Power corrupts a revolutionary's soul in Mexico's fractured history.
Explore the romantic potential of Alexander and Ninette as we analyze their compatibility through historical parallels, personality paradoxes, and the unique charm of their Canadian connection.
Justice for sale: one lawyer, one Lincoln, infinite moral complexities.
Explore the fascinating intersection of science and football, uncovering the physics and strategies behind America's favorite sport.
Lightning girl becomes captive, sparking a revolution that changes everything.
Prophetic dystopian warning: when godless society faces divine apocalypse.
Eye-opening exploration of gender wealth inequality, exposing systemic biases and empowering women to demand financial equality.
Gripping account of six survivors' experiences following the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, revealing the human cost of nuclear warfare.
Exploring Barbara Tuchman's masterpiece The Guns of August through multiple lenses, revealing how she transformed dry military history into compelling narrative and why her chronicle of WWI's opening month remains influential decades later.
Global financial insanity exposed through darkly comedic investigative storytelling.
An investigative journalist exposes widespread corruption and falsehoods in the global media industry, revealing shocking truths about modern journalism.
Fantasy epic of war, magic, and royal intrigue in a divided land.
Explores how America's regional cultures, rooted in colonial settlement patterns and geography, are driving today's political polarization and being exploited by those who benefit from division.
A conservative critique of forces threatening American unity, arguing for preserving traditional values and shared national identity.
Forbidden prison manuscript exposes humanity's darkest desires with unflinching brutality.
A mesmerizing exploration of eels and the human condition, blending memoir, history, and marine biology.
How did the Inca govern millions across vertical peaks without wheels or writing? Explore the masonry and knotted strings that built a mountain empire.
A.O. Scott defends criticism as a noble, creative, and urgent activity in modern life.