New York Times journalist Andrew Ross Sorkin, is a tale of greed, corruption and incompetence to shock the conscience.
In “Capturing Kahanamoku,” the historian Michael Rossi argues that an ugly pseudoscientific movement had its roots in a ...
Virginia Roberts Giuffre’s posthumous “Nobody’s Girl” doesn’t break political news, but might break your heart.
A brisk new portrait by Anthony Gottlieb emphasizes the philosopher’s restless, ambivalent mind and Viennese family ...
Every week, critics and editors at The New York Times Book Review pick the most interesting and notable new releases, from ...
The prolific novelist’s correspondence, collected for the first time, trace a life of literary brilliance, turbulent loves ...
With the famously private novelist enjoying a (private) moment in the sun, we reached out to die-hard fans who’ve tuned in to ...
A childhood crush — an elementary school janitor turned monkish spiritual adviser — teaches her how to control her dreams and ...
Dent is a lexicographer and TV presenter in Britain, where for more than two decades she’s been talking about words on the ...
A new reissue of Siegfried Kracauer’s 1928 novel “Ginster” offers a darkly humorous window into one German conscript’s inglorious journey.
In “Splendid Liberators,” Joe Jackson presents the U.S. wars in Cuba and the Philippines as part of a misguided project to ...
Matthiessen’s politics drifted left. He quit the C.I.A. It was clear that he could write. When just out of Yale he sold a ...