New Books Network

New Books
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Jan 27, 2026 • 44min

Toby Green, "The Heretic of Cacheu: Crispina Peres and the Struggle over Life in Seventeenth-Century West Africa" (U Chicago Press, 2025)

Toby Green, historian of seventeenth-century West Africa and author of A Fistful of Shells, recounts the life and trial of Crispina Peres, a powerful Cacheu trader accused by the Portuguese Inquisition. Short scenes evoke Cacheu’s streets, trade networks, healing rituals, female-led economies, and how a single trial reflected global shifts in empire and the slave trade.
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Jan 27, 2026 • 1h 4min

David Albertson, "The Geometry of Christian Contemplation: Measure Without Measure" (Oxford UP, 2025)

David Albertson, a scholar of medieval and early modern theology and mathematics and author of The Geometry of Christian Contemplation, explores a counter-tradition that sees God in the measurable world. He traces geometric language in thinkers from Dionysius to medieval icon debates. He contrasts inward mysticism with exterior, sacramental attention to points, lines, and shapes and connects these ideas to modern measurement and technology.
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Jan 27, 2026 • 46min

Colette Einfeld and Helen Sullivan, "How to Conduct Interpretive Research: Insights for Students and Researchers" (Edward Elgar, 2025)

Helen Sullivan, a public policy scholar and dean, reflects on pedagogy, emotion, and rigor in interpretive methods. Colette Einfeld, a postdoc and former PhD student, shares reflective perspectives on methodology and supervision. They discuss why they co-edited the book, diverse meanings of interpretivism, messiness and reflexivity in research, inclusive training, and how AI and emotions shape interpretive practice.
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Jan 27, 2026 • 1h 11min

Alaina M. Morgan, "Atlantic Crescent: Building Geographies of Black and Muslim Liberation in the African Diaspora" (UNC Press, 2025)

Alaina M. Morgan, an academic historian exploring Black and Muslim diasporas, discusses her book Atlantic Crescent. She traces overlapping Black, Afro‑Caribbean, and South Asian Muslim encounters using newspapers and archives. Topics include Muhammad Speaks, transnational figures like Abdul Basim Naeem, Bermuda’s diasporic politics, grassroots drug‑response programs, and how shared anti‑imperial struggles shaped imagined geographies.
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Jan 27, 2026 • 54min

Melissa Adler, "Peculiar Satisfaction: Thomas Jefferson and the Mastery of Subjects" (Fordham UP, 2025)

Melissa Adler, Associate Professor at Western University and author of Peculiar Satisfaction, studies libraries, archives, and classification. She traces how Jefferson’s library and archival practices shaped classification, racialized knowledge, and museum objectification. The conversation highlights preservation as power, the persistence of exclusion in information systems, and the stakes for democracy and public institutions.
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Jan 27, 2026 • 52min

Jonathan Gleason, "Field Guide to Falling Ill" (Yale UP, 2026)

Jonathan Gleason, writer, instructor, and medical interpreter, discusses his debut essay collection Field Guide to Falling Ill. He traces personal crises, archival research, and drug histories. Conversations explore medical interpreting, HIV medication stories, opioid landscapes, and how a field-guide frame reveals the history and human costs of American healthcare.
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Jan 27, 2026 • 38min

Duy Lap Nguyen, "Walter Benjamin and the Critique of Political Economy: A New Historical Materialism" (Bloomsbury, 2024)

Duy Lap Nguyen, Associate Professor in World Cultures and Literatures at the University of Houston, reinterprets Walter Benjamin as a coherent thinker. He traces Benjamin’s historical materialism, contrasts it with Kantian progress, and explores critiques of capitalist timelessness. The conversation touches on phantasmagoria, honoring the anonymous, and the relevance of Benjamin’s ideas for today’s politics and technology.
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Jan 27, 2026 • 45min

Misty L. Heggeness, "Swiftynomics: How Women Mastermind and Redefine Our Economy" (U California Press, 2026)

Misty L. Heggeness, an economist and co-director of the Kansas Population Center, uses pop stars like Taylor Swift to show how women reshape the economy. She discusses women reinventing careers, fans and social media as economic power, hidden unpaid care work, and practical reforms and networks that help women thrive. The conversation blends data, culture, and clear policy ideas.
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Jan 27, 2026 • 41min

Karin Wulf, "Lineage: Genealogy and the Power of Connection in Early America" (Oxford UP, 2025)

Karin Wulf, historian of early America who studies women, families, and politics. She explores how eighteenth-century genealogy shaped law, slavery, religion, commerce, and mourning. Short stories about Quaker recordkeeping, transatlantic family business ties, and how lineage continued to matter after the Revolution.
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Jan 27, 2026 • 37min

Tara Lohan, "Undammed: Freeing Rivers and Bringing Communities to Life" (Island Press, 2025)

Tara Lohan, environmental journalist and author focused on water and biodiversity. She discusses why storytelling connects readers to rivers. She explores dam removal methods, sediment management, and tradeoffs between wetlands and free-flowing rivers. She highlights tribal leadership, legal frameworks, and the social benefits of restoring waterways.

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