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An excerpt from “The Lincoln Highway,” by Amor Towles
An excerpt from “My Monticello,” by Jocelyn Nicole Johnson
Kyla Schuller’s “The Trouble With White Women” exposes the hypocrisies and patriarchal overtones of the mainstream movement for women’s rights.
In “The Neighbor’s Secret,” L. Alison Heller gives us a dishy tale of nosy neighbors, mysterious vandalism, family shame — and murder.
“Crossroads,” his new novel, follows one family in a Chicago suburb as they navigate a world full of moral dilemmas.
Two new biographies, “Walk With Me,” by Kate Clifford Larson, and “Until I Am Free,” by Keisha N. Blain, recount Hamer’s struggle to open up voting to Black people in Mississippi and argue for the continued relevance of her tactics.
The narrator of Elisa Victoria’s debut, “Oldladyvoice,” is wise beyond her years.
“The Mirror and the Palette,” by Jennifer Higgie, examines 500 years of women’s self-portraits, tracing a theme of suffering, both physical and emotional, from their lives to their art.
“I Love You but I’ve Chosen Darkness” recounts what happens when a young wife and mother abruptly abandons her husband, her new baby and her life.
In his second collection of diary entries, the popular essayist welcomes readers into the kitchen of his brain.
In his new memoir, “Taste,” the actor opens up about the meals he’s eaten, the people he knows and his cancer diagnosis.
“The Lincoln Highway” follows young adventure seekers east to a midcentury New York.
Amitava Kumar’s novel “A Time Outside This Time” is a crusade against misinformation amid global upheaval.
“The Taking of Jemima Boone,” the first nonfiction book by the novelist Matthew Pearl, recounts a legendary abduction case that complicates our view of relations between settlers and Native Americans during westward expansion.
“The Every,” a follow-up to Eggers’s 2013 novel “The Circle,” is meant to scare us straight, sunk as we are in tech complacency.
In Onuzo’s new novel, “Sankofa,” a British woman discovers her long-lost father is the ex-dictator of a West African country.
In “We Are Not Like Them,” Christine Pride and Jo Piazza team up to create a fictional reckoning that channels too-true headlines.
David Hackett Fischer’s “Albion’s Seed,” published in 1989, describes today’s United States with stunning prescience.
A debut fiction collection imagines Black characters reckoning with this country’s legacy — and present reality — of white violence.
In his new book, the Harvard psychologist Steven Pinker makes an argument for rational thinking and reminds us of how it’s done.
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