It starts with a homemade cappuccino in Bryn Mawr and ends with dinner at Zahav.
A whole library’s worth of papyri owned by Julius Caesar’s father-in-law were turned to charcoal by the eruption of Vesuvius.
Listen to more stories on the Noa app. “A writer,” Saul Bellow once observed, “is a reader moved to emulation.” But what if it’s also the other way around? What if, when we think about writing, we are ...
Finding Read with Jenna book picks is about to get easier! In a new partnership, Read with Jenna and The Libby App are joining together to give readers an easy way to get the latest book club picks at ...
Director Kelly Reichardt tells IndieWire about recreating small-town New England in Ohio and sending Josh O'Connor's art ...
Over 3,700 unique books were banned during the 2024-2025 school year, more than double the number of titles PEN America tracked in the 2021-2022 school year when it began counting. The nonprofit, ...
TAMPA, Fla. — The Hillsborough school board voted unanimously Tuesday to remove two more books from school shelves. "Blankets" by Craig Thompson and "Identical" by Ellen Hopkins were previously ...
Clooney, talking about the broader set of busts Thursday that included alleged gambling on basketball itself, pointed out ...
Diane Keaton has taken the design world on all fronts: she's launched a tabletop collection, owned significant pieces of ...
Our editors and researchers love to save money and time, and use a broad range of consumer-oriented websites and apps to do ...
“What famous inventor did not believe in sign language despite having a deaf wife and mother?” If you’ve read “True Biz” by Sara Nović, as many competitors at this year’s Battle of the Books did, ...