Politics and Prose Presents

Rick Atkinson — The British Are Coming: The Graphic Edition, Volume 1 (The Revolution Trilogy [Graphic Novels]) - with Evan Osnos

1 h 1 min · 18. juni 2026
episode Rick Atkinson — The British Are Coming: The Graphic Edition, Volume 1 (The Revolution Trilogy [Graphic Novels]) - with Evan Osnos cover

Description

This striking graphic edition adapts the first half of the New York Times bestselling The British Are Coming, the opening volume in Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Rick Atkinson’s extraordinary trilogy about the American Revolution From the battles at Lexington and Concord in the spring of 1775 through the Siege of Boston in 1776, American militiamen and the newly created Continental Army take on the world’s most formidable adversary: the British Empire. The gripping saga is alive with astonishing characters: Henry Knox, the former bookseller with an uncanny understanding of artillery; Nathanael Greene, the blue-eyed bumpkin who becomes a brilliant battle captain; Benjamin Franklin, the self-made man who proves to be the wiliest of diplomats; and George Washington, the commander in chief who learns the difficult art of leadership when the war seems all but lost. The story is also told from the British perspective, making the mortal conflict between redcoats and rebels all the more compelling.  Full of riveting details and iconic stories, The British Are Coming is a tale of heroes and knaves, of sacrifice and blunder, of redemption and profound suffering. Expertly rendered in gripping graphic novel-style artwork, the battle for our nation's independence is brought to life like never before. Discover the first act of America’s creation in this vividly illustrated graphic history. Rick Atkinson is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of numerous works of history, including The Long Gray Line, the Liberation Trilogy (An Army at Dawn, The Day of Battle, and The Guns at Last Light), and the Revolution Trilogy (including The British Are Coming and The Fate of the Day). He has won numerous awards, including Pulitzer Prizes for history and journalism. Atkinson is in conversation with Evan Osnos, who has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 2008. In addition, he is co-host of The New Yorker’s Political Scene podcast, and a nonresident Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution. His coverage ranges from politics and foreign affairs to white-collar crime and espionage. His first book, “Age of Ambition: Chasing Fortune, Truth, and Faith in the New China,” won the National Book Award and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. His latest book “The Haves and Have-Yachts: Dispatches on the Ultrarich,” was an instant New York Times bestseller. Prior to The New Yorker, he worked as the Beijing bureau chief for the Chicago Tribune, where he was on teams that won the Pulitzer Prize in 2001 and 2008. Before his assignment to China, he worked in the Middle East, reporting mostly from Iraq. He lives with his family near Washington, D.C. PURCHASE: https://politics-prose.com/book/9780593799307?ic_referral=9oTjaqFluK6SXjGic1uKLwCWduT7K_Q91kcAHaEEs-QwM_spBFK7xWqYJ6ONYsxP5Z1lOJjK23VnR6MzQOIXWK8DN_7sDdll6MNjfyvlZVdIC7nEwaWTMksEWkQXi851Xe3C4S4

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episode Samuel Clowes Huneke & Hugh Ryan — I Will Not Abandon You: Queer Women in Nazi Germany & My Bad: A Personal History of the Queer Nineties and Beyond artwork

Samuel Clowes Huneke & Hugh Ryan — I Will Not Abandon You: Queer Women in Nazi Germany & My Bad: A Personal History of the Queer Nineties and Beyond

