Books
Skip Navigation
The New Republic
The New Republic
LATEST
BREAKING NEWS
POLITICS
CLIMATE
CULTURE
MAGAZINE
NEWSLETTERS
PODCASTS
VIDEO
The New Republic
The New Republic
The New Republic
The New Republic
The New Republic
LATEST
BREAKING NEWS
POLITICS
CLIMATE
CULTURE
MAGAZINE
NEWSLETTERS
PODCASTS
VIDEO
The New Republic
The New Republic
The New Republic
Books
May 23, 2018
Magazine
Gabriel Winant
Mind Control
Barbara Ehrenreich’s radical critique of wellness and self-improvement
May 23, 2018
Jo Livingstone
Poor Mary Shelley!
A new biopic continues a long tradition of obscuring the "Frankenstein" author's genius.
May 22, 2018
Kim Kelly
A Forgotten War on Women
Scott W. Stern’s book documents a decades-long program to incarcerate “promiscuous” women.
May 18, 2018
Magazine
Alan Wolfe
A Most Violent Year
The world that 1968 ushered in is a far cry from the one activists imagined.
May 18, 2018
Sarah Jones
The Myth of Trump’s Populist Revolt
A new book, endorsed by the president, reveals the fictions his supporters tell themselves.
May 16, 2018
Jo Livingstone
The Big, Bad Truth of Michelle Tea
The writer's new essay collection "Against Memoir" brings the unwritten queer past to the light.
May 15, 2018
Jeet Heer
Tom Wolfe reunited journalism with literature.
May 15, 2018
Jason Diamond
Can Psychedelic Drugs Do Good?
Michael Pollan’s new book details the positive effects of LSD and magic mushrooms.
May 14, 2018
Jo Livingstone
Aline Kominsky-Crumb Has One Regret
The artist looks back over a legendary career in comics.
May 10, 2018
Joanna Scutts
Viv Albertine’s Punk Memories
“To Throw Away Unopened” is a memoir of family, freedom, and rebellion.
May 9, 2018
Rachel Riederer
Can Rivers Be People Too?
Inside the radical movement to gain rights for ecosystems—and save the environment
May 7, 2018
Jo Livingstone
Weird Fiction Is Alive
Decades apart, the stories of Robert Aickman and Rita Bullwinkel channel an eerie spirit.
May 7, 2018
Gal Beckerman
Don’t Blame Phones for Narcissism
A new book argues that 2,500 years of culture have caused an outbreak of self-obsession.
May 4, 2018
Alex Shephard
The Nobel Prize in Literature will not be awarded in 2018.
May 4, 2018
Ryu Spaeth
Gerald Murnane’s Endless Island
What the writer’s unique strain of autofiction says about the Australian condition.
May 3, 2018
Shuja Haider
Silicon Valley’s Rigged Game of Life
In “Live Work Work Work Die,” Corey Pein tries to survive the gig economy.
May 1, 2018
Anna Wiener
The Internet Women Made
Claire L. Evans’s new book is a bittersweet reminder that the internet used to be freer and more fun.
April 27, 2018
Jo Livingstone
Did Math Kill God?
A new book on Renaissance mathematics makes a bold case.
April 26, 2018
Colette Shade
What Wendell Berry Wants
Can an environmentalist avoid political movements and the big, structural solutions they offer?
April 25, 2018
Maggie Doherty
On Not Becoming a Mother
In her new novel “Motherhood,” Sheila Heti reflects on fate, agency, and time.
Our Writers
Kate Aronoff
Climate & Energy
Perry Bacon
Trumpism & Its Opponents
Malcolm Ferguson
Breaking News
Matt Ford
Law & the Courts
Melissa Gira Grant
LGBTQ Rights
Heather Souvaine Horn
Climate Change
Ellie Quinlan Houghtaling
Breaking News
Jason Linkins
Power & Plutocracy
Timothy Noah
Politics & Economy
Edith Olmsted
Breaking News
Monica Potts
Politics & Class
Hafiz Rashid
Breaking News
Greg Sargent
Politics & Democracy
Grace Segers
Congress & Elections
Alex Shephard
Politics & Media
Michael Tomasky
Politics & Ideas
About
The New Republic
’s history
52
53
54
55
56