Jennifer Szalai, Dwight Garner and Alexandra Jacobs look back at the books that “offered refuge from the wheels grinding in our heads.”
“You can’t read a page without laughing,” says the author of “The Outsiders,” who’s watched the stage musical of the novel become a Tony Award-winning hit this year.
New festive stories center the many ways people celebrate the season, and each other.
Chicago is a city of bookish abundance, home to countless literary giants past and present. The author Rebecca Makkai recommends works that capture its spirit.
Curl up with these transporting reads.
Charles Onana and his publisher were fined for passages in a book that were found to have violated a French law making it illegal to deny an officially recognized genocide.
The poet left a long visual record of a career in the public sphere.
Like many Americans of his background, his bookish aspirations were defined by what everybody else was reading, or thought they should be reading.
The poet set the course for her revolutionary career early, and charted it faithfully for decades by staying true to her vision and herself.
A decade after it was published, the book “Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents” is surging in popularity and making people rethink their family dynamic.
In “Poet, Mystic, Widow, Wife” the historian Hetta Howes seeks to relate to figures of the past.
In “The Rest Is Memory,” Lily Tuck imagines the life of a Polish teenager during the Holocaust.
The actress and publisher will help decide the 2025 winner of the prestigious British book award. It is “the thrill of a life,” she said.
As a writer, she tackled race, gender, sex, politics and love. She was also a public intellectual who appeared on television and toured the country.
As a writer, she tackled race, gender, sex, politics and love. She was also a public intellectual who appeared on television and toured the country.
Leanne Morgan went from helping her husband sell mobile homes to sudden success in her 50s.
One of the most successful writers in the Chinese-speaking world, she filled her plots with twists and turns, but love always transcended all.
In “A Century of Tomorrows,” Glenn Adamson offers a hurtling history of the art, science and big business of looking ahead.
The Nobel-winning author’s husband was a pedophile who targeted her daughter and other children. Why did she stay silent?
Here are the year’s most notable collections of verse as chosen by our poetry columnist.
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