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Books
June 10, 2020
Jo Livingstone
Who Killed Olof Palme?
Thirty-four years after the prime minister was murdered, Sweden has identified his assassin. But the case is by no means concluded.
June 10, 2020
Jennifer Wilson
The Down Days
Is an Eerily Prescient Pandemic Novel
When Ilze Hugo started writing about an outbreak, she thought she was imagining a far-fetched dystopia.
June 9, 2020
Magazine
Kim Phillips-Fein
The Lost Rebellious Spirit of Keynes
The economist’s ideas are often reduced to stimulus spending. His life and work were much more radical than that.
June 5, 2020
Jo Livingstone
The Radically Inclusive Music of Ornette Coleman
A new book about the free jazz pioneer illuminates the moral and political significance of the postwar avant-garde.
June 5, 2020
Andre Pagliarini
Where America Developed a Taste for State Violence
From Indonesia to Brazil, the United States fostered a global network of brutal repression in the name of anti-communism.
June 1, 2020
Haley Mlotek
Barbara Ehrenreich Still Wants to Be Surprised
“My hope for all readers is that they will shut the book and run out and protest. That’s what I always expect people to do. They seldom do it.”
June 1, 2020
Jake Bittle
The Right’s Reign on the Air Waves
How talk radio established the power of the modern Republican Party
May 29, 2020
David Klion
David Frum’s Hold Over the Center
The Never Trumpers styled themselves as critics of the GOP. Instead, they built up power over liberals.
May 25, 2020
Ryu Spaeth
Sounding It Out
Teaching my daughter to read in self-isolation
May 22, 2020
Alexander Zaitchik
Jonathan Schell’s Warning From the Brink
Fears of the nuclear threat may have subsided with the end of the Cold War, but the danger did not.
May 20, 2020
Magazine
Scott Bradfield
Robert Stone’s Bad Trips
For the late, great novelist, American politics was one end-of-times after another.
May 19, 2020
Magazine
Osita Nwanevu
We’re Not Polarized Enough
Ezra Klein’s flawed diagnosis of the divisions in American politics
May 19, 2020
Laura Marsh
The Flawed Fantasy of a Different Hillary Clinton
Curtis Sittenfeld’s novel “Rodham” imagines an alternative world in which Hillary never marries Bill.
May 18, 2020
Ryu Spaeth
The Unsuitable Passions of J.M. Coetzee
The Jesus trilogy is an ambitious, unearthly reckoning with desire and disaster.
May 15, 2020
Jo Livingstone
A Beach Read With Teeth
In “All Adults Here,” Emma Straub skewers small-town bourgeois society.
May 11, 2020
Kyle Chayka
The Art of Staying Home
Kate Zambreno’s novel “Drifts” brilliantly evokes a hazy state of self-isolation.
May 8, 2020
Heather Souvaine Horn
We’re All Preppers Now
Mark O’Connell’s book set out to explore survivalist subcultures. Then the pandemic hit.
May 6, 2020
Jo Livingstone
At Long Last, the “Queen of Folk” Gets Her Biography
A new book about the legendary singer Odetta comes not a minute too soon.
May 6, 2020
Magazine
Robin Kaiser-Schatzlein
Thomas Piketty’s Plan to Fix the Economy
His new book diagnoses a society obsessed with property rights.
May 1, 2020
Magazine
Sophie Pinkham
How Vivian Gornick Reinvigorated Political Writing
Her most criticized book, “The Romance of American Communism,” has become a modern classic.
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