Biography, Autobiography & Memoir

Reviewed by: 

“Unfortunately, this isn’t the accurate biography it purports to be.”

Reviewed by: 

How does one become a psychiatrist? How can anyone understand what makes another person tick?

Reviewed by: 

“The Hero myth—the drive to seek safety, control and power over the Earth—that has powered Western capitalism and civilization has gone too far.

Reviewed by: 

“The Storytellers is a gift to aspiring writers of mysteries and thrillers, readers and fans, and academics alike. An instant classic . . .”

Reviewed by: 

Charif Majdlani slays the profiteers of his beloved Lebanon, Hezbollah, Syrian military forces, warlords, and the ruling Muslim contingent equally in his courageous look at the city today.

Reviewed by: 

Philippe Sands’ The Ratline: The Exalted Life and Mysterious Death of a Nazi Fugitive, is exhaustive, meticulous and, at times, cinematic.

Reviewed by: 

“Simard’s pioneering research gives us a new way of looking and living with the floral world . . .”

Reviewed by: 

“Hill’s account of low vision is a thought-provoking and emotionally powerful contribution to understanding vision loss.

Reviewed by: 

“The authors infer that Trump cared more about himself than the country. Their meticulous history of his last year in office certainly supports that view. . . .

Reviewed by: 

“By describing her own journey, Chicago offers an unglamorous view of the life of an artist who became famous as well as infamous . . .”

Reviewed by: 

“A revealing, highly readable account of megalomania run amok.”

Reviewed by: 

Brad Stone is a Bloomberg Journalist who has previously written The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon.

Reviewed by: 

“A masterful job of bringing Orwell’s complex personality and incredibly prescient thinking vividly to life.”

Reviewed by: 

Cate Doty’s memoir Mergers and Acquisitions, Or, Everything I Know About Love I Learned on the Wedding Pages is a book written to appeal to those who love wedding culture, not to convert d

Reviewed by: 

“A sterling example of how graphic novels are uniquely able to get readers through tough subjects.”

Reviewed by: 

“provides both practical and clinical advice with an emphasis on improving Black Women’s emotional and physical health through trauma resolution, exercise, mindfulness, support systems, sel

Reviewed by: 

“History at its finest, proving clearly how the past is very much part of the present.”

Reviewed by: 

“Williams reflects . . . on an issue contentious for feminists and other women, namely her sexuality: ‘And one last thing.

Reviewed by: 

“Partly autobiographical, often funny, and entirely insightful from a cannabis-loving man who’s fully experienced every one of his 88 years, Willie Nelson’s Letters to America

Reviewed by: 

“It’s difficult to share the finite details that rise to the surface as Matthews takes the reader from his youth through his life experiences.

Reviewed by: 

“Reading Rosemary Brown’ carefully crafted, charming book, readers can now be armchair companions of two amazing women.”

Reviewed by: 

“Isn’t the final goal of surrealism, after all, to transform the world?”
—Luis Buñuel

Reviewed by: 

The subtitle for this book says it all: Deadly Dogfights, Blistering Bombing Raids, and Other War Stories from the Great American Air Heroes of World War II, in Their Own Words.

Pages