Fluent in German and passing as an Aryan, she once crossed into Germany, uncovered Nazi military secrets and nursed a wounded, and deceived, SS officer.
“Not My Type: One Woman vs. a President” includes reflections on being asked to testify about her sex life, as well as the thrill of winning two lawsuits.
The culture critic Brian Raftery, who wrote about “Jaws” for the Book Review last year, discusses the movie’s anniversary with Gilbert Cruz.
Each age has its own way of drawing the arc of a human life. Ours is concerned with its unpredictability.
Two children’s novels take a gimlet-eyed look at the price of gifts with “no strings attached.”
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
Archival photographs, fashion layouts and anecdotes from celebrity clients: A new book is devoted to all things Valentino.
Now attached to Bard College, the literary journal is about to publish new commentary and a popular historical feature. Next year: the print magazine.
Plus: a cliff-top hotel in Brittany, dynamic sculptures at New York’s Japan Society and more recommendations from T Magazine.
In “Submersed,” Matthew Gavin Frank takes on the undersea universe of amateur submarine enthusiasts — and one obsession turned deadly.
His go-to classic is by Joseph Campbell, and he admires “Brothers and Keepers” and “The New Jim Crow” on incarceration. “The River Is Waiting” is his new novel.
Looking for a swoony, feel-good read? Our romance columnist will be updating this list all year.
Looking for a swoony, feel-good read? Our romance columnist will be updating this list all year.
Poetry and translation are both about picking the just-right word. But reading multiple translations makes an implicit case for celebrating abundance and variety.
Killed in the rainforest he hoped to help save, the journalist Dom Phillips left behind an unfinished manuscript. Those who knew him carried it forward.
Beginning with a reading by Dylan Thomas, she and a friend found unlikely commercial success in the 1950s with recordings of famous writers reciting their work.
In a scrappy new memoir, Jeff Weiss blurs fact and fancy as he recounts his stint as a bit player in the celebrity-industrial complex.
In V.E. Schwab’s “Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil,” three women turned into vampires are thrown into a centuries-long drama of love, power and hunger.
In S.A. Cosby’s new book, “King of Ashes,” a wealthy investment manager must return to his crumbling hometown and protect his family from a bloodthirsty gang.
In today’s overtouristed world, should a professional traveler broadcast his discoveries or hide them away?
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