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Politics
How librarians saved the day in World War II.
Move over, Moneypenny. The first spies were nerds.
By
Brittany Allen
| February 6, 2025
For Andreas Malm, the Destruction of Gaza Runs Parallel to the Destruction of the Planet
“This is the end of the world that never ends.”
By
Andreas Malm
| February 6, 2025
Libraries are already contending with crappy, AI-generated books.
By
James Folta
| February 5, 2025
The Making of an Anti-Woke Zealot: How Elon Musk Was Infected with the MAGA Mind-Virus
Eoin Higgins on the Paranoid Billionaire’s Rightward Swing
By
Eoin Higgins
| February 5, 2025
What Publishing Can Do About Trump: Preserve the Independence of Our Bookstores and Libraries
“A just world starves fascism of the nutrients it needs to thrive.”
By
Josh Cook
| February 4, 2025
Cinema May Be Dying, But Shitposting is a Thriving New Artform
Alex Rollins Berg on Paul Schrader’s Auteur-to-Edge Lord Trajectory
By
Alex Rollins Berg
| February 3, 2025
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Here are the finalists for the second annual Inside Prize.
By
Brittany Allen
| January 31, 2025
How Local and Federal Laws Disenfranchised a Generation of Black Homeowners
By
Bernadette Atuahene
| January 31, 2025
Keep important information about your rights close at hand with these bookmarks.
By
James Folta
| January 30, 2025
On Donald Trump’s Aborted Executive Order and the Future of Congressional Power
Aron Solomon Unpacks the Legal Ramifications of the Latest Presidential Whim
By
Aron Solomon
| January 30, 2025
How Trump’s Illegal Administrative Coup Threatened Funding for Everything, Including Libraries.
“They are not afraid to threaten vast swathes of vulnerable Americans—the point is to be cruel and to punish.”
By
James Folta
| January 30, 2025
Why are we so obsessed with political cartoons?
A brief literary history from Ben Franklin to Ann Telnaes.
By
Brittany Allen
| January 29, 2025
Humanity’s Claustrophobia: How Technology and Globalization Created a World in Crisis
Robert D. Kaplan Reflects on Globalization’s Shifting Definitions in the Age of Social Media
By
Robert D. Kaplan
| January 29, 2025
How Literature Predicted and Portrayed the Atom Bomb
Dorian Lynskey on Pierrepoint B. Noyes, H.G. Wells, and the “Superweapons” of Early Science-Fiction
By
Dorian Lynskey
| January 28, 2025
The Trump administration just scored a major goal for book bans. (Which it claims are a "hoax.")
Here's how you can find the titles you need.
By
Brittany Allen
| January 27, 2025
“Anarchism Means That You Should Be Free.” On the Literature of Liberation
Ed Simon Considers the Life Alexander Berkman, Anarchist, Would-Be Assassin, and 19th-Century Luigi Mangione
By
Ed Simon
| January 27, 2025
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Page 23 of 230
6 Thrillers That Reveal the Dark Sides of Fame
January 21, 2026
by
Jessie Garcia
Ellie Levenson on the Beautiful Realism of Ambiguous Endings in Narratives
January 21, 2026
by
Ellie Levenson
Crime on the High Seas: 8 Historical Mysteries with Pirates and Smugglers
January 21, 2026
by
Linda Wilgus
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Sensitive and powerful The women in em This Is Where the Serpent Lives em are…"