Reading picks from Book Review editors, guaranteed to suit any mood. By The New York Times Books Staff Novels by Haruki Murakami and Rebecca Yarros, memoirs by Angela Merkel and Cher ...
These titles might lend readers a new perspective ahead of November 5.
Try an app. Options like Whichbook enable you to find your next book based on various qualifiers, such as emotion, geography ...
Learn more! A good book has the power to transport you somewhere else entirely, make you think, smile, swoon and laugh. But ...
Shorter days, longer nights…we’re moving into the best months of the year to curl up with a good book, a hot cup of tea (or maybe a spiked apple cider!), and a cozy blanket. If ...
Use precise geolocation data and actively scan device characteristics for identification. This is done to store and access ...
Kamila, Sara and Ted pick out some of the books, including Wolf Hall, Lincoln in the Bardo and On Beauty, which have stood out for them: books they'd recommend to others, and re-read again and again.
BBC Five Live presenter Nihal Arthanayake and writer Elif Shafak bring favourite books to the table, and Harriett Gilbert defends Denise Mina's Philip Marlowe novel.
Given all this, it’s easy to lose faith in humanistic learning. Universities themselves offer little solace. They constantly ...
The concept of "Blind Date with a Book" (BDWAB) is not new, but a recent article in the New York Times magazine highlights a ...
"Not only was it recommended for young adults to read, but it was on the curriculum in schools where it's now banned," the ...