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Politics
“A Thousand Eulogies Are Exported to the Comma.” Of Syntax and Genocide
Nicki Kattoura on the Impossibility of Writing About the Destruction of Gaza
By
Nicki Kattoura
| February 12, 2024
No Slaves, No Masters: What Democracy Meant to Abraham Lincoln
Allen C. Guelzo on the 16th President’s Civic and Political Philosophy
By
Allen C. Guelzo
| February 8, 2024
Trouble at the Southern Border: How US Immigration Policy and Foreign Policy Are Inextricably Linked
Jonathan Blitzer on the Origins and Repercussions of the Current Humanitarian Crisis at the Border
By
Jonathan Blitzer
| February 5, 2024
Sisterhood of the Second World War: On Writing Female Spies’ Classified Adventures
CJ Wray Shares What a Pair of Veteran Sisters Taught Her About Espionage and Postwar Life
By
CJ Wray
| January 31, 2024
A Brief History of the Grand Old American Tradition of Banning Books
Laura Pappano Investigates the “Chaotic and Illogical Business” of Censorship
By
Laura Pappano
| January 30, 2024
No Safe Place to Grieve: The Trauma of Muslim Americans Living Under Surveillance
Aisha Abdel Gawad on the Danger of Talking Openly About Palestinian Pain
By
Aisha Abdel Gawad
| January 29, 2024
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
The Revolutionary Stranger: How Frantz Fanon Put Theory Into Practice
By
Adam Shatz
| January 25, 2024
Life a Cold Crematorium: A Long-Lost Memoir from a Holocaust Survivor
By
József Debreczeni
| January 25, 2024
What Virginia Woolf’s “Dreadnought Hoax” Tells Us About Ourselves
By
Danell Jones
| January 25, 2024
Fire, Earth, Spring: Unity and Resistance in the Lands of SWANA
Sahar Delijani on the Legacies of the Arab Spring
By
Sahar Delijani
| January 23, 2024
White America Facing Its Ghosts: The Slow Unraveling of a Nation’s Suburbs
Benjamin Herold on White Flight, Demographic Shifts, and Coming to Terms With the Racist Policies That Created a Crisis
By
Benjamin Herold
| January 23, 2024
Nick Romeo on the Profound—and Scary—Influence of Economic Ideas
“It’s hard to imagine a group of businessmen aggressively lobbying against the physics curriculum at MIT.”
By
Nick Romeo
| January 19, 2024
Why We Should All Read
Hannah Arendt Now
Lyndsey Stonebridge on “The Origins of Totalitarianism” and the Failure of Democracy
By
Lyndsey Stonebridge
| January 18, 2024
Rebecca Solnit: Slow Change Can Be Radical Change
“Describing the slowness of change is often confused with acceptance of the status quo. It’s really the opposite.”
By
Rebecca Solnit
| January 11, 2024
How Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Rose Up and Won an Underdog Political Victory
Joshua Green Details AOC’s Grassroots Campaign Against the Incumbent Joseph Crowley
By
Joshua Green
| January 11, 2024
Vigilantes and Vengeance: On the Women Who Fight Back
How Elizabeth Flock Immerses Herself in the Lives of Her Subjects
By
Elizabeth Flock
| January 9, 2024
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Page 44 of 234
10 New Books Coming Out This Week
February 16, 2026
by
CrimeReads
The Three Lives of William Conrad: More Than Just the ‘Heavy’
February 16, 2026
by
Keith Roysdon
Why You Should Watch: Santosh (2024)
February 16, 2026
by
Radha Vatsal
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"a succession of nine quietly horrifying stories from a dystopian pastorally radiant England The novella…"