The American writer’s last novel becomes surprisingly effective theater in the hands of Tiphaine Raffier at the Odéon-Théâtre de l’Europe.
After 10 attempts and years of suffering and addiction, Clancy Martin describes facing the darkness in his raw memoir “How Not to Kill Yourself.”
His novel “Lone Women” follows a Black homesteader in Montana who is haunted by secrets and a dark past.
An editor recommends old and new books.
Anatoly Kuznetsov’s documentary novel “Babi Yar” relives the Nazis’ execution of tens of thousands of Jews in 1941.
In “This Bird Has Flown,” the Bangles frontwoman Susanna Hoffs demonstrates her range.
Among the other German writers whose work he rendered into English was Arno Schmidt, whose Joycean wordplay presented a daunting challenge.
The first installment of an essay series on American literature and faith.
In Sarah Maslin Nir’s “The Flying Horse,” a young equestrian and her trusty steed jump back in time.
Jennifer Hershey is the guiding hand who helped shape “Daisy Jones & the Six,” “Mad Honey” and many other chart-topping regulars.
For two different young boys, beloved grandparents who fled war-torn lands embody the new gardens they’ve cultivated.
In her new novel, “Romantic Comedy,” Curtis Sittenfeld pays homage to the beloved form.
A collection of fantastical short stories and a book of poems about escaping capitalist society were also among the 2022 winners.
The former publishing employee who pleaded guilty to stealing unpublished book manuscripts was ordered to be deported and to pay $88,000 in restitution.
A selection of recently published books.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
The New-York Historical Society award goes to Beverly Gage, whose “G-Man: J. Edgar Hoover and the Making of the American Century” puts a notorious character in context.
“People sometimes ask why I want to read horror at all, let alone write it,” says the horror novelist, whose new book is “Lone Women.” “So much writing glances off the hardest and worst experiences, but horror confronts the worst that happens. ... A good horror novel doesn’t lie to you.”
A new report from the American Library Association showed a spike in censorship efforts, with 1,269 attempts.
In “All the Knowledge in the World,” Simon Garfield recounts the history of the encyclopedia — a tale of ambitious effort, numerous errors and lots of paper.
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