Charlie English begins “The CIA Book Club” by describing a 1970s technical manual: a dull cover, as uninviting as anything. A book that practically begs you to put it back on the shelf and move on.
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500,000 books from Imagination Library support literacy in Louisville
The Imagination Library of Louisville offers free books to kids under five as part of an effort to improve youth literacy and ...
This summer, we asked you to tell us about the books you read in high school that profoundly affected you. It turns out you had a lot to share. More than 1,100 of you wrote back to tell us about the ...
Mr. Donahue teaches high school English at Greenwich Country Day School in Connecticut. In her memoir, Dorothy Allison writes, “Two or three things I know for sure and one of them is that telling the ...
Publisher Berkley is releasing the translated novels this year. By Lexy Perez Associate Editor “There wasn’t a demand for the translation in the U.S. at first. But thanks to the success of the series, ...
One the world’s top literary honours, the Booker Prize, is launching a new award to celebrate children’s literature and ...
In “The CIA Book Club,” Charlie English tells the story of America’s war of ideas in the Eastern Bloc. Credit...Maxime Mouysset Supported by By Joseph Finder Joseph Finder, who writes frequently about ...
Turkish author Cenk Enes Ozer left Turkey with almost nothing. Once a celebrated author, Ozer thought his writing days were over. Nine years later, he's back into writing, this time, in English. His ...
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