“Caro’s works are masterpieces of research and artistry,” says the former vice president and managing editor at Knopf Doubleday, who looks forward to — what else? — more reading, after 60 years on the job.
In books and magazine articles, she uncovered the forgotten story of the actresses and screenwriters who helped create the film industry.
A patron saint of exquisite verbosity, James made a career examining the clash of American innocence with European cunning. Here are his best works.
A patron saint of exquisite verbosity, James made a career examining the clash of American innocence with European cunning. Here are his best works.
If your idea of festive joy is being haunted by past memories or driven insane by mysterious specters, have we got the tradition for you.
There are plenty of novels, memoirs, documentaries and livestreaming options sure to satiate fans of theater.
Women, sex and Jewish mothers were just some of the targets of his popular satirical writing in books, essays, screenplays and more.
He helped forge a movement asserting that scholars must put aside their modern-day assumptions and prejudices to fully understand how people acted and thought in the past.
Reading Rhythms bills itself as a series of “reading parties,” where guests read silently for an hour and chat with strangers about the books they brought. (Just don’t call it a book club.)
In his new memoir, “Uncross Your Legs,” Stan Herman chronicles a lifetime of adventures in apparel (and out).
The people who hid Curt Bloch, a German Jew, in the crawl space of a Dutch home gave him both food and the materials he needed to make a highly creative magazine now drawing attention.
Not many, according to a new collection of correspondence from a science fiction master.
Be wary of the recipes (all that glaze!), but there’s still delight in getting advice about etiquette, guest lists and fondue.
He attempted to define evil by plumbing the biographies and motivations of hundreds of violent felons who had committed heinous crimes.
Slip these into your pockets.
Banned book tables are a frequent sight at many bookstores. But are they helping the authors who need it most?
From her idyllic estate, Beatrice Monti della Corte oversees a writer’s residency that has provided inspiration, camaraderie, and leisurely, wine-fueled meals to some of the foremost storytellers of our time.
New York Times commenters share their favorite books of the year.
John Vaillant, the author of “Fire Weather” (one of our 10 Best Books this year), discusses climate change and the fire that devastated a Canadian petroleum town in 2016.
Corinna Luyken, Philip Stead and Isabelle Arsenault capture the unique brightness that comes after the dark.
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