You Can Now Shop Last Month's Amazon Bestsellers I’m rounding up the top bestselling products from Amazon this month! If you haven’t bought these yet, you’re going to want to add to your cart. There’s a reason ... 06/21/2024 - 7:19 am | View Link
EDITORIAL: The Stories We Tell, Part Two But professor Harari has written a number of best-selling books for adult audiences, including bestsellers Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind (2011), Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow (2016), ... 06/19/2024 - 2:33 am | View Link
Washington Post hardcover bestsellers 1 THE WOMEN (St. Martin’s, $30). By Kristin Hannah. An Army nurse in Vietnam treats soldiers wounded in combat but struggles to find support when she returns home. 2 JAMES (Doubleday, $28). By ... 06/19/2024 - 1:00 am | View Link
This week’s bestsellers at Southern California’s independent bookstores See the top-selling releases among hardcover fiction and nonfiction, plus trade paperbacks for the sales week that ended June 16. 06/18/2024 - 9:22 pm | View Link
Open To Debate: Should The World Bet On America? America owes $6 trillion to China, our sprawling military complex often appears helpless against disparate threats abroad, and the War on Terror has stripped us of the moral high ground. Washington is ... 06/14/2024 - 9:10 am | View Link
Editor’s note: The opinions of the smart, well-read women in my Denver book club mean a lot, and often determine what the rest of us choose to pile onto our bedside tables. So we asked them, and all Denver Post readers, to share their mini-reviews with you. Have any to offer?
“First Frost,” by Craig Johnson (Viking)
“First Frost,” by Craig Johnson (Viking)
After 19 mysteries, Sheriff Walt Longmire is getting a little long in the tooth. So in “First Frost,” author Craig Johnson takes a giant step backward to Longmire’s youth, as — get this — a 1960s surfer dude. Yes, I know, he’s now too big for a surfboard, but surfing is what he and his best friend, Henry Standing Bear, are doing that summer between graduating from college and enlisting in the military.
The first hint of trouble comes when a boat capsizes, and the two surfers rescue some of the crew.
“Double Exposure,” by Robert Sullivan (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
“Double Exposure,” by Robert Sullivan (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Timothy O’Sullivan came west after the Civil War to take pictures of the landscape and the indigenous people for the Clarence King and George Wheeler geological surveys. The photographs he left behind are both documentation and art.
Ansel Adams, who discovered O’Sullivan’s work in the late 1930s, called the photographs “surrealistic and disturbing” (although he complained that they were “technically deficient”).
Although O’Sullivan’s photographs are well known, the photographer’s life is largely undocumented.
“Exploring Colorado With Kids,” by Jamie Siebrase (a freelance writer for The Denver Post) and Debbie Mock (Falcon Guides)
Letting a kid “wander the historical buildings at the Centennial Village Museum or touch a cloud inside the National Center for Atmospheric Research, that’s when a spark is ignited and the best kind of learning happens,” write the authors in their introduction to “Exploring Colorado With Kids.”
“Exploring Colorado With Kids,” by Jamie Siebrase and Debbie Mock (Falcon Guides)
This guidebook is a list of fun places to go in Colorado that also teach something.
For instance, at Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument, kids take a mile-long journey through a petrified forest.
Editor’s note: The opinions of the smart, well-read women in my Denver book club mean a lot, and often determine what the rest of us choose to pile onto our bedside tables. So we asked them, and all Denver Post readers, to share their mini-reviews with you. Have any to offer?
Editor’s note: The opinions of the smart, well-read women in my Denver book club mean a lot, and often determine what the rest of us choose to pile onto our bedside tables. So we asked them, and all Denver Post readers, to share their mini-reviews with you. Have any to offer?