Books

[ follow ]
Books
fromThe Atlantic
42 minutes ago

How to Put Sex in a Novel

Contemporary literary fiction increasingly avoids depicting heterosexual intimacy while queer novelists freely explore sex's complexities, as exemplified by Jan Saenz's unconventional novel about selling experimental orgasm-inducing pills.
Books
fromArs Technica
2 hours ago

Hyperion author Dan Simmons dies from stroke at 77

Dan Simmons, author of the acclaimed Hyperion Cantos, died from a stroke at 77, leaving behind a legacy spanning horror, historical, and science fiction genres.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
7 hours ago

What we're reading: writers and readers on the books they enjoyed in February

Claire Baglin's 'On the Clock' uses narrow focus on fast-food work to reveal profound truths about contemporary alienation and precarity with compassion and emotional depth.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
11 hours ago

Ben Markovits: I used to think any book concerned with people falling in love can't be very good'

Reading shaped formative years through detective stories, fantasy epics, and memoirs that provided companionship and escape during frequent moves and family transitions.
Books
fromDefector
4 hours ago

Confessions Of A Bookanizer | Defector

A reader maintains multiple simultaneous books across formats, frequently abandoning them for new interests, creating a chaotic reading pattern that diverges from conventional sequential completion.
fromwww.theguardian.com
11 hours ago

Watching Watership Down on acid with Bez: Shaun Ryder releases new memoir 24 Hour Party Person

I've done more books now, I think, than Shakespeare, sort of. I had a right laugh writing my first book, and people liked it, so when the chance to write another came up, I thought why not? I've got even more mad tales to tell.
Books
Books
fromNature
21 hours ago

Brain mysteries and Bronze Age diplomacy: Books in brief

Lionel Penrose's mid-twentieth century research connected genetic abnormalities to hand creases, establishing the hand as a significant diagnostic tool across multiple medical disciplines.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

The Rigor and Love of a Great Editor

Ann Godoff exemplified editorial excellence through complete self-effacement, prioritizing authors' success over personal recognition while building Penguin Press into a prestigious publishing powerhouse.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Things in Nature Merely Grow by Yiyun Li audiobook review a deconstruction of grief

A Chinese-American author processes the suicides of both her sons through radical acceptance, finding meaning in facts and logic while contemplating her own mental health history's potential influence.
fromScary Mommy
23 hours ago

12 Books That Scary Mommy Editors Devoured In February 2026

I opened this book thinking, Eh, I'm a little bit of a people pleaser, sure. By the end, so much of my life and my choices had been explained to me in the most graceful, non-shameful way. I can't recommend Clayton's walk through the fawn response enough. It's educational, yes, but if you've ever been ashamed of how you handle conflict, this is a very healing read.
Books
Books
fromwww.dailyfreeman.com
1 day ago

Penguin Press founder Ann Godoff, a powerhouse editor of bestsellers and prize winners, dies at 76

Ann Godoff, influential book publisher for over 30 years who founded Penguin Press and published numerous bestsellers and award-winning works, died of cancer at age 76.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

Enough With the Bros

The 'bro' suffix has become a lazy rhetorical device that transforms personal annoyances into social archetypes, preventing genuine critical analysis of why certain behaviors or interests actually warrant criticism.
Books
fromThe Nation
1 day ago

Has Contemporary Fiction Ignored the Working Class?

Work's grip on life demands vigilance; allowing career to consume identity risks losing oneself entirely to labor's demands.
Books
fromBustle
1 day ago

"Immersive Reading" Will Finally Help You Open A Book Before Bed Instead Of Scrolling

Immersive reading—simultaneously reading a physical book while listening to its audiobook—enhances focus, retention, and enjoyment for readers struggling with concentration.
Books
fromScary Mommy
1 day ago

Scary Mommy 2026 Readers' Choice Best Book Subscription Box

Subscription boxes offer curated book selections tailored to specific genres and reading preferences for book enthusiasts.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Railsong by Rahul Bhattacharya review a heartfelt tale of life on the Indian railways

Indian Railways served as a major employer and source of female empowerment in India, particularly in rural areas, while simultaneously representing bureaucratic dysfunction and systemic failures.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

When Did Literature Get Less Dirty?

