Cari Mora by Thomas Harris
/The first book to follow a phenomenon, and a conscious attempt to shed that phenomenon.
Read MoreAn Arts & Literature Review
The first book to follow a phenomenon, and a conscious attempt to shed that phenomenon.
Read MoreAndrew Feldman has here shaped his sources into a Hemingway who feels like a new acquaintance.
Read MoreThe Alex Rider books have always required a rather hefty suspension of disbelief, and they’ve always rewarded it.
Read MoreCan 30 pages be enough to do more than skim the surface of any of these epic events?
Read MoreAira’s lack of a larger schema ultimately makes Birthday an unsatisfying venture.
Read MoreIn Anna of Kleve, Weir crafts an intriguingly multifaceted portrait of this oddest of all English queens. Open Letters asked her some questions about the challenges of this latest installment in the “Six Tudor Queens” series.
Read MoreAn immensely readable popular biography of Henry VI, warmly sympathetic to the tormented figure at its center.
Read MoreA skillfully crafted, beautifully written thriller with an unforgettable heroine.
Read MoreMeiji-era Japan is an appealingly exotic setting for a Holmes adventure.
Read MoreGilded Youth is woven through with a sure knack for storytelling and eye for vivifying detail.
Read MoreAre iPhones, iPads, GPS, and the Internet exacerbating negatives and simultaneously eroding the positives?
Read MoreThe fact that this book captures the man as no book is ever likely to do again is an accomplishment and also a precaution.
Read MoreDedicated to the mage that has been synonymous with the United States since before the United States formally existed.
Read MoreMcCarthy is a wonderfully sympathetic biographer, and her reading and research in these pages is vast.
Read MoreTurner reminds her readers that the father of English literature was a traveling man.
Read MoreWhitehead constantly plays off optimistic idealism against cynical trickery.
Read MoreA fluid, confessional thing unlike any other English-language Caesar.
Read MoreA decent summary of capitalism in America with brief but useful biographies of major figures.
Read MoreEven the cynical reader can take from this book the sense that those with the greatest power in Congress still have a coherent set of values.
Read MoreThere will be more books like Down from the Mountain as more bears hit the immovable object of the American farming industry.
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