NYT > Books > Book Review

For Tayari Jones, All Roads and All Novels Lead to Atlanta

Book Review: ‘Kin,’ by Tayari Jones

Book Review: ‘On Morrison,’ by Namwali Serpell

Three New Books Apply Economic Logic to Some of Life’s Messiest Problems

The 10 Best Books of 2025

Book Review: ‘Saoirse,’ by Charleen Hurtubise

‘The Lost Boys’ on Broadway and Cynthia Erivo in ‘Dracula’: Why Vampires Won’t Die

Guillermo del Toro on Writing and Directing the Oscar-Nominated ‘Frankenstein’

Michael Silverblatt, NPR’s ‘Bookworm’ Who Interviewed Authors, Dies at 73

Book Review: ‘The Optimists,’ by Brian Platzer

How a New Yorker Put Poetry on the London Underground

3 Fizzy, Fabulous New Romcoms

Two Children’s Picture Books About Tantrums and Foul Moods

Cees Nooteboom, Voyaging Author of Enigmatic Novels, Dies at 92

6 New Books We Love This Week

Grant Ginder on His Favorite Books and His New Novel, ‘So Old, So Young’

Fantasy Books That Imbue the Real World With Magic

From 1983: Fania Fénelon, 74; Memoirs Described Auschwitz Singing

From 1966: Anna Akhmatova, Leading Soviet Poet, Is Dead

Book Review: ‘So Old, So Young,’ by Grant Ginder

Learning German from a 1970s Language Book

Book Review: ‘Why I Am Not an Atheist,’ by Christopher Beha

Book Review: ‘Rebel English Academy,’ by Mohammed Hanif

Book Review: ‘Leaving Home: A Memoir in Full Color,’ by Mark Haddon

‘A Hymn to Life’ Review: Gisèle Pelicot’s Memoir Is a Powerfully Written Feminist Manifesto

Book Review: ‘Evil Genius,’ by Claire Oshetsky

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