URL:
https://www.nytimes.com/section/books
Updated:
1 hour 16 min ago
Three new novels hold the keys to real and imagined kingdoms.
Stephen King, David Sedaris, Carmen Maria Machado and others on how Shirley Jackson’s eerie classic first got under their skin.
Bodily functions rarely get the spotlight in fiction and poetry. But for some writers, they drive action and help create indelible characters.
The website Goodreads has become an essential avenue for building readership, but the same features that help generate excitement can also backfire.
The website Goodreads has become an essential avenue for building readership, but the same features that help generate excitement can also backfire.
The Italian writer’s first book, a novella originally published in 1942, establishes the themes — including thwarted desire and the challenges of family life — for which she became known.
In a breezy new history of personal branding, Tara Isabella Burton comes face to face with Oscar Wilde, Frederick Douglass, Kim Kardashian and more.
In “The Beach at Summerly,” Beatriz Williams weaves two standbys of summer fiction into one escapist story.
In her new novel, “Little Monsters,” Adrienne Brodeur takes readers on a stressful march toward a patriarch’s 70th birthday party.
In Thao Thai’s debut novel, “Banyan Moon,” the contentious relationship between a mother and daughter comes to a head when their family’s beloved matriarch dies.
In a new book, Michael Finkel tells the story of Stéphane Breitwieser, “perhaps the most successful and prolific art thief who has ever lived.”
Two giants of the literary world died last week. In this episode, the Book Review celebrates their lives.
In “Planta Sapiens,” Paco Calvo addresses our “plant blindness.”
Want to dip your brain into a jar of serotonin?
Between 1984 and 1990, Tria Giovan captured everyday life on the Lower East Side.
Stories, both new and evergreen, to help children of divorce heal.
Stories, both new and evergreen, to help children of divorce heal.
In “White House by the Sea,” Kate Storey gives readers a comprehensive tour of the summer home beloved by a certain political clan.
A selection of recently published books.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
Pages