All Books
- 5 books about sports other than baseball These recent releases offer plenty of variety
- 'Northland' is an entertaining trip along America's 4,000-mile northern border
- 4 audiobooks that tell personal stories This month we are listening to three memoirs and one novel that sounds like a memoir. Â
- 'There There' weaves a powerful tale of contemporary urban Native AmericansOrange's debut novel follows 12 indigenous people living in Oakland, Calif., all wrestling with the effects of their heritage on their daily experiences.
- Ruby Lal, author of 'Empress,' discusses the amazing life and reign of Nur JahanLal explores the powerful Indian empress who was much more than a romantic icon.
- Donald Hall: poet, farmer, indefatigable observer of life
- 'Squeezed' paints a dark picture of an American middle class that can't keep upJournalist Alissa Quart takes a hard look at 'the Middle Precariat,' highly educated Americans who are barely able to keep up the facade of middle class respectability.
- Colombia's 'lord of the books' saves tomes from the trashWhen José Alberto Gutierrez began working as a garbage collector in 1997, he thought it was a waste that so many books were being thrown away. So he decided to save them. Now known as the “lord of the books," Mr. Gutierrez has donated thousands of books across Colombia.Â
- 'Uncensored' tells of a difficult passage between black and white, poor and richZachary Wood, famed for promoting controversial speakers at Williams College, tells the story of his own painful transitions.
- 'The Bone and Sinew of the Land' restores a lost chapter of US historyWe’ve long forgotten the African-Americans who lived free – at least some of the time – in the Midwest in the decades before the Civil War.
- 'Rough Beauty' recounts a poet's journey from self-reliance to community livingWhen award-winning poet Karen Auvinen loses all in a fire, she must decide what kind of life to rebuild.
- 'And Then We Danced,' 'Old in Art School,' tell of later-in-life creative endeavorsNell Painter enrolls in art school at 64, while Henry Alford begins a serious pursuit of dance at the age of 50.
- 'Frenemies' is Ken Auletta's brightly readable tour of today's ad businessNew Yorker writer Auletta takes his readers deep inside the conference calls and boardrooms of the professionals on the front lines of the industry's internet transformation.
- 'The Debatable Land' probes the history of a chink in the Scottish-English borderBritish historian Graham Robb explores the land that once supported the descendents of the first king of Scotland.
- Lively narrators, rich context make these middle-grade books shineFrom Pakistan to Miami, these lively tales speak to readers in the 8-12 age group.
- 'The Word Is Murder' is Anthony Horowitz at his ambitious bestThis clever work of meta-fiction is told by a writer named Anthony Horowitz, who has been asked by a former detective to look into a most unusual murder.
- 10 best books of June: the Monitor's picksFrom the Tour de France to the dark side of America's economy, these new June releases cover plenty of ground.
- 'Life in the Garden' lovingly recalls the place of gardens in an author's lifePenelope Lively explores the garden’s place in art and literature, and in her own life.
- 6 baseball books for mid-season reading These new releases should provide a good selection for summer reading.
- 'A View of the Empire at Sunset' uses author Jean Rhys to explore 'otherness'Novelist Caryl Phillips uses the life of author Jean Rhys to once again explore themes of racism and colonialism.