The Slenderman case, which began unfolding in May 2014, transfixed the nation.
Three new books — “Calling for a Blanket Dance,” “Stories From the Tenants Downstairs” and “Sirens & Muses” — explore intimate worlds and communities, as seen through a multitude of perspectives.
“Witches,” a novel by Brenda Lozano, weaves two distinct voices about the lives of women in Mexico.
Two new memoirs excavate the denouements of two different relationships in which former wives have one thing in common: relief.
Édouard Louis’s fourth novel, “A Woman’s Battles and Transformations,” focuses on his mother’s life.
In her new book, “All the Living and the Dead,” Hayley Campbell explores the invisible labor that powers the death industry.
The third round of funding for the year will support 226 projects across the country.
He drew on his theological credentials in essays and memoirs, and his fiction, full of colorful characters, was admired for its elegance, wit and depth.
He was a first-time novelist whose tale of a manly vocation and family trauma broke publishing and then movie rights records when Robert Redford bought them.
Madeline McIntosh argued that the publishing industry extends far beyond its biggest players, and that the government has focused on a tiny sliver of deals.
After the attack, writers and world leaders hailed Rushdie as a symbol of free expression. But the battle lines around his novel “The Satanic Verses” were never cleanly drawn.
A debut novel views a middle-aged organic farmer through the eyes of a 21-year-old woman he preys upon.
However you classify them, these narratives combine intellectual rigor with an undeniably bingeable format.
A spokesman for Iran’s Foreign Ministry said the country had no part in the stabbing of Salman Rushdie, but added that the prizewinning author had crossed “red lines.”
In a five-decade career that began with the coming-of-age novel “Riverfinger Women,” she was outspoken in her fiction, her poetry and her life.
In her new novel, “Complicit,” Winnie M Li explores the collateral damage of assault on both victims and witnesses.
The cookbook collection that began in the basement of her home became the Janice Bluestein Longone Culinary Archive at the University of Michigan.
Our critic recommends old and new books.
“A History of Present Illness” is a fictional account from a first-time author who is a doctor.
The author was set to deliver a lecture at the Chautauqua Institution when an assailant rushed at him.
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