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The Judges of the Secret Court
Judges of the Secret Court
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David Stacton
Stacton
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Stactons historical recreation of John Wilkes Booths plot to assassinate Lincoln, its execution, and its aftermath (including the trials of the conspirators, Mary Surratt among them) is among the finest books ever written about the Civil War. David Stacton is an original, finely pitched voice in American fiction. —Larry McMurtry
Contributors: John Crowley |
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India: A Mosaic
India: A Mosaic
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Robert B. Silvers,
Barbara Epstein
Silvers
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In this collection, distinguished writers from East and West bring their distinctive perspectives to Indian history, politics and literature.
Contributors: Arundhati Roy |
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The Stammering Century
Stammering Century
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Gilbert Seldes
Seldes
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19th-century America bred fads, cults, and new religions as perhaps no other time or place ever has. Writing without judgement, but with plenty of verve, Seldes profiles the charismatic and often off-kilter leaders of these movements and sketches their hidden histories.
Contributors: Greil Marcus |
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From Heaven to Arcadia: The Sacred and the Profane in the Renaissance
From Heaven to Arcadia
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Ingrid D. Rowland
Rowland
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In these essays, most of them originally published in The New York Review of Books, Ingrid Rowland explores topics in the art and culture of Renaissance Italy. |
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Voltaire in Love
Voltaire in Love
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Nancy Mitford
Mitford
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The inimitable Nancy Mitford’s account of Voltaire’s 16-year affair with Émilie du Châtelet—a renowned mathematician and scientist—is a spirited romp in the company of two extraordinary individuals as well as an erudite and gossipy guide to the French Enlightenment. “Voltaire in Love caps [Mitford's] career as the nonpareil popular biographer of that era.”—Michael Dirda, The Washington Post
Contributors: Adam Gopnik |
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Reveille in Washington: 1860–1865
Reveille in Washington
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Margaret Leech
Leech
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This Pulitzer Prize–winning view of Washington during the Civil War forgoes the battlefield to focus on the daily life, political intrigues, and social currents of the young capital. Leech brings to life extravagant dinner parties, saloon backrooms, makeshift barracks, and White House halls. "Packed and running over with the anecdotes, scandals, personalities, and tragi-comedies of the day." —The New Yorker
Contributors: James M. McPherson |
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The Crisis of the European Mind: 1680–1715
Crisis of the European Mind
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Paul Hazard
Hazard
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In this landmark of intellectual history, Paul Hazard looks at the period leading up the Enlightenment, years which saw the erosion of the classical values of respect for tradition, stability, and proportion, as well as a growing awareness of non-European cultures. Hazard captures the excitement of a revolution, the impact of which continues to be felt in our own time.
Contributors: Anthony Grafton , J. Lewis May |
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When The World Spoke French
When The World Spoke French
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Marc Fumaroli
Fumaroli
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If you were a writer, thinker, or lover of la douceur de vivre (the sweetness of life) during the 17th century, you conversed and corresponded in French. Eminent scholar Fumaroli has here assembled an unparalleled collection of the most fascinating figures from the period and brought together their rarely seen writings originally penned in French. Pulitzer Prize–winning poet Howard translates.
Contributors: Richard Howard |
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Looking Back: Heroes, Rascals, and Other Icons of the American Imagination
Looking Back
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Russell Baker
Baker
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In these eleven essays, all originally published in The New York Review of Books, Russell Baker looks back on a group of iconic public figures from his own past. |
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The Jeffersonian Transformation: Passages from the "History"
Jeffersonian Transformation
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Henry Adams
Adams
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The ideal introduction and companion to Adams's "massive and magisterial" history of the administrations of Jefferson and Madison, presenting an indelible picture of America's startling rise to world power.
Contributors: Garry Wills |
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