Best history of January
Our picks for the best literature and fiction of January
Original source: https://www.amazon.com/amazonbookreview/editorspicks.html?ref_=abr_widget_nav&theme=light
Our picks for the best literature and fiction of January
Original source: https://www.amazon.com/amazonbookreview/editorspicks.html?ref_=abr_widget_nav&theme=light
Our picks for the best literature and fiction of January
Original source: https://www.amazon.com/amazonbookreview/editorspicks.html?ref_=abr_widget_nav&theme=light
Jerry Craft published the Newbury award-winning graphic novel
focuses on the experience of being Black and the “new kid” at a predominantly white school.
Original source: https://www.npr.org/2022/12/28/1144458555/banned-books-author-jerry-craft-new-kid
A lot of people make resolutions in January, and we are no different. Today, we put our stakes in the ground and make our 2023 pop culture resolutions. We also check in on what we resolved to do in 2022, and whether we did it perfectly, imperfectly, or perhaps not at all.
Original source: https://www.npr.org/2022/12/28/1145790395/our-2023-pop-culture-resolutions
Robert Gottlieb has been working in publishing since 1955. The documentary
by daughter Lizzie Gottlieb, examines his decades-long editing relationship with author Robert Caro.
Original source: https://www.npr.org/2023/01/03/1146641641/robert-gottlieb-caro-power-broker-turn-every-page-lizzie-gottlieb
How do race and class affect the way we eat? What does it mean to “eat like a white person?” And if food inequality isn’t about “food deserts,” what is it
about? We’re getting into all those questions and more with Priya Fielding-Singh, author of the book,
Original source: https://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/2022/12/19/1144182863/revisiting-how-the-other-half-eats