Incoming Resources
- Dealing with government in South Sudan, histories of chiefship, community & state, Cherry Leonardi, Lecturer in History, Durham University
- Tomboys, pretty boys, and outspoken women, the media revolution of 1973, Edward D. Miller
- Hello world, being human in the age of algorithms, Hannah Fry
- Team human, Douglas Rushkoff
- The future of capitalism, facing the new anxieties, Paul Collier
- Fortress Israel, the inside story of the military elite who run the country and why they can't make peace, Patrick Tyler
- Boxing, a concise history of the sweet science, Gerald R. Gems
- Tales of two cities, Paris, London and the birth of the modern city, Jonathan Conlin
- How to watch television, edited by Ethan Thompson and Jason Mittell
- Island People, the Caribbean and the World, Joshua Jelly-Schapiro
- The crucible of Islam, G.W. Bowersock
- Machines that think, the future of artificial intelligence, Toby Walsh
- See Red Women's Workshop, [feminist posters 1974-1990], Prudence Stevenson, Susan Mackie, Anne Robinson, Jess Baines
- Autophobia, love and hate in the automotive age, Brian Ladd
- Yellow, stories, Don Lee
- Winners take all, the elite charade of changing the world, Anand Giridharadas
- Brazil, a biography, Lilia M. Schwarcz and Heloisa M. Starling
- Fire and rain, the Beatles, Simon & Garfunkel, James Taylor, CSNY, and the lost story of 1970, David Browne
- Nightmare alley, film noir and the American dream, Mark Osteen
- The amiable Baltimoreans, Francis F. Beirne
- Turkey, the insane and the melancholy, Ece Temelkuran ; translated by Zeynep Beler
- Infinite jest, caricature and satire from Leonardo to Levine, Constance C. McPhee and Nadine M. Orenstein
- The new librarianship field guide, R. David Lankes ; with contributions from Wendy Newman, Sue Kowalski, Beck Tench, and Cheryl Gould ; and guidance from the New Librarianship Collaborative: Kimberly Silk, Wendy Newman, and Lauren Britton
- Society
- The future is faster than you think, how converging technologies are transforming business, industries, and our lives, Peter H. Diamandis and Steven Kotler
- American Nietzsche, a history of an icon and his ideas, Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen
- Moving the mountain, beyond Ground Zero to a new vision of Islam in America, Feisal Abdul Rauf
- On Saudi Arabia, its people, past, religion, fault lines--and future, Karen Elliott House
- Regenesis, how synthetic biology will reinvent nature and ourselves, George Church & Ed Regis
- Things that matter, three decades of passions, pastimes, and politics, Charles Krauthammer
- Robots are people too, how Siri, Google Car, and artificial intelligence will force us to change our laws, John Frank Weaver
- Dataclysm, who we are when we think no one's looking, Christian Rudder
- The filter bubble, what the Internet is hiding from you, Eli Pariser
- Washington, a history of our national city, Tom Lewis
- Creative life, music, politics, people, and machines, Bob Ostertag
- Anger and forgiveness, resentment, generosity, justice, Martha C. Nussbaum
- Empire of the air, aviation and the American ascendancy, Jenifer Van Vleck
- Heavy metal Islam, rock, resistance, and the struggle for the soul of Islam, Mark LeVine
- India becoming, a portrait of life in modern India, Akash Kapur
- Technologies of speculation, the limits of knowledge in a data-driven society, Sun-Ha Hong
- Broad influence, how women are changing the way America works, Jay Newton-Small, Washington Correspondent, Time Magazine
- Islam and America, building a future without prejudice, Anouar Majid
- The outrage industry, political opinion media and the new incivility, Jeffrey M. Berry and Sarah Sobieraj
- Outsider art, visionary worlds and trauma, Daniel Wojcik
- Hollywood's last golden age, politics, society, and the seventies film in America, Jonathan Kirshner
- Always on, how the iPhone unlocked the anything - anytime - anywhere future--and locked us in, Brian X. Chen
- Humans need not apply, a guide to wealth and work in the age of artificial intelligence, Jerry Kaplan
- From skedaddle to selfie, words of the generations, Allan Metcalf
- This could be our future, a manifesto for a more generous world, Yancey Strickler
- Culture as weapon, the art of influence in everyday life, Nato Thompson