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https://www.nytimes.com/section/books/review
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57 min 48 sec ago
Cocktails, an addiction to erotica, workplace harassment and more.
Eve Fairbanks’s decades-spanning portrait addresses three experiences of the “New South Africa.”
Elvia Wilk’s essay collection is “fan nonfiction” that takes on myriad kinds of world-building.
Hugh Eakin’s new book, “Picasso’s War,” features plenty of cultural heroes and heroines.
Isaac Fitzgerald’s “Dirtbag, Massachusetts” is a memoir about male misbehavior and the struggle to make sense of oneself.
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.
Lying and “breaking and entering” are the alleged crimes at the heart of three witty new picture books.
John Wood Sweet’s “The Sewing Girl’s Tale” tells the story of an unusual prosecution in 18th-century New York — and its contemporary relevance.
In “Agent Josephine,” Damien Lewis makes the case that the legendary cabaret star was a daring World War II-era spy.
“Between the ages of, say, 16 and 21, … I read fiction as a malleable aspirant hoping for a world-shattering experience,” says the author, whose new novel is “The Great Man Theory.” “Maybe I’ll recapture some innocence in my later years.”
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
Fifty years ago, the book dotting every beach towel was Richard Bach’s best-selling novel, “Jonathan Livingston Seagull.”
In 2016, editors at The Los Angeles Times were reluctant to publish reporting that would portray the university and its top fund-raisers in a negative light.
Mark Leibovich’s “Thank You for Your Servitude” asks why establishment Republicans failed to prevent a hostile takeover of their party.
A selection of books published this week.
Damien Lewis makes the case that the legendary cabaret star was a daring World War II-era spy.
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