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fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

Books We Love: These were NPR staffers' favorite plot-driven books of 2025

NPR's 'Books We Love' presents about 380 staff-recommended titles, showcasing diverse, plot-driven and thematically rich books like Emma Pattee's Tilt.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
10 hours ago

Joan Silber Reads "Safety"

Joan Silber reads 'Safety' (Dec. 8, 2025); subscribe on major platforms and sign up for the weekly Books & Fiction newsletter; Silber has nine fiction books and major awards.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
9 hours ago

Five Books to Read on Your Next Flight

Plot-driven thrillers and compact, fragmentary novels make ideal airport reading by passing time and keeping readers engaged during long waits.
Books
fromInverse
8 hours ago

35 Years Ago, The Best Stephen King Thriller Ever Kept Things Terrifyingly Simple

Lore-heavy explanation weakens horror; stripped-down, tension-focused storytelling creates more effective scares.
#kindle
fromZDNET
1 day ago
Books

I'm gifting this Kindle Essentials bundle to my bookworm friends - here's why

fromZDNET
1 day ago
Books

I'm gifting this Kindle Essentials bundle to my bookworm friends - here's why

Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
9 hours ago

I took literary revenge against the people who stole my youth': Romanian author Mircea Cartarescu

Mircea Cartarescu's lifelong fascination with butterflies shapes his fiction and connects him to Vladimir Nabokov's lepidopterist legacy.
Books
fromGameSpot
20 hours ago

The Best Cyber Monday Deals On Graphic Novels & Manga

Amazon's Cyber Monday sale offers deep discounts and B2G1 Free on comic book and manga collected editions from major publishers, including many Batman sets.
fromFast Company
10 hours ago

This startup hired a sci-fi novelist to give its AI companions a soul

When Quentin Farmer was getting his startup Portola off the ground, one of the first hires he made was a sci-fi novelist. The co-founders began building the AI companion company in late 2023 with only a seed of an idea: Their companions would be decidedly non-human. Aliens, in fact, from outer space. But when they asked a large language model to generate a backstory, they got nothing but slop. The model simply couldn't tell a good story.
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Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
16 hours ago

Can you have a community without craic? Scholars of Ireland's pubs warn of declining numbers

Irish pubs are culturally vital yet rapidly closing across Ireland, threatening community cohesion, rural life and social connection.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
10 hours ago

Jorie Graham on Elizabeth Bishop's "At the Fishhouses"

Elizabeth Bishop's 'At the Fishhouses' shifts twentieth-century poetry toward a colloquial, visionary voice, blending melancholy, wit, and sacramental sensibility to achieve momentary spiritual insight.
Books
fromsfist.com
21 hours ago

Field Notes: Kenny Alley, Holiday Architecture Book Fair, and Oakland's Last Old Redwood

Holiday Bay Area events highlight historic-home open houses, seasonal teas, festive Napa Valley train experiences, and local cultural and natural heritage attractions.
Books
fromDaily News
5 hours ago

Hot new baking cookbooks will keep us riding a sugar high through the holidays

Three new baking books offer recipes for all skill levels, practical baking guidance, seasonal celebration bakes, and nostalgic, approachable desserts.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

If I was American, I'd be worried about my country': Margaret Atwood answers questions from Ai Weiwei, Rebecca Solnit and more

Over 600 pages this memoir of sorts ranges from her childhood growing up in the Canadian backwoods to her grief at the death of her partner of 48 years, the writer Graeme Gibson, in 2019, with many friendships, the occasional spat and more than 50 books (including Cat's Eye, Alias Grace and the Booker prizewinning The Blind Assassin and The Testaments) in between.
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fromFast Company
1 day ago

The danger of believing business myths

There's an old myth that Inuit cultures have as many as a hundred words for snow. I remember learning about it in school, and there was just something wonderful about the idea that people's perceptions can be so deeply rich and different. I guess that's why, although it has been debunked many times, the story keeps getting repeated. There is also a lot of truth to the underlying concept.
Books
fromInsideHook
1 day ago

Tom Stoppard Turned Big Ideas Into Thrilling Drama

For more than half a century, Tom Stoppard's plays have left audiences entranced, whether those works were his earlier comedies like Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead and The Real Inspector Hound or more ambitious historical works like and Leopoldstadt. Stoppard's long literary career has reached its conclusion; The Guardian's Claire Armitstead and Chris Wiegand reported that Stoppard died on Saturday at home at the age of 88.
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Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

