Intellectuals, academics, and most of the media slapped a halo over FDR to consecrate both his welfare state and his warring.
NPR's Books We Love returns with about 380 titles handpicked by NPR staff and critics. Reporter Andrew Limbong shares this year's nonfiction favorites with Michel Martin.
With countless racing accolades, a ground-breaking rider-training program, and silver-screen appearances to his name, Stephen ...
Initial Incident (1997): The rivalry began in September 1997 during a match between Leeds United (Haaland) and Manchester ...
James Cocke embarked on what many might consider the least likely endeavor of a person losing his vision: He became an artist ...
Former Playmates including Crystal Harris and Holly Madison have opened up about the grim reality of the Playboy Mansion, ...
After achieving a rare crossover hit with 2005’s Crush, the poet rebelled against public attention. With I Do Know Some ...
This week, a collection of letters adds depth to the portrait of American writer John Updike, and an examination of the ...
The variety in Dharmendra’s oeuvre is mind-boggling. There was no role the man could not do. From a cop to a doctor to a smuggler to a villager to a ghost, Dharmendra essayed all with great panache ...
It’s naive to think, given the nature of Sunday’s loss and the arc of this season, that Lurie isn’t taking a long, hard look ...
Fifty-five years to the date after his mysterious death in New York’s East River, Albert Ayler’s sound still reverberates—through The Roots’ fearless freestyling, Kamasi Washington’s cosmic vision and ...
“There is more to my life,” she tells TODAY.com, explaining that her new memoir, “Finding My Way,” explores her “journey through college years, making friends, finding love and learning more about my ...