Forgotten Places, Living Memory: A New Work by Raja Shehadeh

‘Forgotten’ by Raja Shehadeh and Penny Johnson. Photo: Barnes & Noble

Forgotten: Searching for Palestine’s Hidden Places and Lost Memorials

What do forgotten ruins, abandoned mosques, and erased memorials tell us about a people and their history? In his newest work, Raja Shehadeh, alongside Penny Johnson, takes readers on a journey through Palestine’s hidden past and contested memory.

Palestinian human-rights lawyer, activist, and acclaimed author Raja Shehadeh returns with a new work that is both poignant and necessary. Forgotten: Searching for Palestine’s Hidden Places and Lost Memorials (co-authored with Penny Johnson) is a profound meditation on memory, loss, and the preservation of Palestinian heritage. The book releases on September 30 and is available now for pre-order. (Other Press, 2025)


Uncovering the Forgotten Corners of Palestine

In Forgotten, Shehadeh explores hidden or neglected memorials and places across historic Palestine—now Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories. From ancient ruins to sacred sites like the Nabi ‘Ukkasha mosque and tomb, each chapter reveals what these places might tell us about the land and the people who live between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River.

With Johnson by his side, Shehadeh poses urgent questions: What has been memorialized? What has been left abandoned or erased—and why?


Memory, Erasure, and Resistance

Whether standing on a cliff overlooking Lebanon or at the Dead Sea—the lowest land-based elevation on earth—the authors trace the fragile threads of memory in a fragmented landscape.

In elegiac, elegant prose, they confront the complexities of commemoration: Israel’s resistance to acknowledging the Nakba, and the evolving ways Palestinians remember—or are prevented from remembering—their own history.

Ultimately, Forgotten reminds us that remembering is not a passive act. It is resistance.


Recognition and Praise

  • Publishers Weekly: Longlisted in Fall 2025 Fiction & Nonfiction Preview Titles: History
  • The New Statesman: Book of the Day selection
  • The New Statesman: Named one of the Best Books of 2025 So Far

Forgotten is more than history—it is an act of remembrance, defiance, and storytelling. If you’re interested in exploring how memory shapes identity and belonging, this book deserves a place on your shelf.

📚 Pre-order your copy today and join the conversation on what it means to remember—and resist.


Advance Praise for Forgotten:

“Shehadeh and Johnson, a married couple based in Ramallah, began the book as a way to explore the landscape during the pandemic. The resulting work, Forgotten, is a heartbreaking, hopeful look at how Palestinian culture endures in spite of the occupation and the Israeli government’s attempts to remove all traces of it from the land that they ‘share unequally.'” —THE IRISH TIMES

“In this journey through Palestine, married couple Shehadeh and Johnson explore the careless treatment and outright destruction of the region’s Muslim memorials and historical sites. One of the more complex realities they grapple with is not just Israel’s hand in erasing this history, but Palestine’s own role.” —THE NEW STATESMAN

A Story Between Survival, Hope, and Reckoning: ‘Israel: A Personal History’

In ‘Israel,’ Göran Rosenberg, son of Holocaust survivors grapples with the dream of Zionism and its consequences. Photo: Other Press

Book Spotlight: Israel: A Personal History by Göran Rosenberg

On Sale: October 7, 2025 | Published by Other Press

Combining poignant memoir and historical research, Israel: A Personal History tells the story of a son of Holocaust survivors grappling with the dream of Zionism and its consequences. Originally published in Swedish, this highly acclaimed book will be available in English this fall. (Other Press, 2025)


Where the Story Begins

Israel picks up where Göran Rosenberg’s internationally acclaimed and award-winning childhood memoir, A Brief Stop on the Road From Auschwitz, leaves off.

After his father’s suicide in 1960 in a small industrial town in Sweden, Rosenberg’s mother emigrates with her two children to Israel. At first, young Göran is swept into the world of pioneer Zionism—enchanted by its ideals, visions, and ethos. But as he grows, his journey becomes one of uncovering betrayed ideals, buried stories, false promises, and erased villages.


A Personal and Political Exploration

The result is a work that is both deeply personal and meticulously researched. Rosenberg explores the contradictory visions that shaped the Zionist project, alongside the ethnic violence, oppression, discrimination, and dispossession that followed in its realization.

Part memoir, part history of ideas, Israel is also the political autobiography of a Jewish European intellectual—“a child of dreams and disillusionments, an astute observer of our times.”