How Terror Works

A Berlin couple conducted a covert two-year postcard campaign rebutting Nazi propaganda, exemplifying muted resistance amid moral ambiguity and personal struggle.
fromLGBTQ Nation
23 hours ago

I've kept this terrible secret about my gay great uncle for decades ... until now - LGBTQ Nation

The story begins with the narrator recalling Emily Grierson's death as many of the town's residents attended her funeral in her once refined and grand home, which had fallen into disrepair. While alive, Emily had not permitted any of these folks to enter the house for the past decades, except her servant Tobe. "What secret was she concealing" thought many in the town?
Books
#childhood-reading
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago
Books

Tessa Hadley: Uneasy books are good in uneasy times'

Books shaped a child's imagination, provided vivid historical escape, introduced literary subtlety, and inspired the ambition to craft intricate fictional worlds.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago
Books

Sophie Hannah: I gave up on Wuthering Heights three times'

Early reading shaped lifelong love of mysteries, broadened by a harrowing memoir and self-coaching insights, inspiring a novelist career and revisits to classics.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

The best recent translated fiction review roundup

Brief novel synopses highlight human longing, memory, mortality and social pressures like xenophobia, sexism, and forbidden desire across wartime and contemporary settings.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
2 days ago

Ian McEwan on Imagining the World After Disaster

Humanity survives a century of disasters, offering nuanced optimism, while the realist novel remains the best instrument to represent inner life and contemporary digital experience.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Bog People: A Working-Class Anthology of Folk Horror review dark tales with a sting

English folk horror intertwines class, tradition, and communal grief through rituals, doleful rites, and landscape-driven journeys in ten working-class-set stories.
Books
fromGameSpot
2 days ago

God Of War 20th Anniversary Retrospective Deluxe Box Set Is Over 50% Off

Major God of War anniversary box sets and Deluxe editions are heavily discounted during Black Friday sales, offering substantial savings for collectors.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

From Dylan Thomas' shopping list to a note from Sylvia Plath's doctor: newly uncovered case files reveal the hidden lives of famous writers

Royal Literary Fund case files contain previously unseen personal documents and letters revealing financial, medical, and domestic struggles of prominent 20th-century writers.
Books
fromLos Angeles Times
2 days ago

How to have the best Sunday in L.A., according to Eric Wareheim

An ideal L.A. Sunday blends garden meditation, nursery-hopping, hidden-gem steakhouse dining, plant-driven creativity, and a martini in the hot tub.
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
2 days ago

At Portland Center Stage, an author joins her 'Little Women' onstage * Oregon ArtsWatch

that the story opens with a Christmas holiday celebration. As it happens, dramaturg Kamilah Bush's show notes for Portland Center Stage, where the play continues through December 21, include some helpful analysis of how the celebration of Christmas in American culture changed during the very Civil War time period in which Little Women is set. But this adaptation by Lauren Gunderson, directed by Joanie Schultz, mostly isn't aiming so directly at holiday traditions.
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Books
fromTravel + Leisure
2 days ago

This Charming North Carolina City Is the Perfect Place to Visit for the Holidays-and It's Home to Famous Scenes From Nicholas Sparks' 'The Notebook'

New Bern, North Carolina, blends historic waterfront attractions, a vibrant downtown culinary scene, and festive holiday traditions.
Books
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

How Animal Fairy Tales Can Help Studies of Animal Emotions

Animal Fairy Tales uses animal characters to depict emotional experiences like love, fear, courage, and friendship to foster empathy and healing in children.
Books
fromIrish Independent
2 days ago

The late Manchan Magan, Cecelia Ahern and Andrew Porter among the winners at An Post Irish Book Awards

Late broadcaster and writer Manchán Magan, rugby star Andrew Porter, and author Cecelia Ahern were among the winners at the An Post Irish Book Awards.
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

A Particularly Nasty Case by Adam Kay audiobook review a wayward doctor turns detective

When arriving paramedics ask Eitan for his details, he declines to give his real name, instead giving them the name of his work supervisor and nemesis, Douglas Moran. Eitan is a hard-partying consultant rheumatologist who has just returned to work after several months off following a mental health crisis, and who uses liquid cocaine secreted into a nasal inhaler to get through the working day.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Stay tuned': new Anne Rice film could foretell release of unpublished work by late author

The worst heartbreak and most riveting triumph of Anne Rice's life happened in relatively quick succession, each beginning when the US novelist's daughter Michele, then about three told her she was too tired to play. Rice had never heard such a comment from a child that age, and subsequent blood tests ordered by a doctor revealed that her beloved Mouse had acute granulocytic leukemia, considered untreatable for her.
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Books
fromThe Verge
3 days ago

My favorite e-reader is at its lowest price ever for Black Friday

Kobo Libra Colour delivers more features, wider file support, handwriting and stylus functionality, waterproofing, and 32GB storage at a lower price than the Kindle Colorsoft.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

The Matchbox Girl by Alice Jolly review horror, humanity and Dr Asperger

A mute autistic girl's wartime Vienna viewpoint explores disability, survival, and the role of Dr Hans Asperger, balancing sentimentality and historical realism.
Books
fromKqed
4 days ago

Gather 'round the Table - It's Time for a 'Family Feast!'

