URL:
https://www.nytimes.com/section/books/review
Updated:
2 hours 18 min ago
Ecological disaster ties together the three strands of Matt Bell’s stark yet hopeful “Appleseed.”
In “Rachel to the Rescue,” Elinor Lipman ushers readers into the Beltway with her signature blend of wit and charm.
A selection of recent titles of interest; plus, a peek at what our colleagues around the newsroom are reading.
A new biography by Richard Zenith offers a sharper picture of the Portuguese master, who contained multitudes.
These novels have roots in the good, the bad and the ugly parts of history.
Set in a fictional Chinese city, Yan Ge’s novel features a bestiary of mysterious creatures and a cryptozoologist narrator who is trying to study and classify them.
Joyce Maynard and Diane Johnson are both writing about women looking back on life. Luckily for their readers, the excitement continues.
“To Walk Alone in the Crowd,” by Antonio Muñoz Molina, follows an unnamed narrator across Madrid, Paris and New York.
In Beth Morgan’s shape-shifting debut, “A Touch of Jen,” a young Brooklyn couple grow increasingly obsessed with their Instagram crush.
In his new book, “The Icepick Surgeon,” Sam Kean details evil misdeeds conducted in the name of scientific inquiry.
In his true-crime history, “The Case of the Murderous Dr. Cream,” Dean Jobb explains how a Victorian-era serial killer escaped arrest for so long.
In her new novel, “Embassy Wife,” Katie Crouch takes readers on a tour of expat life in Namibia.
“Landslide” tells the dramatic and unprecedented story of the weeks after the 2020 presidential election from inside the White House.
New fiction ranges from a Chinese family divided across continents to the founding of a cult for rehabilitating toxic masculinity.
The essays in “Don’t Let It Get You Down” explore the in-betweenness of race, class and the size of a woman’s body.
A new collection of letters reveals a self divided between author and woman.
The stories in “Walking on Cowrie Shells” span genres, generations and geography.
Jonathan Balcombe talks about “Super Fly,” and Marjorie Ingall discusses Holocaust literature for children.
A new, deeply reported book by the Times reporters Sheera Frenkel and Cecilia Kang recounts the full story of the social media company’s foibles.
Six new paperbacks to check out this week.
Pages