The Athenaeum will be closed on Monday, May 25, for Memorial Day and will resume regular business hours on Tuesday, May 26.

01.27.2026

Picture Books Recommended by Our Children’s Librarian

Picture book recommendations from our children's librarian

Looking for fresh picture books to spark curiosity, giggles, and big feelings? Our children’s librarian, Shay Glass, has hand-picked a joyful mix of stories that celebrate imagination, art, identity, and everyday wonder—from snowy adventures and playful questions to music, movement, and magical moments. Dive in and discover a new favorite (or three) to share together.

Children’s Picture Books

01.21.2026

Matisse At War: Art and Resistance in Nazi Occupied France by Christopher C. Gorham

In 1940, with the Nazis sweeping through France, Henri Matisse found himself at a personal and artistic crossroads. His 42-year marriage had ended, he was gravely ill, and after decades at the forefront of modern art, he was beset by doubt. As scores of famous figures escaped the country, Matisse took refuge in Nice, with his companion, Lydia Delectorskaya. By defiantly remaining, Matisse was a source of inspiration for his nation. While enemy agents and Resistance fighters played cat-and-mouse in the alleyways of Nice, Matisse’s son, Jean, engaged in sabotage efforts with the Allies. In Paris, under the swastika, Matisse’s estranged wife, Amélie, worked for the Communist underground. His beloved daughter, Marguerite, active in the French Resistance, was arrested and tortured by the Gestapo, sentenced to Ravensbruck concentration camp—and miraculously escaped when her train was halted by Allied bombs. His younger, son, Pierre helped Jewish artists escape to New York; even his teenaged grandson risked his life by defying the Germans and their Vichy collaborators. Amidst this chaos, Matisse responded to the dark days of war by inventing a dazzling new paper technique that led to some of his most iconic pieces, including The Fall of Icarus, his profile of Charles De Gaulle, Monsieur Loyal, and his groundbreaking cut-out book, Jazz. His wartime works were acts of resistance, subtly patriotic and daringly new. Drawing on intimate letters and a multitude of other sources, Christopher C. Gorham illuminated for us this momentous stage of Matisse’s life as never before, revealing an artist on a journey of reinvention, wrenching meaning from the suffering of war, and holding up the light of human imagination against the torch of fascism to create some of the most exciting work of his career, of the 20th century, and in the history of art.

About the Speaker
Christopher C. Gorham is a lawyer, educator, and acclaimed author whose books include Matisse at War and the Goodreads Choice Award finalist, The Confidante. He is a frequent speaker at conferences, literary events, colleges, and book club gatherings.

01.20.2026

Our 2025 “Most Read”

Chosen by our members themselves, these most-circulated titles of 2025 celebrate the curiosity, passion, and wide-ranging tastes of the Athenaeum community. From transporting novels to illuminating works of history and memoir, this list honors the shared conversations, discoveries, and moments of delight sparked by the books our members loved most.

Top 12 Fiction Books

  • James: A Novel by Percival Everett PZ4.E9424
  • Intermezzo : a novel by Sally Rooney PZ4.R77533
  • Tell me everything : a novel by Elizabeth Strout PZ4.S9186
  • Great big beautiful life by Emily Henry PZ4.H5219
  • The lion women of Tehran by Marjan Kamali PZ4.K1493
  • The ghosts of Rome by Joseph O’Connor PZ4.O1857
  • Dream count : a novel by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie PZ4.A225
  • Best detective stories of the year PZ1.B47
  • Our evenings : a novel by Alan Hollinghurst PZ4.H738
  • Midnight in Vienna by Jane Thynne PZ4.T56
  • Three days in June by Anne Tyler PZ4.T979
  • Midnight and blue by Ian Rankin PZ4.R1944

Top 12 Nonfiction Books

  • Chasing Beauty: The Life of Isabella Stewart Gardner by Natalie Dykstra CT275.G199
  • What I ate in one year : (and related thoughts) by Stanley Tucci TX649.T83
  • Kingmaker : Pamela Harriman’s astonishing life of power, seduction, and intrigue by Sonia Purnell CT275.H3709
  • The golden road : how Ancient India transformed the world by William Dalrymple DS423 .D35
  • After lives : on biography and the mysteries of the human heart by Megan Marshall CT275.M3764
  • The loves of my life : a sex memoir by Edmund White CT275.W53396
  • Rot : an imperial history of the Irish famine by Padraic X. Scanlan DA950.7 .S34
  • The book forger : the true story of a literary crime that fooled the world by Joseph Hone Z1024 .H66
  • British dandies : engendering scandal and fashioning a nation by Dominic Janes GT733 .J36
  • Careless people : a cautionary tale of power, greed, and lost idealism by Sarah Wynn-Williams HM743.F33 W95
  • Rick Steves Italy by Rick Steves DG416 .S75
  • Baskerville : the biography of a typeface by Simon Garfield Z250.5.B37 G37

