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Editors Select: July 2022
Our monthly picks from the recent past.
Our monthly picks from the recent past.
Before you watch the Prime Video adaptation of Jack Carr's action thriller, we've got the details to get you up to speed.
The multi-hyphenate creator explores the tumult of postcolonial Africa and civil rights America in "The Scent of Burnt Flowers."
In “How to Raise an Antiracist” and “Goodnight Racism,” National Book Award–winning author and MacArthur “Genius” Grant recipient Dr. Ibram X. Kendi provides helpful and clear guides to talking to children about racism.
We're swapping some screen time for our favorite gossip-worthy audiobooks and podcasts.
Hear the true stories and voices behind the ongoing battle for reproductive freedom.
When comedian and author Sarah Cooper was asked to reimagine the classic “How to Win Friends and Influence People,” she had a lot of thoughts, but she didn’t expect to find so many answers on her journey.
If you’re looking for captivating listens for you or your kids about Black experiences, these are some of the incredible listens that have won our hearts.
Grant and Jane Golliher turn their decades of horse whispering experience into an accessible philosophy on life, leadership, and parenthood with "Think Like a Horse."
This collection of bios and memoirs written by and about refugees offers a window into their lived experiences and an invitation to a greater sense of compassion.
The story John Mankiewicz kept in his back pocket and never gave up on.
Leila Mottley’s captivating first novel, which she started writing at just 17, turns its ripped-from-the-headlines premise into a wholly compelling work of fiction.