About the Author

Göran Rosenberg was born in 1948 in Sweden, the son of Auschwitz survivors. He is the author of several books, including:

  • Det förlorade landet (Israel: A Personal History in Swedish)
  • A Brief Stop on the Road From Auschwitz (Other Press, 2015)
  • Another Zionism, Another Judaism (Other Press, 2025)

📚 Recognized by Publishers Weekly: Israel: A Personal History was longlisted in Publishers Weekly’s Fall 2025 Fiction & Nonfiction Preview: History.


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‘The Shape of Wonder’: Lightman and Rees on the Human Side of Science

Unveiling ‘The Shape of Wonder,’ a journey into the lives of scientists by Alan Lightman and Martin Rees. Photo: Penguin Random House

Book Announcement: The Shape of Wonder by Alan Lightman and Martin Rees

Pantheon Books is proud to announce the upcoming release of The Shape of Wonder: How Scientists Think, Work, and Live, a captivating exploration of the scientific world by renowned physicists Alan Lightman and Martin Rees. Scheduled for release on September 2, 2025, this insightful book promises to demystify the scientific process and humanize the brilliant minds behind groundbreaking discoveries. (Penguin Random House, 2025)


Why This Book Matters

In an age of rapid scientific discovery and technological advancement, it’s understandable that many feel uneasy about the future. While we might place our trust in science when boarding an airplane, undergoing a medical procedure, or stepping into an elevator, the lives and motivations of scientists themselves often feel hidden from view.

This distance has bred a troubling mistrust. Concerns about political agendas, financial interests, or institutional ties have caused skepticism toward science at a time when trust is most crucial.

With the challenges of climate change, pandemics, nuclear threats, artificial intelligence, and genetic engineering, understanding science—and those who shape it—has never been more urgent.


Inside The Shape of Wonder

Lightman and Rees take readers inside the minds and lives of scientists across generations and disciplines:

  • A young theoretical physicist and rock climber at the University of Washington.
  • Werner Heisenberg, whose early interests in music and philosophy shaped his path to physics.
  • Govind Swarup, the pioneering Indian astronomer whose work on radio telescopes transformed astronomy.

Through these stories, readers glimpse the passions, daily lives, and ethical concerns of scientists—revealing that they, too, are guided by curiosity, wonder, and responsibility toward the future.


A Manifesto for Science

More than biography, The Shape of Wonder is a manifesto calling for a deeper appreciation of scientific inquiry and its ethical responsibilities. Featuring figures such as Charles Darwin, Barbara McClintock, and Werner Heisenberg, the book presents science as a deeply human endeavor—one that depends on trust, curiosity, and imagination.


Meet the Authors

  • Alan Lightman is a physicist, essayist, and bestselling author of Einstein’s Dreams. He has taught at Harvard and MIT and hosts the PBS series Searching: Our Quest for Meaning in the Age of Science.
  • Martin Rees, the UK’s Astronomer Royal, is a Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, former President of the Royal Society, and co-founder of the Centre for the Study of Existential Risks at Cambridge University.

Together, they bring unparalleled insight and perspective to this vital book.


Who Should Read This Book?

The Shape of Wonder is ideal for readers who enjoyed Edward O. Wilson’s Letters to a Young Scientist, as well as anyone fascinated by:

  • Astronomy & physics
  • The natural world
  • Lives of great scientific thinkers
  • The human side of discovery

Release Details

📖 The Shape of Wonder: How Scientists Think, Work, and Live
✍️ By Alan Lightman & Martin Rees
📅 Release Date: September 2, 2025
📚 Publisher: Pantheon Books


This book is a timely, inspiring call to see science not as something distant or abstract, but as a profoundly human pursuit—driven by the same curiosity and wonder that shapes us all.


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Colonial Echoes in a Modern World: Edwy Plenel’s Urgent Wake-Up Call

‘The Garden and the Jungle’ by award-winning French journalist Edwy Plenel. Photo: Other Press.

Coming September 9, 2025

The Garden and the Jungle: How the West Sees the World

By Edwy Plenel • Translated by Luke Leafgren

From renowned journalist and essayist Edwy Plenel—former Editorial Director of Le Monde and cofounder of the investigative platform Mediapart—comes a searing and timely critique of Europe’s moral and political failures. The Garden and the Jungle: How the West Sees the World explores how the West, in clinging to myths of superiority and civility, betrays the very values it claims to uphold. It is available for pre-order. (Other Press, 2025)

In the tradition of Hannah Arendt’s The Origins of Totalitarianism, Noam Chomsky’s Illegitimate Authority, and Louisa Lim’s Indelible City, Plenel offers a provocative examination of Western power, politics, and perception in an increasingly unstable world.