I Will Not Abandon You [https://politics-prose.com/book/9781487554347] brings to life the unrelenting defiance of queer women in fascist Germany. In his latest book, award-winning historian Samuel Clowes Huneke shows how love, queer resistance, and collective action survived in the harrowing circumstances of Nazi rule. Drawing on a decade of archival research, Huneke takes readers into a hidden world, from the wartime balls that lesbian activists continued to organize to the concentration camps where women accused of loving women were imprisoned. Following a diverse cast of characters, Huneke reveals both the oppression that queer women faced and how they resisted fascism in solidarity with one another. Arguing that this solidarity - which transcended race, class, and gender - offers a compelling alternative to today's fractured identity politics, I Will Not Abandon You is a vital, new history of queer life under fascism and a call to rethink the foundations of progressive politics today. Samuel Clowes Huneke is associate professor of History at George Mason University. He is the author of States of Liberation: Gay Men between Dictatorship and Democracy in Cold War Germany, awarded the David Barclay Book Prize of the German Studies Association and the Smith Book Award of the Southern Historical Association. He has written for Boston Review, The Baffler, and Los Angeles Review of Books. ——— A powerful and hilarious personal history that tells the true story of the queer ’90s and how it transformed queer life in the decades that followed The 1990s were a decade of transformation. Globalization reshaped geopolitics, and the rise of the World Wide Web revolutionized technology forever. As society shifted from the analog to the digital at the turn of the century, LGBTQ life profoundly changed too. Increased visibility arrived, but at a heavy cost. In his most personal book yet, historian Hugh Ryan guides us through a pivotal decade for queer people and its aftershocks—from new breakthroughs in activism, to the early days of AOL chat rooms, and the eventual backlash to progress. Through the prism of his own experiences, Ryan maps how queer life transitioned from private to public in the late ’90s and early aughts, reshaping the challenges and possibilities LGBTQ people navigated in the new millennium. On a Greyhound bus headed to Burning Man and the glittery dance floors of clubs in Manhattan and Berlin, a timeless and all-too-common story emerges: how a young queer person chooses silence to protect himself—only to spend another beautiful, complicated decade undoing his shame. Funny, stylish, and deliciously nostalgic, My Bad [https://politics-prose.com/book/9781645030577] reckons with the gains and setbacks of a decade that reshaped queer life forever. Hugh Ryan is the award-winning author of When Brooklyn Was Queer (2019) and The Women’s House of Detention (2022). He teaches creative nonfiction in the MFA program at the Bennington Writing Seminars and runs the Queer History 101 Book Club with world-famous performer Peppermint.  PURCHASE BOOKS HERE: https://politics-prose.com/sam-huenke-hugh-ryan-061626

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episode Daniel Squadron — The Fourth Branch: How State Government Can Save Our Union - with E.J. Dionne, Jr. and Senator Chuck Schumer artwork

Daniel Squadron — The Fourth Branch: How State Government Can Save Our Union - with E.J. Dionne, Jr. and Senator Chuck Schumer

This part handbook, part history, and part personal narrative will open readers’ eyes to the oft-overlooked arm of government that has done more harm and more good than any other in recent years: state legislatures. After the 2024 election, many voters were left feeling disillusioned with America’s highest governing body. Anxious citizens point to the federal government and national elected officials with growing alarm, but the broken political system they see in Washington is merely a symptom. The site of that break—and the best opportunity to mend it—lies in the states. In The Fourth Branch, [https://politics-prose.com/book/9781638933854?ic_referral=2LjFaSUNPKfdZTPw8AYuwJ4JK-vMsGcpcw6dyP8cGlswMwtpfi5qnMur750co9P7dHRwGZgdvVyGL0Bk0_acmn_nbQsuwXbOEUhowV9F8I98553r_eNHi8jcoevLh3XxBjvv9PY] co-founder of The States Project Daniel Squadron opens readers’ eyes to the oft-overlooked arm of government that has far more power than most people even realize: state legislatures. Nearly every major issue that Americans care about—from climate change to minimum wage, abortion access to criminal justice reform, gun control to paid family leave—can be determined without the involvement of the federal government. Detailing the systems, experiences, and strategic thinking that inform The States Project’s approach to making change—one designed to combat decades of conservative investment and manipulation at the state level—this guide is an urgently needed and galvanizing framework for participation in our democracy, made all the more engaging by Daniel’s stories of his time as a New York State Senator and his work with inspiring lawmakers around the country. In examining the power and possibility of the states—both their capacity to influence national politics and the low barriers to involvement at the state level—this book will chart a course to real, grounded hope for the future through actions that any ordinary civilian can take to make concrete and lasting change.  A compelling exploration of where power really lies in our government, The Fourth Branch will be a book for anyone who cares about our country and wants to do something about where it’s headed. Daniel Squadron is a former aide to Senator Chuck Schumer, former New York State Senator, and co-founder of The States Project. Squadron will be in conversation with E.J. Dionne, Jr., a bestselling author, a syndicated columnist who appears twice weekly in The Washington Post and nearly a hundred other newspapers, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, and a professor at Georgetown University. His Why Americans Hate Politics won a Los Angeles Times Book Prize and was a nominee for the National Book Award. He is a regular commentator on National Public Radio and on other radio and television programs. He lives in Washington, DC, with his wife, Mary Boyle, and their three children. A VIP special guest will be joining the conversation with Squadron and Dionne. Senator Chuck Schumer PURCHASE BOOK: https://politics-prose.com/book/9781638933854?ic_referral=32ec43wYYtdvbyTm1BXlk2sI8DCOy1o2hZQZCvdrnI8wM-wmqZXhJWI4Fh_RClSBQah9l42lBHsFodiY_2vDLrRPmiMkNG75eNx2rhHvwuyt1FC7_qkSdVWaq79S6aDxAHd9cHc

