In the 1920s and ’30s, clerks at The Times collected stamps from overseas mail. The postage tells of a fluid world history.
This Women's History Month, celebrate with this intersectional list of nonfiction titles about feminism, theory, history, and ...
As an author, I loathe asking for blurbs — most of us hate the cringe-making business of approaching your peers for a favour that eats into their precious writing hours — and sometimes struggle to ...
Every work of narrative builds on those that preceded it. In the case of Steve Oney’s On Air: The Triumph and Tumult of NPR, ...
Finding Flora, the new novel from former Red Deer resident Elinor Florence, digs deep into Central Alberta history. Coming ...
Acclaimed authors and readers of all ages are gathering in Waterloo for an event on Saturday, but it’s not a new book ...
No one aboard the train that day died (although one woman on the ground was killed). “I didn’t actually want to write about ...
Khalil’s attorney rushed to District Judge Jesse Furman, an Obama appointee, who halted any deportation pending a hearing. On Wednesday, in court, Khalil’s attorneys were present to challenge his ...
Clay Risen examines Cold War hysteria in an even-handed way, trusting readers to make the connection between McCarthyism and ...
Genealogists volunteering for the Looted Books Project recently returned a volume to a 103-year-old Holocaust survivor in Florida who was given the book in 1930 as a gift for her good performance in ...
The meticulously research book presents an unvarnished look at the good times and bad days in the Golden State which ...
March is full of exciting new YA releases that go well beyond the arrival of Suzanne Collins's latest Hunger Games novel.
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