Top 10 eBooks

  • James: A Novel by Percival Everett
  • Great big beautiful life by Emily Henry
  • The Emperor of Gladness by Ocean Vuong
  • Long Island Compromise: A Novel by Taffy Brodesser-Akner
  • The God of the Woods by Liz Moore
  • Kingmaker by Sonia Purnell
  • The Hunter by Tana French
  • Be Ready When the Luck Happens by Ina Garten
  • Night Watch by Jayne Anne Phillips
  • Tell me Everything by Elizabeth Strout

Top 10 Audiobooks

  • James: A Novel by Percival Everett
  • Be Ready When the Luck Happens by Ina Garten
  • Tell me Everything by Elizabeth Strout
  • The God of the Woods by Liz Moore
  • Great big beautiful life by Emily Henry
  • Orbital by Samantha Harvey
  • We Solve Murders by Richard Osman
  • A Marriage at Sea by Sophia Elmhirst
  • All the Colors of the Dark by Chris Whitaker
  • The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman

Check out our catalog to grab these books for yourself, or read more about eBooks and audiobooks at the Boston Athenaeum.

12.17.2025

Member Favorite Books of 2025

Athenaeum member reading in cozy nook

We asked Athenaeum members to share their favorite page turners of 2025, and they delivered a list packed with recommendations, from cinematic classics to sharp contemporary critique.

Here’s what our members were loving this year:

After Lives: On Biography and the Mysteries of the Human Heart, by Megan Marshall, 2025

Available in print and CloudLibrary ebook

“This collection of essays covers an extraordinary range of topics and time periods, and is a fascinating glimpse into the work and experiences of a brilliant biographer.”

Art Work: On the Creative Life, by Sally Mann, 2025

Available in print

“Mann is not only a great photographer, she’s also a gifted writer. Her text is honest, poetic and sometimes funny. I loved seeing how she transforms the ordinary into haunting photos.”

Christmas at Thompson Hall: A Tale, by Anthony Trollope, 1894

Available in print, CloudLibrary audiobook, CloudLibrary ebook, and print anthology

“All the best of Trollope, funny, witty, insightful, and just lovely!”

The Correspondent: A Novel, by Virginia Evans, 2025

Available in print, CloudLibrary audiobook, and CloudLibrary ebook

“The main character—our writer of letters—felt like a good (sometimes cranky, always insightful) friend.” Recommended by Ellen N.

The Frozen River: A Novel, by Ariel Lawhon, 2023

Available in print, CloudLibrary audiobook, and CloudLibrary ebook

“A gripping mystery story, meticulously researched with interesting descriptions of the early legal system in America, and rich characters and details of colonial life in a small town in Maine. Small town gossip and an ending you don’t see coming!” Recommended by Fiona N.

Girl on Girl: How Pop Culture Turned a Generation of Women Against Themselves, by Sophie Gilbert, 2025

Available in CloudLibrary audiobook, and CloudLibrary ebook

“Sophie Gilbert’s Girl on Girl challenges nostalgic views of late-1990s and early-2000s pop culture, arguing that the era shaped today’s worsening gender climate. Through incredibly researched chapters (with references!) the book shows how media, fashion, film, and technology sold girls and young women a set of damaging messages…” Recommended by Alex C.

James: A Novel, by Percival Everett, 2024

Available in print, CloudLibrary audiobook, and CloudLibrary ebook

“Mark Twain’s Huckleberry Finn turned inside out.” Recommended by Julie K.

Jane Austen in 41 Objects, by Kathryn Sutherland, 2025

Available in print

“Well chosen objects. Described in clear direct prose.” Recommended by Kirk C.

