The best books to have on your radar for 2025 Inside the mind of BookTok's Laurie Gilmore The 2024 Cosmopolitan book awards An exclusive extract from Eliza Clark's new book The 20 historical fiction books you need to read 25 best autobiographies to read now ...
Room to grow The best historical fiction to read now Books to calm anxiety 11 steps for a big clear out The best indoor plants and how to care for them Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
Two recent books are great reads providing insight and understanding into the 2024 election year. DEMOCRACY AWAKENINGbyHeather Cox Richardsonis an insightful narrative into the political rise ofDonald Trumpdating back to the beginning of Republican conservatism following FDR’s New Deal.Her concise na...
"For any reader wondering why a point on the globe visited only by a very small number of people is worth a dedicated book, Michael Bravo provides compelling answers in this well-written historical account [...] Bravo is emphatically well-qualified to write such a history of the North Pole...
in Good Reads by Cesar Alvarez What I am reading: April 1, 2015 Recent articles that I found interesting and made me think. For more articles see the quant mashup Quantocracy. 99 Problems But A Backtest Ain’t One–“The first time one can actually realize how good (bad) his chosen ...
fascinating. The science is up-to-date and accurate; Woollings doesn't settle for ordinary close-enough-but-wrong explanations but instead explains how weather and climate systems really work. You'll be amazed and awestruck at everything that happens to produce that puff of wind against your ...
But I’ve compiled a list of twelve books that I think are great fall reads. Now, naturally, there are so many more that I could have added, but I wanted to keep the list length reasonable- but if you’d like to see more suggestions, especially in a certain genre- let me know,...
From thrilling dramas to charming romances to helpful life advice, you'll surely want to have your nose in one of these summer books and beach reads.
The non-fiction part is correct. The book reads as though it is a series of essays, all about various aspects of a personal experience birding, and then loosely connected to make one long narrative. At first I found this jarring … wondering how we got from story A to story B, but ...
place in literature. It’s the sort of book that I would expect to be taught in a good English literature class. But, except for about three of you reading this (yeah, you know who you are), a book taught in English Lit is not generally the sort of book one reads for entertainment...