Voices
Christopher Sandford is the author of many books, including, most recently, Zeebrugge: The Greatest Raid of All (Casemate).
Arts & CultureIdeas
Giacomo Puccini, the composer of “La Bohème,” “Tosca” and “Madama Butterfly,” has been called the world’s most popular songwriter, and with good reason.
Arts & CultureBooks
Erskine Childers went from being the John le Carré of his day to a convicted war criminal and nationalist martyr.
Arts & CultureIdeas
The absolute refusal to accept handed-down truths—whether in politics, science, religion or art—was a constant in Kurt Vonnegut’s life and work.
Arts & CultureIdeas
Charles Darwin’s teaching has been misappropriated by generations of intellectually dubious adherents.
Arts & CultureIdeas
Fascism has proved sufficiently elastic to be used as a term of abuse across the political spectrum.
Arts & CultureIdeas
'The root of Spiritism...is the diseased moral condition of the age,' one Catholic author wrote.
Arts & CultureBooks
Melville, who was born 200 years ago this August, was consumed with the issue of humanity’s capacity for good or evil.
Arts & CultureIdeas
The treaty’s offhand attitude toward the non-European world stirred up resentments that lingered for decades.
Arts & CultureIdeas
Lawrence’s triumphant arrival in Damascus in 1918 might be said to have been the spark that ultimately ignited a powder keg of factional rivalries and distrust.
Arts & CultureIdeas
Though ‘lapsed,’ the prolific author was obsessed with the church.