Philip Roth's Zuckerman Unbound functioned as a response to the controversial reception of Portnoy's Complaint, with Roth's protagonist expressing regret over writing sexually explicit material that drew accusations of anti-Semitism and misogyny.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

These books are pushing boundaries': winners of 30,000 Inclusive Books for Children awards announced

Six female authors won the 2026 Inclusive Books for Children awards, with winning titles featuring diverse representation in children's literature across multiple age categories.
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

The Most Dangerous Books in Society

A study found that reading banned books predicted civic engagement more strongly than personality traits. Reading banned books showed zero correlation with grades, violent crime, or nonviolent crime in adolescents. Reactance theory explains why censorship backfires: Restricted freedoms activate curiosity and thinking.
Books
Books
fromEsquire
2 days ago

Why Is Taylor Sheridan Writing a Prison Survival Guide?

Taylor Sheridan, who has never been incarcerated, is publishing a humorous prison survival guide co-written with ex-convict Tom Nelson, releasing June 23.
Books
fromwww.npr.org
2 days ago

Readers say goodbye to Book World from 'The Washington Post'

The Washington Post's Book World section closure removes a major source of book reviews and recommendations for casual general readers, impacting discovery more than dedicated book enthusiasts.
fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

Nine Books to Reset Your View of the World

Books rise to the level of enduring art, I believe, when their writers take something ordinary and reintroduce it in a way that radically transforms it. The right work can make a subject that's never crossed my mind, or that strikes me as aggressively boring, into something incantatory, pulsing with meaning.
Books
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

My Bags Are Big by Tibor Fischer review how to make it in crypto

Dan, a 60-year-old cryptocurrency investor in Dubai, recounts his unconventional journey from south London through sports management, failed romance, and encounters with David Bowie, populated by eccentric characters in a narrative driven by sardonic humor.
#literary-fiction
Books
fromThe New Yorker
2 days ago

Adrian Matejka Reads C. D. Wright

Adrian Matejka reads poetry selections including C. D. Wright's 'Against the Encroaching Grays' and his own poem 'Almost Home' in conversation with Kevin Young.
fromJezebel
1 day ago

Turns Out, When You Write a Novel About Killing a Politician, People Tell You How They'd Do It

When the people who are after me get here, they'll arrest me and put me on trial, or they'll disappear me to some black site. Or they won't bother with any of that and they'll just kill me. All of these seem like plausible outcomes, but in the novel's prologue, the narrator seems much more confident of her success: I am a fucking genius, a gorgeous fucking genius, and the only thing left to do is sit down and write.
Books
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Homeschooled by Stefan Merrill Block review a true Misery' memoir

Stefan Merrill Block's mother withdrew him from school in the 1990s under the guise of nurturing his creativity, but her homeschooling was actually driven by her own emotional needs and isolation rather than educational philosophy.
fromVulture
2 days ago

The Judy Blume Book That Scandalized a Nation

I was wild. My fantasies were wild. She remembered having dinner with her agent, Claire Smith, and Smith's husband in Brooklyn, after both the Smiths had read a draft of Wifey. Everyone was so scandalized by it. But [Claire] was not so scandalized so that she wouldn't sell it. A lot of people wanted me to change my name, warning me I would ruin my lovely career if I published this under my own name.
Books
Books
fromVulture
2 days ago

The Next Heated Rivalry Book Got Delayed Another Year

Rachel Reid delays the final Heated Rivalry book from September 2026 to June 2027 due to worsening Parkinson's symptoms affecting her writing ability.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
2 days ago

What Fetishists Can Teach Us About Consumerism and Desire

Fetish cultures transform ordinary objects into sources of transcendent meaning and sustained erotic power that resist the disappointment of conventional consumerism.
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

As If by Isabel Waidner review surreal doppelganger story

As the trophy takes the form of an elusive UFO, Corey Fah an outsider unfamiliar with the baffling inner workings of the system is unable to collect or even confirm the award. Waidner has said that the novel was partly inspired by the experience of winning the Goldsmiths prize for their previous work Sterling Karat Gold, and by the ephemeral nature of success, with its unfamiliar contexts of social power and opportunity.
Books
fromOpen Culture
4 days ago

An Introduction to the Codex Seraphinianus, the Strangest Book Ever Published

At the end of the day [it's] similar to the Rorschach inkblot test. You see what you want to see. You might think it's speaking to you, but it's just your imagination.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
4 days ago

