Recommended reading / viewing / listening

This week: Take a reading vacation / Why is Buc-ees thriving? / How to heal from burnout / Tony Blair returns to the Middle East’s political battlefields / Trump’s war on the Library of Congress is not new

Most of these items come from my social media networks. Follow me on BlueSky, Instagram, Tumblr, LinkedIn, and Facebook for more fascinating videos, photos, articles, essays, and criticism. Learn more about my academic background here and about me here.

1. Business is booming for the Beaver – but why?
By David Brown and Kaye Knoll | Texas Standard | October 2025
“A YouTuber investigates Buc-ee’s, the travel stop staple, and what makes it so successful.”

2. My First Murder
By Skip Hollandsworth | Texas Monthly | October 2025
“A legendary true crime writer revisits the case that launched his lifelong obsession.”

3. What the O.J. Verdict & Its Aftermath Revealed About Race in America
By Patrice Taddonio | Frontline :: PBS | October 2025
“Millions of households across the U.S. had tuned in to wall-to-wall coverage of onetime American icon O.J. Simpson’s trial for the brutal double murder of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ron Goldman. Then, on Oct. 3, 1995, came a televised verdict, watched by more than 150 million people, that shook the country along racial lines — sparking both consternation and celebration, and raising profound questions about the criminal justice system, fairness and America’s racial divide.”

4. Trump Is Waging a Culture War on the Library of Congress. It’s Been Done Before.
By Rebecca Brenner Graham | Politico Magazine | May 2025
“Thomas Jefferson wanted to donate his personal collection of books to the Library of Congress. But critics thought those books were un-American.”

5. Fool me once: the magical origin of the word ‘hoax’
By Scott Neuman | NPR | October 2025
“How did hocus pocus transform from the stage name of a magician … to a byword for the entire craft?”

6. Trump’s welcome message to new citizens isn’t very welcoming
By Chauncey DeVega | Salon | September 2025
“His message to naturalized citizens is part of an effort to redefine American identity and patriotism”

7. Tony Blair’s long experience in the Middle East is both his strength and his weakness
By Jill Lawless and Danica Kirka | Associated Press | September 2025
“Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair has returned to the forefront of Middle East peace efforts after a U.S. peace plan on ending the Israel-Hamas war cast him in a leading role in overseeing the post-war administration and reconstruction of the Gaza Strip. It’s familiar territory for Blair, who spent eight years working to promote peace between Israel and the Palestinians as the international community’s envoy to the Middle East.”

8. I’m exhausted but am surviving. How can I heal from burnout without expensive time off?
By Eleanor Gordon-Smith | Leading Questions :: The Guardian | September 2025
“So many burnout books and blogs seem to assume a second income is present to take care of all the stuff that will still need doing if I take a break, but it’s just me. How do I take an actual break?”

9. The Graduate: Intimations of a Revolution
By Frank Rich | The Criterion Collection | February 2016
“[I]t straddles both the old and the new. It survives not just as a peerless Hollywood entertainment but as a one-of-a-kind cinematic portrait of America when it, like Benjamin Braddock at the edge of his parents swimming pool, teetered on the brink.”

10. How artists and musicians are responding to Trump’s 2nd term
By Jeffrey Brown | PBS News Hour | September 2025
“Rock legend Bruce Springsteen publicly blasted President Trump and his policies, saying ‘we’re living through particularly dangerous times.’ As Trump increasingly targets the arts, artists are faced with the question of whether to speak out or keep their heads down.”

11. Something Very Tiny Is Following Earth Around the Sun
By Robin George Andrews | The New York Times | September 2025
“The object, the latest ‘quasi-moon’ detected by astronomers, could be with us for almost another 60 years.”

12. The Borderlands War, 1915-20
By Christopher Rose, Joan Neuberger and Henry Wiencek | 15 Minute History :: UT Department of History | 2014-2020
Also see: The Rise and Fall of the Latvian National Communists | Slavery and Abolition in Iran | The Amateur Photography Movement in the Soviet Union | The Russian Empire on the Eve of World War 1

13. Beyond the beach read: The new wave of bookish travel
By Lizzie Enfield | BBC News | September 2025
“Forget the solo beach paperback: travellers are now joining structured reading retreats that mix books, place and community.”

