In We Might Just Make It After All, Elyce Arons recounts her epic friendship and business partnership with Kate Spade, with whom she co-founded the multi-billion dollar fashion company, and their coming-of-age in 1990s New York.
From a longtime Vanity Fair writer and editor, a delightfully fun, intelligent, and perceptive history of teen movies, from Mean Girls to Fast Times at Ridgemont High, the John Hughes movies, the Hunger Games franchise, and more.
From New York Times bestselling author Jeffrey Toobin comes a timely exploration of the most controversial presidential pardon in American history -- Gerald Ford’s pardon of Richard Nixon -- and what it means for our current political landscape.
In this groundbreaking work of discovery, Dr. Stephanie Venn-Watson unlocks the secret to longevity: an essential saturated fat that can prevent celluar breakdown, improve metabolic and immune function, and reverse or delay other effects of aging
From social media sensation and self-taught home cook Diane Morrisey, 100+ recipes that can be categorized as the ones "that all... Læs mere
From the New York Times bestselling author of The Bad-Ass Librarians of Timbuktu, a rollicking adventure following three eccentric Victorian archeologists and linguists on a twenty-year quest to decipher cuneiform, the oldest script in the world.
A follow-up to the wildly successful What My Mother and I Don't Talk About, this collection breaks the silence on the complex—and often contentious—relationships we have with our fathers.
When a little girl who loves to ba-DUM ba-DUM drum comes face to face with the King of the Lions who loves quiet, loves it so much he's forbidden noise throughout the land, she must... Læs mere
A former Obama speechwriter moves to the Jersey Shore and learns to surf with the help of his brother-in-law: a tattooed, truck-driving Joe Rogan superfan.
#1 New York Times bestselling author Brad Thor returns with his twenty-fourth gripping Scot Harvath thriller.
A coming-of-age tale that follows its quintessential musical enthusiast narrator from his stormy, blue-collar childhood in Michigan to his striving twenties in 1990s New York and the making of Rent, his first astronomical triumph, and later on the Broadway sensation, Hamilton.