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Jonathan Taplin: When Music Was a Vanguard for Political Movements

Jonathan Taplin: When Music Was a Vanguard for Political Movements

In Conversation with Andrew Keen on Keen On

By Keen On | May 10, 2021

"If I could only see it!" Read a newly unearthed letter from Tennessee Williams to Eugene O’Neill.

By Walker Caplan | May 7, 2021

A Writer From the Future: Who Was Sci Fi Iconoclast Izumi Suzuki?

A Writer From the Future: Who Was Sci Fi Iconoclast Izumi Suzuki?

Andrew Ridker on the Brief and Brilliant Life of a Truly Unique Artist

By Andrew Ridker | May 7, 2021

Niall Ferguson on the Dangers of Focusing on a Single Disaster Scenario

Niall Ferguson on the Dangers of Focusing on a Single Disaster Scenario

In Conversation with Andrew Keen on the Keen On Podcast

By Keen On | May 7, 2021

On the Power of Fiction: 8 Novels About Little-Known Historical Events

On the Power of Fiction: 8 Novels About Little-Known Historical Events

Chanel Cleeton Recommends Zeyn Joukhadar, Vanessa Riley, and More

By Chanel Cleeton | May 7, 2021

After the Genocide, How Much Armenian Art Remains?

After the Genocide, How Much Armenian Art Remains?

Christina Maranci in Conversation with Christopher Lydon on Radio Open Source

By Open Source | May 7, 2021

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

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  • Repetition
  • Night Night Fawn
  • El Paso: Five Families and One Hundred Years of Blood, Migration, Race, and Memory
  • Gunk
  • The Glorians: Visitations from the Holy Ordinary

The Truth is Out There: On the Wild and Divisive World of Cryptozoology

By T. S. Mart and Mel Cabre | May 6, 2021

On James Baldwin’s Unflinching Exposé of American Greed and Racial Terror

By Eddie S. Glaude Jr. | May 6, 2021

How US Newspapers Became Utterly Ubiquitous in the 1830s

By kenellingwood | May 6, 2021

The Women Codebreakers Who Helped Win the War from Bletchley Park

The Women Codebreakers Who Helped Win the War from Bletchley Park

From the We Have Ways of Making You Talk Podcast

By We Have Ways of Making You Talk | May 6, 2021

How Do You Write a Historical Novel About Under-Documented Lives?

How Do You Write a Historical Novel About Under-Documented Lives?

Emily Hourican on Researching Her Novel, The Glorious Guinness Girls

By Emily Hourican | May 5, 2021

Natural Alchemy: On the Long History of Community Gardens in Indianapolis

Natural Alchemy: On the Long History of Community Gardens in Indianapolis

Angela Herrmann Considers Urban Agriculture and Food Production

By Angela Herrmann | May 5, 2021

Cross Your Legs, Stretch Your Hymen, Toss Your Ambition: The World According to Early “Marriage Classes”

Cross Your Legs, Stretch Your Hymen, Toss Your Ambition: The World According to Early “Marriage Classes”

Danielle Dreilinger on the College Courses That
Sought to Reduce Divorce

By Danielle Dreilinger | May 4, 2021

Polar Nightmare: On One of the First International Expeditions of the Modern Era

Polar Nightmare: On One of the First International Expeditions of the Modern Era

Julian Sancton Considers the Belgica Expedition and Frederick Albert Cook as an Antihero

By Julian Sancton | May 4, 2021

How Malcolm X Inspired John Coltrane to Embrace Islamic Spirituality

How Malcolm X Inspired John Coltrane to Embrace Islamic Spirituality

Richard Brent Turner on A Love Supreme, Artistic Transformation, and the Black Arts Movement

By Richard Brent Turner | May 4, 2021

How To: On the Unlikely Political and Cultural Power of the DIY Manual

How To: On the Unlikely Political and Cultural Power of the DIY Manual

Bethany Kaylor Digs Into the History of Doing It Yourself

By Bethany Kaylor | May 3, 2021

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