An uncompromising voice in the women’s movement’s second wave, she focused on working-class women and later on women’s rights around the world.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
Ernaux’s writing has spoken particularly to women and to others who, like her, come from a working class seldom depicted with such clarity in literature.
The French philosopher and sociologist said that Ernaux had always been “a great personal inspiration.”
The French writer, who was awarded the 2022 Nobel Prize in Literature, blurs the line between fiction and memoir with spare prose she has characterized as “brutally direct.”
Three memoirs recount past harm — consensual and not.
In his new book, the satirist and comedian traces the rise of ill-equipped politicians and considers how to thwart them.
Lydia Millet believes the natural world can help us become more human.
“It is too difficult for me to constantly switch back and forth between the pictures and the text bubbles,” says the animal behaviorist and advocate for autistic people, whose new book (with Betsy Lerner) is “Visual Thinking.” “I like technical and scientific books with lots of illustrations.”
The 1976 book (and its 1980 film adaptation) helped the world see the country star’s remarkable resilience. The writer who worked by her side remembers his one-of-a-kind collaborator.
A recluse plagued by yearning and existential loneliness, the count found new life, and new readers, during the pandemic when the novel was serialized.
“Half American,” by the historian Matthew F. Delmont, provides a fresh account of the war, stressing the particular challenges — from segregation to racist violence — confronted by Black service members.
A selection of recently published books.
For “Konin: A Quest,” Mr. Richmond, a filmmaker, conducted 200 interviews to memorialize the culture of his forebears that vanished once the Nazis arrived.
In “Looking for the Hidden Folk,” Nancy Marie Brown makes a strong case for everyday wonder.
Twenty five books, spread across five categories, were named on Tuesday, including fiction, nonfiction and poetry. The winners will be announced next month.
In “Waging a Good War,” Thomas E. Ricks examines the civil rights movement through the lens of military history.
In “The Winners,” the Swedish author wraps up his Beartown trilogy.
A new book tells the history of America through its cemeteries.
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