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New Books to Read This Week
If you are on the hunt for new books to read, this week is a great one. Arcadia Publishing has just released a fresh batch of local history titles covering everything from the life of a legendary American songwriter to...
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Why Pride Still Matters: History, Struggle, and the Fight That Isn't Over

Every June, rainbow flags line the streets, parades wind through city centers, and the word "Pride" takes on a festive, celebratory energy. And that celebration is earned. But Pride was never just a party. It was born from resistance, sustained by grief, and is still fueled by necessity. To truly honor Pride, we have to understand where it came from and why the work is not finished.

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If You Love Widow's Bay, Read These Books Next

If you have been watching Widow's Bay on Apple TV+ and finding yourself equal parts spooked and delighted, you are in very good company. What makes the show so addictive is that rare tonal tightrope walk: it is genuinely funny and genuinely scary, often in the same scene. If you find yourself craving more of that North Shore historic (and maybe haunted) vibe, we have some books for you. Here are our picks for readers who can't get enough of Widow's Bay. 

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New Local History Books Publishing Today

Whether you grew up tracing battle routes on old maps or you've always suspected that New England's past holds more secrets than the history books let on, today is a good day to be a reader. We're proud to announce five new titles joining our catalog, and this batch might be our most exciting yet.

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On This Day in History: President Andrew Jackson Signs the Indian Removal Act

On this day 196 years ago, President Andrew Jackson signed one of the most consequential and devastating pieces of legislation in American history. The Indian Removal Act, signed into law on May 28, 1830, authorized the president to grant lands west of the Mississippi in exchange for Indian lands within existing state borders. What followed was not a peaceful exchange. It was the forced uprooting of entire nations.

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New Books That Should Definitely Be on Your Shelves

If you have been searching for new regional history books, deeply researched community histories, or titles that fill the gaps left by mainstream publishing, your search ends here.

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On This Day in History: Two Flights That Changed Aviation Forever

May 21 belongs to the sky. On this date, separated by exactly five years, two pioneering aviators accomplished what many believed was impossible, crossing the Atlantic Ocean alone and changing the course of aviation history in the process. In 1927, Charles Lindbergh landed his Spirit of St. Louis in Paris after a grueling solo flight from New York. In 1932, Amelia Earhart touched down near Londonderry, Northern Ireland, becoming the first woman to make the same journey alone. Together, their stories form one of the most remarkable coincidences in the history of flight.

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New Books You're Not Going to Want to Miss

Few things connect us to a place quite like its history and its food. Today is a great day for readers who love both, as a new collection of titles arrives from one of the most dedicated local publishers in the country (surprise, it's us, Arcadia Publishing).

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On This Day in 1869: The National Woman Suffrage Association Is Founded in New York

Every election in which a woman casts a vote carries a thread back to that day in 1869. It is a reminder that rights often have to be demanded before they are granted, and that the work of demanding them requires people willing to build something lasting.

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New Local History Books Out Today

Local history is not just about the past. It is about understanding who we are, how our communities were shaped, and what has been carried forward across generations. Each new title published today adds another layer to that ongoing conversation, giving readers the chance to see familiar places through unfamiliar eyes.

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Mother's Day Guide 2026: Books to Write Home About
Give the gift of home: find the stories about the places from the place she loves most. Find Books by Zip Code   📚 Quick Picks Go-to favorites for anyone. For the Mom who... Misses home Loves Mysteries Loves Exploring...
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New Books You Want to Add to Your TBR

Today's new local history book releases represent a continued commitment to telling the stories that matter most at the community level. From the personal insights shared by our authors to the meticulous research woven through every chapter, each new title is a testament to the richness of local and regional history waiting to be discovered.

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New Local History Books You're Not Going to Want to Miss

Tuesday means new books, and that means somewhere in America today, a community is about to see its story on a shelf for the very first time.

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The Books Are Here and So Are the Stories Behind Them

There's a particular kind of person who writes local history. They're usually the one at the dinner table who knows the real story behind every street name, can't drive past an old building without wondering who built it, and has been meaning to write all of this down for years before they finally just did it. Today, a few more of those people officially have their names on the spine of a book — and we couldn't be more proud to publish them.

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New Books Publishing Today

Every Tuesday, Arcadia adds fresh titles to a catalog that has spent decades doing what national publishers don't bother with: preserving the histories of small towns, overlooked industries, complicated communities, and the people who built them. This week's lineup is no exception

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New Books Publishing Today!

There is something a little magical about the day a new book officially exists in the world. After years of research, interviews, photo archives, and late nights spent chasing down the details that make a story worth telling, today is that day for a fresh batch of local history books from Arcadia Publishing. These are books about places you may have driven through a hundred times without knowing their full story, the kind of reads that make the familiar feel brand new.

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Riding Into History: The Launch of the Pony Express

On April 3, 1860, (166 years ago to the day), the Pony Express made its inaugural run, sending riders simultaneously east from Sacramento, California and west from St. Joseph, Missouri. What followed was one of the most audacious logistical experiments in American history: a relay system of horse and rider teams that would carry letters nearly 2,000 miles across prairies, deserts, and mountains in approximately ten days, cutting the previous mail delivery time nearly in half. It was thrilling, dangerous, expensive, and short-lived. And it captured the American imagination in a way that few endeavors ever have, before or since.

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Who is really the fool?

Every year on April 1st, the internet erupts in fake announcements, friends short-sheet each other's beds, and news organizations publish stories that are just plausible enough to make you pause. April Fools' Day is one of the most universally observed unofficial holidays in the world. And yet, for all its ubiquity, no one can quite agree on where it came from.

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New books publishing today!
History isn't only made in capitals and courtrooms, it's made in backcountry fields, mining camps, small-town gristmills, and along roadways dotted with hand-painted barn signs. Today, Arcadia Publishing releases a fresh batch of titles that prove exactly that. Every community...
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Women's History Month Feature | Susan B. Anthony: A Women's History Month Tribute to a Suffrage Pioneer

This Women's History Month, few names deserve more recognition than Susan B. Anthony. A pivotal force in the women's suffrage movement, Anthony played a central role in the decades-long fight that eventually secured American women the right to vote. Her story is one of extraordinary persistence: a woman who spent more than half a century fighting a battle she would not live to see won, and who kept going anyway.

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Women's History Month Feature | Amelia Bloomer: Suffragist, Editor, and the Woman Who Changed Fashion Forever

You've probably heard the word "bloomers" but do you know the woman behind it? Amelia Jenks Bloomer was an early suffragist, newspaper editor, and social activist who worked to change not only women's clothing styles, but the very fabric of American society. Her name became forever linked to a pair of trousers, but her true legacy runs far deeper than fashion, she was a trailblazing journalist, a tireless reformer, and one of the quiet architects of the women's rights movement.

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