All Chapter & Verse
- 'Magpie Murders' author Anthony Horowitz delivers remarkable twist on the classic whodunnitThe聽bestselling British author and screenwriter is making his own bid for detective story immortality with an astonishing Golden Age-style mystery novel.
- 'American Fire' spotlights a troubling rural arson spree solved by old-fashioned legworkThe new book by Washington Post reporter Monica Hesse is聽one of the year's best and most unusual true-crime books.
- Happy birthday to Henry David Thoreau 鈥 an inconvenient yet invaluable friendI didn't take much to Thoreau the first time I read him. He's been proving me wrong ever since.
- The perfect beach read for this summer? Robert Louis StevensonStevenson offers another possibility for reading that seems worth exploring in this season of our political discontent.
- 'Giant of the Senate' author Al Franken is back to 'The Funny'Al Franken's humor is back at full strength in his new book, which is a memoir of the former 'Saturday Night Live' writer's journey to the NBC institution and his more recent time in politics.
- 4 revelations in Robert Caro's new audio projectHistorian Robert Caro shares some important lessons learned in his new audio project 'On Power.'
- Inside the hidden history of confederate memorialsIt was largely women who led the drive to get their communities to embrace Civil War monuments.
- How World War I changed AmericaA new book by a Library of Congress historian unearths once-forgotten tidbits of history related to the Great War.
- How the Bank of England took a page from Dr. SeussThe Bank of England hopes to make their reports more understandable by imitating the famed children's book author's concise, simple writing style.
- How Muhammad Ali fought the law ... and won'Sting Like a Bee' author Leigh Montville explains how the fabled boxer vanquished the Vietnam draft.
- Why Michael Bloomberg says he's 'optimistic' about climate changeFormer New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg is coauthor of 'Climate of Hope,' a solution-oriented book about what individuals and governments can and should be doing about climate change.
- What's that hot new category for kids? Religious booksDespite struggle in other genres, religious books aimed at children have seen an impressive and steady increase in sales over the past decade.
- The Colorado: how a river rules the westIn his new book, 'Where the Water Goes,' journalist David Owen takes readers inside the topsy-turvy world of Western water.
- As colleges ditch books, the future of the campus library is changingAs major universities like UC Berkeley abandon traditional book collections, the role of campus libraries is starting to look a little different from the good old days of an offline era.
- Five surprising facts about ProtestantismBritish historian Alec Ryrie chronicles the epic drama of a faith that he portrays as vibrant, diverse, and confounding.
- When New York City stood on the brink'Fear City' tracks New York's devastating brush with bankruptcy.
- More 'Rebirth' titles arrive, stirring additional mystery for comic book superheroesKudos to the folks creating these comics, who are taking 80-year-old characters and making them fresh and exciting.
- How Pablo Neruda helped me appreciate Poetry Month 鈥 and much moreOne of Neruda鈥檚 continuing themes was the way that basic objects, like tables and chairs, soap and socks, a dictionary or a pair of scissors, can seem magical when glanced at a slightly different angle.
- What Gay Talese has to teach us in an age of social mediaThe iconic magazine piece 'Frank Sinatra Has a Cold' has lessons 鈥 and surprises 鈥 for today's journalists.
- 'Lenin on the Train,' chugging toward historyA new book tracks the future Russian leader on his road to revolution.