In “Necessary Trouble,” Drew Gilpin Faust, Harvard’s former leader, wrestles with her conservative Southern upbringing, and the unfinished business of the Civil War.
In these books, love is a choice you make over and over, not just on one day in a white dress.
Sometimes our reflections have nothing to do with us; sometimes they’re “the hide to our seek.”
Sometimes our reflections have nothing to do with us; sometimes they’re “the hide to our seek.”
A selection of recently published books.
Fans are rushing to collect all 13 of the Brooklyn Public Library’s limited-edition cards, which feature imagery from each of the rapper’s solo albums.
In Maud Ventura’s “My Husband,” a Frenchwoman cannot stop surveilling her spouse: “I think of my husband all the time; I wish I could text him all day.”
Two new books bring attention to old discoveries with the potential to cure stubborn ailments and reveal the secrets of biology.
Across Korea and Canada and the Midwest, these lonely protagonists guide us through ennui, delusion and even the afterlife.
Harakka Island, a creative community off the coast of Helsinki, Finland, helped the illustrator Marika Maijala come into her own as an artist. “I don’t know where my art ends and my life begins. The border is fleeting.”
Harry Smith lived many lives. “Cosmic Scholar,” a new biography, details his earthly ones.
When asked to narrate an audiobook of machine-generated verse, Mr. Herzog readily agreed. “I wasn’t the best choice,” he said. “I was the only choice.”
She wrote about heroic Jewish resisters in her book “Defiance,” which was later made into a film starring Daniel Craig and Liev Schreiber.
In the pandemic emergency, Brewster Kahle’s Internet Archive freely lent out digital scans of its library. Publishers sued. Owning a book means something different now.
William Boyd’s new book follows one man from childhood to death, and the globe-spanning adventures in between.
In a new book, Clare Carlisle considers the powerful partnership between the Victorian novelist and the de facto husband who tended her career.
He won the National Book Award for poetry in 2009, having first been nominated 40 years earlier. He taught at Brown University for four decades.
An editor recommends two escapist biographies.
Rethinking the German filmmaker’s vast body of work while reading a new book about him.
In Paul Murray’s new novel, “The Bee Sting,” an Irish family faces economic ruin after the 2008 financial crash. And that’s just the start of their troubles.
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