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@yalepress

Books et Veritas. Bringing truth to light for more than one hundred years. Our London office tweets at

New Haven, CT
Joined July 2007

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  1. Retweeted

    I am so thrilled to learn that has been named one of the eight finalists for the 2020 Lincoln Prize! It’s such an honor to be selected alongside some of the most fantastic historians in the field.

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  2. . interviews Daniel Esty about his new book, A Better Planet. Check out the video here:

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  3. The New York Review of Books reviewed Rachel Harrison's Life Hack, a catalog of the exhibition at Whitney Museum of American Art.

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  4. Retweeted
    Jan 31
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  5. New Books Network calls Jerusalem: City of the Book a "fascinating journey through Jerusalem’s libraries which tells the story of this city as a place where some of the world’s most enduring ideas were put into words."

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  6. Retweeted
    Jan 31

    .'s new book, "Why I Am Not a Buddhist" is the best critique of Buddhism I've read. I hope it sparks a lot more discussion within and about Buddhism.

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  8. Retweeted
    Jan 31
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  9. "Empire was not a natural outcome of British history, nor even of Indigenous history. Empire was and remains resistible."

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  10. "What would happen if President Trump had an early lead that evaporated as votes were counted, and then he refused to concede?"

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  11. Retweeted

    NEW EPISODE! Sarah M. S. Pearsall of joins me to discuss her new book "Polygamy: An Early American History ()."

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  12. Crossing the Rubicon by Luca Fezzi was mentioned in NYT's New and Noteworthy Column.

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  13. Sir Walter Scott's books are magical and spiritual, but what did Scott himself believe about the supernatural?

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  14. "For Millet and Modern Art, the essays are its heart and soul, down to earth and of course, modern.”

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  15. "What makes his use of lynching as a metaphor truly original is the fact that it is uttered by someone who has historically impersonated a lynch mob leader."

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  16. Sir Walter Scott's books are magical and spiritual, but what did Scott himself believe about the supernatural?

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  17. Publisher's Weekly reviewed Election Meltdown by Richard L. Hasen, calling it a "bracing and comprehensive inquiry."

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  18. Retweeted

    My Interview with Terry Gross on Fresh Air: “‘Election Meltdown Is A Real Possibility’ In 2020 Presidential Race, Author Warns

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  19. Retweeted
    Jan 29

    Listen to my amazing colleague describe all the terrible, entirely plausible things that could go wrong with the election.

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