A Letter to the Luminous Deep, by Sylvie Cathrall, 2024

Available in print

“An underwater world conjured in epistolary form; lovingly portrayed neurodivergent characters; grief, sisterhood, apocalypse; queerness everywhere. What more could you want?” Recommended by Kat

Loved and Missed, by Susie Boyt, 2021

Available in and CloudLibrary audiobook, and CloudLibrary ebook

“This book is extraordinary. The most sensitive, cutting, precise depiction of parent-child relationships I’ve ever read. Devastating in the best way: it made me laugh and cry, I stayed up late reading it and gave it to my mom the next day. I recommend it constantly!” Recommended by Zoe W.

One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This, by Omar El Akkad, 2025

Available in print, CloudLibrary audiobook, and CloudLibrary ebook

“It is a passionate cri de coeur against the genocide in Gaza.” Recommended by Ken W.

Out of Africa, by Isak Dinesen (Karen Blitzen), 1937

Available in print, CloudLibrary audiobook, CloudLibrary ebook, and audio cassette

“Poignancy combined with beautiful writing, or the other way around.”

The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York, by Robert A. Caro, 1974

Available in print, CloudLibrary audiobook, and CloudLibrary ebook

“Incredibly well written. Explains so much about politics in general and how it works.” Recommended by Jeanne S.

The Slip: A Novel, by Lucas Schaefer, 2025

Available in print

“Such a cast of characters wandering through Austin, TX, with connections to each other and commentary on American history and American social and sexual politics, and all wrapped up in a rollicking journey that leaves the reader breathless and oddly optimistic.” Recommended by Mark T.

When the Clock Broke: Con Men, Conspiracists, and How America Cracked Up in the Early 1990s, by John Ganz, 2024

Available in print, and CloudLibrary audiobook

“Illuminating pre-history of Trumpism in ’90s U.S.” Recommended by Ken W.

12.10.2025

The Jazz Barn by John Gennari

John Gennari shared the story of how a small town in New England became a home for jazz, challenging conventional assumptions about the relationship between culture and landscape, art and geography, town and city, and race and place. This is a book about what happened in the 1950s in a barn, an icehouse, and a greenhouse in the verdant Berkshire Hills of western Massachusetts. Against the backdrop of McCarthyism, the civil rights movement, the expansion of the Afro-Caribbean diaspora, and postwar cultural tourism, two New Yorkers bought part of a sprawling estate in Lenox, where they converted an old barn and other outbuildings into an inn that could host musical performances and seminars. The Berkshire Music Barn went on to host jazz greats like Duke Ellington, Dave Brubeck, and Billie Holiday, as well as jazz roundtables grounded in folkloric approaches to the music. The Jazz Barn explores the cultural significance of venues like the Berkshire Music Barn and later the Lenox School of Jazz to tell a surprising story about race, culture, and place. John Gennari explores how a predominantly white New England town became a haven for African American musicians, and reveals the Berkshires as an important incubator not just of American literature and classical music but also of the Modern Jazz Quartet and Ornette Coleman’s “new thing.” The Berkshire Music Barn became a crucial space for the mainstreaming of jazz. By the late 1950s, the School of Jazz was an epicenter of the genre’s avant-garde. Richly illustrated with the photographs of Clemens Kalischer among others, The Jazz Barn demonstrates that the locations where jazz is played and heard indelibly shape the music and its meanings.

About the Speaker

John Gennari is Professor of English and Critical Race and Ethnic Studies at the University of Vermont. Gennari’s previous book, Flavor and Soul: Italian America at Its African American Edge (University of Chicago Press, 2017), is a study of Black/Italian cultural intersections in music and vernacular soundscapes, foodways, sports, and other forms of expressive culture. His earlier book, Blowin’ Hot and Cool: Jazz and Its Critics (University of Chicago Press, 2006), won the ASCAP-Deems Taylor Award for Excellence in Music Criticism and the John G. Cawelti Award for Best Book in American Culture Studies.

12.03.2025

Chasing the Pearl-Manuscript by Arthur Bahr

Arthur Bahr offers a unique study of the only physical manuscript containing Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, exploring it as both a material and literary object. In this book, Bahr takes a fresh look at the four poems and twelve illustrations of the so-called “Pearl-Manuscript,” the only surviving medieval copy of two of the best-known Middle English poems: Pearl and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. In Chasing the Pearl-Manuscript, Bahr explores how the physical manuscript itself enhances our perception of the poetry, drawing on recent technological advances (such as spectroscopic analysis) to show the Pearl-Manuscript to be a more complex piece of material, visual, and textual art than previously understood. By connecting the manuscript’s construction to the intricate language in the texts, Bahr suggests new ways to understand both what poetry is and what poetry can do.

