In her latest book, the noted artist juxtaposes treasured personal objects with items from the Smithsonian design museum
A massive digitization and transcription project calls for volunteers at the Smithsonian
Author and Illustrator Chris Raschka wants his new children's book to teach kids about the icons of jazz.
Photographer Barbara Yoshida traveled across the globe to capture prehistoric stone monuments shrouded in moonlight
Color can be subjective, but in the 19th-century, color dictionaries provided a common language for scientists to describe different hues found in nature
Victoria Sambunaris’s new photography book, Taxonomy of a Landscape, goes beyond the amber waves of grain to catalogue what's on America's horizon
Michelle Frankfurter tells the stories of these young migrants and also those of the thousands who jump aboard “the death train”
Nestled in between the Bronx and Manhattan, North Brother Island once housed Typhoid Mary, but now is an astonishing look at a world without humans
For his new book, Dan Falk followed a group of scholars who argue, unlike most, that the playwright was up to speed with the latest astronomy
The literary genre isn’t meant to predict the future, but implausible ideas that fire inventors’ imaginations often, amazingly, come true
Dinah Fried's new photo book brings the words of authors such as James Joyce and Lewis Caroll to life
In one of his final interviews, the award-winning writer talks about what inspired him to travel to the farthest reaches of the globe
In photographer Gabriele Galimberti's new book, kids stand amongst their most prized possessions
Seventy-five years ago, the idol of America’s youth set out on what would be his final journey
The first movie in the dystopian young adult book trilogy comes out this weekend. Get ready
No novelist captured the muddy waterway and its people like the creator of Huckleberry Finn, as a journey along the river makes clear
Illustrator David Aguilar melds art and science to imagine how alien creatures might adapt to their environments
Why someone would translate Herman Melville’s classic into emoticons
Forensic linguistics can use powerful programs to track written text back to its author
As mapped out by Google, the trip would take about 272 hours and 15 minutes
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