11 Books to Read: The Best Reviews of April

The truth of daily life under Stalin, keeping time in a world before clocks, how the Rolling Stones began and more.

Always Under Siege: Olga Freidenberg’s Diary-Theory and the Everyday Terror of Stalinism

By Irina Paperno | Cornell

Olga Freidenberg’s journals recorded the indignities and horrors of daily life in the Soviet Union. Review by Gary Saul Morson

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Beyond Inheritance: Our Ever-Mutating Cells and a New Understanding of Health

By Roxanne Khamsi Riverhead

Genetic mutations are more pervasive than previously thought, causing cancer and other ailments. Are there possible benefits as well? Review by David A. Shaywitz

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The Fullness of Time: Marking the Day by Birdsong, Blooms, Shadows, and Stars

By Cathy Haynes | Riverhead

Before the era of standardized clocks, communities marked the hours through signs glimpsed in the natural world. Review by Brandy Shillace

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Gilgamesh: A New Verse Translation

By Simon Armitage | Liveright

The epic of Gilgamesh is more than 40 centuries old. Simon Armitage’s new translation feels thrillingly alive. Review by William Giraldi

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James Joyce: A Political Life

By Frank Callanan | Princeton

The writer left his native Ireland when he was a young man, but the nation’s struggle for independence haunted the fiction he wrote in exile. Review by James Campbell

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John Foster Dulles: Apostle of American Empire

By Bevan Sewell | Johns Hopkins

As secretary of state, Dulles kept the U.S. out of major wars and came to recognize the danger of an all-or-nothing approach to nuclear weapons. Review by Richard Aldous

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London Falling: A Mysterious Death in a Gilded City and a Family’s Search for Truth

By Patrick Radden Keefe | Doubleday

The death of a British teen reveals a bizarre tale of avarice and deception. Review by Dominic Green

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Prophecy: Prediction, Power, and the Fight for the Future, from Ancient Oracles to AI

By Carissa Véliz | Doubleday

Prophecy is often about power. Those who are believed to be able to see the future are granted more control in the present. Review by Julian Baggini

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The Rolling Stones: A Biography

By Bob Spitz | Penguin Press

Keith Richards and Mick Jagger built the Rolling Stones out of endless hours of practice. The carnival of excess would come later. Review by David Kirby

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This Is Not About Running: A Memoir

By Mary Cain | Mariner

Mary Cain set several national high-school track records before turning pro as a teenager. Her memoir depicts a toxic athletic subculture. Review by James S. Hirsch

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This Vast Enterprise: A New History of Lewis & Clark

By Craig Fehrman | Avid Reader

Lewis and Clark’s expedition to the Pacific was aimed at mapping trade routes, but its heroic ambition shaped the identity of a young nation. Review by Karin Altenberg

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