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Reading picks from Book Review editors, guaranteed to suit any mood. By The New York Times Books Staff Novels by Haruki Murakami and Rebecca Yarros, memoirs by Angela Merkel and Cher ...
“America First” personifies the debate through its two principal antagonists: President Franklin Roosevelt and aviator Charles Lindbergh.
Our columnists on new books by John Banville, Kate Christensen under a pseudonym and more. By Sarah Weinman Our critic A.O. Scott walks you through a poem that speaks to his mood right now.
Lila Pereira, a successful media executive, rises to the top of her career but has to reckon with her youngest daughter, Grace, resenting her for not being a PTA mom. Grace also dredges up the ...
Paul Engle noted that “poetry is ordinary language raised to the nth power.” As if by magic, poetry books capture feelings that are often elusive and put into words our deepest pain and ...
Hamas-linked CAIR gets a free pass from lazy media that smear Steven Emerson as an ‘Islamophobe.’ When accusations first emerged that Steven Emerson’s Investigative Project on Terrorism (IPT ...
FOX News Books features titles from FOX News personalities, including FOX & Friends Weekend co-host Pete Hegseth, FOX News Sunday anchor Shannon Bream, The Faulkner Focus and Outnumbered host ...
enlightening and influential young-adult books, in chronological order beginning in the 1800s Firekeeper's Daughter ...
Hot Stuff: Spring 2024 romance novels bring sibling bonds to the forefront Hot stuff: The 6 best romance novels of summer 2023 Hot stuff: The 8 best romance novels of spring 2023 Hot stuff: The 5 ...
In a new memoir, Al Pacino promises to reveal the person behind the actor. But is he holding something back? In his new novel, the present isn’t much better than the past—and it’s a lot less ...
October 22, 2024 • In Charles Baxter's new novel, a small-town insurance salesman buys a blood test that can predict romantic entanglements, promotions — and more. It's a screwball satire of ...