The Misinformation Age by Cailin O’Connor & James Owen Weatherall
/For a book of 200 pages, The Misinformation Age covers a great deal of territory.
Read MoreAn Arts & Literature Review
For a book of 200 pages, The Misinformation Age covers a great deal of territory.
Read MoreThis is a continuation of the Safehold series by an author to stick with, a modern-day version of Golden Age SF.
Read MoreQueen Elizabeth II has met more people, smiled into more eyes, and shaken more hands than any other human being on Earth.
Read MoreA deeply researched account of the relentless persecution of the Knights Templar.
Read MoreThe Duke I Once Knew grows much stronger as it goes along and gains momentum, and its conclusion will put a smile on every reader’s face.
Read MoreJohn Rebus retired a few books ago, but he has a way of turning up.
Read MoreThis historical novel portrays Roosevelt as a crime fighter and features his mountain lion Josephine.
Read MoreA brisk gallivant through nineteen biographies of men who made fortunes in the business of war.
Read MoreA historical novel about Queen Elizabeth’s wedding gown, and the women who made it.
Read MoreThis profile of James Wood from the OLM archives was written by Sam Sacks in December of 2014. . .
Read MoreA book review from the archives, originally published in December 2016.
Read MoreIt's not surprising that certain themes have surfaced again and again, considering the boiling news atmosphere in which these authors are stewing every day.
Read MoreThese authors concentrate on the things that novels should concentrate on: showing readers new worlds and introducing them to new monsters.
Read More2018 a particularly demoralizing year for nonfiction, and here are the worst offenders.
Read MoreA combination of laziness and cynicism is the most prominent trend in this year's bad fiction.
Read MoreWinnowing down the candidates in this category was more difficult than almost any other year in the last decade.
Read MoreThe bulk of the year was an unplanned and unexpected celebration of the plasticity of the genre.
Read MoreThese books about the natural world serve up a sense of wonder.
Read MoreThe best of a genre stacked with devilish dukes, concupiscent cowboys, ingenious ingenues, and naughty nannies.
Read MoreVirtually every entry is the latest book in an ongoing series.
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