The two will discuss their shared love of birding in a free live virtual event as part of The New York Times summer birding project.
At Simon & Schuster, Alfred A. Knopf and The New Yorker, he polished the work of a who’s who of mid-to-late 20th century writers.
McCarthy’s death inspired hundreds of people to share their impressions of him and his work.
Cormac McCarthy was the last of a generational cohort of writers who redefined American prose.
The poet and novelist Luis Alberto Urrea thinks the borderlands are the most interesting book in the world, being rewritten every day. These are his recommendations.
“What an Owl Knows,” by Jennifer Ackerman, is peppered with fascinating facts, photos and superlatives.
In the wake of the pandemic, people are rethinking their relationship not just to work but to time.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker said the law, which came amid a recent rise in book-banning efforts, was the first of its kind. At least one other state is weighing similar legislation.
McCarthy applied a stark, merciless vision to his stories of misfits and the apocalypse. Here’s where to start with his work.
The Coens and Ridley Scott are among the directors who took big swings at the novelist’s work. The distinctive writer left his mark on the big screen.
The poet and activist Rose Styron, 95, had to be talked into writing about herself and the many luminaries she has known. “I don’t like looking backward,” she said.
“All the Pretty Horses,” “The Road” and “No Country for Old Men” were among his acclaimed books that explore a bleak world of violence and outsiders.
In “Revolutionary Spring,” the Cambridge historian Christopher Clark argues for the lasting impact of the uprisings that engulfed Europe in 1848.
From apartheid South Africa to North Korea to the stage of the New York City Ballet, the characters in these three new books imagine themselves in lives other than their own.
In her second novel, “Nightbloom,” Peace Adzo Medie sets a pair of cousins, born on the same day, on separate paths.
The narrator of “My Stupid Intentions,” Bernardo Zannoni’s debut novel, is a beech marten in an unforgiving world.
Clinton, Tenn., tried to desegregate its high school in 1956, one year before Little Rock. It didn’t go well.
From apartheid South Africa to North Korea to the stage of the New York City Ballet, the characters in these three new books imagine themselves in lives other than their own.
In “Young and Restless,” Mattie Kahn returns young women and girls to their rightful role in the history books: as forces for change.
Elizabeth Gilbert delayed her new novel indefinitely after an online backlash condemned the book’s publication while Russia is at war with Ukraine.
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