At the heart of the book is a statement made in 2022 by Josep Borrell, the EU’s top diplomat:

“Europe is a garden… Most of the rest of the world is a jungle, and the jungle could invade the garden.”

This worldview, rooted in colonial arrogance, reveals a Europe that still sees itself as the guardian of civilization—under siege by an unruly, dangerous “outside.” Plenel argues that such thinking not only distorts history but also deepens the divide between the West and the global majority, fueling resentment, conflict, and resistance.

With a powerful new introduction for U.S. readers, The Garden and the Jungle is a call to reimagine Europe—and the political West—as part of, not above, the shared human experience. It is a plea for humility, solidarity, and the rediscovery of true universal values.


About the Author

Edwy Plenel is an award-winning journalist, essayist, and cofounder of Mediapart. He is the author of For the Muslims: Islamophobia in France, and was formerly Editorial Director of Le Monde.

About the Translator

Luke Leafgren is Assistant Dean of Harvard College. An acclaimed literary translator, he has translated seven novels from Arabic and is a two-time recipient of the Saif Ghobash Banipal Prize, including for The President’s Gardens by Muhsin Al-Ramli and Mister N. by Najwa Barakat.


🗓 Publication Date: September 9, 2025
📘 Format: Trade Paperback Original
📚 Publisher: Other Press


Advance Praise for The Garden and the Jungle:

“Insistently historical, geopolitically capacious, Edwy Plenel’s The Garden and the Jungle is bracing. It insists that we take a step back so that we face, without flinching, the truth of our world. Because it is only in so doing that we can undo the ugliness that has for too long marred human existence.”
—Grant Farred, author of The Perversity of Gratitude: An Apartheid Education

“This passionate, eloquent book is an outstanding portrait of the savagery of our times in the heart of civilization. Edwy Plenel, France’s outstanding journalist, writes of an empire of radical evil bent on the destruction of ideals of universal human rights and law. The source of toxicity in the ruling classes is the greed for riches never satisfied. Western imperial attitudes of superiority inside its walled garden keeping out the feared jungle, must change—this book is a trigger.”
—Victoria Brittain, author of Shadow Lives: The Forgotten Women of the War on Terror

“Edwy Plenel acutely and unsparingly diagnoses, in a time of genocide, the fatal flaw in Europe’s grandiose self-image. Anyone hoping for a future of less suffering and misery cannot afford to miss reading The Garden and the Jungle.”
—Pankaj Mishra, author of The World After Gaza


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Hope in Hard Times: Why ‘A More Perfect Union’ Matters Now More Than Ever

Sojourners’ President Rev. Adam Russell Taylor has unifying vision for America in these divided times. Photo: Barnes & Noble

📚 “A More Perfect Union” by Rev. Adam Russell Taylor Reissued in Paperback

Broadleaf Books has reissued Rev. Adam Russell Taylor’s timely and compelling work, “A More Perfect Union: A New Vision for Building the Beloved Community,” now available in paperback. (Mixte Communications, 2025)

First published in 2021, this powerful public narrative speaks directly to the fractures and threats facing American democracy today. As the nation confronts deep divisions and looming dangers like Project 2025, Taylor calls for a moral realignment grounded in shared values, inclusive ideals, and a bold vision for unity.

Reimagining the Beloved Community

In “A More Perfect Union,” Taylor draws from the moral vision of the Beloved Community — a concept rooted in the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the Civil Rights Movement. His approach bridges generational, geographic, class, racial, gender, and ideological divides, aiming to inspire collective action and hope in a time of uncertainty.

A Moral Call at a Crossroads

With a foreword by the late Rep. John Lewis, the 249-page book challenges readers to recognize the pivotal moment we face and to embrace the work of national healing. Taylor’s message is clear: the journey toward a more just and inclusive America must begin now.

“A More Perfect Union” is available in both hardcover and paperback wherever books are sold.

👩‍💻 About the Author

Rev. Adam Russell Taylor is president of Sojourners, an ecumenical Christian organization that works to advance justice and peace. He previously led the Faith Initiative at the World Bank Group, served as Vice President of Advocacy at World Vision U.S., was co-founder and executive director of Global Justice, and was selected as a White House Fellow under the Obama administration.


Praise for “A More Perfect Union”:

“America stands on a knife’s edge. If we are to survive this moment, with its pitfalls and perils, we have to figure out how to be together differently.” –  Eddie S. Glaude Jr., author of “Begin Again: James Baldwin’s America and Its Urgent Lessons for Our Own.”

