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Politics
A Better Way to Teach History: On Adapting James Loewen’s “Lies My Teacher Told Me”
Nate Powell on Book Bans and the Problem of American “Heroification”
By
Nate Powell
| July 22, 2024
From Dream to Nightmare: On the Deadly Manifestations of Religious Hatred in India
Zara Chowdhary Remembers a Idyllic Childhood Torn Apart by Violent Sectarianism
By
Zara Chowdhary
| July 22, 2024
Florida’s Commissioner of Education thinks Jane Austen was an American.
By
James Folta
| July 19, 2024
Joe Biden’s Gaza Problem: It’s Not Just the Pundit Class That Wants Him Gone
Dan Sheehan on Progressives’ Anger with the Current President
By
Dan Sheehan
| July 19, 2024
What the Gradual Corporate Capture of the Supreme Court Means For Democracy
Senator Sheldon Whitehouse and Jennifer Mueller on the Current Dangers Facing the American Judiciary
By
Sheldon Whitehouse and Jennifer Mueller
| July 19, 2024
How America’s Sex Education—and Oversexed Culture—Continues to Fail Women
Natalie Lampert on Moving the Conversation About Controlling Women’s Bodies Beyond Abortion
By
Natalie Lampert
| July 19, 2024
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
JD Vance is the Toxic Byproduct of America’s Obsession with Bootstrap Narratives
By
Alissa Quart
| July 18, 2024
Rebecca Solnit: It’s the Pundits Who Have Turned on Biden, Not the Party
By
Rebecca Solnit
| July 16, 2024
“Weaponized Autism.” Shame, Pride, and the Making and Undoing of the Alt-Right
By
Elle Reeve
| July 15, 2024
Leveling the Legal Playing Field: Why Everyone Deserves Their Day in Court
Abbe Smith on the Importance of Criminal Defense Attorneys to America’s Judicial Ecosystem
By
Abbe Smith
| July 12, 2024
Americans' confidence in higher education has taken a nosedive.
By
Brittany Allen
| July 11, 2024
20 Canadian authors have withdrawn from the Scotiabank Giller Prize.
By
Dan Sheehan
| July 10, 2024
Jan Carson on Capturing the Failures of Northern Ireland in Fiction
The Author of "Quickly, While They Still Have Horses" Reflects on a Country's Disappointing Lack of Progress
By
Jan Carson
| July 10, 2024
If You’re Going to Platform Extremists You Should At Least Check Their Facts
Maris Kreizman on Publishing’s Nonfiction Problem
By
Maris Kreizman
| July 9, 2024
Word Are Deeds: Rebecca Solnit the Power of Speech to Shape the Future
“Your opponents would love you to believe that it’s hopeless, that you have no power.”
By
Rebecca Solnit
| July 3, 2024
Gaza Diaries: “We Left Our Souls at Home.”
From Heba Al-Agha’s Account of the last Eight Months of Israel’s War on Gaza (trans. Julia Choucair Vizoso)
By
Heba Al-Agha and Julia Choucair Vizoso
| July 3, 2024
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Page 32 of 229
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…"