New Books Network

New Books
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Jan 29, 2026 • 59min

Rolando Pujol, "The Great American Retro Road Trip: A Celebration of Roadside Americana" (Artisan Publishers, 2025)

Rolando Pujol, author and journalist who chronicles roadside Americana, guides a coast-to-coast retro road trip celebrating vintage signs, quirky giant attractions, and classic fast-food architecture. He tours neon diners, doo-wop motels, drive-ins, and Route 66 oddities. He urges curiosity, exploring secondary roads, and preserving these fading cultural treasures.
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Jan 29, 2026 • 42min

Yossef Rapoport, "Becoming Arab: The Formation of Arab Identity in the Medieval Middle East" (Princeton UP, 2025)

Yossef Rapoport, a historian of the medieval Arabic-speaking Middle East, explores how rural communities transformed into Arab identities. He challenges migration-based stories. He examines peasants, land rights, tax records, revolts, and how claims of Arab lineage interacted with Islam and Turkish rule. The conversation traces social change from local villages to clan-based Arabness by the 15th century.
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Jan 29, 2026 • 36min

Stephen Bezruchka, "Born Sick in the USA: Improving the Health of a Nation" (Cambridge UP, 2026)

Stephen Bezruchka, a public health physician who studies how social and political forces shape population health. He explores why the U.S. fares poorly in life expectancy despite high spending. Topics include inequality as a toxic force, early-life and intergenerational stress, geographic and racial disparities, cultural supports like the Latino advantage, and policy lessons from Japan.
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Jan 29, 2026 • 44min

Ghost in the Criminal Justice Machine

Emile Suotonye DeWeaver, formerly incarcerated organizer and author whose sentence was commuted after 21 years, draws on prison journalism and activism. He critiques how white supremacy shapes reforms and parole, exposes hidden forces that extend sentences, and explores power redistribution, collective care, and models that center incarcerated leadership.
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Jan 29, 2026 • 29min

Swapna Kona Nayudu, "The Nehru Years: An International History of Indian Non-Alignment" (Cambridge UP, 2025)

Swapna Kona Nayudu, an academic of international history and Indian foreign policy, discusses Nehru-era non-alignment. She explores its intellectual roots in Tagore and Gandhi. She traces India’s diplomatic interventions in Korea, Suez, Hungary, and the Congo. She examines non-alignment as neutrality plus mediation and its limits in practice.
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Jan 29, 2026 • 1h 24min

Rishi Rajpopat, "Panini's Perfect Rule: A Modern Solution to an Ancient Problem in Sanskrit Grammar" (Harvard UP, 2025)

Around 500 BCE, the Indian scholar Pāṇini wrote a treatise on Sanskrit, the Aṣṭādhyāyī, describing a kind of language machine: an algebraic system of rules for producing grammatically correct word forms. The enormity and elegance of that accomplishment—and the underlying computational methodology—cemented Pāṇini’s place as a founder of linguistics. Even so, centuries of commentators have insisted that there are glitches in the machine’s ability to tackle rule conflict (that is, a situation in which two or more rules are simultaneously applicable) and have responded with complex rules and tools aimed at resolving the issues apparently besetting the ancient system. In this book we discuss Panini's Perfect Rule: A Modern Solution to an Ancient Problem in Sanskrit Grammar (Harvard UP, 2025) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoicesSupport our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
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Jan 29, 2026 • 1h 46min

Justin L. Mann, "Breaking the World: Black Insecurity and the Horizons of Speculation" (Duke UP, 2026)

Justin L. Mann, assistant professor of English at Northwestern and author of Breaking the World, studies Black speculative fiction and critical security. He discusses how SF shaped Reagan-era securitization, contrasts state futurism with Black insecurity, reads Butler and Jemisin for world-breaking practices, and connects biosecurity, militarization, and climate narratives to racialized vulnerability.
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Jan 29, 2026 • 1h

Debra Kaplan and Elisheva Carlebach, "A Woman Is Responsible for Everything: Jewish Women in Early Modern Europe" (Princeton UP, 2025)

Debra Kaplan, a historian of early modern Jewish communities and social welfare, and Elisheva Carlebach, a scholar of Jewish communal life and ritual, explore newly found archival treasures. They trace women's roles in kehillot, print culture and literacy, women-led societies and burial work, mikva'ot and midwifery, marginalized lives, household inventories, and comparisons with Christian counterparts.
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Jan 29, 2026 • 52min

Robinson Kariuki Mwangi, "The Influence of Early Keswick Theology of Sanctification in the Socio-Ethical Life of the East African Revival Movement: A Missional Perspective" (Langham Academic, 2025)

Robinson Kariuki Mwangi, principal and missiology Ph.D. whose 2025 study traces Keswick sanctification in the East Africa Revival. He explores revival testimony and practices, Keswick origins and Bible texts shaping separation, how revival groups relate to Anglican life, and missional tensions between zeal, exclusion, and calls for more inclusive social ethics.
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Jan 28, 2026 • 1h 12min

LiLi Johnson, "Technologies of Kinship: Asian American Racialization and the Making of Family" (NYU Press, 2025)

LiLi Johnson, Assistant Professor of English and Gender and Women’s Studies at Dalhousie University and author of Technologies of Kinship, explores how bureaucracy, photography, digital platforms, and genetic testing shape Asian American family-making. She discusses archival discoveries like paper families, transnational matchmaking, referral photos in adoption, online dating/donor markets, and the rise of genetic intimacy.

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