In “We Tried to Tell Y’All,” Meredith D. Clark chronicles the heyday of Black Twitter.
Caryl Phillips’s new novel, “Another Man in the Street,” follows an immigrant who arrives in 1960s London.
“I’m very comfortable with the level of ambition I have for my books,” says the ubiquitous BBC talk show host, who calls “Frankie” his “first happy romance.”
In a new memoir, Sarah Hoover grapples with the uglier moments that she and her husband, the artist Tom Sachs, have faced while navigating parenthood.
When cats bite or scratch, they’re trying to tell you something. Wilbourn, a cat therapist, was a pioneer in the art of listening to them.
Nearly six years after becoming a literary heavyweight with “Read with Jenna,” she’s starting her own publishing venture with Penguin Random House.
“The Lady of the Mine,” by Sergei Lebedev, takes place during Russia’s 2014 invasion.
In her lively debut novel, “How to Sleep at Night,” Elizabeth Harris measures what happens when the Republican half of a gay couple dials up the campaign rhetoric.
In Adam Haslett’s “Mothers and Sons,” crisis reconnects an asylum lawyer and his estranged mother, the co-founder of a women’s retreat.
Tips from writers, artists and a social worker that might make the practice less daunting.
A new book traces shifts in the nation’s treatment of aging adults — for better and for worse.
Her new novella, “Rosarita,” takes place in Mexico, a country she finds so like her native India that, she says, “I feel utterly at home there.”
Adam Ross’s “Playworld” is about a child actor and the real-world dramas that engulf his adolescence.
The new novel by Bernhard Schlink, the author of “The Reader,” explores the legacies of World War II and reunification in contemporary Germany.
He charted the rise of musical minimalism on New York’s downtown scene in the 1970s. He later gained notice for abstract works of his own.
A novel of British nobility; a memoir of American aristocracy.
In “The Life Cycle of the Common Octopus,” a college student balances her new independence while investigating the demise of her parents’ marriage.
She chronicled the melodrama of Pale Male, a red-tailed hawk who became an avian sensation as it took up residence atop a Manhattan apartment building.
The company introduced safeguards after readers flagged “bigoted” language in an artificial intelligence feature that crafts summaries.
His 15 well-plotted novels teemed with romance and strange coincidence. An erudite literary critic with an ear for language, he also wrote a raft of nonfiction books.
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