Assouline has made its name publishing tomes that sell for $1,000 or more. But that’s just the beginning of this family-run ...
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
The season’s most anticipated titles include new fiction from Sally Rooney, Richard Powers, Jean Hanff Korelitz and more, ...
Pleasantly surprised on the subway, an invisible helper appears and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s ...
An exciting book with no words, a murder mystery, an author mocking their own pain and a poetic masterpiece highlight this ...
In best seller after best seller, world-weary investigators tackled military malfeasance and Russian spies, cracking jokes ...
In “Lucky Loser,” two investigative reporters illuminate the financial chicanery and media excesses that gave us the 45th ...
Batuman’s endless appreciation and ardor for her subjects (literature, yes, along with transcultural irony and ungenerous ...
Today, The New York Times Magazine published one of the most ambitious stories in its long history — an account of a Russian ...
Russia did not become a liberal democracy, and nor did a number of its former satrapies. Few people have had more opportunity ...
A massive, two-volume coffee table book revisits the heyday of classic Hollywood glamour as seen in Life magazine.
Katherine Rundell said children can handle hefty themes, but finds it “bad manners to offer a child a story and give them ...