Book Review: Hirohito's War
/A massive new history details the war in the Pacific Theater during WWII
Read MoreArchive
The complete Open Letters Monthly Archive.
A massive new history details the war in the Pacific Theater during WWII
Read MoreA new book celebrating the library's thousands of years of history and constantly-changing cultural role is filled with sharp essays
Read MoreArcheological research has uncovered more than ever about the ordinary men and women who lived in Britain during the centuries of Roman occupation. A lively new book assesses what we know
Read MoreAlan Cheuse
Read MoreHe sailed around Cape Horn and wrote a classic about it, and he fought for the downtrodden in Boston courts for thirty years - he was Richard Henry Dana, Jr., and he's the subject of a thought-provoking new biography.
Read More"How a Court LOOKS," remarked a courtier to one of England's more successful modern-day monarchs, "is at least as important as how a Court WORKS." A re-issued study from Philip Mansel looks at form and function in the court of Napoleon Bonaparte
Read More"Austria," quipped Talleyrand, "has the tiresome habit of always being beaten" - but Richard Bassett's vigorous new history of the Imperial Austrian Army begs to differ!
Read MoreA French army and a British army stumble upon each other in the wilderness of the New World, and their conflict changes the nature of the world's biggest war
Read MoreA veteran state conflict analyst looks at the mother of such conflicts: the long strife between Israel and Palestine
Read MoreVeteran historian John Julius Norwich attempts to cram over 800 years of Sicilian history into 300 pages - and because he's John Julius Norwich, he very nearly succeeds
Read MoreE. L. Doctorow
Read MoreIn his beautifully-written new book, ecologist Carl Safina takes a broader look at the emotional and mental lives of nonhuman animals
Read MoreA professor of Italian clings to Dante's Divine Comedy when confronted with an unthinkable tragedy in his own life
Read MoreThe half-legendary Maid of Orleans gets a refreshingly wide-angled new history from Helen Castor
Read MoreA memoir of the first President Bush, written by his former Chief of Staff
Read MoreIn a mere 200 pages on the history of writing, Matthew Battles takes readers from ancient China and Sumeria to Gutenberg to - oh my, are we out of time already?
Read MoreFar from the popular image of ravenous killing machines, wolves are actually surprisingly cautious predators who carefully weigh the risks they take, as a stunning new study illustrates
Read MoreMilitary historian Stephen Harding tells the poignant story of the last soldier killed in World War II
Read MoreRoger Rees
Read MoreOmar Sharif
Read MorePowered by Squarespace.