Lyz Lenz opens up about an unhappy union, and what she learned from it, in “This American Ex-Wife.”
In “Out of the Darkness,” Frank Trentmann details the way people in the country that started World War II are still confronting and atoning for the atrocities of their government.
In “Remembering Peasants,” the historian Patrick Joyce presents a stirring elegy for a vanishing culture.
Rabbi Harlow’s prayer books, including “Siddur Sim Shalom,” became the standards of worship in Conservative synagogues across North America.
Oni Press will revive the beloved horror and sci-fi name with new stories starting this summer.
A new biography chronicles this essential American writer’s complicated love life, celebrated career and singular talents.
In “Language City,” the linguist Ross Perlin chronicles some of the precious traditions hanging on in the world’s most linguistically diverse metropolis.
He popularized the term “institutional racism" and, with Stokely Carmichael, wrote a book in 1967 that was seen as a radical manifesto.
Books — often riddled with gross grammatical and factual errors — are appearing for sale online soon after the death of well-known people.
As the presidential election approaches, “LatinoLand,” by Marie Arana, explores the diverse politics and historical roots of Hispanic Americans.
In this collaboratively written novel, Lower East Side dwellers get through lockdown swapping colorful tales on the roof of their scruffy building.
As a scholar, Laurence Ralph specialized in youth violence. Then a relative was killed. “Sito” tells the story.
A roundup of international fiction from Congo, Sweden, Bolivia and India.
After writing a best seller about the sinking of the Andrea Doria, he was a co-author with Richard M. Nixon, Patty Hearst, William S. Paley and others.
When some books, including best sellers, were conspicuously absent from the science fiction Hugo Awards last year, writers and fans became suspicious.
A blues novel; a baseball tell-all.
As his own life unfolds, an artist reconsiders his reaction to Joan Didion’s memoir about loss.
“Hard Girls,” by J. Robert Lennon, delves into family lives built on deception and abandonment.
In “The Other Profile,” a struggling grad school dropout starts to work for, and then becomes obsessed with and consumed by, a semi-famous content creator.
Even in countries where homophobia is pervasive and same-sex relationships are illegal, authors are pushing boundaries, finding an audience and winning awards.
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