The British writer Yomi Adegoke initially supported the anonymous spreadsheets that began appearing online in 2017. A journey to a more ambivalent position inspired her debut novel, “The List.”
“The Most Secret Memory of Men,” by Mohamed Mbougar Sarr, examines a plagiarism case and the place of African literature in the West.
The new book by Adam Nagourney offers an in-depth look at how a newspaper navigated reporting challenges, financial crises and the transition to the digital era.
In Lisa M. Hamilton’s new book, a Hmong refugee turns a patch of arid farmland into a kingdom.
Ben Fountain’s new novel, “Devil Makes Three,” is a study of opportunism and deception during a political crisis.
“Fear Is Just a Word,” by the New York Times reporter Azam Ahmed, tells the story of a woman determined to avenge her daughter’s death at the hands of a drug cartel.
“The End of Eden” is Adam Welz’s moving, chilling elegy for biodiversity as we know it.
Her new novel, “Night Watch,” is a mother-daughter story set in a West Virginia mental institution.
A prolific feminist turns her sights to the opposite sex.
Her second novel, “The Unsettled,” follows three generations in a family divided between the North and the South in 1980s America.
Isle McElroy’s second novel, “People Collide,” puts a pair of bored newlyweds in each other’s shoes.
The Substack pundit Fredrik deBoer and the political scientist Yascha Mounk feel that liberal ideologues and “woke” pretenders have marred American life.
In her memoir, “Thicker Than Water,” the famously private “Scandal” star opens up about the family secret that made her question whether she was playing the lead role in her own life.
In her memoir, “Thicker Than Water,” the famously private “Scandal” star opens up about the family secret that made her question whether she was playing the lead role in her own life.
Answering reader mail with a recommended crime series and a book about architecture.
Derna, which lost entire neighborhoods and thousands of residents in the deluge, has a history as a cultural and intellectual hub as well as a rebellious streak.
“I would like not to be a hermit,” the former White House aide says upon the publication of a memoir about her journey down a political rabbit hole.
In Eliza Clark’s novel “Penance,” a 16-year-old becomes more fascinating in death than she was in life.
Emily Wilson’s translation of the “Iliad” brings Homer’s great war story to rousing new life.
In Nora Fussner’s new novel, the jaded producers of “Searching For … the Invisible World” are pulled into a haunted story they initially refuse to believe.
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