Take one 24-year-old, add a seasoned family member and introduce a pandemic. Welcome to Cathleen Schine’s new novel!
With his powerful novels and essays, Mr. Oe tried to ensure that Japan learned the lessons of its 20th-century militarism.
The new book by the sociologist and author of “Evicted” examines the persistence of want in the wealthy United States, finding that keeping some citizens poor serves the interests of many.
“Birnam Wood,” by the Booker Prize winner Eleanor Catton, is a fast-moving ecological novel and a generational cri de coeur.
After chancing upon a 1924 photo of Her Royal Highness Rani Shri Amrit Kaur Sahib in a Mumbai museum, an Italian journalist set out to discover who she was.
Couto’s language is enriched by his country’s idioms, voices — and possibilities. “We are still in the process of creating one nation,” he said, made of “different languages, different beliefs.”
An editor recommends old and new books.
If “The Last of Us” has you unnerved by fungi, these six books can offer some new perspective. (Our spore-bearing, mysterious little neighbors aren’t completely evil — promise.)
Ian Buruma’s “The Collaborators” takes on three complex, disparate figures with notably controversial war records.
In “Hello Beautiful,” Ann Napolitano puts a fresh spin on the classic story of four sisters.
She was best known for “The Holdfast Chronicles,” a series about a dystopic world in which once-enslaved women conquer their former male masters.
New memoirs, a landmark biography of Martin Luther King, Jr., a look at the woman who helped halt the rise of a K.K.K. leader — and more.
She opened Murder Ink, believed to be the nation’s first mystery bookstore, and brought fans together through interactive whodunits and other events.
Watch for reality-bending explorations of time and space, a Western horror novel from Victor LaValle and new fiction from Han Kang. Plus: Tom Hanks (yes, that Tom Hanks) releases his debut novel.
Just in time for the Academy Awards, our critic Alexandra Jacobs discusses two recent books on the subject, Michael Schulman’s “Oscar Wars” and Bruce Davis’s “The Academy and the Award.”
When Natalia Petrzela isn’t teaching or writing, she’s podcasting or getting into Hollywood scrapes. It’s all part of what it means to be a scholar in 2023.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
The unemployment form, with its insults and banalities, is an object of unhappy necessity. The poetic form, however, resists the other’s requirements.
The author of “The Writing Retreat” dreaded talking at book events, so she turned to a professional — and to her grandmother.
New reading relates the history of mirrors, patchwork and a monumental teahouse, plus the struggle to make design more just.
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