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Joshua B. Freeman’s “Behemoth” is an accessible and cogent global history of the factory and the modern world that all Americans should read.
In “What Are We Doing Here?,” her new collection of essays, Marilynne Robinson mounts a vigorous defense of America’s ethical traditions and egalitarian institutions.
Readers respond to recent issues of the Sunday Book Review.
In which we consult the Book Review’s past to shed light on the books of the present. This week: Seymour E. Harris reflects on the need to check unbridled power of corporations.
Two new books — Anya Kamenetz’s “The Art of Screen Time” and Naomi Schaefer Riley’s “Be the Parent, Please” — offer advice to anxious parents.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
The author Luis Alberto Urrea avoids certain novels: “I run screaming when I see an Ayn Rand book creeping up the alley looking for victims.”
Ronen Bergman’s “Rise and Kill First” examines the violent efforts used to bring an end to terrorism.
In Xhenet Aliu’s debut novel, a postindustrial landscape is the setting for two generations of heartache.
In “A False Report,” T. Christian Miller and Ken Armstrong tell the story of a rape investigation that is comforting in its moral clarity.
The authors Amy Kaufman and Suzannah Showler dive deep into the art and artifice of the prime time love factory that’s swept the nation.
A selection of books published this week; plus, a peek at what our colleagues around the newsroom are reading.
Detective stories from around the world.
Our critics chose 15 remarkable books by women that are shaping the way we read and write fiction in the 21st century.
In “We the Corporations,” Adam Winkler recounts the history of American companies’ efforts to shape the law to their advantage.
Whether they’re lovers, parents, professors or kids, the characters in these stories all have something to hide.
Matt Young discusses “Eat the Apple,” and A. O. Scott talks about Martin Amis’s “The Rub of Time.”
A graphic pep talk for the literary year ahead.
Six new paperbacks to check out this week.
In “Educated,” Tara Westover recounts her remarkable journey from a remote mountainside in Idaho to Cambridge University.
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