Smithsonian Scholars Pick Their Favorite Books of 2018
Here are eleven titles that intrigued and thrilled Smithsonian’s knowledge seekers this year
The True Story of the ‘Green Book’ Movie
Jazz, race and an unlikely friendship inspire the new film about navigating Jim Crow America
How Voltaire Went from Bastille Prisoner to Famous Playwright
Three hundred years ago this week, the French philosopher and writer began his career with a popular retelling of Sophocles’ ‘Oedipus’
The Ten Best Books About Food of 2018
These ten titles should satisfy readers hungry to learn more about the history and science of food
A Letter to Stan Lee, Comic Book Legend, Written by One of His Biggest Fans
Movie producer and instructor Michael Uslan eulogizes his hero and mentor, whose superheroes taught him countless life lessons
Lessons in the Decline of Democracy From the Ruined Roman Republic
A new book argues that violent rhetoric and disregard for political norms was the beginning of Rome’s end
The Court Case That Inspired the Gilded Age’s #MeToo Moment
A turn-of-the-century trial, the focus of a new book, took aim at the Victorian double standard
The Unforgotten: New Voices of the Holocaust
The Translator Who Brought a Lost Jewish Poet’s Words to the English-Speaking World
Raised in the U.S. but a lifelong speaker of Lithuanian, Laima Vince became enamored of Matilda Olkin’s writing
The Unforgotten: New Voices of the Holocaust
Why did we turn an isolated teenage girl into the world’s most famous Holocaust victim?
Today’s Whales Are Huge, But Why Aren’t They Huger?
Most giant cetaceans only got giant in the past 4.5 million years, suggesting they could have room to grow
This Freak Aviation Disaster Brought Supersonic Idealism Down in Flames
In a just-released Smithsonian Book, author Samme Chittum assesses the Concorde’s demise with the keen eye of a crime reporter
The Much-Loved Paddington Bear Turns Sixty
Celebrating the October 1958 publication of A Bear Called Paddington, Smithsonian Libraries takes a look at several pop-up books
The Screenwriting Mystic Who Wanted to Be the American Führer
William Dudley Pelley and his Silver Shirts were just one of many Nazi-sympathizers operating in the United States in the 1930s
Would Baseball have Become America’s National Pastime Without Baseball Cards?
Tobacco companies spurred the mania, but artistry won the hearts of collectors
A new book imagines how the underworld may appear with these illustrations
A Vintage Take on High Fashion Showcases the Beauty of a Stitch in Time
Photographer Cathleen Naundorf mined Chanel’s archives for a majestic new book
A new book from historian Sarah Churchwell examines the etymologies of two ubiquitous phrases
The Artist Who Made Coloring Books Cool for Adults Returns With a New Masterpiece
Johanna Basford, whose fanciful, hand-drawn illustrations launched a worldwide craze, is back with flying colors
Why Louisa May Alcott’s ‘Little Women’ Endures
The author of a new book about the classic says the 19th-century novel contains life lessons for all, especially for boys
Before the Civil War, Congress Was a Hotbed of Violence
A new book from historian Joanne Freeman chronicles the viciousness with which elected officials treated each other
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