In “McNeal,” the playwright Ayad Akhtar explores the way artificial intelligence is disrupting the literary world and raising questions about creativity.
These books are perfect for the spooky season.
These books are perfect for the spooky season.
With the first volume of a new series and an instructional book on magic, the “Watchmen” author wants an imaginary revolution.
From downtown New York, the writer both scrutinized and kept ahead of a turbulent world.
He made films, video art and photographs, but was best known as a pioneering art critic and mordant novelist.
The series is the third production linked to the author to face turmoil after allegations made by five women surfaced this summer.
Twenty years after the publication of her fantasy debut, “Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell,” Clarke is returning to her richly imagined world of magical England.
NASA and the U.S. Poet Laureate may not be obvious collaborators, but a Jupiter-bound mission helped them find common ground.
The English writer Sarah Moss brings her trademark subtlety and sense of the ominous to her harrowing memoir.
How the multi-hyphenate, biracial artist from Far Rockaway influenced 1980s graffiti culture and the downtown New York art scene.
NASA and the U.S. Poet Laureate may not be obvious collaborators, but a Jupiter-bound mission helped them find common ground.
The young language-deprived protagonist of Ann Clare LeZotte’s novel “Deer Run Home” tells her own story, in verse.
In “Night of Power,” Robert Fisk’s posthumous war stories focus on the victims and perpetrators in conflicts across the Middle East.
Oguz Atay stretched the possibilities of fiction and critiqued his changing nation with playful, surreal stories.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
She helped make films like “Sleepless in Seattle” and “Contact.” She also wrote widely about the industry, for The Times and other publications.
His literary career traced the arc of his country’s modern political journey in stories about ordinary citizens facing repression and arbitrary government.
“The Price of Power,” by Michael Tackett, reveals a legislator for whom political survival has been a top priority — even when it means supporting a “sleazeball” for the presidency.
Memoirists and scholars explore the issue at every level, from the origins of the war on crime to what comes after “broken windows.”
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