NPR’s Morning Edition host and author Steve Inskeep visits the ACPL to discuss his book Differ We Must: How Lincoln Succeeded ...
The Indiana Department of Education is launching what it calls a “faith-based academic pathway” to the state’s new high ...
Z-A feels like a mega evolution for the whole series — a colossal achievement that runs splendidly on the Switch 2 after the ...
This week's new titles include memoir, comics journalism and speculative fiction, horror and humor. Susan Orlean tells her ...
The Life of a Showgirl isn't just a streaming success — it has moved a massive number of vinyl LPs. How massive? Let's do ...
The tenuous ceasefire in the two-year Israel-Hamas war appears to be holding even as complex issues remained ahead.
Indiana tax collections are running $270 million ahead of projections after three months of the fiscal year, according to the ...
Filmmaker M. Night Shyamalan and novelist Nicholas Sparks describe their collaboration to simultaneously craft the new novel ...
Southern food writer John T. Edge turns the lens on his own family in his new memoir, House of Smoke: A Southerner Goes Searching for Home.
Humans can genetically modify plants and animals to be more resilient to climate change and disease. But the scientific community is divided about whether the tool should be put to use in nature.
Candy died in 1994 at age 43. Now, a new Amazon Prime documentary does a fine job of profiling a gifted entertainer who was also, by all accounts, a very sweet human being.
The Taliban responded with contradictory stances in the effort to rescue women and girls who were wounded and left homeless. That's a reflection of tensions between hardliners and pragmatists.