“This essential book reframes and renews the vision from our earliest history, in the civil rights movement, to some of the most hopeful and powerful new examples of it today.” – Jim Wallis, Director of the Georgetown University Center on Faith and Justice, founder of Sojourners, and New York Times bestselling author.

“An urgent and eloquent volume. Adam Russell Taylor invokes history, theology, and organizing experience to make clear that the idea guiding the witness of Martin Luther King Jr. and John Lewis should be our North Star in leading toward redemption, renewal, and social reconstruction.” – E. J. Dionne Jr., author of “Our Divided Political Heart” and “Code Red.”


The Cost of Conscience: Exploring Justice and Corruption in ‘The Middleman’

‘The Middleman’ is Mike Papantonio’s new thought-provoking legal thriller. Photo: Barnes & Noble

“The Middleman” by Mike Papantonio is a gripping legal thriller that explores the high-stakes world of whistleblowers, corruption, and corporate greed. Drawing heavily from real-world headlines, the novel weaves a fast-paced narrative that’s as timely as it is thrilling. Papantonio, a renowned trial lawyer, uses his insider knowledge of the justice system to craft a story that feels disturbingly authentic.

The plot centers around Amy Redmond, the president of EirePharma, the Redmond family business and a powerful Pharmacy Benefit Manager (PBM). EirePharma was recently taken over by the charismatic CEO Connor Devlin who she suspects of using racketeering practices—and perhaps murder—to raise the prices of insulin for his own profit that ultimately harms consumers.

Amy is engaged to Connor but she tentatively decides to become a whistleblower as she tries to gather evidence to make sure Connor pays for his crimes. Nicholas “Deke” Deketomis and his law firm have a reputation for taking on America’s Big Pharma, so when Deke’s college friend and Amy’s cousin Matt Redmond presents him with a case of possible fraud, he agrees to investigate the matter. Amy is caught in the middle of a deadly game of wills between a formidable gangster, who in the eyes of the public is a respected businessman, and a law firm that is determined to investigate and uncover Connor’s crimes.

As the stakes rise, the characters are drawn into a deadly game of cat-and-mouse, where truth comes at a steep price. Murder, manipulation, and lies blur the lines between right and wrong, keeping readers on edge until the final page. The narration is non-linear, providing the necessary character development to make them relatable. There is not much court drama and the language doesn’t include too much legal terminology; instead, it focuses on the intense relationship between Amy and Connor, as Amy tries to gather the necessary evidence to convict him and Connor’s use of mobster-like tactics to preserve his way of life. Papantonio doesn’t just tell a story—he delivers a wake-up call about the consequences of unchecked power and the courage it takes to stand against it.

Overall, “The Middleman” is a suspenseful blend of mystery and moral urgency. By exploring the themes of family, friendship, justice, and good vs. evil, it creates a compelling and thought-provoking story. With sharp dialogue and a plot full of twists, this book is recommended for fans of John Grisham or anyone intrigued by the dark intersections of law, politics, and corporate influence.

*The author of this blog received a copy for an honest review. The views and opinions expressed here belong solely to her.

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Related post: Mike Papantonio’s ‘The Middleman’: A Legal Thriller That Hits Close to Home

New memoir: ‘Iowa Trouble’ by Tyler Granger

‘Iowa Trouble’ is a politics centered memoir by Tyler Granger, a lifetime Iowan who was heavily involved in the area’s politics. Photo: Tyler Granger, used with permission.

Tyler Granger is a lifelong Iowan who wanted to share his life’s journey and began writing his memoir in 2020 for his infant daughter so she would have a book about her father and her family’s history. He shares his journey in this memoir, which includes stories ranging from football to Warped Tour to working for the Obama campaign. He has a degree in political science from Northwestern College and has worked on a variety of political campaigns and non-profits across Iowa. “Iowa Trouble” is a memoir of political violence across Iowa mixed with a variety of horror stories from punk sub-culture to Iowa gangsters to the politics of the Iowa Caucus. (Tyler Granger, 2023)

“Iowa Trouble” – while it is not for everyone, it includes something for everyone. It is a coming of age/gangster novel/political thriller/horror memoir with the target audience being punks and political junkies.

* Disclaimer: This self-published memoir includes stories of murder, rape, drugs and alcohol, political corruption, and other violent crimes that could be potentially emotionally distressing for some readers.

Author Tyler Granger. Courtesy photo, used with permission.

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