Other books we recommend this week include Dorian Lynskey’s study of the role the apocalypse plays in the cultural ...
Anyone who sets a yearly reading goal knows the truth: if you love something, you should quantify it with a numerical target ...
In this podcast, Motley Fool co-founder David Gardner is joined by superstar guests Randi Zuckerberg and Morgan Housel as ...
Gottfried Leibniz made conceptual advances that lie behind our digital world. Yet for centuries he was mocked for a misstep.
The Zippin Pippin isn’t just a rollercoaster; it’s a time machine on tracks. Originally built in 1923 in Memphis, Tennessee, ...
Deeply rooted in the exploration of spirituality, Al Mulhim's work connects geometric forms with the human psyche.
Enter Tiger Dust, the quirkiest oddities shop this side of the Hillsborough River. Nestled in the heart of Tampa’s eclectic ...
A saint-poet of medieval times Kabir was a rationalist, a social activist and a visionary.
Amanda Gorman, a Los Angeles native and the United States' first National Youth Poet Laureate best known for her poem "The Hill We Climb," took to social media Saturday to express her condolences ...
And to achieve it, millions of us will reach for a self-help book ... He is also the author of “Love Poems for Married People” and “Truth in Advertising,” among other books.
Poetry has been a cornerstone of human expression for millennia. One of the earliest poetic texts, Hymn to the Death of Tammuz, dates back to 2500–3000 BCE, alongside the ancient Epic of Gilgamesh.
By Elisa Gabbert Elisa Gabbert’s collections of poetry and essays include, most recently, “Normal Distance” and “Any Person Is the Only Self.” Her On Poetry columns appear four times a year.