As part of its Women’s History Month coverage, The National Interest is publishing a multi-part series honoring some of ...
Okay, so remember when I said last semester that there are four authors I always zero in on? I’ve now reviewed books from two ...
Visitors to the Library of Virginia can talk with authors about the history and culture of Appalachia, Black culinary history, a racially-charged court case set in 1960s Virginia and more during ...
At a time when, in his words, “nobody was writing about gay life,” he produced groundbreaking novels and memoirs and ...
With Season 3 of Prime Video's hit sci-fi series returning, here's how to read the books the TV show is based on.
A peace settlement to end a major war can be an opportunity to reorder the world. After the defeat of Napoleon Bonaparte in ...
The Third Reich viewed women’s rights as “confusion of a rootless liberalism” and emphasized the slogan “children, kitchen, ...
Anselm Kiefer’s “Breaking of the Vessels,” weighing more than seven tons, is one of the artist’s many manic dissections of ...
The meticulously research book presents an unvarnished look at the good times and bad days in the Golden State which ...
Five years ago today, we we were sent home from school with the “understanding” that we would be back in two weeks. I ...
Clay Risen examines Cold War hysteria in an even-handed way, trusting readers to make the connection between McCarthyism and ...
Author William Geroux finds a compelling true-crime angle in a series of camp murders, as well as international intrigue in a ...