The past two months have seen a bumper crop of trend pieces about the old and formerly untrendy practice of preserving the harvest.
275,232 books were published in the US last year. Don’t publications have an obligation to review only those books that warrant serious consideration?
What does the King of Pop have in common with the main character of an 18th century German novel? Quite a lot, in fact.
The topic has come up in our pages regularly over the years.
Turning my inner bibliophile loose in a four-story bookstore is an invitation for disaster.
In a recent essay in n+1, Benjamin Kunkel, in a wide-ranging consideration of technology’s effects on contemporary culture and daily life, writes that the internet and its products feel forced upon us. For anyone who goes online daily—and...
We have discovered more than a half dozen passages in the forthcoming book that are reproduced nearly verbatim from uncredited sources.
Despite popular perceptions of the jury trial, this most central feature of the American legal system is actually slowly disappearing.
No one book could ever hope to encompass a country as complex and multi-faceted as Iran. But if you read these five, you’ll be on your way.