Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
Live” turns 50 this year, and a monumental biography of the man who created it attests to his enduring role as America’s ...
“The Diamond Mine” offers a brief, dreamy chronicle of a teenage girl’s sexual awakening with an Afrikaans soldier about to ...
In “Cerebral Entanglements,” Allan J. Hamilton argues that new imaging technologies give us unprecedented access — with ...
By Erica Ackerberg Paul Fussell’s 50-year-old survey of trench warfare deserves a new generation of readers, our book critic writes. The standout essays in Megan Marshall’s “After Lives ...
While many of her contemporaries are playing canasta, she’s releasing her 25th book. There’s no mystery to it, Tyler says: ...
Beginning in 1924, prominent guests of the publisher autographed leather-bound books during their visits to The Times’s ...
In “What Fell From the Sky,” by Adrianna Cuevas, and “Oasis,” by Guojing, the best examples of humanity aren’t necessarily human. By Donna Barba Higuera Gianni Rodari used puns, topsy ...
Find Your Next Book N.Y.C. Literary Guide February Releases 10 Best Books of 2024 21st Century’s Best Books Advertisement ...
Whether you’re in the mood for another Jane Austen adaptation, a British rom-com or a love story with a fabulous older ...
In “What Fell From the Sky,” by Adrianna Cuevas, and “Oasis,” by Guojing, the best examples of humanity aren’t necessarily ...
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