is launching an app that will allow the sales of e-books, too. By Alexandra Alter In “The Killing Fields of East New York,” Stacy Horn profiles one 1990s white-collar crime spree and the ...
In a new memoir, Hanif Kureishi reflects on a life transformed since he lost the use of his arms and legs.
Okorafor’s spellbinding new novel follows Zelu, a once-struggling writer grappling with power, privilege, agency and art ...
The Japanese author Uketsu, according to his biography, “only ever appears online, wearing a mask and speaking through a ...
This week’s literary quiz tests your knowledge of films inspired by nonfiction books or deeply autobiographical novels.
In “A Perfect Frenzy,” Andrew Lawler reveals the hypocrisies of the patriots on the battleground of colonial Virginia.
Gallant is the genius absurdist of the 20th century. Conditions were overripe for absurdism. Born in Montreal, Gallant was ...
In a vibrant collection of “essays on the future that never was,” Colette Shade takes a cold look at the cheery promise of ...
In Maggie Su’s funny debut novel, a Frankenstein-like monster turns on his flailing creator.
“Picturing the Border” collects photographs of the United States-Mexico boundary dating back to the 1960s.
In “Dark Laboratory,” Tao Leigh Goffe traces the origins of global environmental collapse to the explorer’s conquest of the ...
Our critic A.O. Scott shows you what he loves about it. By A.O. Scott Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times. Clay McLeod Chapman kept hearing friends say, of their Fox ...