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33 min 32 sec ago
An excerpt from “The Arab Winter,” by Noah Feldman
A selection of recent books of interest; plus, a peek at what our colleagues around the newsroom are reading.
“In Praise of Walking” and “In Praise of Paths” offer two very different approaches to the benefits of taking regular strolls.
An excerpt from “A Children’s Bible,” by Lydia Millet
In “Enemy of All Mankind,” Steven Johnson argues that a 1695 showdown on the high seas was a crucial turning point in the rise of the British Empire.
The heroine of Amy Jo Burns’s debut novel, “Shiner,” comes of age amid the patriarchy of contemporary Appalachia.
In “Sunny Days,” David Kamp traces a revolutionary decade in kids’ TV.
His collection “Sorry for Your Trouble” features characters who find that the pieces of their lives no longer fit.
In “The World,” Richard Haass urges Americans to educate themselves about an increasingly dangerous planet.
Jill Watts’s “The Black Cabinet” highlights the struggles of those African-Americans who worked in the Franklin Roosevelt administration.
In “The Shapeless Unease,” the British novelist Samantha Harvey ponders her struggles with insomnia.
Gilles Kepel’s “Away From Chaos” is a useful overview of the many changes that have roiled the Muslim world.
Nancy Thorndike Greenspan’s “Atomic Spy” offers new material on Klaus Fuchs, the notorious Manhattan Project physicist.
Noah Feldman’s “The Arab Winter” tries to find hope in a grim turn of events.
Hans Morgenthau’s “Politics Among Nations” taught thinkers from George F. Kennan to Henry Kissinger to put national interest above idealism. America is still learning that lesson.
Francesca Momplaisir’s debut novel, “My Mother’s House,” examines the depths of depravity from three perspectives, including a home’s.
An author offers an alternative perspective for his novel, while readers revisit Moynihan and comment on the literary tastes of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie.
Lydia Millet talks about “A Children’s Bible,” and Barry Gewen discusses “The Inevitability of Tragedy.”
In Abby Sher’s “Miss You Love You Hate You Bye,” two best friends prove to be their own worst enemies.
In “Yes No Maybe So,” by Becky Albertalli and Aisha Saeed, two teenagers from different backgrounds feel a spark while canvassing for a local politician.
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