The Thread® - Books and Literary News

The Thread from MPR News

The Thread® is your source for book recommendations and other literary news.

Ask a Bookseller

Ask a Bookseller is a weekly series where The Thread checks in with booksellers around the country about their favorite books of the moment. Listen to Ask a Bookseller to find your next favorite book.

Big Books and Bold Ideas

Big Books and Bold Ideas is a weekly series hosted by Kerri Miller every Friday at 11 a.m., featuring conversations about books and other literary ideas. Listen to Big Books and Bold Ideas here.

Sign Up for The Thread® Newsletter

Sign up for The Thread newsletter to get reading recommendations from Kerri Miller and other bookworms around the MPR newsroom. Find reviews for new releases, as well as hidden gems you may have missed.

Talking Volumes

Talking Volumes is back for its 25th season. Join us at the Fitzgerald Theater for four special events with renowned authors, celebrating our anniversary with a special $25 ticket price for MPR members and Star Tribune subscribers. Buy tickets here.

The most hated woman in China was its last empress. Host and Talking Volumes producer Heather McElhatton interviews Anchee Min about her book Empress Orchid. The author talks about re-imagining the Ching Dynasty court and the women who rose to power amid intrigue and murder. The conversation was recorded at the Fitzgerald Theater on April 20.
A new book explores Genghis Khan's civic side. A Macalester College professor's best-seller maintains the feared Mongol invader instituted many reforms that were well ahead of the times.
Sandra Benitez writes of bi-culturalism and the search for a long-lost brother in her latest novel. It's the story of a Minneapolis woman exploring lessons of healing embedded in rural Mexican traditions.
The most hated woman in China was its last empress. The next in the Talking Volumes series is based on a true story of palace intrigue and murder, re-imagined by author Anchee Min.
Her husband's daily view of life and death as a nurse inspired a poet's precise observations of how those experiences look and feel.
A recorded broadcast of a Talking Volumes conversation. Greta Cunningham interviews Shannon Olson, author of Children of God Go Bowling.
Dr. Seuss' first book was published in 1958. What was fresh and different back then remains so for the children of those first children to read books like The Cat in the Hat.
British writer Sarah Dunant's new novel opens with a scandalous discovery in 15th-century Italy. Two nuns preparing the body of Sister Lucretzia for burial, find a beautifully ornate tattoo of a snake slithering down her torso. The book tells how that tattoo got there. It's the story of nun as a young woman growing up in Florence at the birth of the Renaissance, experiencing the excitement and the terrors of the time.