Briefly Noted Book Reviews

This devastating début novel takes the form of an oral history about a tragedy that shatters a family. At its heart is a couple who arrived in the U.S. in the late nineteen-nineties as refugees from Afghanistan. They prospered, and brought up four children in an affluent suburb in Virginia. Rotating testimonies from people they know-family friends, a cousin, lawyers-offer theories about what led to the novel's central catastrophe.
Books
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

My rookie era: I wasn't immediately good at oil painting, but it taught me to find pleasure in struggle

Returning to painting through oil classes helped overcome fear of judgment, teaching fundamentals, practice, and acceptance of possible failure to enjoy the creative process.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
5 days ago

Mary Gaitskill Reads "Something Familiar"

Mary Gaitskill performs "Something Familiar" from the March 2, 2026 issue and has published eight fiction books, including Veronica and the essay collection Oppositions.
Books
fromSFGATE
5 days ago

A writer went investigating a homicide case. Instead, he found an SF relic.

A found journal connected to Ken Kesey's Merry Pranksters was discovered in a Utah antique store amid a true-crime investigation into a road-trip homicide.
Books
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
5 days ago

Artist Steph Littlebird steps into authorship with 'You Are the Land' * Oregon ArtsWatch

Steph Littlebird released You Are the Land, combining her illustration practice with authorship to center Indigenous perspectives rooted in Pacific Northwest heritage.
fromJezebel
5 days ago

The Time I Learned Greek Scholars Are Canonically Hotter Than Roman Scholars

It started with a book launch in 2021. I'd been living in London as a social media journalist when I asked my then-publication's culture editor to send me to one of these exclusive-sounding events, as 1) I'd never been and 2) I just really wanted to be a person who "has a book launch to go to." Thankfully, there was one that exact day-and he put my name on the list for the release of Mary Beard's Emperor of Rome. Huzzah.
Books
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Myth, monsters and making sense of a disenchanted world: why everyone is reading fantasy

Fantasy is a dominant, all-pervading cultural form offering diverse subgenres, serious artistic value, and lineages from varied creators and traditions.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
6 days ago

Books for the Busy Person

Short, compact books and short stories can deliver immersive, rewarding reading experiences even when readers have only brief moments of time.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

Last year I read 137 books': could setting targets help you put down your phone and pick up a book?

Public tracking and gamified reading goals risk turning reading into a competitive, metric-driven activity that can undermine enjoyment, deep engagement and sustainable reading habits.
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

Imagining From Multiple Perspectives

Skilled fiction-writers can guide the imagination, cuing readers to use their senses so that they fantasize more richly than they could alone (Scarry 1999, 3-9). If it serves a storyteller's artistic aims, a writer can prompt readers to imagine a scene from several perspectives at once. Creative writers can accomplish this goal by blending appeals to readers' visual and somatosensory (bodily) senses.
Books
#charles-dickens
fromThe New Yorker
6 days ago

A Childhood in Jewish New Orleans

It's a standard trope in portrayals of assimilated Jews to open with a scene built around a Christmas tree. That's how Tom Stoppard's " Leopoldstadt" and Alfred Uhry's " Last Night of Ballyhoo" begin, and also Ian Buruma's memoir about his grandparents, " Their Promised Land." The idea is, as soon as you show that, you've got the audience's full attention, especially if it's a Jewish audience, because it's so peculiar.
Books
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Georgi Gospodinov: Jorge Luis Borges gave me an exhilarating sense of freedom'

Early reading fostered a lifelong devotion to books and writing, shaped by adventure, criminology, eroticism, Salinger, Borges, and Bulgarian poets.
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

The Unlikely Success of a Strange Alabama Bookstore

Outside, the Alabama Booksmith is so unassuming it's as if Reiss had forgotten that he was running a retail business: a two-story, nearly windowless structure, surrounded by office parks and parking lots, on a dead-end street in a suburb of Birmingham. Inside, the vibe is half 1970, half 1870, with wood panelling, rattan chairs, and a drop-tile ceiling-but also patterned tablecloths, cozy curtains, a functioning fireplace, and an oversized hourglass.
Books
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Another World by Melvyn Bragg review portrait of the broadcaster as a young man

