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It's our literary hour today on Cincinnati Edition. Our guest experts answer your questions about what to read this season.
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Tess Gunty's "The Rabbit Hutch," a sweeping debut novel set in a low-income housing community in Indiana, has won the National Book Award for fiction. The 30-year-old Gunty was among three writers nominated for their first published books.
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The regional book festival is this weekend at the Duke Energy Convention Center.
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Author Wajahat Ali talks about moving beyond intolerance and polarization.
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Dr. Baldwin, author of 'In The Shadow of the Ivory Tower,' will speak at University of Cincinnati Oct. 6.
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In his book “The Insect Crisis” Oliver Milman explores a crisis in the insect world, what’s causing it, and what can be done about it.
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A year after America's withdrawal from Afghanistan, a soldier talks about a mission to rescue alliesAs the Taliban closed in, hundreds of Afghan citizens found escape with the help of U.S. combat veterans. One of those veterans talks to Cincinnati Edition about the rescue effort.
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Parton was the special guest at a luncheon at Ohio State University with Ohio first lady Fran DeWine, where the country music legend talked about her modest beginnings with her large family in her hometown near Sevierville, Tennessee.
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He’s written about Devo, the tire industry and the Rust Belt. Now, author David Giffels is turning his 2009 memoir “All the Way Home” into a half-hour series, working alongside the creative minds behind the television series “The Goldbergs” and the 2016 film “Ordinary World."
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Journalist Joshua Prager spent hundreds of hours speaking with the woman known as Jane Roe. He describes her as an imperfect plaintiff.