Here are a few of the books that stuck with us and became personal favorites this year. Perhaps they will stick with you, too ...
Crafting The New York Times Book Review’s annual list involves arguments, politicking and, every once in a while, a rare ...
These are the characters who make up Peter Heller’s “The Orchard.” It’s a charming, gentle book and something of a departure ...
As the Polar Sun weaves its way from Greenland to Alaska, Synnott devotes as much time to history as he does to his own ...
The Burning God wraps up R.F. Kuang's horrifying fantasy tale that is steeped in historical brutality. The Poppy War is a ...
What a treat this book is: the best of Strand Magazine’s mysteries published over the past 25 years by the genre’s best ...
"Memoirs are about those most ancient questions," explained book critic Parul Sehgal in a 2019 interview with The New York ...
Adam Christopher Back in the 1970s, readers could pick up novelizations of popular movies. For example, not only was “Rocky” ...
How many people would want to kill a Park Service trail crew worker? Plenty, apparently. Sprinkle in a grizzly bear and you ...
Like in her debut novel “The Measure,” New York Times Bestselling author Nikki Erlick’s second book “The Poppy Fields” asks ...
Olivia Nuzzi's new book "American Canto" faced criticism from major publications on Tuesday, with reviewers calling it ...
A major constraint on the Iowa-class design was an “escalator clause” in the Second London Naval Treaty of 1936, which raised the maximum allowable displacement of battleships from 35,000 tons to ...