The comedian’s mental health got so bad she had to stop performing. Now she has returned.
In “Glitter and Concrete,” Elyssa Maxx Goodman traces the emergence of drag in the early 1900s, its descent underground after the Depression and its 1980s renaissance, spurred by club culture.
Hannah Stowe grew up in coastal Wales, dreaming of a life on the ocean. Her memoir, “Move Like Water,” recounts how she pursued her passion.
There are strikes, culture wars, actual wars, and the world is on fire. But there is still culture.
In her eighth novel, “The Wren, the Wren,” Anne Enright gives voice to a daughter and granddaughter who fend for themselves after their patriarch’s abandonment.
“The Wolves of Eternity” wrestles with conflicting worldviews in a tale of intersecting lives.
In books, articles and lectures across Europe and America, he broadened an international appreciation of his native country’s rich dance tradition.
Our critic Jennifer Szalai discusses Walter Isaacson’s biography of the billionaire entrepreneur along with her recent profile of Klein, the Canadian writer and activist.
From the dark heart of a misguided follower to the young hand of a diarist whose words outlived her, these novels encompass the full spectrum of humanity.
An exhibition about the bohemian set’s “philosophy of fashion” goes deeper than just clothes.
The fruits of a free-ranging reading week were a fascinating book on China and a political science paper that explains a quirk of far-right politics.
Speaking across linguistic and emotional boundaries, or perhaps not speaking at all, these characters leave the reader to read between the lines.
A rancher turned hero finds himself elected to the Statehouse in the novel “Mr. Texas.”
Read in both English and Spanish by Juanita Devis, the Argentine writer’s verses trace his descent into blindness.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
The Utah Republican’s announcement that he would retire coincided with the publication of a forthcoming book based on extensive interviews in which he slammed his party and the Senate.
She saw her family members marched off to their deaths while she went to a forced-labor camp. It took her almost 60 years to begin telling her story.
“Language, specific to the writer’s voice, rhythmic, weighted, moves me,” says the author, whose new novel is “Night Watch.” “Language is always the living soul of a narrative.”
An evocation of motherhood as negative capability.
The author of “Happiness Falls” explains how — and why — she chose a quote from “The Little Prince” to set the tone for her novel.
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