About the Speaker

Arthur Bahr is professor of literature and MacVicar Faculty Fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His first book, Fragments and Assemblages: Forming Compilations of Medieval London (University of Chicago Press, 2013), showed how medieval manuscripts were often artfully sequenced and laid out so as to enhance the literary potential of the compilation as a whole. His new book, Chasing the Pearl-Manuscript: Speculation, Shapes, Delight (University of Chicago Press, 2025), applies those insights to the only surviving copy of four extraordinary Middle English poems: PearlCleannessPatience, and (most famously) Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.

11.24.2025

Schoolcraft Collection: Indigenous Languages Books with Sage Innerarity

The Schoolcraft Collection of Books in Indigenous Languages at the Athenaeum contains over 200 published translations of nineteenth-century catechisms, tracts, Bibles, primers, grammars and vocabularies. Over the past year, as part of a grant-funded project from the Lyrasis Foundation, Sage Innerarity, the Boston Athenaeum’s Indigenous Collections Fellow, has been exploring this remarkable collection and developing a new guide to help researchers better understand its historical and cultural context. Sage joined us for a special presentation and shared her work on this project. Learn more about how these materials came to the Athenaeum, as well as how the materials reflect the complex relationships between Indigenous peoples, missionaries, and the organizations responsible for funding and governing missionary efforts.

About the Speaker

Sage Innerarity, MLIS (she/her) is a citizen of the Ione Band of Miwok Indians and the former Indigenous Collections Fellow at the Boston Athenaeum. She is an alumna of Amherst College, where she studied English and American Studies with concentration in Native American Studies. As a Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellow, she combined oral histories and archival research in her summa-recommended, award-winning thesis entitled “Stealing the Fire: (Re)claiming, (Re)telling, and (Re)covering Miwok Creation Stories and Oral Histories.”

In May 2025, Innerarity graduated with her MS from Simmons University School of Library and Information Science (SLIS) where she studied Cultural Heritage Informatics and Archives Management. During her time at Simmons, she was a recipient of the Society of American Archivist’s Mosaic Scholarship and the winner of the Kenneth R. Shaeffer Award. Innerarity continues to support cultural heritage preservation as a member of SAA’s Native American Archives Section Steering Committee and in her role as a Program Coordinator for Fresh Tracks, a program of the Aspen Institute Forum for Community Solutions.

11.21.2025

Artist-Reporters: Documenting Allan Rohan Crite Exhibition Panel

The Boston Collective was a group of emerging artists in the 1980’s who orbited around the significant force that was Allan Rohan Crite (1910-2007). Collective members Aukram Burton and Reggie Jackson have been documenting the life and work of Crite through filmed interviews and photographs while drawing inspiration from him about how to be artists themselves. Hear more about the Boston Collective and the ways that Burton and Jackson helped ensure Allan Rohan Crite’s legacy through their own work.

About the Speakers

Aukram Burton is an educator, media artist, and producer who serves as the Executive Director of the Kentucky Center for African American Heritage. His work illuminates the cultural links between Africa and the African Diaspora through media, exhibitions, and performances. For more than forty years, Aukram has documented the lives and traditions of African-descended communities in various locations, including Barbados, Brazil, Benin, China, Colombia, Cuba, Ghana, Haiti, Jamaica, Japan, Nigeria, Panama, Senegal, South Africa, Tibet, and across the United States. His photography transcends aesthetics—it serves as a form of activism and a means of engagement. Through his lens, Aukram creates counter-narratives that challenge stereotypes and foster a deeper understanding of the African Diaspora. His images focus on dignity, cultural identity, and shared humanity, encouraging reflection and dialogue. With a passion rooted in political awareness, his work affirms the resilience and richness of African-descended communities, aiming to inspire social change through visual storytelling.

