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History
In the Room Where German Tycoons Agreed to Fund Hitler’s Rise To Power
David de Jong on Hermann Göring’s Meeting with Some of Nazi Germany's Wealthiest Businessmen
By
David de Jong
| April 22, 2022
Arundhati Roy on Religious Nationalism, Dissent, and the Battle Between Myth and History
“Our hopes have been cauterized, our imaginations infected.”
By
Arundhati Roy
| April 21, 2022
How the Transcendentalists Shaped American Art, Philosophy and Spirituality
Dominic Green on the Legacies of Whitman, Thoreau, Tyndale, and More
By
Dominic Green
| April 21, 2022
Why This Era of Global Change Demands New Language
Audrey Schulman on the Limits of Scientific Terminology
By
Audrey Schulman
| April 21, 2022
On the Absolute Pleasure of British Historical Reality TV Shows
Colleen Hubbard Couldn’t Have Written Her Novel Without the BBC’s Historic Farm Series
By
Colleen Hubbard
| April 21, 2022
Imagining the Lives of the Aviators Who Inspired William Faulkner
Taylor Brown on Looking to the Past (Which Isn't Even Past)
By
Taylor Brown
| April 21, 2022
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
On Fictionalizing the Long-Suppressed and Complicated Histories of Holland and Indonesia
By
Anne Lazurko
| April 21, 2022
On Königsberg, Fortress City and Outpost of Russian Power
By
We Have Ways of Making You Talk
| April 21, 2022
How Airline Stewardesses Fought Their Industry’s Toxic Patriarchal Norms
By
Nell McShane Wulfhart
| April 20, 2022
Reckoning with the History of Medical Racism: A Reading List
Dolen Perkins-Valdez Recommends Books That Spotlight the Colonization and Control of Black Bodies
By
Dolen Perkins-Valdez
| April 20, 2022
The Chairman Had No Rhythm: What It Meant to Dance with Mao Zedong
Vanessa Hua Follows Echoes of History Around the Dance Floor
By
Vanessa Hua
| April 20, 2022
Why the Evil Legacy of Nazi Billionaires Remains Very Much Alive in Germany Today
David De Jong in Conversation With Andrew Keen
By
Keen On
| April 20, 2022
How Did Shakespeare Kill (And Heal) His Characters?
Kathryn Harkup on the Many Ways To Live and Die on the Elizabethan Stage
By
Kathryn Harkup
| April 19, 2022
An Inside Look at Judith Jones’ First Notes for Julia Child
From the Language of Cooking to Troubles with the Omelette
By
Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz
| April 19, 2022
On the Romance and Wonder of Victorian Science
Nicole Yunger Halpern in Praise of an Expansive, Fantastical Approach to Knowledge
By
Nicole Yunger Halpern
| April 18, 2022
The Chilling Similarities Between Bush’s Invasion of Iraq and Putin’s Invasion of Ukraine
Joseph Weisberg in Conversation with Andrew Keen
By
Keen On
| April 18, 2022
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Page 93 of 223
Valerie Wilson Wesley on the Harlem Renaissance and Writing Historical Mysteries
February 19, 2026
by
Alex Dueben
The Best International Crime Fiction of February 2026
February 19, 2026
by
Molly Odintz
Baltimore, 1979: N Luv Wit a Stripper
February 19, 2026
by
Michael Gonzales
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"a succession of nine quietly horrifying stories from a dystopian pastorally radiant England The novella…"