Danielle Henderson brings her family to life using humor as quick and sharp as the violence she survived as a child.
Danielle Henderson brings her family to life using humor as quick and sharp as the violence she survived as a child.
Danielle Henderson brings her family to life using humor as quick and sharp as the violence she survived as a child.
With a passionate love for the ocean, Frauke Bagusche plunges readers into the dazzling mysteries of the sea.
Krys Malcolm Belc’s growing realization that he identified as male happened as his wife bore children and as Belc decided to carry a child as well.
Ruth Scurr’s Napoleon gives intriguing and novel insight into a man about whom we thought everything had already been said.
The Wreckage of My Presence is funny and bold, occasionally manic or melancholy, and always hilarious and heartfelt. Fans will turn the last page wanting more.
This epic audiobook enhances Kendi and Blain’s transformative history project through the sense of humanity that only a person’s voice can convey.
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.
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