This fascinating dive into Hollywood history is a splendidly starry way to add to your TBR pile.
By Steven Rea
This fascinating dive into Hollywood history is a splendidly starry way to add to your TBR pile.
This fascinating dive into Hollywood history is a splendidly starry way to add to your TBR pile.
Ian Wright’s book connects readers with an astonishing range of international data—no passport required.
Capturing a sense of the infinite unknown that enraptures dedicated stargazers, SUN AND MOON is a stunning visual history of space exploration.
Discover those distant days when tickets, terminals and take-offs inspired excitement in the hearts of travelers.
Readers are bound to get a rush from THE AMUSEMENT PARK.
For readers who take pleasure in pondering the enigmas of the natural world, CONSIDER THE PLATYPUS is a can’t-miss gift.
In her new book, You Look Like a Thing and I Love You, Janelle Shane assures us that AI is really good at some things and really, really terrible at others.
Part travel memoir, part history, part spiritual reflection—A Pilgrimage to Eternity is wholly enjoyable.
Aaron Glantz untangles how a group of Wall Street bankers and hedge fund partners transformed a national crisis into a financial bonanza for themselves.
Tom Holland’s sprawling and detailed look at the ways that Christianity grew to be such a powerful force in the Western world is energetically conducted.
God Save the Queens fills an empty space in music history, giving female hip-hop artists the platform they’ve always deserved.
Crucible is a fascinating gallop through interwar Europe, told chronologically through the eyes of some of the era’s most radical figures.
What if you entered a psychiatric hospital under false pretenses? From inside, you’ll be able to observe how medical staff interacts with patients.
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