Justice, But Make It Political📚

What happens when the department designed to be above politics gets pulled into the political arena? Injustice traces how the Justice Department’s independence was chipped away, decision by decision, until the institution meant to enforce the law began bending under partisan pressure. Carol Leonnig and Aaron C. Davis take you inside tense, behind-the-scenes moments: prosecutors […]

Get Your Feet Back Under You✨

Strong leadership isn’t louder or tougher—it’s grounded. In Strong Ground (2025), BrenĂŠ Brown argues that the real advantage in today’s chaotic workplace is the ability to stay connected, accountable, and clear-eyed when everything feels uncertain. She opens with a personal wake-up call: a painful injury that revealed how “strong” parts of her life were compensating for […]

Malala, Unfiltered (At Last)

The world knows Malala Yousafzai as a symbol—brave, composed, unwavering. But Finding My Way reveals what the headlines never could: the private work of becoming yourself when everyone else thinks they already know who you are. In this deeply personal memoir, Malala writes about Oxford freedom and relentless scrutiny, tight friendships and lonely moments, first […]

One Sentence, Big Stakes📜✨

What if America’s most famous idea came down to a few fiercely debated words? In The Greatest Sentence Ever Written, Walter Isaacson unpacks the Declaration of Independence’s second sentence—“We hold these truths…”—and shows how a small committee’s edits helped shape a nation’s biggest promise. You’ll see how Jefferson’s original phrasing evolved through collaboration (including Franklin’s […]

House Hunt, High Stakes

What if finding your “forever home” became the one thing you’d sacrifice everything for? In Best Offer Wins, 37-year-old publicist Margo has spent 18 months losing bidding wars in the ruthless Washington, DC suburbs. When she finally spots the perfect Colonial in her dream neighborhood, she decides she won’t lose this one, not to cash […]

Tea, Treason, and a Spy😎

In a Berlin apartment in 1943, a small circle of well-connected Germans gathered for tea and spoke the unspeakable: Hitler had to go. They weren’t soldiers in hiding, but aristocrats, diplomats, educators, and quiet helpers who sheltered Jews, traded forbidden truths, and imagined a post-Nazi Germany. Their meetings felt almost ordinary, until one guest arrived […]

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