14. How to Build a Dictionary: On the Hard Art of Popular Lexicography
By Ilan Stavans | LitHub | September 2025
“This conversation concentrates on the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) as a Platonic model not only within the English language but in countless other linguistic ecosystems. It looks at Samuel Johnson as the cathartic figure whose lexicographic work shaped modern English dictionaries. And it ponders the sprawling OED products and compares the enterprise to its American counterpart, Merriam-Webster.”

15. What Teen Novels Are Capable Of
By Isabel Fattal | The Atlantic | September 2025
“These books can help young people come to terms with the thoughts that feel too scary to say out loud.”

16. ‘Warrior ethos’ mistakes military might for true security – and ignores the wisdom of Eisenhower
By Monica Duffy Toft | The Conversation | September 2025
“In the aftermath of World War II, U.S. leaders wanted to emphasize a defensive rather than aggressive military posture as they entered the Cold War, a decades-long standoff between the United States and Soviet Union defined by a nuclear arms race, ideological rivalry and proxy wars short of direct great-power conflict.”

17. The parlance of pilots
By Mark Vanhoenacker | Aeon | September 2025
“High above London, Tokyo and Cairo, the language of the cockpit is technical, obscure, geeky – and irresistibly romantic”

18. The night the skies over Baghdad were illuminated, the 24-hour news cycle took over
By Tom Jones | The Poynter 50 | March 2025
“CNN’s live coverage of Operation Desert Storm launched a new era in television news”

19. Should College Get Harder?
By Joshua Rothman | The New Yorker | September 2025
“A.I. is coming for knowledge work, and yet college seems to be getting easier. Does something need to change?”

20. Persepolis
By Melvyn Bragg | In Our Time :: BBC 4 | 2015-2018
Also see: The California Gold Rush | Sappho | The Earth’s Core | The Science of Glass

Podcast recommendations

A close friend recently asked to me to recommend some interesting podcasts. For regular readers of this blog, nothing on this list will surprise you.

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A close friend recently asked to me to recommend some interesting podcasts. Here is my list. It’s not comprehensive, and the categories are quite general. For regular readers of this blog, nothing on this list will surprise you.

Thankfully, most podcasts cover several subjects, and so they’re hard to classify as one thing. Generally, I like news programs, lectures to intelligent crowds (but not recorded classroom lectures), or one-on-one conversations. I mostly avoid call-in shows — I like to keep the public out of the equation whenever possible — but I make exceptions for exceptional programs.

As of Friday, Feb. 7, 2014, the iTunes library tells me I have 2,311 podcast episodes. It calculates that it will take me 66 days, nine hours, 23 minutes, and 46 seconds to listen to all of them.

NEWS
DocArchive — BBC World Service
Global News — BBC World Service
Newshour — BBC World Service
Best of Today — BBC Radio 4
Podcast of Week — CSPAN
New Yorker: Out Loud — The New Yorker
New Yorker: Comment — The New Yorker
Story of the Day — NPR
World Story of the Day — NPR
Hourly News Summary (central to my hourly existence in this life) — NPR
The World — PRI
The Takeaway — PRI and WNYC
TribCast — The Texas Tribune
Washington Week — PBS
PBS News Hour — PBS

NEWS :: DOCUMENTARIES
Documentary of the Week — BBC Radio 4
Outlook — BBC World Service
American RadioWorks — American Public Media
Longform Podcast
ProPublica Podcasts
DecodeDC
Radio 3 Essay — BBC Radio 3
The National Press Club podcast
Weekends on All Things Considered — NPR

NEWS :: FOREIGN AFFAIRS
The Economist podcast
Inside CFR Events — Council on Foreign Relations
Brookings Event podcast — The Brookings Institute
Prime Minister’s Questions — The Guardian
The Stream — Al Jazeera English
Worldview — WBEZ

