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https://www.nytimes.com/section/books/review
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37 min 44 sec ago
A review in comics format helps inquisitive young citizens learn how we choose who runs our country.
The dangerous animosities of the past never went away, and have now re-emerged with new force.
Six new paperbacks to check out this week.
In Marilyn Stasio’s new crime-fiction column, the bodies accumulate at a rather alarming rate.
Ian McGuire talks about his new novel, and Elisabeth Egan discusses Romy Hausmann’s “Dear Child.”
Readers respond to recent issues of the Sunday Book Review.
In “Billion Dollar Loser,” Reeves Wiedeman places the once exalted Silicon Valley founder in the context of contemporary capitalism.
In “Billion Dollar Loser,” Reeves Wiedeman places the once exalted Silicon Valley founder in the context of contemporary capitalism.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
The former national security adviser H.R. McMaster’s new book, “Battlegrounds,” examines recent foreign policy and charts a path forward.
Looking for a book that will scare the pants off you? We’ve got some suggestions.
“In plainer terms, we read literature to have a good time.”
In “Trust,” the wunderkind politician underscores the importance of what he calls “overlapping circles of belonging.”
In “A World Beneath the Sands,” Toby Wilkinson details the hundred years when many of the great discoveries of ancient Egypt were made, by Europeans.
Before you pick up one of these hair-raising, shiver-inducing novels, you’re going to want to close the curtains and check the locks (twice).
Karla Cornejo Villavicencio, a National Book Award finalist for “The Undocumented Americans,” talks immigration, her unconventional approach to nonfiction and why impostor syndrome doesn’t faze her.
A selection of recent visual books of interest; plus, a peek at what our colleagues around the newsroom are reading.
“The Silence” invites readers to consider whether the connected life has left us more disconnected than ever.
In “Max Jacob: A Life in Art and Letters,” Rosanna Warren retraces the colorful history of a now largely forgotten figure of French modernism who was surrounded by famous friends.
In “A Place for Everything,” Judith Flanders, a British social historian, traces the revolutionary history of alphabetical order.
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