Anna Darrow could set a broken leg with some string and a flatiron.
By Amy Lifson
New Jersey exhibits a rare collection from Milton's library.
By Thomas Fulton
Decorative arts in Ohio and beyond.
By Bill Eichenberger
Utah listens to its own quirky history.
By Sarah Auerbach
Kansans tell their diverse stories.
By Steven Hill
New Hampshire remembers the authors of Curious George and their escape from Paris.
By Sarah Stewart Taylor
Louisiana marks ten successful years of a literacy program.
By David Skinner
California finds its own history in a documentary about the punk/funk/ska band Fishbone.
Eudora Welty's photographs reveal new stories in Alabama.
By Laura Wolff Scanlan
Massachusetts focuses on the food imagery in Eric Carle's illustrations.
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September/October 2012
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Supremely Contentious
The Transformation of “Advice and Consent”
By Meredith Hindley
Who Was Westbrook Pegler?
The original right-wing takedown artist
By David Witwer
The Strange Politics of Gertrude Stein
Was the den mother of modernism a fascist?
By Barbara Will
Friends of Rousseau
Some of the people he has influenced don't even realize it.
By Leo Damrosch
John Muir, Nature's Witness
The founder of the Sierra Club worshiped the outdoor world.
By Anna Maria Gillis