A warm, bustling family feast celebrates food, love, and togetherness through earthy illustrations and joyful kitchen scenes.
#childrens-books
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Service by John Tottenham review comic confessions of a grumpy bookseller

A misanthropic middle-aged bookseller rants in repetitive monologues, embodying stasis, bitterness, failed ambitions, and resentment toward gentrification and trendy customers.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
4 days ago

A Chef's Guide to Sumptuous Writing

Gabrielle Hamilton ran Prune, a thirty-seat East Village restaurant from 1999 to 2020, and published memoirs about her upbringing and family relationships.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
4 days ago

Traci Brimhall Reads Thomas Lux

Traci Brimhall reads Thomas Lux's 'Refrigerator, 1957' and her 'Love Poem Without a Drop of Hyperbole in It'; Kansas poet laureate and 2025 Guggenheim poet.
Books
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Imagining Beyond the Body

Human imagination can extend beyond human minds, enabling adoption of non-human perspectives and prompting rethinking of relationships with the environment.
Books
fromInc
4 days ago

In a World of AI Copy, Being Human Is Your Edge

AI accelerates marketing copy, but human-created content remains more valuable where genuine human connection and authenticity matter.
fromThe New Yorker
4 days ago

Sam Shepard's Enactments of Manhood

Two actors are wriggling across the stage on their bellies. They're earthworms, or maybe simply brothers, Cricket and Coyote, who want to become earthworms. They're planning to write a screenplay together, and one suggests making their movie about worms. But "I thought we were writing something about what it means to come from the same root," the other brother complains. "A movie, a Western, brothers killing men and running amuck in the desert."
Books
Books
fromNextbigideaclub
4 days ago

How to Stay Creative in a World That Won't Stop Distracting You

Social media's design fosters reactive behavior that undermines the receptive mental state necessary for deep creativity.
fromThe Nation
4 days ago

The Inexplicable Logic of Contact Sports

This, I learned, is known as a B'nei Mitzvah. Through a series of misadventures, it fell on the day of the Australian Rules Football (AFL) Grand Final, a day that is, in essence, the Australian equivalent of Super Bowl Sunday. I have three older brothers who all love the AFL, but it's my younger sister who is our family's most devoted fan.
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Books
fromStreetsblog
4 days ago

Book Excerpt Special: Jonathan Lethem's 'Program's Progress' - Streetsblog USA

A Different Kind of Tension contains surreal short stories blending class struggle, car-culture autocracy, perception-altering drugs, and dislocating, time-altering sexual experiences.
#superman-no-1
fromsfist.com
4 days ago
Books

Rare 1939 Copy of Superman No. 1' Found In SF Attic Now Most Expensive Comic Book Ever Sold

fromsfist.com
4 days ago
Books

Rare 1939 Copy of Superman No. 1' Found In SF Attic Now Most Expensive Comic Book Ever Sold

Books
fromThe Nation
4 days ago

[they're in their lord of the flies bag]

Boys intimately connected to river and land, wild yet rooted, belonging and safety within nature before any descent into violence.
Books
fromDefector
4 days ago

How A Campy 1970s Game Show Became Part Of Canada's National Lexicon | Defector

The phrase "gong show" in Canadian usage broadly denotes chaos, reflecting the mayhem of the late-1970s TV program The Gong Show.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Secrets of the cow-skulled scarecrow: did one man's cruel tales inspire Paula Rego's best paintings?

