Book Review: Brothers at Arms
/An invigorating new history looks at the American Revolution from a wide-angle international view
Read MoreAn invigorating new history looks at the American Revolution from a wide-angle international view
Read MoreSelf-preservation these days requires not only skipping wholesale the front sections of all the political magazines to which I subscribe but also physically tearing them off their staples and discarding them, so that not even a stray glance falls on their appalling content. I’ve been doing this for a couple of weeks now and face […]
Read MoreA smart and gripping new novel brings the Salem Witch mania to life.
Read MoreThe tough and bitter East Africa campaign of 1941 receives a comprehensive new history.
Read MoreSome Penguin Classics just never feel quite legitimate, no matter how hard they try, no matter how fervent their supporters are over the decades or centuries. This is how it will feel twenty years from now, when Kurt Vonnegut’s flyblown oeuvre is inducted into the line, and this is how it will feel thirty years […]
Read MoreOur books today – one old favorite and one I believe a new mention here at Stevereads – provide a warm-reminder reading experience that only gets warmer as the weather turns colder and the years go by: they’re both anthologies of travel-writing. The first, A Taste for Travel, was edited by John Julius Norwich in […]
Read MoreA thought-provoking new history shines a spotlight on the long and brutal aftermath of the First World War
Read MoreOur books today are posies picked from the local Barnes & Noble, a colorful trio of Regency novels all occupying roughly the middle orbit in the solar system of the British peerage: all books about earls, that strangely accessible rank of nobility considerably above a viscount and just a bit below a marquess. Any time […]
Read MoreThat familiar glory of medieval English architecture -the church spire - is the subject of a stunning new book.
Read MoreA new book chronicles the world's enduring fascination with Ancient Egypt
Read MoreOur book today is a “graphic adaptation,” what once would have been known as an “illustrated classic,” of Shirley Jackson’s best-known little piece of work, “The Lottery.” It’s Shirley Jackson’s The Lottery: A Graphic Adaptation, done with marvelous restrained mastery by Miles Hyman, Shirley Jackson’s grandson, who opens the production with a few remarks about […]
Read MoreCan birds - any species of bird, anywhere in the United States - survive their contact with humanity? A new book looks at the science and the sobering numbers.
Read MoreDepression-era US President Herbert Hoover has always been easy to malign - a new biography argues that he's just as easy to underestimate
Read MoreHe's forever linked in history with his punning nickname, but a new biography shows there was more to Æthelred than being "Unready"
Read MoreThis is a place for all of my writing about books.