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TODAY: In 1922, historian and author Howard Zinn is born.

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All this week we’ve been highlighting our most anticipated books on a variety of subjects, from politics and social science to memoir and essay collections, history and biography, and finally tech and science • Please teach more living poets: Nick Ripatrazone on the benefits of studying “breathing, human artists” • Gregory Pardlo writes a letter to Yusef Komunyakaa • Jay Parini on the golden age of reinventing real life • In which Nicola Waldron wonders if writing can be a kink • Amitav Ghosh and Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni on Indian epics in modern novels • At the birth of surrealism in Montparnasse, 1913 • On translating a childhood between five countries • Lessons from Nabokov: Rajia Hassib on finding freedom in a foreign language • Martha C. Nussbaum: Is there such a thing as an ethics of cosmopolitanism? • Kanako Nishi on Jun’ichiro Tanizaki’s subversive attention to detail in an age of endless scrolling • Walter Mosley talks to legendary filmmaker Walter Bernstein • From literary ambition to awkward sensitivity, Hans Christian Andersen, original softboi, had it all • Wittgenstein, making sense of nonsense, from Bertrand Russell to the existentialists • The political chaos and unexpected activism of the post-Civil War era • On Victor Hugo’s posthumous career as a religious prophet • Sara Martin on reciting Paul Celan to expedite intimacy • Lara Vapnyar on the book that made her weep for hours • J.M.G. Le Clézio on the expansive, immersive quality of great poetry • The feints and jabs of Polari, Britain’s gay slangSusan Steinberg on the value of writing an ugly draft • What does a war correspondent look like? Zara Meerza on conflict journalism by Arab women • On overtourism and the joy of unsung places • Jenny Zhang on her complicated feelings about Little Women’s heroine

Best of Book Marks:

13 books that will actually make you laugh out loud: from A Confederacy of Dunces to The Sellout • What We Talk About When We Talk About Books author Leah Price recommends five great books about books • 14 rapid-fire book recs from rapper, singer, and writer, Dessa • A blistering Brexit novel, a instruction manual for antiracism, and an exposé of abuses at sea all feature among the Best Reviewed Books of the Week

New on CrimeReads:

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Nile Cappello on the Bloody Benders, America’s first family of serial killers • J. Kingston Pierce on 1970s crime fiction and the remarkable rise of regional noir • Michele Campbell on eight books about vacations that don’t exactly turn out to be relaxing • Hank Phillippi Ryan cross-examines the most suspenseful jury verdicts in fiction and film • Summer’s not over yet! Grab one of these riveting thrillers and hit the beach • Mary Anna Evans digs up some explanations for our fascination with archaeological mysteries • Lauren North on seven psychological thrillers that explore the inner workings of the human mind • August’s best international crime fiction • Olivia Rutigliano on how the new film Ready or Not marries traditional mystery tropes to feminist horror • Rachel Monroe talks murder, miniatures, and true crime fandom

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