The Life She Wished to Live is the biography that Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings has long deserved.
The Life She Wished to Live is the biography that Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings has long deserved.
The Life She Wished to Live is the biography that Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings has long deserved.
In a must-read book for anyone interested in Abraham Lincoln, a scholar analyzes the president’s most personal notes to himself.
Lebo weaves personal stories with facts from nature, resulting in a difficult-to-classify literary and culinary exploration—the best kind, in our opinion.
This cookbook features dishes from immigrant and refugee chefs’ native homes in Iran, Iraq, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Venezuela and more.
With every page of this coffee-table stunner for bibliophiles, you’ll take a journey around the globe and through the stacks.
Higginbotham dispels the mythology that has surrounded Chernobyl in this darkly fascinating book.
Too often a side character in the story of Henry VIII, Catherine Howard is given new depth and dimension in Russell’s biography of the doomed queen.
A lively blend of reportage and history, this book provides a new perspective on the legacy of the American cowboy within the Black community.
Book clubs may view George Washington in a new light after reading Dunbar’s revealing narrative.
There’s one company responsible for bringing just about every book you’ve ever read into your life, and you may not even know it exists.
Michelle Zauner perfectly distills the palpable ache for her late mother and wraps her grief in an aromatic conjuring of her mother’s presence.
Tyler J. Kelley examines the delicate dance of commerce and nature on America’s waterways—and presents some creative solutions to maintain the equilibrium.
In an engrossing new study, Crowther reveals the parallels between Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton—two disparate, talented and troubled poetic geniuses.
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