NPR Books

Rabbi's Son Visits Bible Belt In 'My Jesus Year'

NPR Books - 3 hours 38 min ago

In an effort to reconnect with his Jewish faith, Georgia-native Benyamin Cohen explored the Christianity across the "Bible Belt" of America. He documented his experiences in My Jesus Year: A Rabbi's Son Wanders the Bible Belt in Search of His Own Faith.

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Is America 'Too Insular' For A Literary Nobel?

NPR Books - 3 hours 46 min ago

Horace Engdahl, a Nobel Prize official, commented on Wednesday that the United States is "too isolated" and "too insular" to generate literary Nobel laureates. He said Europe remains the "center of the literary world."

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Extra! Extra! Unionist Bombs Wreck The 'Times'

NPR Books - 5 hours 34 min ago

Radical bombers battle strikebreaking capitalists while Clarence Darrow squares off against the "American Sherlock Holmes" in this very popular history of a trial that mixed murder, politics and celebrity in 1910 Los Angeles.

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Nikki Giovanni Says Hip Hop Essential For Kids

NPR Books - 6 hours 2 min ago

In her latest project, poet and wordsmith Nikki Giovanni brings together poetry and hip hop, in an effort to reach young ears. NPR's Tony Cox speaks with Giovanni about the new book, Hip Hop Speaks to Children: A Celebration of Poetry with a Beat.

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NBA's Alonzo Mourning Touts 'Resilience' In Memoir

NPR Books - October 4, 2008 - 8:02pm

In 2000, the muscular, 6-feet-10-inch NBA star was diagnosed with a rare, life-threatening kidney disease. Alonzo Mourning made a full recovery following a transplant. Now, he's written a memoir about the obstacles he had to overcome on the road back to the NBA.

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Doris Lessing Revisits — And Rewrites — The Past

NPR Books - October 4, 2008 - 12:01pm

As she nears the end of her own life, Nobel Laureate Doris Lessing is attempting to make some sense of her beginnings: Her new novel, Alfred And Emily, imagines a better life for her parents — one in which they marry different people.

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