Melvyn Bragg leaves Wigton for Wadham College, embraces Oxford life, explores culture and politics, joins demonstrations, and later reassesses his imperial-minded motives.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The best recent crime and thrillers review roundup

Two contemporary novels probe suburban domesticity, revealing secrets, manipulation, and moral ambiguity through slow-burn suspense and darkly comic plotting.
fromFuncheap
1 week ago

Book Talk with Adam Hochschild: American Midnight (Grace Cathedral)

In these turbulent years, democracy was tested by war, pandemic, and violence driven by conflicts over race, immigration, and labor rights. In American Midnight: The Great War, a Violent Peace, and Democracy's Forgotten Crisis, legendary historian Adam Hochschild brings this moment vividly to life, revealing both the repression that darkened the era and the Americans who struggled to repair a fractured nation.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

I'll Be the Monster by Sean Gilbert review are they fantasists or psychopaths?

Glimpse them chatting in a restaurant or posing on Instagram, and you might think they have it all. The pair live in London but often travel, drawing the eyes of other guests, their skin glowing, their limbs artfully at ease. She writes affirmations on hotel stationery; he claims to taste notes of bark and tobacco in his chianti. As Sean Gilbert's dark, observant debut opens in Istanbul, this apparently perfect couple bicker and sweat, for secrets lurk behind their facade and one of them might be murder.
Books
fromFast Company
1 week ago

5 simple tips to hit breakthrough ideas

Most of us think great ideas are conjured from within-some mysterious well of genius possessed by a special few. But if you listen closely to history's most celebrated creators, you'll hear something completely different. They describe their greatest work not as something they conjured or invented, but as something they found. Not creation, but discovery. Listen to the audio version of this Book Bite-read by George himself-below, or in the Next Big Idea App.
Books
Books
fromBustle
1 week ago

How This Best-Selling Author Wrote The Sapphic WNBA Romance Of Her Dreams

A reassigned sports journalist discovers queer community, romance, and the cultural rise of the WNBA while pursuing a tense attraction to a Sparks star.
#toni-morrison
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

In the age of the rough sex defence', Emerald Fennell's treatment of Wuthering Heights' Isabella Linton is grotesque

Isabella's agency is stripped: she is fetishized, reduced to a submissive object, and treated as a disposable narrative tool rather than a developed character.
Books
fromIndependent
1 week ago

Paul Mescal's mum invites us to find 'unexpected, unruly and beautiful' joy in the small pleasures of life

A cancer diagnosis transformed a life and, with daily practices and supportive online messages, inspired wise, uplifting poems that find joy amid hardship.
Books
fromTime Out New York
1 week ago

NYC's top Black and queer-owned bookstore just revealed its best books for Black History Month

Gladys Books & Wine centers Black queer stories, serving as a Bed-Stuy bookstore and wine bar offering community, literary events, and Black love–focused programming.
Books
fromPoynter
1 week ago

When newspapers cut book coverage, communities lose more than reviews - Poynter

Newspaper book coverage is rapidly shrinking despite a $30 billion publishing industry, with major outlets cutting book sections and reducing book-review staff.
Books
fromAbove the Law
1 week ago

Who Better To Write A Legal Thriller Than A Trial Attorney? - Above the Law

A Tampa attorney published a legal thriller about a charter captain on Anna Maria Island accused of murder amid 1970s drug smuggling and death‑penalty conflict.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The Last of Earth by Deepa Anappara review into Tibet's Forbidden Kingdom'

In The Last of Earth, she points her writerly compass towards the mountains of mid-19th-century Tibet a region then closed off to European imperialists to meditate on the chequered history of colonial exploration, cartography and the impermanence of human existence. It's in the nature of white men to believe they own the world, that no door should be shut to them.
Books
Books
fromCN Traveller
1 week ago

My Favourite Airbnb: Jane Austen's Family Home in Bath

Jane Austen's Bath residence at 4 Sydney Place preserves Georgian features and reflects Bath's social life and Roman and Georgian heritage.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Our Most Anticipated Books of 2026

Forthcoming notable books include Halldór Laxness's A Parish Chronicle, Helen Garner's collected stories, Hernan Diaz's new novel, and Can Xue's The Enchanting Lives of Others.
Books
fromPoets & Writers
1 week ago

