The historian, whose new book is “Silent Spring Revolution,” would also invite E.O. Wilson and Rachel Carson: “We could talk about the 11,000 bird species the Cornell Lab of Ornithology is helping to conserve in the face of climate change.”
Before she put pen to paper — or fingers to keyboard — this fantasy novelist spent a long time getting to know her protagonist.
The Times reporters Megan Twohey and Jodi Kantor talk about their book ‘She Said,’ and Neal Gabler discusses the first volume of his Ted Kennedy biography.
Four books show kids the infinite joys of building, sailing, restoring and just plain floating a boat.
In Stephen Spotswood’s new novel, “Secrets Typed in Blood” — set in 1940s New York City — a pulp magazine writer claims that a killer is copying crimes from her stories.
A selection of books published this week.
Noah Baumbach’s adaptation of the Don DeLillo novel is a campus comedy, a domestic drama and an allegory of contemporary American life.
Even if you still love printed books, the digital option lets you put an entire library in your bag, just in time for holiday travel and vacation.
A comprehensive, slipcased catalogue raisonné of the Swedish painter’s work revisits the techniques and themes that redrew the timeline of modern art in the West.
Tangier’s many facets have long inspired writers. Here, the Moroccan-born novelist Laila Lalami introduces readers to the books and writers that, to her, best capture the city.
New books by N.K. Jemisin, H.A. Clarke, Nathan Tavares and Isaac Fellman.
This poem’s final turn tightly encapsulates the immigrant experience with new language and destinations.
Simon & Schuster sold 900 signed copies of the singer’s new essay collection, but superfans and internet sleuths noticed something wasn’t right with the autograph. Now the publisher is issuing refunds.
Michael Cunningham’s 2005 novel jumps between centuries and genres as it explores the yearning for transcendence and the importance of noticing.
On Nov. 29, Times readers are invited to be the first to find out which books we’ve selected as the year’s best.
Reading Diane Noomin’s feminist comics allowed me to feel the full range of my own grief.
The deal to acquire Simon & Schuster would have made the buyer, Penguin Random House, even larger, and reduced the number of big publishers in the U.S. to four.
From farmworkers in California’s Central Valley to vacationers in Jamaica and Connecticut, these protagonists find themselves in lives they don’t quite recognize.
In “Aesthetica,” Allie Rowbottom imagines a 35-year-old ex-influencer who’s about to undergo an extreme surgery to undo every cosmetic procedure she’s endured to date.
“Eat Your Mind,” a new biography by Jason McBride, surveys her life and art.
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