Dr. Reginald L. Jackson is the founder and president of Olaleye Communications, Inc. where he serves as a consultant to artists and scholars who are conducting visual and cultural research related to African retentions in the Americas. He is an Emeritus Professor of Communications at Simmons College and worked as academic V.P., Dean of International Relations and Professor of Visual Communications at African University College of Communications in Ghana. As an educator and visual artist, Dr. Jackson has documented African retentions in Ghana, Nigeria, Cuba and Brazil. A prolific exhibitor, he has participated in over 150 exhibitions including Ghana, China and Brazil. Jackson’s work can be found in the permanent collections of institutions such as the MIT Museum, the Studio Museum in Harlem, the Boston Athenaeum, the Bowdoin Museum of Art, the RISD Museum of Art, Yale University Art Gallery, Simmons College and Amherst College.

G McFarland is an artist, archivist, and the Boston Athenaeum’s Allan Rohan Crite Exhibition Assistant. In his practice, G uses film photography and sound recording to produce experimental records of place and phenomena. His work appears under the name Lovett Muds.

11.20.2025

Dark Renaissance: The Dangerous Times and Fatal Genius of Shakespeare’s Greatest Rival by Stephen Greenblatt

Poor boy. Spy. Transgressor. Genius. In repressive Elizabethan England, artists are frightened into dull conventionality; foreigners are suspect; popular entertainment largely consists of coarse spectacles, animal fights, and hangings. Into this crude world of government censorship and religious authoritarianism comes an ambitious cobbler’s son from Canterbury with a daring desire to be known ― and an uncanny ear for Latin poetry. A torment for most schoolboys, yet for a few, like Christopher Marlowe, a secret portal to beauty, visionary imagination, transgressive desire, and dangerous skepticism. What Marlowe seizes in his rare opportunity for a classical education, and what he does with it, brings about a spectacular explosion of English literature, language, and culture. His astonishing literary success will, in turn, nourish the talent of a collaborator and rival, William Shakespeare. Dark Renaissance illuminates both Marlowe’s times and the origins and significance of his work ― from his erotic translations of Ovid to his portrayal of unfettered ambition in a triumphant Tamburlaine to Doctor Faustus, his unforgettable masterpiece about making a pact with the devil in exchange for knowledge. Introducing us to Marlowe’s transgressive genius in the form of a thrilling page-turner, Stephen Greenblatt brings a penetrating understanding of the literary work to reveal the inner world of the author, bringing to life a homosexual atheist who was tormented by his own compromises, who refused to toe the party line, and who was murdered just when he had found love. Meanwhile, he explores how the people Marlowe knew, and the transformations they wrought, gave birth to the economic, scientific, and cultural power of the modern world, including Faustian bargains with which we reckon still.

About the Speaker

Stephen Greenblatt, PhD, is Cogan University Professor of the Humanities at Harvard University and general editor of The Norton Anthology of English Literature. He is the author of the Pulitzer Prize– and National Book Award–winning The Swerve.

11.12.2025

The Second Estate: How the Tax Code Made an American Aristocracy by Ray Madoff

Ray Madoff tells us about her revelatory book that lifts the curtain on America’s most consequential public deception: how the rich get richer using tools the government gave them. Amid conflicting narratives about the drivers of wealth and inequality in the United States, one constant hovers in the background: the US tax code. No political force has been more consequential—or more utterly opaque—than the 7,000-page document that details who pays what in American society and government. Most of us have a sense that it’s an unfair system. But does anyone know exactly how it’s unfair? Legal scholar Ray D. Madoff knows. In The Second Estate, she offers an unprecedented look behind the scenes of America’s byzantine system of taxation, laying bare not only its capacity to consolidate wealth but also the mechanisms by which it has created two fundamentally separate American societies: the working Americans who pay and the ultra-rich who benefit. This is not a story of offshore accounts or secret tax havens. In The Second Estate, Madoff shows that the US system itself has, over time, been stripped and reconstituted such that it now offers a series of secret paths, hidden in plain sight, for wealthy people in the know to avoid taxation altogether. Through the strategic avoidance of traditional income, leveraging of investments and debt, and exploitation of rules designed to promote charitable giving, America’s wealthy do more than just pay less than their share; they remove themselves from the tax system entirely. Wealth becomes its own sovereign state, and the living is surprisingly—and maddeningly—cheap.

About the Speaker

Ray D. Madoff is a professor at Boston College Law School and the cofounder and director of the Boston College Forum on Philanthropy and the Public Good. She is the author of Immortality and the Law: The Rising Power of the American Dead and lead author of The Practical Guide to Estate Planning. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and The New York Review of Books, among other outlets.