Book Review: Goethe
/A short new biography seeks to do the impossible: encompass the Protean life of Goethe in only a handful of pages. Robert Minto reviews.
Read MoreArchive
The complete Open Letters Monthly Archive.
A short new biography seeks to do the impossible: encompass the Protean life of Goethe in only a handful of pages. Robert Minto reviews.
Read MoreOn a chilly day in late May, 1918, American troops went into battle in the World War I for the first time - a gripping new history tells the story
Read MoreNow in paperback: a fascinating history of mankind's interactions with the most famous volcano in the world
Read MoreThe mad debacle of the Dardanelles campaign is now 100 years in the past, and to mark the anniversary, a classic account is reprinted
Read MoreThe pioneering English Egyptologist William Bankes gets a smart and vivacious new biography
Read MoreIn Florence of the 1490s, a ranting Dominican friar picked a fight with the wrong Pope and lost badly. A new I Tatti volume translates the bickering before the bonfire.
Read MoreIn the wake of the First World War, unimaginable energies were unleashed upon the societies of the Western world. A fascinating new book attempts to assess the results.
Read MoreJohn Ferling, great historian of 18th century America, here tells the story of the American Revolution itself, in typically riveting fashion
Read MoreThe quintessential modern classic of gardening-literature gets a very nice reprint
Read MoreA nature enthusiast looks at the countless little lives taking place on his small rural French meadow-farm
Read MoreDuring the Italian Renaissance, one enterprising autodidact took it upon himself to track down and transcribe as many inscriptions from the ancient world as he could find
Read MoreA noted Israeli scholar and 'refusnik' writes a reserved and thorough history of the occupied territories
Read MoreThe popular Facebook-poster Jeff Nunokawa now has a book collecting his highlights
Read MoreThe firebrand preacher and founder of the Presbyterian denomination is the subject of a masterful new biography
Read MoreA former British White House correspondent looks back half a century at the two titans who ruled a now-vanished Washington
Read MoreReligion and science - the so-called "non-overlapping magisteria" - are actually deeply adversarial, writes "Why Evolution is True" author Jerry Coyne
Read MoreCrime columnist Irma Heldman reports on the winners, the sinners, and the dinner at the 2015 Edgar Awards
Read MoreThe US Constitution - the oldest in the world - gets a comprehensive new biography
Read MoreRuth Rendell
Read MoreMax Planck, the great physicist and father of quantum theory, gets a marvelous and empathetic new biography
Read MorePowered by Squarespace.