Here are the year’s notable fiction, poetry and nonfiction, chosen by the staff of The New York Times Book Review.
Kathy Baum, who curates new books for the Denver-area bookstore, shares some of her fall and winter favorites.
“Everyone Who is Gone is Here: The United States, Central America, and the Making of a Crisis” by Jonathan Blitzer (Penguin, ...
These are the books your favorite authors are most excited to pick up next year, including recommendations from Jodi Picoult, Kennedy Ryan, Abby Jiminez and more.
Newsweek staff has gathered an eclectic list of classics and new favorite reads that will appeal, no matter how choosy the ...
Though he studied Sanskrit along with science and read classics, novels and poetry ... and if the country repaid him with a witch hunt, he “should turn his back on her.” ...
“My novel was inspired by the incredible work teachers, librarians and kids are doing to push back against bans and to protect their freedom to read,” she said ... Every child should feel at home in ...
The book revolves around a man, despite being deceived, overcomes challenges through his innate goodness.
The novels and nonfiction we couldn’t stop thinking about this year—and in a year like this one, that’s saying something.