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Drink deep of the details of winemaking, the history of coffee, the nature of beer and the appreciation of fine spirits in four new books.
In “The Great Shift,” James L. Kugel explores changing notions of God; in “The Exodus,” Richard Elliott Friedman argues that early Jews really did flee Egypt.
Adam Valen Levinson’s “The Abu Dhabi Bar Mitzvah” is an irreverent memoir about an American man who has a coming-of-age in the Middle East.
In which we consult the Book Review’s past to shed light on the books of the present. This week: Richard Gilman on the religious novel.
Readers respond to reviews in recent issues.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
The Book Review’s Help Desk columnist gives her choices of the best in self-help and how-to of 2017.
Nicholas Blincoe’s biography of the West Bank city begins with its roots as a trading post in the eighth century B.C. and follows it to the present.
The filmmaker shares the novels that most influenced his movie career and why he no longer looks to books for material for his films.
Moving from English to German, thanks to Yiddish, has helped Deborah Feldman find her voice and her purpose.
Marilyn Stasio’s column features tales of murder and mayhem, from cozy to grisly, all decked out in the finery of the season.
Lesley Hazleton reviews Wills’s new book, “What the Qur’an Meant.”
A selection of books published this week; plus, a peek at what our colleagues around the newsroom are reading.
In “God: A Human History,” the author of “Zealot” follows up his book about Jesus with one about God.
Christopher de Hamel’s “Meetings With Remarkable Manuscripts” uses a dozen rare illustrated volumes to transport readers back to the medieval world.
Brad Thomas Parsons’s “Distillery Cats” profiles the felines who patrol the world’s great distilleries.
Books of fiction and nonfiction that mine the experience of men and women both powerful and ordinary who discover new truths in uncertain country.
Simon Schama’s “Belonging: 1492-1900” recounts the history of a people who never seemed to belong anywhere.
Eric Metaxas’ “Martin Luther” seeks to make its subject attractive to a wide reading audience.
These books explore historical fires and the lives they have touched.
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