Western Canon That Barely Survived Multiple Disasters
By
Robert Bartlett
| October 10, 2025
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Page 6 of 220
10 New Books Coming Out This Week
January 12, 2026
by
CrimeReads
The Clarity of Darkness: Margot Douaihy on Why Noir Feels So Relevant Today
January 12, 2026
by
Margot Douaihy
The Deadly Art of Falling in Love: Blending Romance and Crime in Literature
January 12, 2026
by
Letizia Lorini
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Poignant Tender The final line of em The Rest of Our Lives em is by…"