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episode Madeleine Schwartz — How We See It: The World Looks at America in the Age of Trump -with Linda Kinstler artwork

Madeleine Schwartz — How We See It: The World Looks at America in the Age of Trump -with Linda Kinstler

From the celebrated magazine of international writing, twelve sharp global perspectives on a changing United States, with an introduction by the Dial's editor in chief, Madeleine Schwartz The 2024 U.S. presidential election reverberated internationally, a global event whose outcome has already reshaped trade, migration, security, and rising authoritarianism across the world. Inside the United States, we are swamped by the news cycle; but how does the wider world see and interpret what is happening under Trump? In How We See It [https://politics-prose.com/book/9798893850222?ic_referral=MgrFWxR4AmgN4I8T1cZWKetvYXN-c_-g_8EwFvXGhP8wM5JhVrueqej1m0t88hP76br7ZylP4TKKV0FDVMnLpyXYGLTdo3jJDzN0a-efSg9-ta3KbZ4GSYUQ_2-dU0SfAmMqzyM], twelve of the most talented and insightful journalists from around the world probe their home countries' complex relationship with the United States--and how this has swerved under the new administration. A diverse, international cast of writers examines how Turkey's recent history helps us understand America's slide into autocracy, how Argentina's century-long obsession with the dollar has changed under Trump, anti-American tourism sentiment in Italy, and what right-wing Americans get wrong about South Africa. Essays in the collection also look at how Taiwan is navigating the uncertainty of Trump's response in the event of a Chinese invasion and the newly fraught view of the U.S. from Canada. Featuring pieces commissioned by The Dial, the award-winning magazine, How We See It shifts and expands our frame of reference, our self-awareness, and our understanding of how much our world has changed since the election of 2024. Madeleine Schwartz the founder and editor-in-chief of The Dial, a new, award-winning magazine of international writing. Founded in 2023, The Dial is an online magazine of culture, politics, and ideas, with a focus on local writing from around the world. Schwartz is in conversation with Linda Kinstler, a Junior Fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows and a contributing writer at The New York Times Magazine. Her first book, Come to This Court and Cry: How The Holocaust Ends, won a 2023 Whiting Award in Non-Fiction and was shortlisted for the Wingate Prize for Jewish Literature. PURCHASE: https://politics-prose.com/book/9798893850222?ic_referral=YUqvefCpNQplGYg2i3Nn4JuN0xbdS_F20CWGOO3djB4wM8r73X8eGghS18Ji5u5xN5UQ-csTRmgNwGilRHsaqnd77veKnPvwdQro90jDzAksoHz2c3JieL_VP1ygTdvY6Rj7ft0

23. juni 202656 min
episode Ellen Prentiss Campbell — Vanishing Point - with Dorothy Reno artwork