NEWS :: SCIENCE / TECHNOLOGY
Marketplace Tech Report — American Public Media
New Tech City — WNYC
Quirks and Quarks — CBC
Science Weekly — The Guardian
Stardate podcasts — McDonald Observatory
Science Times — The New York Times
Environment podcast — NPR
Nature podcast — Nature

FILM / TV
Front Row Daily — BBC Radio 4
The Treatment with Elvis Mitchell — KCRW
Kevin Pollack’s Chat Show
The Q&A with Jeff Goldsmith — CBC

MUSIC
Legacy Podcasts: Rock — Legacy Recordings
Legacy Podcasts: Sarah McLachlan — Legacy Recordings
Other Directions — Steven Lee Moya
Soundcheck — WYNC
The Blues File — WXPN
Classical Performance — WGBH
25 Years of Chill Out Music — Roebeck
50 Great Voices — NPR
From the Top — NPR
Jazz Profiles — NPR
Chillsky
Properly Chilled
Escuela de Rumberos Salsa podcast

BOOKS
Book Review Podcast — The New York Times
Q and A — CSPAN
After Words — CSPAN
The Guardian Books Podcast
Writers and Company — CBC
Bookworm — KCRW
The New York Review of Books podcast
Between the Lines — WABE
Unfictional — KCRW
New Yorker: Fiction — The New Yorker
Selected Shorts — PRI
World Book Club — BBC World Service

GENERAL ARTS / LIFE
The Brian Lehrer Show — WNYC
The Leonard Lopate Show — WNYC
TED Talks — TED
The Best of YouTube
Arts and Ideas — BBC Radio 4
Radio Open Source with Christopher Lydon podcasts
Here’s the Thing with Alec Baldwin — WNYC
The Current — CBC Radio
Ideas — CBC Radio
The Forum — KQED
Fresh Air (as long as Terry Gross isn’t on) — NPR
RadioWest — PRI
Studio 360 — PRI and WYNC
To the Best of Our Knowledge — PRI
WGBH Forum
Radio Times — WHYY

HISTORY
Conversations with History — UC Berkeley
Free Library podcast — Free Library of Philadelphia
American History TV — CSPAN
Great Lives — BBC Radio 4
15 Minute History — University of Texas at Austin
BackStory — University of Virginia
The History of Byzantium — Robin Pierson
Walter Cronkite’s History Lessons — NPR
History: Days of Infamy, Daily Life
The Journal of American History Podcast
Lectures in History — CSPAN
Lincoln and the Civil War
Witness — BBC World Service
Los Angeles Public Library Podcast
Miller Center Forums — The University of Virginia Miller Center
New Books in History
Pritzker Military Library Podcasts
Virginia Historical Society Podcasts
We the People Stories — National Constitution Center

Behind The Wall

Tabletop Games

Rebecca Aguilar

#CallingAllJournalists Initiative | Reporter | Media Watchdog | Mentor | Latinas in Journalism

Anna Fonte's Paper Planes

Words, images & collages tossed from a window.

Postcards from Barton Springs

Gayle Brennan Spencer - sending random thoughts to and from South Austin

The Flask Half Full

Irreverent travelogues, good drinks, and the cultural stories they tell.

Government Book Talk

Talking about some of the best publications from the Federal Government, past and present.

Cadillac Society

Cadillac News, Forums, Rumors, Reviews

Ob360media

Real News That Matters

Mealtime Joy

bringing joy to family meals

Øl, Mad og Folk

Bloggen Øl, Mad og Folk

a joyous kitchen

fun, delicious food for everyone

A Perfect Feast

Modern Comfort Food

donnablackwrites

Art is a gift we give ourselves

Fridgelore

low waste living drawn from food lore through the ages

BeckiesKitchen.com

MUSINGS : CRITICISM : HISTORY : NEWS

North River Notes

Observations on the Hudson River as it passes through New York City. The section of the Hudson which passes through New York is historically known as the North River, called this by the Dutch to distinguish it from the Delaware River, which they knew as the South River. This stretch of the Hudson is still often referred to as the North River by local mariners today. All photos copyright Daniel Katzive unless otherwise attributed. For more frequent updates, please follow northriverblog on Facebook or Instagram.