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NewsHour Bookshelf

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Nov 06

Watch 7:30
Attorney Ben Crump on Trayvon Martin, racial hypocrisy and signs of progress

Since 2012, the families of several unarmed young American black men shot to death by police in high-profile incidents have turned to civil rights attorney Ben Crump in pursuit of justice. Crump has now written a book arguing these killings…

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Oct 18

Watch 8:00
John Kasich on supporting impeachment and the question Trump voters should ask themselves

Former Ohio Gov. John Kasich served in public office for over three decades. But in his new book, “It’s Up to Us,” he calls on the American people to pay less attention to the president and political drama in Washington…

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Oct 15

Watch 6:19
How fiction draws Pulitzer-winner Elizabeth Strout home to Maine

By Jeffrey Brown, Anne Azzi Davenport

Olive Kitteridge is overbearing and hard to love, as well as complicated and compelling. The character at the center of Elizabeth Strout's 2009 Pulitzer-winning novel is also back -- in a new book called "Olive, Again." Strout takes Jeffrey Brown…

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Oct 10

Watch 8:58
How ‘Deep State’ book disputes accusations of Trump bias at FBI, DOJ

In a new book, Pulitzer winner James B. Stewart explores two controversial recent investigations by the FBI and the Justice Department: Probes into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server when she was secretary of state and Russian interference…

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Oct 08

Watch 16:54
Hillary Clinton: Trump’s actions ‘direct threat’ to national security

As an impeachment inquiry into President Trump’s actions on Ukraine begins, Hillary Clinton says that it appears "that there is evidence of abuse of power and obstruction of justice and contempt of Congress." The former secretary of state and daughter…

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Sep 24

Watch 7:23
Memory is a superpower in Ta-Nehisi Coates’ novel about the Underground Railroad

By PBS NewsHour

To make the case for reparations for the toll of slavery, acclaimed writer Ta-Nehisi Coates has offered forceful advocacy and powerful data-driven argument. With his first novel, "The Water Dancer," he uses fiction to illuminate the Underground Railroad. Coates joins…

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Sep 12

Watch 8:43
18 years after September 11th, an oral history that recalls the details

For everyone old enough to remember September 11th, 2001, their experience of that catastrophic day is seared into memory. But details of what the victims, survivors and emergency responders endured have faded from national consciousness over time. Now, a powerful…

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Sep 05

Watch 6:01
What 3 generations of a Filipino family prove about poverty and migration

For some families, ensuring economic stability requires a wrenching choice: to leave children behind and find work abroad. Author Jason DeParle has written a book, “A Good Provider is One Who Leaves,” that traces three generations of a single Filipino…

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Aug 26

Watch 8:03
How Arab women are changing the face of journalism in the Middle East

A new book called “Our Women on the Ground: Arab Women Reporting from the Arab World” shares the stories of female journalists working in the Middle East. The editor, Zahra Hankir, and NPR correspondent Hannah Allam, who wrote one of…

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Jul 30

Watch 8:14
‘The House of Broken Angels’ author Luis Alberto Urrea answers your questions

By Jeffrey Brown

Luis Alberto Urrea, author of our July pick for the NewsHour-New York Times book club, Now Read This, joins Jeffrey Brown to answer reader questions on “The House of Broken Angels,” and Jeff announces the August book selection.

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Full Episode
Saturday, Sep 13
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