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News Articles: Book Reviews

<em>Halfway Home: Race, Punishment, and the Afterlife of Mass Incarceration,</em> by Reuben Jonathan Miller

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

'Halfway Home' Makes Case That The Formerly Incarcerated Are Never Truly Free

Sociologist, criminologist, and former jail chaplain Reuben Jonathan Miller says "no other marginalized group ... experience[s] [the] profound level of legal exclusion" that those once imprisoned do.

February 02, 2021
|
By:
  • Ericka Taylor
<em>We Came, We Saw, We Left: A Family Gap Year</em>, by Charles Wheelan

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

'We Came, We Saw, We Left' Takes Us On One Family's Gap Year Adventure

Dartmouth's Charles Wheelan, author of Naked Economics, writes about his nine-month globetrot in 2016 with his wife and their teenagers — offering a refreshing escape during these isolating times.

January 31, 2021
|
By:
  • Carson Vaughan
<em>Soul City: Race, Equality, and the Lost Dream of an American Utopia,</em> by Thomas Healy

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

In 'Soul City,' One Man Envisions A Place Where Black People Have Power, Opportunity

Author Thomas Healy chronicles how, in 1969, Floyd McKissick went about building a city from scratch, only to have his dreams dashed by a combination of prejudice and bureaucracy.

January 29, 2021
|
By:
  • Michael Schaub
Joan Didion attends The American Theatre Wing's 2012 Annual Gala at The Plaza Hotel on Sept. 24, 2012 in New York City.

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

Joan Didion's 'Let Me Tell You What I Mean' Offers Plenty Of 'Journalistic Gold'

What's particularly salient in this book of previously uncollected essays is Didion's trademark farsightedness — especially striking decades later. But it does leave one wishing to hear from her now.

January 27, 2021
|
By:
  • Heller McAlpin
<em>The Devil You Know: A Black Power Manifesto</em> by Charles M. Blow

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

Charles Blow's 'The Devil You Know' Is A Black Power Manifesto For Our Time

Blow's book is a call to action for Black Americans to reconsider their Great Migration North and imagine new possibilities of Black political might.

January 26, 2021
|
By:
  • Hope Wabuke

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

For January, 3 Romances That Prove Love Is Ageless

This month, you're never too old — or too young — for a Happy Ever After, whether you're a 50-something entrepreneur, a beauty influencer or a teenager working hard at the family restaurant.

January 24, 2021
|
By:
  • Maya Rodale
<em>The Doctors Blackwell: How Two Pioneering Sisters Brought Medicine to Women and Women to Medicine,</em> by Janice P. Nimura

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

As 19th Century Females, Sisters In 'The Doctors Blackwell' Achieve Many Firsts

Historian Janice P. Nimura tells the story of America's first and third certified women doctors and the role these sisters played in building medical institutions.

January 21, 2021
|
By:
  • Martha Anne Toll
Youth Poet Laureate Amanda Gorman speaks at the inauguration of U.S. President Joe Biden.

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

A Different Day: A 2021 Poetry Preview, Part 2

Poetry helps us express feelings that don't fit neatly into sentences; confusion and fear but also hope and joy. Here's the second installment of our look ahead at the most exciting poetry of 2021.

January 21, 2021
|
By:
  • Phillip B. Williams,
  • Ken Chen,
  • and 2 more
<em>White Freedom: The Racial History of an Idea</em>, by Tyler Stovall

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

'White Freedom' Examines The Tandem Development Of The Concepts Of Freedom And Race

Tyler Stovall writes white freedom is "the belief (and practice) that freedom is central to white racial identity, and that only white people can or should be free" — noting nations were built on it.

January 20, 2021
|
By:
  • Ilana Masad

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

In 'Remote Control,' Drones Fly Over The Yam Fields Of A Near-Future Africa

Nnedi Okorafor's multi-faceted new novella follows a young girl in a near-future version of Ghana who becomes the Adopted Daughter of Death — but she can't quite figure out how that happened.

January 20, 2021
|
By:
  • Jason Heller

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

The History In 'Angel Of Greenwood' Could Not Be More Timely

Randi Pink's new novel follows a young couple, Angel and Isaiah, whose budding love is set against the backdrop of historical tragedy: the Tulsa race massacre of 1921.

January 19, 2021
|
By:
  • Caitlyn Paxson

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

The 'Uncollected Stories' Show Allan Gurganus At His Finest

This is Gurganus's first book since 2013, and it's worth the wait. These stories are funny, compassionate, and marked by the author's amazing ability to reflect both light and dark in his characters.

January 19, 2021
|
By:
  • Michael Schaub
Nadia Owusu is a Brooklyn-based writer and urban planner.

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

'Aftershocks' Is A Powerful Memoir Of A Life Upended — Then Pieced Back Together

When Nadia Owusu was 4 years old, her Armenian American mother disappeared from her life. When she was 13, her Ghanaian father died. Owusu reflects the losses and her biracial identity in her memoir.

January 18, 2021
|
By:
  • Maureen Corrigan

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

There's Pain And Tragedy In 'Yellow Wife' — But Also Great Joy

Sadeqa Johnson's novel — inspired by a real historical figure — pulls no punches in its tale of an enslaved woman trying to survive and make a life for herself and her family.

January 17, 2021
|
By:
  • Denny S. Bryce
<em>Drug Use for Grown-Ups: Chasing Liberty in the Land of Fear,</em> by Dr. Carl L. Hart

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

'Drug Use For Grown-Ups' Serves As An Argument For Personal Choice

Dr. Carl Hart's positions on drug use and availability may seem quite extreme to some — but are thoughtful and data-driven. He asserts that racism is a major factor in the negative image drugs carry.

January 15, 2021
|
By:
  • Nicholas Cannariato
  • Load More

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