She was the first Black woman in the position, which she held for two years. Her hiring came amid a push for diversity in the industry.
The release of a movie based on the best-selling novel renewed questions about the author, Delia Owens, her time in Zambia and the shooting of a suspected poacher there.
Liska Jacobs’s novel sets a honeymooning couple in a posh Beverly Hills establishment during a summer of unrest in Los Angeles.
Cocktails, an addiction to erotica, workplace harassment and more.
Does poetry have any place in a war zone? For one correspondent, it is indispensable.
Eve Fairbanks’s decades-spanning portrait addresses three experiences of the “New South Africa.”
In his new story collection, “The Haunting of Hajji Hotak,” Jamil Jan Kochai explores the intergenerational impact of conflict.
Elvia Wilk’s essay collection is “fan nonfiction” that takes on myriad kinds of world-building.
In his grouchy, funny memoir, “A Factotum in the Book Trade,” Marius Kociejowski writes about what a good bookstore should feel like, famous customers he’s served and more.
He was considered too radical by many Orthodox rabbis and too regressive by many Conservative Jewish leaders. But his work was widely praised.
Authors of color have turned in recent books to humor and surreal conceits to explore racism, identity politics and the pain of being “on the other side of whiteness.”
Authors of color have turned in recent books to humor and surreal conceits to explore racism, identity politics and the pain of being “on the other side of whiteness.”
Hugh Eakin’s new book, “Picasso’s War,” features plenty of cultural heroes and heroines.
Our critic recommends old and new books.
Isaac Fitzgerald’s “Dirtbag, Massachusetts” is a memoir about male misbehavior and the struggle to make sense of oneself.
An early writer for Rolling Stone, he traveled in the same circles as the Beatles, Janis Joplin and other stars, witnessing and documenting a time of cultural transformation.
Three new books describe Blacks engaged in politics in the South.
Elamin Abdelmahmoud talks about his new memoir, and Sally Denton discusses “The Colony: Faith and Blood in a Promised Land.”
This is why we don’t trust algorithms to design hardcovers.
Looking for a long read? These novels are worth their weight.
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