Book Review: “Sometimes You Have to Lie”
In Sometimes You Have to Lie, Leslie Brody traces the origin story of author Louise Fitzhugh and her children's classic, Harriet the Spy.
Read MoreIn Sometimes You Have to Lie, Leslie Brody traces the origin story of author Louise Fitzhugh and her children's classic, Harriet the Spy.
Read MoreCourting Justice: Vanderbilt law scholar Sara Mayeux chronicles the role of the public defender in American history.
Read MoreSpenser Hits 50: Ace Atkins keeps the action going in Robert B. Parker’s Someone to Watch Over Me.
Read MoreA lonely young woman becomes a murder suspect in R.J. Jacobs’ new novel, "Somewhere in the Dark."
Read MoreNashville author Ariel Lawhon’s latest is a masterful novel about an unsung World War II heroine.
Read MoreIntrigue in Spain: Mike Maden hits another bullseye with Tom Clancy Firing Point
Read MoreFrail and failing, retired detective Buck Schatz defends lethal punishment for a serial killer he put away.
Read MoreSay Nothing weaves the unsolved case of a disappeared Belfast mother into a history of the Troubles.
Read More