In Paperback: Walden's Shore
/Now in paperback: a thorough - and thoroughly interesting - study of the actual physical dimensions of the little pond whose name Henry David Thoreau made immortal
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The complete Open Letters Monthly Archive.
Now in paperback: a thorough - and thoroughly interesting - study of the actual physical dimensions of the little pond whose name Henry David Thoreau made immortal
Read MoreThe great home of generations of the Sitwell family, Renishaw Hall, is the subject of Desmond Seward's latest book
Read MoreThe bad science behind the Hindenburg was made tragically obvious by its explosion in 1937; a new book warns that other miracles of science may be equally dangerous
Read MoreA new book assembles and studies the scattered writings of American slaves
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 MoreA witty, unsparing memoir from author and critic Gary Indiana
Read MoreThe huge environmental problems facing India form the backdrop for Meera Subramanian's fantastic first book
Read MoreIn the continents-spanning 16th-century clash between Venice and the Ottoman Empire, a crucial role was played by Albania - and by two families at the heart of events
Read MoreAt the end of the 14th century, Lorenzo de' Medici and the friar Savonarola began a series of clashes in palace and pulpit that would end up altering the course of the city's history. A lively new book tells the story.
Read MoreBook critic Michael Dirda's latest collection offers more personal musings on the subject he loves most
Read MoreA new edition of this collection of Holocaust diaries by young people captures the voices and the worries of the Nazis' most innocent victims
Read MoreA newly-reprinted biography of the "Iron Chancellor" Otto von Bismarck is noticeably short - what kind of a job does it do?
Read MoreIn his brilliant new book, Jedediah Purdy argues that humanity must face the collapse of nature using the three tools it knows best: politics, policy, and cold, hard cash
Read MoreA powerful new book by one of our best historians examines from new sources the torturous path Russia took to the First World War
Read MoreYale University Press publishes a 2005 memoir by the 2014 winner of the Nobel Prize for literature
Read MoreThe great ancient Indian emperor Ashoka gets a splendid new biography that attempts to divine the man at the heart of the legend
Read MoreVeteran New Yorker writer William Finnegan has written a captivating memoir of surfing and growing up
Read MoreA lively new book explores the minds and behaviors of many of Earth's cetaceans
Read MoreThe settled opinion of historians has always been that President Eisenhower personally hated his vice president, Richard Nixon; a vigorous, unmissable new book tries to set that record straight
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