The University Bookman
Reviewing Books that Build Culture
Writing from the Edge of the Middle
Veery Huleatt reviews a strong collection of essays on the Midwest and the consequences of losing our narrative.
Two Tolkiens on View
Alexi Sargeant reviews the exhibit Tolkien: Maker of Middle Earth, now at the Morgan Library in New York through May.
Why Make Men Pigs
Colleen Curran reviews Madeline Miller’s move from myth to novel as she works with a character from the Odyssey.
A Conflicted Idea of America
Craig Bruce Smith reviews Jill Lepore’s treatment of America’s founding eras in the first of four pieces on These Truths.
What Hath Lepore Wrought
Daniel N. Gullotta assesses Jill Lepore’s treatment of America’s antebellum and Civil War eras.
Citizenship and the Fitful History of the American Way
Robert Greene II reviews the third part of Jill Lepore’s new history, covering the period from Reconstruction through World War II.
Recent Domestic History
Lauren Turek reviews the final section of Jill Lepore’s new history of the United States, covering post–World War II to early Trump.
Would You Recognize a Dystopia If You Saw One?
Ryan J. Barilleaux helps us take a deeper look at our glib use of dystopian rhetoric.
Churchill as Communicator
Joseph Bottum and Benjamin F. Jones review a major new biography of Churchill.
The Book Gallery
A collection of conversations with Bookman editor Luke C. Sheahan and writers and authors of imagination and erudition. Click on the icon in the upper right corner of the video to see more episodes in this series or check out our YouTube page.
