Happy holidays! As we do at the end of each year, The Review asked a dozen of our contributors to recommend scholarly books that thrilled, surprised, challenged, and delighted them. This year the ...
A Pulitzer Prize winning book on a father’s struggle to find answers about his child’s death, and a blistering satire on race ...
Whether you’re scrambling for a last-minute gift or laying in your own stores for winter reading, these acclaimed faculty ...
When Mollica and Raziuddin began batting ideas back and forth at the start of the project, Mollica says he kept envisioning a ...
The End of Trauma. George Bonanno’s 2021 book serves up a controversial take, backed by extensive data, that horrible experiences don’t usually traumatize us—and argues that we are already experts in ...
From how bees see the world to what berries can teach us about the economy, these recent titles provide an infusion of ...
In the book “Cursed,” the Brooklyn-based photographer and director Charlie Engman intentionally leans into the strangeness of ...
Recent research highlights a decline in reading for enjoyment, with significant portions of the population, especially ...
School districts have been grappling with what books should be allowed in Florida school libraries for the last several years ...
New editions of books by John Dickson Carr, Tom Mead and Edna Sherry remind me why I loved them the first time. The first two books of “On the Calculation of Volume,” by Solvej Balle ...
From a deep dive on a fatal space shuttle disaster to a study of a dozen iconic trees, these are our favorite titles this ...
Grey’s Anatomy besties Jessica Capshaw and Camilla Luddington have been opening up on their podcast iHeartRadio’s Call It What It Is. They’ve talked about everything from AI and what gives ...