Ellen Prentiss Campbell — Vanishing Point - with Dorothy Reno

‘As all Pittsburghers know, Homewood Cemetery is full of stories.  Here Ellen Prentiss Campbell unearths not one but three, piecing together the fascinating yet little-known saga of the Hetzels.  VANISHING POINT is a smart, sharp historical novel that combines the shifting mores of art and the changing fortunes of one extraordinary American family.’ - Stewart O’Nan, author of EMILY, ALONE and EVENSO Vanishing Point [https://politics-prose.com/book/9781627206877], Ellen Prentiss Campbell’s newest historical novel, is a family epic spanning three generations and a hundred years, from the 1880’s to the 1980’s. The story of Pennsylvania artist George Hetzel’s complicated family explores their joys and sorrows, secrets and mysteries. Deeply researched and vividly imagined, it presents a family you will long remember as it celebrates the enduring strength of love and art. Ellen Prentiss Campbell grew up in Pennsylvania and Maryland. A graduate of Smith College and The Bennington Writing Seminars, for many years Ellen practiced psychotherapy. Her novels The Bowl with Gold Seams and Frieda’s Song and her story collections Contents Under Pressure and Known by Heart have garnered awards, recognition and – best of all – many readers. Member of the National Book Critics Circle, her blog “Girl Writing” appears in The Washington Independent. Ellen lives walking distance from Politics and Prose. Ellen is in conversation with Dorothy Reno, classic-books columnist for the Independent. Her short fiction has been published in Canada and the United States; she is at work on a collection of essays. She lives in Washington DC and previously resided in Hanoi, Vietnam, and Tbilisi, Georgia. PURCHASE: https://politics-prose.com/book/9781627206877?ic_referral=p-dpjxgNU-YLmm35MQDlee-9T16ntB3WTGs2YEL0-FgwM3Kt-gIcy4afK4OiL0XmQA2A02F7jZeP1wIEA89yGPbu0B14G3sTlChkqou9m81siHshgid4cIN9L7lBTWSwLLsJ7FQ

22. juni 202653 min
episode Ben Fountain — Rasputin Swims the Potomac: A Novel - with Stephen Kearse artwork

Ben Fountain — Rasputin Swims the Potomac: A Novel - with Stephen Kearse

From the award-winning, bestselling author of Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk comes a biting satire of American politics and a searingly intelligent novel about the cruel absurdities of contemporary life, centering on a world champion professional wrestler with presidential ambitions Reporter Clarence Thomas Jr. is looking for a great story, former country music teen star Faith Spack has parlayed her fame into a job at the White House, and the two-term incumbent president is campaigning for a constitutionally dubious third term. After an outbreak at a campaign rally, a mysterious new pandemic of “weeping sickness” sweeps the nation, threatening the president’s hold on the Oval Office. Desperate to retain power, he enlists the mystical pro wrestler Rasputin to help ensure his reelection and guarantee additional seasons of his presidential reality TV show, The Real West Wing. But as Rasputin’s appeal threatens to exceed the president’s, and the wrestler’s supposedly supernatural powers start to seem like the real thing, the campaign finds itself trapped in a spandex-clad destiny no number of executive orders can control, one in which both Clarence and Faith are compelled to play increasingly large parts. Hilarious, compelling, and tragically relevant, Rasputin Swims the Potomac [https://politics-prose.com/book/9781250776549?ic_referral=Xw6p5zz-K5rAIImxG-Ai5W6PjdHRvnIH_JhGrS_Q_KowM1wC29vEUo8WGtqWX6xuAq7XMPP6RLHGRAyf8tx35oGNqMmczl1vc9p0naAqv6aZUq0wC6xcIatpmgRWml_V5vdeeF0] is both an escape and a warning, a scathing satire that explores the twists and turns of American democracy as it hurtles toward authoritarianism. Ben Fountain's most recent book is the novel Rasputin Swims the Potomac.  His work has received the Joyce Carol Oates Prize, the National Book Critics Circle Award, the PEN/Hemingway Award, and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Fiction, among other honors, and has been a finalist for the National Book Award.  A former practicing attorney in Texas, he now lives in eastern North Carolina. Fountain is in conversation with Stephen Kearse, the author of Liquid Snakes, In the Heat of the Light, and Post, a forthcoming novel about the U.S. Post Office. His short fiction has been published in Joyland, The Deadlands, FIYAH, and Plotter. He works as a journalist and lives in metro Washington, D.C., with his family. He has never swam the Potomac, but he enjoys walking along it. PURCHASE: https://politics-prose.com/book/9781250776549?ic_referral=XZ-zO1miIU5-husD8gc0NQ5mTr7hjbA_5tNmH62lYbowM7_PBWTYMf43H6Bip_NlhMriJQRPpHZVKzUueeUeeuK6Fqo4iBKNc9vd8A-yZBRlfB1cpKO2rQz-HaNY6YeNIaNoxdE

22. juni 20261 h 9 min