Combine instant money with an incomplete transition to adulthood, and add believable characters, get a subtle study into human nature. With "How to Lose Everything", journalist and author Philipp Mattheis turns a simple and familiar... Read More
This compilation is a thought-provoking, “big picture” view of the digital state. Digital State: How the Internet is Changing Everything, written and edited by Simon Pont, is an anthology of sixteen essays tracking the evolution of... Read More
Sports network’s “quiet founder” addresses his troubled family in a memoir aimed at setting the record straight. Don Rasmussen recounts his role in founding the country’s major sports network in Just A Guy: An Autobiography by... Read More
An American in Mexico takes the risks necessary to truly immerse himself into Mexican life and culture. To say Lyn Fuchs is an American writing about visiting Mexico would be an oversimplification. Fuchs, professor and... Read More
This in-depth look at the government’s treatment of raw food producers and distributors is a rallying cry against all unnecessary regulation. Before the advent of pasteurization in the 1860s, there was no food processing and little... Read More
Geography, math, and science are all part of the learning experience of preparing this book’s offering of over fifty recipes from places as far-flung as China (Sesame Noodles), Africa (Juicy Jollof Rice), Mexico (Tortilla Soup), and... Read More
Impressively enlightening, Wickham’s timely exploration of an influential ideology deepens scholarly understanding of the Middle East. From political scientist Carrie Rosefsky Wickham, Emory professor and author of Mobilizing Islam,... Read More
Offering priceless wisdom, this rare guide to weight loss opens up new opportunities for spiritual growth. Hatha yoga, the physical practice of yoga postures, is finally losing its (sadly) accurate reputation in the Western world as the... Read More