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The work of the British artist Samuel Palmer is characterized by images of an idealized pastoral life. Painted while he was ...
One million Spaniards emigrated to Latin America after the Civil War. Today, their grandchildren — many with dual nationality ...
Since The Terminator burst into theaters in 1984, the franchise has set the gold standard for sci-fi action, time-travel twists, and metal-clad menaces. Across six feature films, TV spinoffs, comics, ...
In fact, humans have been freediving for thousands of years, mainly to gather food and resources from the ocean floor. For ...
What's the key to achieving financial freedom? And what's the real risk investors face? In this podcast, Motley Fool analyst ...
Learn the history of gossip or why we love to swim in these nonfiction books and you'll sound smarter at your next dinner ...
Jennifer Aks, embodiment coach, author, thought leader and founder of The Power of Gesture®, a groundbreaking bodyset ...
Adam Smith, 1759 Smith's economic masterpiece "The Wealth of Nations" is better known, but his bestseller from 1759 is just ...
What can chimpanzees teach us about ourselves? A lot, says Craig Stanford, who's spent three decades studying the lives of ...
The “Call Me by Your Name” author on novels about people misunderstanding the situations in which they find themselves.
Author Jessa Crispin explains how films Michael Douglas made in the 1980s and 1990s reflect the anxieties of those times.
The author will be appearing Aug. 9 at El Centro’s After-Hours Books and Aug. 10 at Kubo LB’s Bel Canto Books.