In February, the Book Review Book Club will read and discuss “Orbital,” a Booker Prize-winning novel following six people living and working on a space station above Earth.
From contact with aliens courtesy of Adrian Tchaikovsky to the childhood writings of Octavia E. Butler, February’s sci-fi ...
Bill Gates’s first memoir; new novels by Ali Smith, Anne Tyler and TJ Klune; a Booker Prize nominee and more.
There are romance novels in our picks (Brynne Weaver’s Scythe And Sparrow is of particular note), but we’ve also got some ...
As the Year of the Snake arrives, Singapore’s cinemas and streaming services offer a slate of shows that mirror the serpent’s ...
One Day, a picture book by the beloved children’s author, follows the true story of a father and son escaping Auschwitz by train ...
Books newsletter: a preview of Saturday’s pages; Dylan Thomas Prize; Classics Now; The Last Boy; Mick Herron award; Susan ...
Majors in Political Science are prepared for further study at the graduate level or for a variety of careers. Our alumni include teachers, lawyers, reporters, lobbyists, campaign managers and elected ...
With stories set in Ancient Rome, Gilded Age New York, and more, these are the most anticipated historical fiction books of ...
Romance-focused fantasy novels were among the most popular ... and debuted at No. 1 on the New York Times fiction bestseller list last February, where it remains at No. 6.
Physics writer Emily Conover joined Science News in 2016. She has a Ph.D. in physics from the University of Chicago, where she studied the weird ways of neutrinos, tiny elementary particles that ...
New research spanning 150 years of U.S. history provides a startling answer: immigrants are consistently less likely to commit crimes than their US-born peers. Credit: Abramitzky et al.