At the height of the Cold War in the 1950s, as the fear of nuclear Armageddon hung over American and Soviet citizens, ...
This year has had a little something for everyone when it comes to books — fans of romantasy, science fiction, horror, and ...
The costs of the shiny convenience that dangles from a convergence of AI, robotics, and the Internet of Things may be higher ...
Dan Jones’s superb narrative history, Henry V, stresses the great king’s piety, and how it grounded a world view that may seem alien today ...
The Cold War spawned some odd military projects that were doomed to fail, from atomic subways to a city under the ice.
The in-between season offers ample chance to dive into a new book. From easy-breezy reads ... Paul Murray’s The Bee Sting is a tour de force of fiction. The Barnes, a once-well-off Irish family ...
As well as the promise of autumn, September brings with it a huge array of brilliant new books for every kind of reader. Whether you’re craving critically acclaimed novels, page-turning mysteries, or ...
"I absolutely loved this. Like an Adam Kay for psychotherapy, Dr Natalie Cawley opens up the closed world of therapy so well, with humour, honesty and fascinating insights." Frankie Boyle At the ...
But one might be surprised to learn (as we were) that a teenage Sendak published his first professional illustrations in a 1947 popular science book about nuclear physics, co-authored by his high ...