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History
How London’s Great Plague Planted the Seeds For Future Scientific Advancements
Thomas Levenson on the Dubious Yet Important Science of 17th-Century Medicine
By
Thomas Levenson
| April 30, 2025
Tracing the Journey of World War II's Stolen and Looted Objects
Elisabeth Dini on the Decades-Long Legal Battles to Recover Long-Lost Valuables and Heirlooms
By
Elisabeth Dini
| April 29, 2025
75 Years Ago,
The Martian Chronicles
Legitimized Science Fiction
Sam Weller on Ray Bradbury’s Underappreciated Classic
By
Sam Weller
| April 28, 2025
A Deeply Globalized Ancient World: On William Dalrymple’s
The Golden Road
Alok A. Khorana Explores the Millenia-Long Cultural Connections Between India and Eurasia
By
Alok A. Khorana
| April 28, 2025
Uncovering the Forgotten: The Struggle For Trans History, From Nazi Germany to Today
Milo Todd on Writing Historical Fiction in an Era of Alternative Facts
By
Milo Todd
| April 28, 2025
What Can a 17th-Century English Doctor Teach Us About Embracing Uncertainty?
Cutter Wood on Thomas Browne and the Joys of Exploring What We Don't Know
By
Cutter Wood
| April 28, 2025
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Nanny As Nuisance: How Caregivers Disrupt the Fiction of the Nuclear Family
By
Hannah Zeavin
| April 25, 2025
Time to re-read
The Masses
, the 1910s literary magazine crushed by government censorship.
By
James Folta
| April 24, 2025
Five incredible books edited by Toni Morrison.
By
Brittany Allen
| April 24, 2025
“The Question Project.” On John Dunton and the World’s First Advice Column
Mary Beth Norton Explores the 17th-Century English Origins of a Major Cultural Phenomenon
By
Mary Beth Norton
| April 24, 2025
How the Rattlesnake Almost Became an Emblem of a Nascent America
Stephen S. Hall on the Centuries-Long Historical Evolution of a Serpentine Symbol
By
Stephen S. Hall
| April 24, 2025
The Sant Jordi NYC Festival of Books & Roses is bringing the Catalan celebration to America.
By
James Folta
| April 23, 2025
On the Vital Importance of Preserving the Most Obscure—and Endangered—of the World’s Many Languages
Lorna Gibb Considers How Language Shapes Identities, Worldviews and Societies Across the Globe
By
Lorna Gibb
| April 23, 2025
How Christian Missionaries Sought to Erase Native American Culture and Identity
Mary Annette Pember on the Church-State Collaboration That Led to Systematic Displacement Throughout the 19th Century
By
Mary Annette Pember
| April 23, 2025
The Acid Queen: Rosemary Woodruff Leary, the Invisible Woman of Western Psychedelia
Susannah Cahalan on the Disappearing Acts and Unseen Influences of Timothy Leary’s Wife
By
Susannah Cahalan
| April 23, 2025
What if the final meeting between V.P. Vance and Pope Francis took place in a Dan Brown novel?
By
James Folta
| April 22, 2025
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Page 16 of 219
Inside the World of Brubaker and Phillips' Criminal – on the Page and Screen
December 19, 2025
by
Alex Segura
The Best Crime TV Series of 2025
December 18, 2025
by
Olivia Rutigliano
The Best Books of 2025: Legal Thrillers
December 18, 2025
by
CrimeReads
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Tokarczuk is an excellent storyteller She is very good at creating a 'sense of anticipation…"