Rachel Carson’s Sky Writing Is Now a Picture Book
In “Something About the Sky,” the National Book Award-winning marine biologist brings her signature sense [+]
In “Something About the Sky,” the National Book Award-winning marine biologist brings her signature sense [+]
The author of “Gothikana” isn’t going to reveal much. But she will share a useful [+]
“Literary Theory for Robots,” by Dennis Yi Tenen, a software engineer turned literature professor, shows [+]
The title of Taylor Swift’s next album, “The Tortured Poets Department,” spurred strong responses from [+]
“Praiseworthy,” Alexis Wright’s bracing satire of clashing worldviews in Australia, more than lives up to [+]
“John Lewis” and “Medgar and Myrlie” tell the stories of activists who struggled with when [+]
Her children’s books on matters of sex and sexuality — notably “It’s Perfectly Normal” — [+]
In “Everyone Who Is Gone Is Here,” Jonathan Blitzer connects the dots between U.S. foreign [+]
Paul Theroux’s new novel, “Burma Sahib,” explores the writer’s formative experiences in colonial Myanmar.
In “The Bishop and the Butterfly,” Michael Wolraich tells the story of the sensational true [+]