The Best Books of 2018: Science Fiction & Fantasy!
/The best science fiction and fantasy in a year filled with sequels, prequels, and books-in-series.
Read MoreAn Arts & Literature Review
The best science fiction and fantasy in a year filled with sequels, prequels, and books-in-series.
Read MoreA year's worth of historical fiction steeped in relevance.
Read MoreDebut fiction is a strong indicator of the general health of a literary year.
Read MoreThe yardstick here is not solely accuracy of translation, but the worth of the English-language results.
Read MoreThe pure has been sifted from the pandering and here are the gems I found!
Read More2018 presented a bracing variety of enterprising reprints.
Read MoreOakes takes us along as she and her team fight the damp and cold of the Alaskan wilderness to gather data.
Read MoreIt’s refreshing how Emezi approaches a story of fractured national and racial identity quite differently from recent books that deal with similar themes.
Read MoreIf you only know his name from The Avengers franchise, you’re missing the point entirely.
Read MoreAlvarez seems to have cracked the code for how to translate these novels to the screen.
Read MoreAn examination of the agonizing debates about the meaning of a just war in the Civil War era.
Read MoreCommunicates a compelling voice from a speaker who’s well-intentioned, well-studied and considerate, but hopelessly aloof.
Read MoreExploring the only three impeachment cases from history, as well as its power and meaning for today.
Read MoreNot your ordinary pastiche as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle himself pursues Jack the Ripper. . .
Read MoreExplore how the geography of some of our favorite literary works influence storytelling as well as the reader’s response.
Read MoreThe general public has embraced The Statute of Liberty like no other work of art in the American experience.
Read MoreVideo game writer Alex Rubens sets out to chronicle the game’s creation as well as its lasting impact on both gaming and popular culture.
Read MoreThe revelation – thrilling and unsettling in equal measure – that the plain old precincts of our homes are alien wonderlands of the exotic and the unexpected.
Read MoreThis book address Churchill's place in the annals of art, mainly because Churchill doesn't have one – he was an ardent dabbler and nothing more.
Read MoreThe author presents the idea that the President’s psychological makeup and insecurities are hiding behind the façade of a bully.
Read MoreAn arts and literature review.
Steve Donoghue
Sam Sacks
Britta Böhler
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Eric Karl Anderson
Olive Fellows
Jack Hanson
Jennifer Helinek
Justin Hickey
Hannah Joyner
Zach Rabiroff
Jessica Tvordi