Katie Cleminson had what she calls a “textbook pregnancy”. But at 41 weeks, when she went into hospital, they couldn’t find a ...
Kattan narrates Palestinian history through inherited memory, presenting the ongoing Nakba as a lived, generational ...
Buoyed by their successful strategies for early literacy, California legislators and advocacy groups are calling for a ...
What made her one of our greatest — and most dangerous — novelists was her belief that stories could contain what our minds couldn’t confront.
PBS has been a staple television network for decades. While the programs have changed, the drive to provide a different kind ...
Twenty-five years after a dramatic rescue, retired Traffic Officer André Rautenbach reflects on the day he saved Baby Brett, ...
Watch an exclusive clip from Maite Alberdi's 'A Child of My Own,' a documentary premiering at the Berlin Film Festival.
Reading is a dying art. In 2024, 40 per cent of Britons did not read or listen to a book. More than a third of adults say that they’ve given up reading for pleasure. In the era of the smartphone, ...
Even after 30 years since his murder, the life and death of Brian Klinefelter continues to inspire many people.
In The Bluest Eye, Morrison struggled to unite the there and not-there in the same figure: Claudia had occupied the positive pole, as it were, and Pecola, the negative. Four novels later, in Beloved, ...
Smartphones have their advantages, but growing up without one built skills that younger generations don't have.
These six mysteries and thrillers are willing to venture a little further into the shadows while keeping their sense of wit.