Literary MagNet: Mandy-Suzanne Wong

Mollusks and other overlooked marine animals are imagined as conscious protagonists, revealing endurance, emotional life, and human-caused threats to ocean ecosystems.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Lauren Groff on Masters of Short Fiction

Clarice Lispector’s regulated, surreal prose illuminates women’s interior psyches and outsider perspective, while Yoko Ogawa’s novellas probe surreal, disturbing manifestations of evil.
Books
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

In Hamnet, Grief Isolates and Art Connects

A family's private sorrow reshapes relationships and identity; a restrained, landscape-driven cinematic rendering lets silence and imagery embody grief.
Books
fromInverse
1 week ago

15 Years Ago, The Worst Young Adult Sci-Fi Movie Saw The Cynical Future

James Frey's fabricated memoir caused scandal, career fallout, and he then produced a commercially driven YA sci-fi franchise adapted into a film.
Books
fromMiami Herald
1 week ago

This publisher enlists 'bookfluencers' to choose its titles. Is it working?

Lightly revised rereleases of backlisted young-adult novels, paired with influencer-driven publisher models, can revive titles and reach new generations of readers.
Books
fromLos Angeles Times
1 week ago

This publisher enlists 'bookfluencers' to choose its titles. Is it working?

Bindery Books uses influencer-led imprints to publish and promote underrepresented authors, pairing social-media book creators with titles to build engaged reader communities.
Books
fromTechRepublic
1 week ago

Turn Your Expertise Into Published Books Using Advanced AI Technology

Aivolut AI Book Creator produces complete, Amazon-ready manuscripts in minutes using advanced LLMs and proprietary algorithms, drastically reducing the time to publish for business professionals.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The Disappearing Act by Maria Stepanova review a poetic exploration of Russian guilt

A stranded novelist wrestles with memory, homeland's violent legacy, compromised language, and guilt over joy while living through exile and silencing amid war.
fromTechCrunch
1 week ago

Audible's new 'Read & Listen' feature syncs your Kindle ebooks with audiobooks | TechCrunch

The company announced on Wednesday an "immersion reading" feature in the Audible app, which allows readers who have both the ebook and audiobook versions of a title in their Audible and Kindle libraries to read the ebook's text while the audio plays. The feature also lets users switch between the different formats across devices. While in the "Read & Listen" mode, the text of the book is highlighted in real-time in sync with the narration.
Books
#antiquarian-books
Books
fromThe Verge
1 week ago

Audible syncs ebook reading and audiobook listening to keep you focused

Audible added immersion reading that highlights synced ebook text during audiobook playback to boost focus and assist language learners when users own both formats.
Books
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 week ago

Rachel Reid, the unassuming author of Heated Rivalry' whose universe has taken on a life of its own

Rachel Reid turned niche queer 'hockey smut' romance into a mass phenomenon with the Game Changers series and its HBO adaptation, selling over 650,000 copies.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

How Toni Morrison Saw History

Preserve offensive monuments and artifacts and add counterpoints or context to confront and reveal suppressed histories and Black accomplishments rather than erase them.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Our Better Natures by Sophie Ward review reimagining Andrea Dworkin

Three women's intertwined 1971 stories probe justice, freedom and power through activism, personal trauma, and cross-cultural family ties.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

A Hymn to Life by Gisele Pelicot review a unique memoir by a figure of astonishing power

Her ex-husband, Dominique, who will almost certainly be in jail for the rest of his life for drugging and raping his wife and recruiting 50 men over the internet to do likewise, takes his place among the monsters of our age. In his absence, the reader may experience a version of what happened in Gisele Pelicot's own family namely, the misdirection of anger towards her.
Books
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

The Haunting of Trauma: PTSD and Toni Morrison's 'Beloved'

Excellent descriptions of trauma abound, including memoirs, but they are logical and descriptive, constrained by the conventions of straightforward narrative. But trauma itself upends the usual modes of narrative by which we think about our lives: out of sequence and unintegrated, traumatic memories defy the logic that guides our sense of our lives as stories with a past, present, and future. Literary tools such as symbol, allegory, and narrative structure can embody a visceral sense of the ways that trauma can disrupt and diminish a life.
Books
Books
fromKqed
1 week ago

A New Mother's Descent Into Madness

A Black new mother's descent into paranoia and psychosis amid racial tension and isolation captures the harrowing realities of postpartum experience.
Books
fromLos Angeles Times
1 week ago

Michael Silverblatt, 'genius' host of KCRW literary show 'Bookworm,' dies at 73

Michael Silverblatt, longtime KCRW Bookworm host, died at 73, leaving a significant archive of in-depth interviews with major late-20th and early-21st-century authors.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

More heartache than Hamnet?: Maggie O'Farrell's best books ranked!

