All Books
- 'Radio Free Vermont' touts the power of local government and grassroots effortsThis new novel by author, environmentalist, and Vermonter Bill McKibben is heavy on coincidence and light on believability.
- 'Calder' clearly establishes its subject as a giant of the 20th centuryUp until now, there has never been a full-scale biography to help us understand and appreciate Calder's accomplishments.
- This Thanksgiving I'm feeling grateful for my very first bookMy library grows by the year, but it all started with Gumby.
- 'Gold Dust Woman' tells the story of rock icon Stevie NicksDevoted followers won’t find major new stories in this biography by Stephen Davis, but it’s certainly an exhaustive account.
- 'Poems of Gratitude' assembles poetry of gratitude from around the world and throughout the agesThese poems remind us that gratitude is something we can celebrate every day of the year.
- How do the Pilgrims relate to immigrants today?'However clichéd,' says The Mayflower' author Rebecca Fraser, 'there is a good deal of truth in the Mayflower legend!'
- 'The Thin Light of Freedom' is a Civil War history that explores the forging of modern AmericaSmall towns throughout the Great Appalachian Valley changed hands many times during war, and as complicated a military picture as that presents, it represents an even more complicated political and social picture.
- 'Black Tudors' reveals a surprising and overlooked chapter of historyHidden in British archives and parish records are the identities of dozens of black people who lived in England during Tudor times.
- 'Troublemakers' follows the meteoric transformation of Silicon Valley’s founding generation'Troublemakers' transports us to a Silicon Valley before the arrival of internet behemoths the likes of Netflix and Salesforce, when giants such as Fairchild Semiconductor and Intel ruled the day.
- 'Prairie Fires' author Caroline Fraser offers a substantial biography of Laura Ingalls WilderWe meet here a Wilder who embodied 'a great American drama in three acts': poverty, struggle, and reinvention.
- 'Lenin' illuminates one of history's most destructive leaders'The regime [Lenin] created was largely shaped by his personality,' writes Victor Sebestyen, 'secretive, suspicious, intolerant, ascetic, intemperate.'Â
- The most popular books in every state – they're not what you thinkWhat's America reading? Politics, advice, and anything with a movie tie-in.
- Bumper crop of new US presidents biographies reflects the challenges they all facedFrom John Adams to George H. W. Bush, these seven presidential biographies cover remarkable ground and offer a series of engaging portraits.
- 'L’Appart' is a painfully funny story of the joys and pitfalls of making Paris your homeIf you’ve ever dreamed of tossing your return ticket home, David Lebovitz might make you think twice.
- Author Malachy Tallack dives into the world of 'un-discovered islands'Some of these 'un-discovered islands' are products of myth and legend like the famous Atlantis. Others have more unexpected origins like fraud. And a few actually were once considered real by scientists and geographers as recently as this decade.
- 'Franklin D. Roosevelt' examines the now-forgotten political opposition FDR faced at every stageRobert Dallek's FDR is a man of great but always complicated drives.
- 'Friends Divided' explores the remarkable, stormy friendship of Thomas Jefferson and John AdamsRevolutionary-era historian Gordon S. Wood, in his latest book on the period, makes clear just how fragile the American experiment had become once George Washington retired to Mount Vernon.
- 'Murder, Magic, and What We Wore' is the Diet Sprite of Regency rompsThe young adult novel is full of fits and starts, but charming in a way that feels as sweetly ingenuous as its heroine
- How US women transformed the Olympics'Fire on the Track' author Roseanne Montillo says that US athletes competing in the 1928 Olympics helped transform women's sports.
- 'Traces of Vermeer' strives to figure out the actual nitty-gritty of Vermeer's craftJelley is a painter in her own right, which allows her to write with authority.