In her debut graphic memoir, “This Beautiful, Ridiculous City,” Kay Sohini examines the lasting appeal of the Big Apple.
The Rules of Culture, Volume 1' is Cohen’s first acquisition for his imprint at the Crown Publishing Group, a division of ...
Our columnist on four stellar new releases. Alida Becker was an editor at the Book Review for 30 years. She was the first ...
The Shetland Way, by Marianne Brown, tells a tale of wind power – and local-outsider venom – that could be coming to your corner of England ...
Some fear we’ll be buried in brimstone; others expect to be extinguished by A.I. But is there comfort to be found in our ...
What does it take to bury an outdated argument? The thought occurred while reading Motherland, one of a series of recent ...
Simply put, Mixbook remains the best service of the five we tested for making photo books. While some competitors excelled at one thing or another, Mixbook does just about everything right. Its ...
Creating a roundup of the 25 best-selling books of all time is harder than it sounds. Books—especially those published hundreds of years ago—were published in different editions and translated ...
In her new book, Cho Nam-Joo captures both the universality of sexism and the specificity of women’s experiences. When I was young and adrift, Thomas Mann’s novel gave me a sense of purpose.
Your TBR list is getting longer... The simple joy of reading a book can inspire so much. While we’re turning their pages, we use our imaginations to live inside entire worlds with its characters.
Even in the 21st-century digital age, books haven’t lost their importance; they are still a reliable source for gathering information. Although we can now carry thousands of e-books on mobile devices ...