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https://www.nytimes.com/section/books/review
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17 min 17 sec ago
The Ethiopian American novelist also talks aesthetics and the inspiration behind his most recent novel, “Someone Like Us.”
In Stephen Graham Jones’s new novel, a young outcast is forced to become a murderer fated to enact gory revenge.
A roundtable of Book Review editors discuss what surprised them, what delighted them, what will send them back to their own shelves.
She was married to John Belushi until his fatal drug overdose in 1982. She went on to celebrate his comic talent in books and a documentary.
The novel became the beach read of the summer, with the shark at its center embodying the unease of an era of political and social upheaval.
Sometimes we forget that moving is not just about goodbyes. It’s also about hellos.
In his picaresque memoir, “My Glorious Defeats,” the Anonymous-movement activist Barrett Brown takes us on a journey of pure, joyous solipsism.
The pseudonymous Italian author has become a worldwide phenomenon. But speculation about who she really is has followed her for years.
Dwight Garner writes that voters, who “seemed to want a break from contemporary social reportage,” looked for immersive reads.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
A journalist and author, he helped write a revisionist account of Rudolph Giuliani’s role as mayor before and after the terrorist attacks.
Arthur, the former publisher of Knopf, is joining Hachette Book Group to start and run a new imprint.
In Yasmin Zaher’s “The Coin,” a rich, chic Palestinian schoolteacher in New York City grapples with displacement and American consumerism.
Even after doing research in Montana, a draft of the book that became “The Heart in Winter” was “dead on the page,” he says. Back in Ireland, the runaway lovers now at its center “suddenly appeared to me.”
Some of their favorites didn’t make our “Best Books of the 21st Century” list — but they make a case for them anyway.
In books and articles he wrote about the militarization of space and believed that investing in exploration would ultimately “protect Earth and guarantee the survival of humanity.”
Her writing, about marriage and divorce, sex and its consequences, work-life balance, the challenges of child-rearing and other topics, still resonates today.
Henry Hoke’s 2023 novel, “Open Throat,” narrated by an animal in peril in the Hollywood Hills, is adapted for a staged reading.
Kevin Barry’s new novel follows a fugitive couple from Butte, Mont., in the late 19th century.
In her most recent book, “The Backyard Bird Chronicles,” the best-selling author revels in a newfound preoccupation with birds — and drawing.
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