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2026 Florida Legislature
Not So Forever Home
Paycheck To Paycheck
Florida And Climate Change
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Growing Up With Guns
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Defending The Everglades. Again.
2026 Atlantic Hurricane Season
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Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
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Meet the Staff
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'More Money Than God,' But Morally Bankrupt
Sebastian Mallaby's book is an expert primer on hedge funds — the "Ferraris of finance" — and a detailed portrait of Wall Street's daredevils. Reviewer Susan Jane Gilman says More Money Than God is illuminating ... and infuriating.
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•
3:55
What Scares Thriller Writer Karin Slaughter?
Slaughter is a master of the thriller genre; her latest book, Broken, is full of twists and turns and technical details. In the latest installment of our "Thrilled to Death" series, Slaughter talks with NPR's Michele Norris about the stories that keep her in suspense.
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•
8:15
Playing With Your Food — Scientifically
How about an electrified birthday cake or a steaming martini? A new book shows you how to turn your food into edible science experiments. Your kitchen is like a home laboratory, says one author, why not have fun with it?
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•
0:00
Why The Tea Party Is Like A Starfish, Not A Spider
What do Wikipedia and Craigslist have in common with the Tea Party movement? They succeed by being decentralized, says Rod Beckstrom, co-author of the management book The Starfish and the Spider.
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•
7:03
The Global Economy's 'New Argonauts'
The world economy has created a new class of global engineers. AnnaLee Saxenian, the dean of the School of Information at the University of California, Berkeley, has written a new book about this group. Deborah Amos talks to her about The New Argonauts.
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•
0:00
Daniel Mendelsohn, Examining The 'Beautiful'
A classical scholar with a voracious appetite for high and low culture alike, he's dauntingly smart — but far too interested in why we love what we love to be a snob. Jacki Lyden talks to Mendelsohn about his new essay collection.
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•
0:00
Bill O'Reilly Discusses Jesus, Obama — And Himself
Fox News TV host Bill O'Reilly describes himself "as the most controversial journalist and commentator in the United States of America." In his memoir, A Bold Fresh Piece of Humanity, he explains how he got that way.
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0:00
Tell-Alls, Dramatic Warnings And The Obamas Lead Political Books Of 2018
This year brought memoirs from several former Trump administration officials, investigations by journalists reporting on Trump's White House — and a look back from former first lady Michelle Obama.
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•
7:01
Teddy Roosevelt's 'Doomed' War On New York Vice
When Teddy Roosevelt became a New York police commissioner in 1895, he vowed to clean up the city's endemic vice and corruption. It didn't exactly work out. New Yorkers liked the idea of standing up to corrupt cops, but they rebelled when Roosevelt tried to enforce a ban on Sunday drinking.
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•
8:57
Lessons In Counterterrorism From The Octopus
Ecologist and "natural security expert" Rafe Sagarin thinks our systems for dealing with natural disasters and terrorist attacks need to be updated. The best place to turn for advice? Other organisms.
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•
5:01
In Karen Russell's World, Sleep Is For The Lucky Few
Karen Russell has set her latest story in a terrible future where insomnia has become a national crisis. Sleep Donation is a digital download from a new publisher called Atavist Books.
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•
2:45
Writing The Wicked Ways Of The 'Worst. Person. Ever.'
Raymond Gunt is profane, rude, heartless and truly the Worst. Person. Ever. Author Douglas Coupland says he's not exactly sure how the character, with no redeeming qualities, came into his mind.
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•
5:18
Illustrated Memoir Recalls Marching In Selma At Just 15
Lynda Blackmon Lowery was still a child when she joined the legendary 1965 march. Now she's written a book for young readers about the experience, called Turning 15 On The Road To Freedom.
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•
5:52
My Accidental Masterpiece: The Phantom Tollbooth
Fifty years ago Norton Juster sat down and tried to remember the confusion and dislocation of childhood. His memories became a book, and The Phantom Tollbooth was born. In this essay, Juster looks back at his beloved novel, and the bored, disconnected child who grew up to write it.
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•
3:59
Right On The Money: A 'Capital' Book For Our Times
In the 2008 financial crash, a lot was written in newspapers and even books — but there wasn't much fiction out there to help those who like to view life through an imaginative lens. Now author John Lanchester's Capital can fill that void. It describes the crash as seen from London, and Lizzie Skurnick calls it "brilliant."
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•
2:59
Connie Rice: Conscience Of The City
In Power Concedes Nothing, civil rights attorney Connie Rice describes brokering peace between the Los Angeles Police Department and minority populations.
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•
7:19
Everything Is Fair Game In 'Known And Strange Things'
Teju Cole's new essay collection covers politics, poetry, music and even Snapchat. "I love to live things," he says — and he recommends Miles Davis as a cure for election season stress.
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•
6:35
Graphic Novel About Holocaust 'Maus' Banned In Russia For Its Cover
NPR's Robert Siegel talks with author and illustrator Art Spiegelman about how his book Maus, the very antithesis of Nazi propaganda, was purged from Moscow stores because of a swastika on the cover.
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•
3:54
A Brutal British Mystery Novel for Boxing Day
Writer Jonathan Hayes was escaping a painfully dull Boxing Day dinner when he was introduced to Dorothy Sayers' The Nine Tailors for the first time. Hayes says Sayers helped nudge the English mystery novel out of the drawing room and into the real world.
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•
0:00
Life Kit: Cleaning Better
NPR's Life Kit has tips and tricks for how to clean better.
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•
3:35
Skipping Out On College And 'Hacking Your Education'
Dale Stephens says many students would be better off ditching college and finding alternate ways to complete their educations. His new book, Hacking Your Education, explores that idea. "When you think about education as an investment, you have to think about what the return is going to be," he says.
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•
4:02
Hello Muddah, Hello Drama: The Brief Bloom Of Parodist Allan Sherman
Sherman worked a tight niche: classic songs rewritten to tickle a Jewish audience's funny bone. A new biography, Overweight Sensation: The Life and Comedy of Allan Sherman, explains how the performer's 1960s crossover fell in line with a collective awakening to ethnic identity in America.
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•
8:20
Black In America: A Story Rendered In Gray Scale
Chimamanda Adichie's Americanah is about a young Nigerian woman who moves to the U.S. It's a story of relocation, far-flung love and life as an outsider. But reviewer Rosecrans Baldwin says that despite the author's talent, much of the storytelling feels flat.
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•
2:53
Bachmann's 'Conviction' To Fixing Government
After a meteoric rise, GOP presidential candidate Michele Bachmann is now polling in the single digits. But she's still plowing ahead with her campaign, and this week she came out with a memoir. The Minnesota congresswoman talks with co-host Steve Inskeep about Core of Conviction and aiming to win the nomination.
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•
8:56
Hellbent For Living: A Screwball Parisian Adventure
There are many books set in the so-called City of Light, but author Rosecrans Baldwin says that none are quite as charming as The Dud Avocado. Have a favorite tale set in France? Let us know what it is in the comments.
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3:55
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