E’s doorstep. He introduced Forché that he was a coffee farmer from El Salvador, a coastal country in northern Central America. Prior to the publication of this memoir, Forché wrote her experience in El Salvador (seven stays from 1978 to 1980) in her poems. In this new book, she is cleverly integrated into the political context, and its content is closely related to what she sees and hears.

Kerri K. Greenidge, “BLACK RADICAL: The Life and Times of William Monroe Trotter” (Liveright, publisher of The Times of William Monroe Trotter)

For the first 30 years of the 20th century, William Monroe Trotter has been the editor of the Boston Negro weekly The Guardian, and he has also appeared in the biography of many contemporary people as a nasty existence, like American politics Booker T. Washington and historian WEB Du Bois. He is radical, outspoken and never fails. Greenidge’s description of Trotter’s life generally reveals an attitude of approval, but also conveys the more annoying element of his character. She opened the door of inquiry for us, led us to reflect on the tug-of-war between the reformers and the activists, and led us to think about whether the success, which at first seemed purely symbolic, could be realistic The world has an impact.

By Adam Higginbotham, author of MIDNIGHT IN CHERNOBYL: The Untold Story of the World’s Greatest Nuclear Disaster (Simon & Schuster, Midnight Chernobyl: The World’s Largest Nuclear Disaster) / strong>

Adam Higginbotham ’s documentary work on the Chernobyl nuclear accident, “Midnight Chernobyl”, has taken decades to collect materials, including interviews, letters, unpublished memoirs, and just recently decrypted Some files. In this book, he shows us how the Soviet governing elite’s near-crazy obsession with secrecy led to the catastrophic accident of the 1986 reactor explosion. He rebuilt the disaster from scratch, describing the causes and consequences of the disaster. He borrowed the eyes of people who had experienced it in the past to bring this disaster to life in front of his readers, and finally handed over this fascinating and frightening work.