In “The Typewriter and the Guillotine,” Mark Braude takes on the intersection of Janet Flanner’s career and a lurid murder case.
Alwyn Turner charts the new values, entertainments and anxieties that transformed the country in the 1920s and ’30s ...
The Canadian Press on MSN
Today-Music-History-Jan25
Today in Music History for Jan. 25: ...
The best hotels in Berlin for LGBT+ travellers - These are the best queer-friendly stays to choose from in Germany’s capital ...
In this installment of NPR's "Word of the Week" series we trace the origins of the "cravat" (borrowed from the French ...
The Museum of Modern Art in New York presents “Wifredo Lam: When I Don’t Sleep, I Dream,” the most extensive retrospective devoted to the artist in this country. Wifredo Lam went to Spain from Cuba in ...
Woman's World on MSN
Alan Hale Jr.'s Private Battle: How The 'Gilligan's Island' Skipper Escaped His Father's Shadow
By the time Alan Hale Jr. reached the later years of his life, he no longer seemed to be searching for anything. The long ...
Its techno scene attracted a global crowd — until the city was hit by cultural crackdowns and Covid-19. But one pioneer ...
But today, in the face of Trump’s wave of assaults, the counterculture as we have known it (with the possible exception of ...
Shaped by the austerity of her Mennonite upbringing and the bustling Vancouver art scene of the 1960s and 70s, she developed ...
How does she do it, grip each new generation with her thrillers? On her 50th death anniversary, we add it all up: truth, toxins, an unerring eye for detail.
Britain was rive by grief in the wake of WWI. But Alwyn Turner reveals that in the years that followed, from Aero bars to Art Deco cinemas, a social revolution lifted the nation.
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