
February 2019
El Norte
by Carrie GibsonA sweeping saga of the Spanish history and influence in North America over five centuries, from the acclaimed author of Empire’s Crossroads
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January 2019
How to Fix the Future
by Andrew KeenAs our world continues to be fundamentally changed by the Digital Revolution, this essential book by a leading Internet commentator shows how to preserve…
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October 2018
Enemies and Neighbors
by Ian Black“Comprehensive and compelling . . . A nuanced, landmark study that has deservedly won plaudits from both Palestinian and Israeli historians.” —Sunday Times (UK)
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October 2018
The Allies Strike Back, 1941-1943
by James HollandIn the second book in this masterful new history of World War II in the West, James Holland tackles the Nazi invasion of Soviet…
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April 2018
Nineteen Sixty-Eight in America
by Charles Kaiser“A splendidly evocative account of a historic year—a year of tumult, of trauma, and of tragedy.”—Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.
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April 2018
Hue 1968
by Mark BowdenFrom “a master of narrative journalism” (New York Times Book Review), a riveting history of the biggest and bloodiest battle of the Vietnam War.
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February 2018
Killing Pablo
by Mark Bowden“The story of how U.S. Army Intelligence and Delta Force commandos helped Colombian police track down and kill Pablo Escobar. . . . A…
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October 2017
Playing Through the Whistle
by Scott PriceFrom a Sports Illustrated senior writer, a moving epic of football and industrial America, telling the story of Aliquippa, Pennsylvania, its now-shuttered steel mill,…
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October 2017
The Private Lives of the Tudors
by Tracy BormanThe internationally bestselling author of Thomas Cromwell and Elizabeth’s Women takes readers behind the closed doors and into the intimate lives of the Tudor…
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September 2017
Blitzkrieg
by Lloyd ClarkFrom a well-regarded military historian, a riveting and richly detailed reassessment of one of the most shocking military victories of all time.
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May 2017
The Great Society
by Robert SchenkkanThe sequel to All the Way, which won the 2014 Tony for Best Play, The Great Society traces the remainder of LBJ’s tumultuous presidency,…
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March 2017
Washington’s Immortals
by Patrick K. O'DonnellFrom a bestselling military historian, the story of the Revolutionary War told through a band of brothers whose actions at key battles from Brooklyn…
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February 2017
Neither Snow Nor Rain
by Devin LeonardFew institutions are as loved, as loathed, and as historically important as the United States Post Office, the subject of this landmark century-spanning social,…
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February 2017
The Black Calhouns
by Gail Lumet BuckleyGail Lumet Buckley tells the story of her dynamic family during the most crucial century in African American history.
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January 2017
But You Did Not Come Back
by Marceline Loridan-IvensA phenomenal success in Europe, But You Did Not Come Back is an important addition to the library of Holocaust literature—a deeply moving story…
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November 2016
The Rise of Germany, 1939-1941
by James HollandThe first volume in a major, wide-ranging three-volume revisionist history of World War II in Europe, North Africa, and the Atlantic from a highly…
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June 2016
First to Fly
by Charles Bracelen FloodFrom a critically acclaimed historian, the lively story of the American pilots who defied neutrality and flew for France before the United States entered…
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June 2016
Innovative State
by Aneesh ChopraFrom the first chief technology officer of the United States, a brilliant look at our government, private sector “open innovation,” and how to tackle…
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June 2016
The Kentucky Cycle
by Robert SchenkkanA sweeping epic of three families in eastern Kentucky that spans two hundred years of American history, awarded the Pulitzer Prize, now reissued for…
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June 2016
Eccentric Orbits
by John BloomHow the largest man-made constellation in the heavens was built by dreamers in the Arizona desert, targeted for destruction by Motorola, and saved by…
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April 2016
1941: Fighting the Shadow War
by Marc WortmanA thrilling exploration of the little-known history of America’s clandestine involvement in World War II prior to Pearl Harbor.
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March 2016
Liberty’s First Crisis
by Charles SlackThe tumultuous early years of the United States are brought to life in this gripping account of the Sedition Act and its victims, including…
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February 2016
Jam on the Vine
by LaShonda BarnettAn explosive debut novel that chronicles the life of a trailblazing African American woman journalist through the start of the twentieth century.
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February 2016
S O S
by Amiri BarakaThe definitive selection of Amiri Baraka’s dynamic poetry—comprising more than five decades of groundbreaking, controversial work—with new, previously unpublished, and uncollected poems.
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January 2016
The Devil Is Here in These Hills
by James GreenFrom a celebrated labor historian, the definitive chronicle of the fight for freedom by West Virginia coal miners, an important chapter in American history.
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November 2015
Empire’s Crossroads
by Carrie GibsonA gripping narrative history of the entire Caribbean, from first exploration to today, by a talented British American historian.
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October 2015
Leningrad: Siege and Symphony
by Brian MoynahanFrom Brian Moynahan, award-winning foreign correspondent and European editor with the Sunday Times, comes a brilliant work of military, political, and cultural history.
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August 2015
Selected Works
by Terrence McNallyFrom one of America’s most important contemporary playwrights, a definitive collection of work, including two never-before-published plays, interspersed with personal essays unique to this…
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July 2015
Liberty’s Torch
by Elizabeth Mitchell“Journalist Elizabeth Mitchell recounts the captivating story behind the familiar monument that readers may have assumed they knew everything about.” —Sam Roberts, New York…
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June 2015
Shakespeare in Love
by Tom StoppardThe long-awaited stage adaptation of the film that won seven Academy Awards including Best Picture, Shakespeare in Love.
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June 2015
The Trigger
by Tim Butcher“The most original of First World War centenary books. . . . A travel narrative of rare resonance and insight.” —Sunday Times (UK)
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November 2014
Dam Busters
by James Holland“Dam Busters describes the maneuvering that went on behind the scenes before one of Britain’s most important efforts to cripple the Nazi war machine….
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November 2014
Honorable Treachery
by G. J. A. O'TooleA reissue of the first comprehensive history of American intelligence, espionage, and covert action—a book poised to capture a new audience in the wake…
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September 2014
Gaddafi’s Harem
by Annick Cojean“Not only should Cojean be praised for her unveiling of Gaddafi’s sexual atrocities, but, more importantly, she has drawn attention to the severe improvement…
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August 2014
Still Writing
by Dani Shapiro“One of those rare books that is both beautiful and useful. Still Writing is an exploration of the writing life, lit up by Shapiro’s…
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August 2014
All the Way
by Robert Schenkkan“A magnificent work. . . . a brilliant portrayal no less epic than the great tragedies of classic literature.” —Roma Torre, NY1
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July 2014
Masters of the Word
by William J. BernsteinFrom the author of A Splendid Exchange comes a remarkable history of media—from the creation of the alphabet through the invention of the Internet—and…
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June 2014
I Learn from Children
by Caroline PrattThe wise, timeless story of a pioneering school, the ingenious woman who created it, and the lessons we can learn—from children.
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May 2014
How Asia Works
by Joe Studwell“Provocative. . . . How Asia Works is a striking and enlightening book . . . A lively mix of scholarship, reporting and polemic.”…
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April 2014
Color Blind
by Tom Dunkel“Dunkel’s enthralling narrative of Bismarck’s talented collection of white and black players falls into the ‘must-read’ category.” —Cleveland Plain Dealer
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