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History
On One of the Great Dutch Novels of Social Reform
How Eduard Douwes Dekker's
Max Havelaar
Led to a Revolution
By
Pramoedya Ananta Toer
| July 25, 2019
On the Hypercapitalist Utopian Project of Singapore
Trisha Low Examines the Successes and Failures of Lee Kuan Yew's Vision
By
Trisha Low
| July 24, 2019
The Unsung Woman Who Changed How We Take Care of Newborns
How Virginia Apgar Revolutionized the Metrics for Measuring a Baby's Health
By
Dr. Catherine Whitlock and Dr. Rhodri Evans
| July 24, 2019
In the Woods: Telling the Finnish-American Immigrant Story
Karl Marlantes on the Hardworking Lives of His Ancestors
By
Karl Marlantes
| July 23, 2019
Ronald Reagan Presided Over 89,343 Deaths to AIDS and Did Nothing
Walt Odets on the First Years of the AIDS Epidemic and the Stigmatization of Gay Men
By
Walt Odets
| July 22, 2019
Gaze Upon These Heroic (and Very Good) Space Dogs!
The Soviet Space Dogs Who Boldly Went Where They Were Told to Go
By
Martin Parr
| July 19, 2019
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
What If We Got Stuck on the Moon?
By
Harry Hurt III
| July 19, 2019
On the Human Spaceflight Program That Made Apollo Possible
By
James Donovan
| July 19, 2019
11 Legendary Literary Parties We're Sad to Have Missed
By
Emily Temple
| July 18, 2019
The world's oldest surviving letter by an actual Christian contains a request for fish sauce.
By
Aaron Robertson
| July 16, 2019
What Hemingway Cut From
For Whom the Bell Tolls
An Epilogue, For Starters
By
Seán Hemingway
| July 16, 2019
Brazil's History Is Ahead of It, Not Behind
Geovani Martins on Finding Joy in a Beautiful, Struggling Nation
By
Geovani Martins
| July 16, 2019
Why a 1980s Novel of Dystopian Patriarchy Still Speaks to Women Today
Leni Zumas on a New Edition of Suzette Haden Elgin's
The Judas Rose
By
Leni Zumas
| July 15, 2019
On the Brides of Jamestown: Old World Puritanism Weaponized for the New World
The Relentless Campaign Against Unmarried Women
By
Jennifer Potter
| July 12, 2019
We Need a New American Holiday Commemorating the 14th Amendment
Anthony McCann on the Constitutional Confusion of the So-Called American Patriot Movement
By
Anthony McCann
| July 9, 2019
Spurned in Love, Edith Wharton Turned to Poetry
Irene Goldman-Price on Wharton's Little-Known Book of Poems on Love, Loss, and Regret
By
Irene Goldman-Price
| July 9, 2019
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Page 193 of 218
Wake Up Dead Man
Knows the Whodunnit is Inherently Political. (It's also a Perfect Movie.)
December 12, 2025
by
Olivia Rutigliano
2025 In Trends: Dark Academia Featuring Darker Magic
December 12, 2025
by
Molly Odintz
The Best Books of 2025: Espionage Fiction
December 12, 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…"