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https://www.nytimes.com/section/books/review
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19 min 13 sec ago
“A History of Present Illness” is a fictional account from a first-time author who is a doctor.
“Memoirs,” a new collection of Lowell’s nonfiction, includes a coming-of-age autobiography that may be the best thing he ever wrote.
Mark Braude talks about his new biography of the singer, model, writer and muse.
At an annual gathering in Key West, Fla., Ernest Hemingway look-alikes vie for the title of “Papa.”
In Jennifer Ziegler’s “Worser,” a precocious logophile learns that the spaces between words are as important as the words themselves.
To save oppressed wolves from authoritarian foxes, a silent boy in Sam Thompson’s Orwellian middle grade novel must learn to speak.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
The former journalist, author of 25 spy thrillers and a stalwart on the best-seller list, opens up about his writerly quirks.
“My late mother refused to even buy my books because why buy them when you can get them free at the library?” says the journalist and author, whose latest book is “Raising Lazarus.” “I gave her copies, of course.”
In “Raising Lazarus,” Beth Macy considers how — or whether — we will ever be able to put the overdose epidemic behind us.
Elizabeth Hand’s “Hokuloa Road” brims with menace: vine-choked cliff-top highways, aviaries filled with strange birds, tanks of poisonous sea urchins.
In the new biography “Path Lit by Lightning,” David Maraniss details the enormous odds that a Native American hero had to overcome.
A selection of recently published books.
In “The Women Could Fly,” women are uniquely capable of magic, which leads the government to strictly monitor and regulate them.
In “Life on the Mississippi,” Rinker Buck takes a lengthy river trip to examine a uniquely American history.
In a quest to explore her own sexuality, Nona Willis Aronowitz hit the sheets — and the books.
Mark Braude’s biography of a bohemian icon makes a case for Kiki de Montparnasse as an artist in her own right.
Two eerie story collections depict the mundanity of human suffering.
Lynne Tillman’s taut memoir of caring for an aging parent runs an emotional gamut.
Johanna Mo’s new novel, “The Shadow Lily,” is a solid police procedural that brims with twists, turns and surprising revelations.
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