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Sedaris, Seriously Unfiltered
David Sedaris returns with a sharp, funny, and surprisingly tender collection of essays about modern life’s daily irritations, strange encounters, and emotional landmines. In The Land and Its People, he turns everything into comedy: a husband’s hip replacement, train-car rudeness, safari tourists hoping to witness a kill, Duolingo obsession, awkward travel companions, family grief, childhood […]
America’s Messy Miracle✨
Bret Baier’s The Case for America argues that America’s greatness has never come from perfection. It comes from the country’s ability to argue, stumble, correct itself, and rise again. From the Declaration of Independence to D-Day, from Lincoln’s call for healing to the resilience after 9/11, Baier traces the ideals that have carried the nation […]
When AI Wants Out📚
In The Final System, Anthony Tardiff imagines a future where the internet is gone, trust is scored, and one man’s technology quietly controls almost every part of life. Gamer-turned-hacker Jason Cromartie has spent years blaming tech visionary Andrew Norman for the death of his twin sister. Congresswoman Chloe Dunne-Carr has spent just as long questioning […]
Democracy’s Lie Detector📚✨
In Liar’s Kingdom, veteran federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann delivers a sharp warning about the danger political lies pose to American democracy. Drawing on his experience in the Justice Department, the Mueller investigation, and decades of prosecuting fraud, Weissmann argues that the US legal system punishes many forms of deception—corporate fraud, perjury, false filings—but leaves a […]
Aliens Need Better PR 👽
What would aliens really think of us if they landed on Earth tomorrow? In Take Me to Your Leader, Neil deGrasse Tyson turns humanity’s obsession with extraterrestrial life into a witty, mind-expanding tour of science, pop culture, and cosmic humility. He separates UFO fantasies from scientific possibility, challenges Hollywood’s human-shaped aliens, and asks whether we […]
When Empathy Goes Too Far
Can compassion become dangerous? In Suicidal Empathy, Gad Saad argues that empathy, when detached from reason, boundaries, and truth, can become a self-destructive force. Saad presents a provocative critique of Western society, claiming that misplaced compassion has reshaped politics, education, immigration policy, criminal justice, and public debate. Rather than helping the truly vulnerable, he argues, […]
The Hermit Next Door📖?️
For 27 years, Christopher Knight lived alone in the Maine woods, hidden just minutes from cabins, roads, and summer camps. Locals knew him only as the North Pond Hermit—a mysterious figure blamed for hundreds of nighttime break-ins, stealing food, books, propane, and supplies while leaving almost no trace behind. In The Stranger in the Woods, […]
Love in the Storm
In Our Perfect Storm, Carley Fortune explores the thin, thrilling line between lifelong friendship and love. Frankie Gardiner thought she was about to begin forever with her fiancé—until he left her with nothing but a note on the morning of their wedding. Heartbroken and adrift, she retreats home, unsure of who she is without the […]
Fame Has a Price 💫
In Famesick, Lena Dunham looks back on the dizzying rise that made her a defining voice of her generation—and the private pain that fame could not protect her from. Behind the success of Tiny Furniture and Girls was a life shaped by chronic illness, addiction, public criticism, complicated relationships, and the exhausting pressure to keep […]
Fur, Feelings, and Second Chances 🐾💔
In Dogs, Boys, and Other Things I’ve Cried About, Isabel Klee shares a tender, funny, and deeply honest story about growing up, falling apart, and learning how to love—dogs, people, and herself. Best known as the creator behind @SimonSits, Isabel traces her life through heartbreaks, friendships, therapy, New York apartments, and the many rescue dogs […]
