Book Review: The Invention of Nature
/The great German naturalist Alexander von Humboldt was fascinated by all of the natural world, and his work in studying it and writing about it has shaped our understanding ever since
Read MoreThe great German naturalist Alexander von Humboldt was fascinated by all of the natural world, and his work in studying it and writing about it has shaped our understanding ever since
Read MoreA harrowing and contentious new assessment of the Nazi war on the Jews of Europe.
Read MoreOur book today is Twelve Days of Terror, Richard Fernicola’s 2001 history of the famous series of shark attacks that happened at the Jersey Shore in 1916, when four people were killed in July by a shark – probably a single shark, probably a bull shark, since it was able to travel up-river quite a […]
Read MoreA witty, unsparing memoir from author and critic Gary Indiana
Read MoreA sarcastic screenwriter learns he has only six months to live in this reprinted novel from Edward St. Aubyn from 2000
Read MoreIn the latest chapter of S. M. Stirling's "Emberverse" series, two courageous women embark on a quest for a supernatural sword
Read MoreIn Zen Cho's exuberant debut, the magic of Napoleonic-era England is slowly dwindling, and it's up to the Sorcerer Royal to figure out why
Read MoreThe life of infamous NSA whistle-blower Edward Snowden, in comic book form
Read MoreA spirited defense of humanist intangibles in a culture obsessed with material gain
Read MoreThe huge environmental problems facing India form the backdrop for Meera Subramanian's fantastic first book
Read MoreA mother grieving the loss of her own son investigates the 30-year-old disappearance of a powerful Southern family's little boy in this haunting debut
Read MoreAt the beginning of the 19th century, a small trove of elaboratedly carved chess pieces was uncovered on a remote beach - a lively new book traces the history and strange charisma of the Lewis chessmen.
Read MoreThis is a place for all of my writing about books.