The Thai American heroine of Christina Soontornvat’s graphic novel wrestles with anti-Asian racism while auditioning for the cheerleading squad.
He took part in studies that found the widening ideological divide to be the largest since post-Civil War Reconstruction.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
The mainstream publishing industry is intimidating. How does a writer break in? Follow Jessamine Chan’s “The School for Good Mothers” through the roller coaster of its creation.
While other future novelists were discussing iambic pentameter and leitmotifs, Gina Chen immersed herself in computer science.
This poem explores all the distances between mothers and their children, the frayed seams between countries and cultures.
He coached the Permian High School Panthers in Odessa, Texas, for four seasons in the 1980s, including the one that became the subject of a best-selling book.
“Black Folk Could Fly,” a posthumous book of Randall Kenan’s collected essays, provides a window into his life and heart.
A British village wedding awakens some distinctly unpleasant spirits in “Small Angels,” Lauren Owen’s creepy second novel.
A selection of recently published books.
The death of a matriarch prompts reflection in LaToya Watkins’s debut novel, “Perish.”
“The Stolen Year,” by Anya Kamenetz, is an account of Covid’s devastating effects on American youth.
“Dispatches From the Gilded Age” is a collection of essays by the journalist Julia Reed, who died at 59 in 2020.
To read “Last Times,” by Victor Serge, is to watch the accelerating catastrophe of the Nazi invasion of France.
William Kent Krueger’s “Fox Creek,” the 19th book starring the detective Cork O’Connor, will delight fans — and it’s a good entry point for those new to the series, too.
Her latest novel uses horror and a privileged white protagonist as vehicles for social critique.
Gurnah, who received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2021, has long rejected attempts to categorize him or his work. “The idea that a writer represents, I resist,” he said.
Alice Feiring devotes the day to her mother, her boyfriend, playing folk music, shopping for food and yes, visiting wine bars.
Authors including Paul Auster, Gay Talese, Kiran Desai and others reminded the Midtown crowd that without free expression, “literature is nothing but an echo chamber.”
Casey Parks’s “Diary of a Misfit” pieces together the elusive history of a Louisiana musician who spent all his life in a community that misgendered him.
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