Nonfiction

Reviewed by: 

Batja Mesquita, PhD is an affective scientist and a social psychologist.

Editor(s):
Genre(s):
Reviewed by: 

“essential reading for anyone concerned with social justice. . . . a blueprint for a Jewish 1619 Project.”

Reviewed by: 

“Memoir is meant to be an individual story that illuminates the human condition.

Reviewed by: 

The Covid-19 plague descended with a vengeance on New York City in early March 2020. The city was utterly unprepared, including its preeminent hospitals.

Reviewed by: 

There is something wrong with contemporary liberal democracy, especially in the United States.

Reviewed by: 

Ancestors and forerunners show up in the annals of American literature more often than readers imagine.

Author(s):
Genre(s):
Reviewed by: 

The Flatboat Patience’s colorful come-and-go crew of cosplaying and pedantic historical re-enactors, a gadget-head food-snob galley chef, and alternately doomsaying and day-saving

Illustrator(s):
Other Contributors:
Genre(s):
Reviewed by: 

The Secret Life of Butterflies is a gorgeous book with a blue cover loaded with Monarch butterflies.

Reviewed by: 

“An excellent introductory or reference volume for the novice history student beginning the study of military history . . .”

Reviewed by: 

“Often viciously funny, this book is a breezy balm for the anti-Trump crowd.”

Reviewed by: 

“There is a realization that comes with reading Trees: that while the collection brings with it an appreciation of Hesse’s work, each essay, each poem can be taken away and treasur

Reviewed by: 

“In these days of isolation and disconnection, Carlson shows us how to enrich our own landscapes, both inner and outer. What seems barren at first can reveal hidden treasures.”

Reviewed by: 

“without an ability for a nation to protect an objective truth that all political tribes can agree on, there is a substantial challenge in maintaining a healthy American democracy.”

Reviewed by: 

In the winter of 1949 the celebrated French avant-garde artist Jean Cocteau came to New York to give a talk at the screening of his latest film, The Eagle with Two Heads.

Author(s):
Genre(s):
Reviewed by: 

Veteran reporter Stephen Bates, who once covered both the English royals and religion for the Guardian, has since leaving the newspaper carved out an engaging and enterta

Reviewed by: 

“Where Mandelbaum breaks new ground is when he discusses and assesses the serial failures of Presidents Clinton through Obama in post-Cold War geopolitics.

Reviewed by: 

“A thoughtful, revealing book about a horrid man and serial predator who produced some fine movies.”

Reviewed by: 

Bad City, a startling tale of people looking the other way and behaving ever so badly, never lets up.

Reviewed by: 

Growing Up Getty: The Story of America’s Most Unconventional Dynasty is a riveting biographical work of the life and legacy of America’s greatest wildcatter, J.Paul Getty, who discovered t

Reviewed by: 

“True Raiders represents the best kind of rollicking adventure true-life tale, lively engaging prose based on what did happen, not wild speculation bordering on fantasy.”

Reviewed by: 

“Jefferson Morley’s new book Scorpions’ Dance uses the relationship between CIA Director Richard Helms and President Richard Nixon as a window through which to take another look at

Author(s):
Genre(s):
Reviewed by: 

If you live in Poetry World, you’ve been hearing about Zeina Hashem Beck’s O for a while now.

Author(s):
Genre(s):
Reviewed by: 

In his 1999 book The Age of Spiritual Machines Ray Kurzweil, inventor of the reading machine for the blind, explored the possibility of a world when the AI creations of our future were not

Reviewed by: 

Casey Sherman has had enormous commercial success as an author.

Reviewed by: 

American Cartel joins a small shelf of important books, including Dopesick and Empire of Pain, that fully capture the greed and corruption fueling the nation’s d

Pages