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Blood, Toil, Tears, and Churchill

The Leaning Towers of Deutsche

The author of a new book exposes the widespread, historic corruption fueling the German bank’s downfall

Alexandra Fuller

The African-born writer recommends books that depict the complex brutality of colonialism

Cloudy with a Chance of Doom

Pozzi Scheme

Murder, They Wrote

Bob Balaban

“I pretend for a living. But in real life, I’m a reality junkie”: the actor recommends his favorite nonfiction books

License to Burn

Flipping the Hitchcock Script

The author of a new book on Joan Harrison re-writes the filmmaker’s prolific history to highlight the woman driving his success

Coco d’Azur

One Crept over the Falcon’s Nest

You Can Take Galileo Out of Rome …

The author of a new history of the astronomical revolution explores the radical scientist’s conservative side

Soviet Syndrome

Short List

Caroline de Maigret

De Beauvoir, Didion, Ernaux: the French style star on the essential women writers

New York’s Got Game

Walk south on Sixth Avenue toward West Third Street at any time of the day or night and you’ll be hard-pressed not to see a basketball game in play. It’s a perpetual motion—has been for decades—throughout the city

Sex (Time) Machine

A new history of sex reveals tales of Clarice Clatterbollocks, testicle thefts, and women keeping live fish in their knickers

Forget It, Jake—It’s Hollywood

Women of the Resistance

L.A. Confidential

When it comes to Los Angeles in the 60s and 70s, Andee Nathanson was to photography what Eve Babitz was to literature, recording the exploding scene from within. A new book of her photographs illustrates that golden age

On Topics

The millennial novelist Miranda Popkey has more to say about #MeToo than you can fit in a hashtag

Long and Winding Road

Claire Tomalin

Recommends four books spanning three centuries

On the Spectrum