Who’s really in charge of our online behavior? No one, David Auerbach argues in “Meganets.”
New romance novels brim with shining, seductive, beautifully crafted sentences.
Catherine Lacey’s new novel follows a polarizing artist through a fractured country.
Who’s really in charge of our online behavior? No one, David Auerbach argues in “Meganets.”
In Cecile Pin’s debut novel, “Wandering Souls,” the tale of three young Vietnamese migrants transforms into a larger meditation about how and why refugee stories are told.
The writer of “The Glass Castle” starts a new chapter with a rip-roaring novel set during Prohibition.
The writer of “The Glass Castle” starts a new chapter with a rip-roaring novel set during Prohibition.
In her new novel, “Biography of X,” Lacey dreams up a larger-than-life, narcissistic artist, and rewrites American history to tell her story.
In “The People’s Hospital,” Ricardo Nuila explores the ways in which a space for those stranded by the American health care system serves as an unlikely model.
In her debut novel, “The Nursery,” Szilvia Molnar paints an honest, frightening and claustrophobic picture of new motherhood.
In Mona Simpson’s new novel, “Commitment,” a precariously functioning family fractures under the pressure of mental illness. Or does it?
Actors were two weeks into rehearsals when the show, which was set to star the Tony-winning actress Adrienne Warren, was postponed indefinitely.
Gilbert Cruz talks to Book Review staff members about the books they’ve been enjoying lately.
Before her, guitarists played the blues, and mostly sat down doing it. Sister Rosetta Tharpe stepped out.
The artist Didier William envisions new releases by Victor LaValle, Mona Simpson and more.
Sentenced as a teenager to 15 years for “unlawful assembly,” Abdelrahman ElGendy started recording the abuses of prison life. The idea of someday publishing his memoir gave him a reason to live.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
The show, scheduled to open in April at the James Earl Jones Theater, was adapted from Emma Donoghue’s best-selling 2010 novel.
From Pomplamoose to MXMS to Taylor Swift, this best-selling author’s playlist is tailored to all the moods in “She Is a Haunting.”
In “Still Life With Bones,” Alexa Hagerty recounts her training in the science of forensic exhumation at mass grave sites in Guatemala and Argentina — and what such work means for the families of victims.
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