The result is a harshly critical societal view of play. Activities that you play, instead of simply do, are ousted from the ...
Amid the inevitable violence and horror, there are the equally inevitable heroes and villains, but for everyone the world has ...
Critic Bethanne Patrick recommends 10 promising new titles — fiction and nonfiction — to consider in February.
Revolving around two career criminals and a Thameside mansion, The Burial Plot is a gripping historical thriller about murder ...
There are romance novels in our picks (Brynne Weaver’s Scythe And Sparrow is of particular note), but we’ve also got some ...
Split Fiction follows Zoe and Mio, two authors who both become trapped inside their own stories. The two must work together to escape their stories and bond with each other to survive. Hazelight ...
Start turning pages on these 47 new releases from Edward Ashton, Heather Fawcett, James Rollins, Cory Doctorow, and many more.
Snowy landscapes, icy air, cozy evenings spent at home…winter always provides a picture-perfect setting. Many readers even insist it's the best of all seasons for snuggling up with a good book. In ...
What are three popular tropes that romance novels use? Jennifer Harlan, a New York Times books editor, recommends three romance novels that show off those tropes at their best. An author of books ...
Though this January feels like an uncomfortable harbinger of what the rest of 2025 may have in store for us, the fantasy ...
Two new books, “The Sirens’ Call” by Hayes and “Superbloom” by Carr, argue that our capacity for attention and connection has been devastated by the digital age In her memoir “The ...
Our editors and critics choose the most captivating, notable, brilliant, surprising, absorbing, weird, thought-provoking, and ...