Books

Book Review: “The Veiled Prophet” — The Pageantry of Reaction

June 29, 2026
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Veiled power in St. Louis –How a secret society turned class war into ritual and never let go.

Poetry Review: Nicole Yurcaba’s “Hutsulka” — Lost in Translation, Living in War

June 26, 2026
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A compelling exploration of diasporic grief and the limits of a poetic response to war.

Book Review: Throwing Some Shade on Shade — A Case for Sunlight

June 26, 2026
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A science writer challenges the orthodoxy on sun exposure, arguing for its benefits while downplaying its risks.

Book Review: Rivalry as Collaboration — Dylan, the Beatles, and the Sound of Influence

June 25, 2026
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Jim Windolf’s joint portrait argues that competition between icons did not divide them—it reshaped modern music

Children’s Book Reviews: Finding Home, Making Family

June 24, 2026
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From exile to everyday kindness, these picture books trace how belonging is built—through resilience, community, and imagination.

Book Review: “Obstinate Daughters” — The Women Who Powered the Revolution

June 23, 2026
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Denise Kiernan’s accessible book restores the often overlooked figures who shaped America’s founding.

Author Interview: Rethinking 1968 — Beyond the Stereotypes

June 19, 2026
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In “1968,” historian Alexander Bloom challenges the clichés of counterculture and reflects on a year of global rupture.

Book Review: “Summer of Freedom” — History Lit by Flashbulb

June 18, 2026
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Oliver Hilmes’s “Summer of Freedom” offers vivid snapshots of 1945—but little sense of why the world changed.

Book Review: Frederic Edwin Church, America’s Master of Grandeur

June 15, 2026
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Victoria Johnson’s lively biography celebrates Church’s ambition, while overlooking some of the broader shifts that dimmed his legacy.

Book Review: “Love and Terror” — Charles Manson as Myth, Murder as Media

June 12, 2026
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Claudia Verhoeven’s “Love and Terror” reframes the Manson murders as a cultural narrative shaped by spectacle, ideology, and America’s enduring fascination with charismatic deception.

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