The Envoy: The Epic Rescue of the Last Jews of Europe in the Desperate Closing Months of World War II by Alex Kershaw
     The true story of how Raoul Wallenberg did what no other individual or nation managed to do: He saved more than 100,000 Jewish men, women, and children from extermination.
  Dear Mrs. Kennedy: The World Shares Its Grief, Letters November 1963
    by Jay Mulvaney and Paul De Angelis
     New insight into the American and world reaction to JFK's assassination–as expressed in  heartfelt letters   to First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy from world leaders, artists, celebrities, friends, political acquaintances, school children and many others. 
  Bloody Crimes: The Chase for Jefferson Davis and the Death Pageant for Lincoln's Corpse  by James Swanson
    The true crime saga that began with Swanson's best-selling   Manhunt: The 12-Day Chase  for Lincoln's Killer  now continues with the  stories of the two fallen leaders as they make their final journeys through the  bloody landscape of a wounded nation.
  Churchill's Empire by Richard Toye
    The  first comprehensive analysis of Churchill's relationship with the British Empire, drawing on newly released documents to separate the facts from the "overblown" reputation. Toye,  an Associate Professor at the University of Exeter, reveals how Churchill  the statesman evolved while struggling  to reconcile the demands of conscience with those of political conformity.
  The Good Soldiers by David Finkel
      The human impact of the 2007 "Surge" in Iraq as seen from the front lines, by Pulitzer-Prize winning Washington Post writer David Finkel, who accompanied a battalion of optimistic Americans  into one of the most violent parts of Baghdad. 
  Tears in the Darkness: The Story of the Bataan Death  March and its Aftermath
     Reveals the extraordinary ordeal that  happened to mostly ordinary American soldiers during World War II in the Pacific when 76,000   Filipinos and Americans surrendered to the Japanese on the tiny Philippine peninsula of Bataan. Written by the husband-wife team of Michael Norman, a former reporter for The New York Times,   and Elizabeth M.   Norman, the author of two war books. 
  Al-Qaeda Goes to College: Impact  of the War on Terror on American Higher Education
     The first book-length treatment of how the 9/11  attacks  affected American higher  education by noted legal author James Castagnera. Topics include: universities' roles in  training counter-terrorism experts; lawsuits against universities by terror victims;  accused Islamists teaching at American colleges;  conspiracy theories advocated by  some academics; and  more.
  The Night I Freed John Brown (Historical Fiction)
 In this first novel by John Michael Cummings, 
    the historic village of Harpers Ferry comes alive as a young boy searches 
  for answers and a place of his own.
  Ned 
    McAdoo and the Molly Maguires (Historical Fiction) 
Enjoy 
    the first three chapters of a new novel by Claire and Jim Castagnera that 
    weaves historical events and present day America into a tapestry that explores 
    the early days of the labor rights movement and also examines how perspectives 
    on past events change over time.
  Doctors from 
    Hell: The Horrific Account of Nazi Experiments on Humans
Following the war crimes trial of high-ranking 
    Nazi leaders such as Hermann Goering, twelve subsequent trials were held in 
    Nuremberg targeting an array of Nazis. The medical trial is examined here 
    by Vivien Spitz, who was the youngest court reporter on the scene, and today 
    is a lecturer on lessons of the Holocaust.
  King Philip's 
    War
  A look at the bloody conflict between 
    English Settlers and Native Americans in 1675 by noted nature guide Michael 
  Tougias.
  Rena's Promise: 
    A Story of Sisters in Auschwitz
  Insights from Heather Dune Macadam, 
    co-author of this remarkable book.
Writers' Corner contains material 
  from independent authors, publishing houses, and publicity people. However, 
  none of the selections are sponsored.