What if America’s “frontier story” isn’t just a victory lap—but a complicated, costly collision of ambition, mythmaking, and dispossession? In The Undiscovered Country (2025), historian Paul Andrew Hutton tracks the relentless push west through the lives of the people who made (and were crushed by) it: Daniel Boone, Kit Carson, Red Eagle, Davy Crockett, Buffalo […]
Raid, Rallies, Retribution
Eric Trump’s Under Siege pulls readers inside what he describes as a decade-long political and personal pressure campaign aimed at his family—and at the America First movement. From the shock of the August 2022 Mar-a-Lago raid to the behind-the-scenes grind of campaigns, courtrooms, and corporate “cancel culture,” Eric frames each chapter as another round in […]
A Quick Stupidity Check✨
Washington can feel like a maze of jargon, ego, and theater—and How to Test Negative for Stupid cuts through it with a pocketknife. Senator John Kennedy blends sharp political observations with stories from small-town Louisiana, where “say what you mean” is a survival skill, not a slogan. He pulls back the curtain on how the […]
The Border Plot Twist✨
Is America’s border crisis actually something bigger—an intentional strategy aimed at reshaping the country from the inside? In The Invisible Coup (2026), investigative journalist Peter Schweizer argues that mass migration isn’t just a humanitarian challenge or policy failure, but a tool being used by foreign governments, radical movements, and domestic political actors to weaken American […]
Fonz, Flubs & Finding Peace📚✨
Everyone knows Henry Winkler as the cool, unshakable Fonzie. Being Henry shows what was happening underneath: a kid labeled “stupid” because of severe, undiagnosed dyslexia, a son trying to survive impossibly critical parents, and an adult terrified of being trapped in one iconic role forever. Winkler walks you through the sweaty, nerve-racked Happy Days audition […]