The ghost of a previous lover is always a challenge, particularly if you (mistakenly) believe that she's actually dead. This is the unenviable situation for Lily, the protagonist of O'Farrell's second novel, who is swept off her feet by dashing architect Marcus and in short order moves in with him. Lily takes his assurances that her predecessor Sinead is no longer with us to mark a more permanent absence;
Books
Books
fromFood & Beverage Magazine
1 week ago

Bookish Wine: Where Romantasy, Art, and Wine Collide - Food & Beverage Magazine

Bookish Wine pairs special-edition romantasy novels with bespoke Sonoma wines to create a limited-release, collectible, immersive reading-and-tasting experience for romantasy communities.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Poem of the week from plastic: A Poem by Matthew Rice

Night-shift factory work constrains workers' imagination and individual potential, reducing moments of perception to fragments within enforced time-stamped routine.
Books
fromApartment Therapy
1 week ago

T.J. Maxx Has a New Home Section No One's Talking About (Yet!)

T.J. Maxx, Marshalls, and HomeGoods now carry discounted bestselling novels and paperbacks, often priced $8.99–$12.99, including contemporary hits and classics.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Frogs for Watchdogs by Sean Farrell review about a boy

There's a particular energy to novels written from the point of view of small children. Humour, of course, in the things the child misinterprets; pathos in the things they feel they must keep hidden; jeopardy in the dangers we can see, and they cannot. As any relative or babysitter can attest, even the sweetest child can become mind-numbingly dull when they're all the company one has, so there's a skill to charm without boring.
Books
Books
fromThe Mercury News
1 week ago

A 'fair' of the heart Hearts and pages a-flutter

A Los Altos romance-only bookstore hosted a Valentine's fair drawing readers, local authors, vendors and community members celebrating romance literature and connections.
Books
fromNature
1 week ago

Can consciousness ever be understood - this side of death?

Conscious experiences are brain-constructed phenomena that can be expanded and clarified through psychedelics, while science develops testable neural theories of consciousness.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

One Day has been a bestselling novel, a forgettable film, a beloved TV series now can it be a musical?

David Greig and Max Webster are adapting David Nicholls's One Day into a staged musical, tackling adaptation pitfalls while distinguishing the production from screen versions.
Books
fromMiami Herald
1 week ago

'Fighting Back' traces one pilot's journey from Bronx childhood to the birth of the Israeli Air Force

Bronx-born Stan Andrews becomes a World War II combat pilot whose wartime service and American antisemitism drive him to volunteer for Israel's air efforts.
Books
fromLondon On The Inside
1 week ago

Gisele Pelicot Will Tell Her Story at Southbank Centre

Gisèle Pelicot launches A Hymn to Life: Shame Has to Change Sides, urging shame to change sides in sexual abuse cases.
fromNature
1 week ago

'What are we doing here?' The polymaths who searched for the meaning of life

A mentor once told me that, when writing a research statement for a professorship, I had to start with the most ambitious pitch I could imagine - and then go ten times bigger. It's tricky enough to do this as a cosmologist, given that the topic of study is the entire Universe. But there is a quest that is more ambitious still: to find out 'what are we doing here?'
Books
Books
fromFuncheap
1 week ago

Drumbeats, Heartbeats: Community As One

San Francisco Public Library hosts a joint Black History Month and Lunar New Year celebration at the Main Library with performances, procession, and youth readings.
Books
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 week ago

Julian Barnes: I've become more left-wing because the center has moved rightwards'

Julian Barnes, aged 80, declares Departures his final book while continuing essays, confronting memory themes, living with blood cancer and maintaining a rich literary life.
Books
fromHarper's Magazine
1 week ago

Juvenile Impulse, by Becky Zhang

A retrospective narrative examines adolescent identity, desire, power dynamics, and authorial agency at a rigorous, hierarchical all-girls Southern California school.
[ Load more ]