Book Review: The Iliad
/Homer's Iliad gets a new and unconventional translation into sometimes very familiar language
Read MoreHomer's Iliad gets a new and unconventional translation into sometimes very familiar language
Read MoreOur book today is Wild Nights, the winning little work of urban natural history Anne Matthews wrote in 2001, a smart, informed book that follows in the natural history footsteps of such works as Cathy Johnson’s The Nocturnal Naturalist (and act as precursors to great books like Marie Winn’s Central Park in the Dark) by [...]
Read MoreA sudsy, salty, saucy Mediterranean memoir comes with a light spray of classical allusions ...
Read MorePete Dexter's lean, harrowing novel of murder and ambition is coming to the big screen with a full complement of movie stars - and a new paperback edition of the book is a happy by-product.
Read MoreIn 1868, Robert Browning completed a long poem about an old murder case ...
Read MoreA magnificent three-volume history of warfare in the West.
Read MoreTheir brains - their digits - their eyes - their locomotion - their families - their staggeringly long reign over the planet Earth: it's all here, and much, much more. The greatest dinosaur reference work just got even better.
Read MoreThe son of a powerful crime family falls in love with a young woman in the Witness Protection Program - a young woman his family wants dead! Don't you hate it when that happens?
Read MoreA stark and powerful account of the killing regimes of Nazi Germany and Stalinist Russia - and of the blood-soaked stretch of middle Europe where those regimes did their work.
Read MoreA slim, engaging new book tries to take an objective look at the popular question of Shakespearean authorship - if such objectivity is even possible.
Read MoreDog-torturer Michael Vick writes a triumphalist come-back memoir.
Read MoreA Dickens-obsessed little Oregon town plays unwilling host to - what else? - a Dickens-themed murder in this captivating mystery debut
Read MoreDuring World War Two, thousands of men left U.S. jobs in order to join the military - and thousands of women stepped in to fill those jobs ... and in some cases join the military too. A fascinating new book looks at what magazine cartoons had to say about all this.
Read MoreNow in the U.S.: an epic, gore-spattered series about a roving band of Viking warriors!
Read MoreYoung, vain, unfaithful Catherine Howard, Henry VIII's fifth wife, regularly draws writers intent on finding heroism in her brief life & times; Carolly Erickson is the latest aspirant.
Read MoreThe meek and dutiful Jane Seymour, mother of Henry VIII's long-sought male heir, takes center stage in a new historical novel about her life and times.
Read MoreTragedy haunted the earliest years of the new Tudor dynasty, and in this atmospheric new novel, a candle-maker and a courier are tasked with finding out why.
Read MoreThe ancient Greek historian Thucydides is virtually synonymous with the Peloponnesian War, but a new history gives the master a much-needed makeover
Read MoreFrom the glory days of the late 1980s comes this new reprint-volume of the adventures of Marvel Comics' imperious, headstrong super-merman, Prince Namor the Sub-Mariner!
Read MoreBelknap Press produces a big, attractive, and lovingly annotated edition of Jane Austen's peak-of-her-career novel "Emma" - perfect for newcomers and those who know every line by heart.
Read MoreThis is a place for all of my writing about books.