Here are the year’s most notable picture and middle grade books, selected by our children’s books editor. Credit...Photo illustration by Sebastian Mast Supported by By Jennifer Krauss Jennifer Krauss ...
Our favorite titles of the year resurrect overlooked histories and examine how the United States ended up where it is today Science From “experimental archaeology” to the mysterious appeal of ...
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. Preview this article 1 min Several years after major ...
The New Deal, George Selgin suggests, did not work the way most historians claim. This economist’s eye-opening analysis shows that the increased government centralization of the 1930s rarely resulted ...
NEW ORLEANS -- Adding the PCSK9 inhibitor evolocumab (Repatha) to stable lipid-lowering therapy reduced major adverse cardiac events (MACE) in patients with atherosclerosis or high-risk diabetes, but ...
Andreas Vesalius was a physician and anatomist who lived during the 16th century AD. Up until this point of time, the standard authority on anatomy was the work of Galen, a 2nd / 3rd century Greek ...
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Lucy E. Hyde does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their ...
NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Wisp, the largest pure play women's telehealth company in the U.S., today announced a strategic partnership with Vesalius Longevity Labs, the market’s first soon-to-be ...
Banned Books Week has begun and new titles are dominating this year's top challenged list. Banned Books Week is Oct. 5-11 and this year's theme is, "Censorship Is so 1984. Read for Your Rights." The ...
The most commonly banned books in U.S. schools include LGBTQ titles, international bestsellers, teen romantasy novels and a 1962 classic, according to a new report that compares modern-day censorship ...
“. . . It is known vaguely, if at all, as an old volume that contains some possibly distressing illustrations of skeletons and muscles.” Thus complains the Metropolitan Museum’s scholarly Curator of ...
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