“The Leftover Woman” follows two struggling women living completely different lives. How do their paths overlap?
With the republication of “The Children’s Bach,” a 1984 novel, and “This House of Grief,” a 2014 account of a murder trial, the Australian writer Helen Garner is ripe for discovery by American readers.
In “The Upside-Down World,” Benjamin Moser roams the galleries of the Netherlands in search of clues to the artists’ biographies.
In her new book, “Brainwyrms,” Alison Rumfitt reimagines contemporary anti-trans bigotry as a ravenous helminth that causes its hosts to go violently mad.
“The Reign of Marvel Studios” captures how movies based on comic-book properties came to dominate pop culture. At least until now.
An anthology that combines new work with selections from The Brownies’ Book, a children’s magazine launched by W.E.B. Du Bois, is bringing its mission to bear in a new national context.
The filmmaker’s new memoir, “Every Man for Himself and God Against All,” prompts a critic’s incredulity.
For $27 (not including tax and shipping), you can own a baseball cap embroidered with the name of your favorite literary darling, too.
Justin Torres’s genre-defying new book, “Blackouts,” explores what it means to be erased and how to persist after being wiped away.
New works of nonfiction and fiction transcend stereotypes, and connect a wealth of ideas and facts for young readers.
New works of nonfiction and fiction transcend stereotypes, and connect a wealth of ideas and facts for young readers.
Mary Gabriel’s biography is as thorough as its subject is disciplined. But in relentlessly defending the superstar, where’s the party?
As the former White House aide goes on a book tour, frankly discussing the men who felt free to comment on and assess her appearance, she has a more relaxed look.
A new collection of her novels and stories is a showcase for a science fiction pioneer.
Published in Japan in 1988, this novel follows a 19-year-old daughter in a happy family who starts to wonder if they are not really hers.
Four recent books wrangle with threats to — and from — the American news media.
Two books with nothing in common except for Molly Young’s enthusiasm, and possibly yours.
While working on a new novel, “Mister, Mister,” the author Guy Gunaratne examined Britain’s political legacy, and underwent a deeply personal transformation.
The heroine of Ainslie Hogarth’s “Normal Women” is so desperate to escape the confines of conventional, upper-middle-class womanhood that she turns to a yoga studio that looks a lot like a cult.
The best-selling novelist refuses to yield when it comes to writing software, but she’s had a bit of a change of heart on Barnes & Noble.
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