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In “Ghosts of New York,” Jim Lewis introduces four characters and follows their intersecting paths.
Leo Timmers, Mylo Freeman and Klaas Verplancke take us inside the minds of two loony kings and a once blue princess.
In her second novel, “Libertie,” the dark-skinned daughter of a light-skinned doctor finds freedom in art.
An excerpt from “Girlhood,” by Melissa Febos
A selection of recent titles of interest; plus, a peek at what our colleagues around the newsroom are reading.
An excerpt from “Of Women and Salt,” by Gabriela Garcia
In Dawnie Walton’s debut novel, “The Final Revival of Opal & Nev,” readers will hear an oral history that harks back to a simpler time.
“Of Women and Salt,” Gabriela Garcia’s debut novel, evokes the history of a Cuban family rived by brutal events.
In “A World on the Wing,” Scott Weidensaul describes the splendor of birds that can span continents in their flight, and also all the ways they are threatened.
The senator from Illinois shares the occasionally harrowing, never boring story of her barrier-breaking life in a new memoir, “Every Day Is a Gift.”
Eight essays tell a collective story of female adolescence and womanhood, fraught with unwanted attention and abuse.
“Do Not Disturb,” by Michela Wrong, paints a picture of a country, and a region, long vexed by ethnic conflict, corrupt leadership and human rights abuses.
Linda Colley’s “The Gun, the Ship, and the Pen” examines how constitutions came to be written — and why they sometimes fail.
Harriet Tubman, Frances Seward and Martha Wright shared a political cause and residency in Auburn, N.Y. “The Agitators,” by Dorothy Wickenden, tells the story of their joint crusade.
David Freedlander’s “The AOC Generation” offers a picture of a growing electorate that may be changing American politics forever.
The creator of Ramona Quimby and Henry Huggins constructed a world that children recognized — one that changed with the times.
A. O. Scott discusses Olsen’s work, and Wendy Lower talks about “The Ravine: A Family, a Photograph, a Holocaust Massacre Revealed.”
Six new paperbacks to check out this week.
Jesse McCarthy’s debut collection, “Who Will Pay Reparations on My Soul?,” sees art as not a tool of political power, but a power itself.
Readers respond to recent issues of the Sunday Book Review.
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