The novelist played with reality and chance in tales of solitary narrators and mutable identities. Here’s an overview of his work.
“I Just Keep Talking,” a collection of essays and artwork by the historian Nell Irvin Painter, captures her wide-ranging interests and original mind.
Dozens of books have disappeared from Warsaw to Paris. Police are looking into who is taking them, and why — a tale of money, geopolitics, crafty forgers and lackluster library security.
These authors investigate the interior lives of Palestinians charged with violence and probe the confines of Israeli prisons.
A complicated, generous life yielded a body of work of staggering scope and variety.
With critically lauded works like “The New York Trilogy,” the charismatic author and patron saint of his adopted borough drew worldwide acclaim.
In “The Demon of Unrest,” present-day political strife inspires a dramatic portrait of the run-up to the deadliest war on American soil.
Our columnist reviews this month’s latest scary releases.
Wenyan Lu’s novel, “The Funeral Cryer,” explores a Chinese tradition through a modern, more personal lens.
Rachel Khong’s new novel follows three generations of Chinese Americans as they all fight for self-determination in their own way.
She wrote her much-anticipated second novel, “Real Americans,” while also creating the Ruby, a co-working collective for writers and other artists.
The best stories in Honor Levy’s “My First Book” capture the quiet desperation of today’s smart set. But there is such a thing as publishing too soon.
New novels from R.O. Kwon, Kevin Kwan and Miranda July; a reappraisal of Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy; memoirs from Brittney Griner and Kathleen Hanna — and more.
In Heidi Reimer’s debut novel, “The Mother Act,” a daughter grapples with being parented (or not) by an actress who happily mines her life for material.
In “The Age of Grievance,” the New York Times opinion writer Frank Bruni chronicles the nation’s descent into constant kvetching.
“Lublin,” a novel by Manya Wilkinson, brings together a quest fable and a dark history with disarming humor.
In a new book, an anthropologist investigates the makeshift treatment centers that have proliferated during the country’s war on drugs.
Three new arrivals help readers make sense of our mental health crisis. They also offer solidarity.
The Finnish artist and writer Tove Jansson had a love-hate relationship with her most famous creations.
Carl Sandburg’s boyhood; Carolyn Forché’s political awakening.
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