Rather than slogging through a lake of reviews to find something you’re just going to put down after 30 minutes, Cult of Mac has once again waded through the iTunes store to compile a list of the best new movies, albums and books to come out this week.
Enjoy!
Music
St. Vincent – St. Vincent

Singer/songwriter/guitar-shredder Annie Clark’s fourth studio album as St. Vincent is full of twists and turns, sonic textures, and balladry, making St. Vincent her best album ever. Beyonce and Gaga may reign supreme among female entertainers, but St. Vincent asserts herself as a pyrotechnic guitarist laying down rhythmic somersaults. Lorde be damned, there’s nothing quite like her mix of vocal range and captivating balance of experimental leanings and pop sensations.
iTunes – $7.99
SchoolBoy Q – Oxymoron

Everyone’s talking about Beck this week and the new album he released after six years of silence, but while Morning Phase is great and definitely worth a listen, I’ve been addicted to SchoolBoy Q’s Oxymoron. The front five tracks are especially hard to escape from a repeat loop. It’s the best rap album so far this year and enlists collaborators such as Kendrick Lamar, 2 Chainz, ASAP Rocky, Jay Rock, Tyler the Creator and Kurupt, among others.
iTunes – $12.99
Wild Beasts – Present Tense

Present Tense, Wild Beasts’, fourth LP, is simply brilliant. After taking a full year off to recoup from a two-year tour for their last album, the band presents their most human musical portrait, even if its a bit less accessible than their other albums.
iTunes – $9.99
Books
The Future of the Mind
by Michio Kaku

Not a week passes where we don’t hear of scientist making an incredible new discovery about how the brain works but where is all that info leading us? In his book The Future of the Mind, Michio Kaku surveys the latest findings by scientists to give readers a better idea of how the brain works as well as dancing with future ideas like smart pills to enhance cognition; downloading brains neuron by neuron, or even sending our emotions and consciousness out into space.
iTunes – $11.99
Neanderthal Man: In Search of Lost Genomes
by Svante Pääbo

As fun as it is to celebrate just how damn smart humans have become, it’s also good to see where we’ve come from. Geneticist Svante Pääbo’s book Neanderthal Man analyzes what we can learn from the genomes of our closest evolutionary relatives as he searches for the mysterious answer as to why humans survived while Neanderthals went kaput.
iTunes – $19.99
The Wives of Los Alamos
by TaraShea Nesbit

Growing up in New Mexico, I was always aware that the genius scientists who researched energy sources at Los Alamos National Lab were a main fount of state pride. This is where we first built and detonated The Bomb, after all. It’s one of only two laboratories in the U.S. where research is done on nuclear weapons, but Tarashea Nesbit’s book The Wives of Los Alamos focuses on the town’s softer side. As the bomb was being invented, babies were born, friendships were forged, children grew up and Los Alamos gradually transformed from an abandoned school on a hill into a real community.
iTunes – $11.99
Movies
The Book Thief

Based on the novel of the same name by Markus Zusak, Emily Watson and Geoffrey Rush star in this inspirational film about a girl named Leslie, whose adoptive German parents hide a Jew from Hitler’s army. As the war effort deepens, Leslie becomes obsessed with books and the escape they provide from the brutal backdrop of World War II.
iTunes – $14.99
Frozen

Indie Oscar flicks get all the attention this time of year, but for kids no movie was bigger this winter than Frozen, Disney’s latest animated journey. This epic ice capade pits Anna, a fearless optimist, against mountain man Kristoff and his loyal reindeer Sven. Of course, things go wrong after Anna’s sister is missing, so the crew sets off on an journey that’s full of mystical trolls, weird-talking snowman and enough snow to keep you cold through the summer.
iTunes – $19.99
The Great Beauty

If you don’t mind reading subtitles, Great Beauty was one of the best films to polish your eyeballs with in 2013 and now it’s finally on iTunes. The movie follows an aging socialite, Jep Gambardella, who wrote a famous novel in his 20s, only to retire into a comfortable life writing cultural columns and throwing parties in Rome. After his 65th birthday party, where he is feted at a disco party straight out of Fellini, he walks through the ruins and city streets, encountering the various characters, reflecting on his life, his first love, and sense of unfulfillment.
iTunes – $19.99