Paula Rego connected a brutal play about persecuted imagination to her experience under Salazar and created a life-size Pillowman for a Tate triptych.
Books
fromBustle
5 days ago

Elizabeth Olsen Quit Instagram & Picked Up Books Instead

Elizabeth Olsen left Instagram to avoid doomscrolling, prefers curated creative content privately, chooses thoughtful film projects post‑Marvel, and formed disciplined reading habits through school.
Books
fromThe Nation
5 days ago

The Return of Richard Siken

Richard Siken remains a crossover poet whose new collection abandons narrative distance for plainly autobiographical, meditative openness.
fromPortland Mercury
5 days ago

Oregon Contemporary's Le Guin Exhibition: Earthsea Maps, Cat Drawings, and a Full-Scale Reproduction of Her Writing Room

A Larger Reality: Ursula K. Le Guin isn't a typical exhibition. Ursula Kroeber Le Guin wasn't a typical artist. Curated by her son, Theo Downes-Le Guin, the new show installed at Oregon Contemporaryis, by his definition, "nonobjective"-a sprawling love note unembarrassed by its devotion. Braiding her personal and creative worlds, the exhibition pulls together interactive installations, a working typewriter, and hand-drawn maps of Earthsea. And that's just scratching the surface.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Crick: A Mind in Motion by Matthew Cobb review the charismatic philanderer who changed science

Most people could tell you that Francis Crick, together with James Watson, discovered the double helix structure of DNA, and shaped our understanding of how genes work. Fewer know that Crick also played a key role in modern neuroscience and inspired our continuing efforts to understand the biological basis of consciousness. Crick once said the two questions that interested him most were the borderline between the living and the non-living,
Books
from99% Invisible
5 days ago

Murderland - 99% Invisible

Then one day, Caroline discovered a map which documented the amount of arsenic in the soil in the Tacoma region. The map was the first of many clues she used to try to make sense of what plagued the Pacific Northwest of her childhood. What Caroline found was this: the 70s and 80s were the heyday of the mining and smelting of heavy metals in America-metals like copper, lead, and zinc, which all released huge amounts of toxic fumes like lead, arsenic, and asbestos into the air.
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Books
fromElite Traveler
5 days ago

Discover Boston's Hidden Library

A historic private Boston library offers public access via a $40 day-pass, featuring vast rare books, manuscripts, maps and a 10,000-piece art collection.
Books
fromwww.npr.org
5 days ago

A rare 'Superman No. 1' comic book found in an attic fetches $9.12M

A 1939 copy of Superman No. 1 found in a mother's attic sold for $9.12 million, becoming the most expensive comic book ever sold.
Books
fromPythontest
5 days ago

PythonTest Black Friday Deals 2025 | PythonTest

Multiple discount codes offer 20% and 50% off courses and the pytest book through November, including BLACKFRIDAY and SAVE50.
Books
fromBuzzFeed
5 days ago

Parents Have Spoken: 59 Gifts For Kids That Get A Stamp Of Approval

Choose parent-approved, long-lasting gifts for kids that they'll love and use, such as book subscription boxes, laser tag sets, or marble runs.
Books
fromBustle
5 days ago

A 'Wicked' Prequel About Glinda Is On The Way - But It's Not What You Think

Galinda: A Charmed Childhood is a Wicked prequel novel exploring Glinda's pampered-yet-ignored upbringing, her dance-driven escape, and roots before the Wicked story.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
6 days ago

Briefly Noted Book Reviews

Two midcentury English couples navigate secrecy, trauma, and shifting modernity amid a brutal winter, while a contemporary poetry collection probes desire, grief, and language's transformations.
Books
fromBustle
6 days ago

Elder Millennial Adultery Just Hits Different

Modern women face disillusionment with ambition and often seek inner life and imagined possibilities as alternatives to career or traditional family roles.
Books
fromIndependent
6 days ago

'It was a racket. But it was a racket RTE started.' Myles Dungan on freelance contracts, losing 'Late Date' and moving into fiction writing

Myles Dungan combines sardonic self-deprecation and imagination to create The Red Branch, a 19th-century San Francisco espionage thriller about Fenians, with agent support.
Books
fromTime Out New York
5 days ago

The New York Public Library just revealed the best books of 2025

The New York Public Library's 2025 Best Books lists present top ten selections across adults, teens, kids, and Spanish-language children's categories.
Books
fromBaldurbjarnason
1 week ago

The dichotomy of print versus the web

Print publishing delivers tangible distribution and audience engagement, while digital platforms and automation offer scalability but face management, execution, and business-model challenges.
Books
fromPoynter
6 days ago

Want to tell your own story? Try memoir-plus. - Poynter

Memoir-plus combines personal memoir with reporting and research to illuminate the complex middle of eating disorder recovery.
Books
fromAnOther
6 days ago

Juhea Kim's New Book Asks What Love Looks Like at the End of the World

Love becomes a lens to preserve nature, human connection, empathy, and tenderness amid climate-driven environmental collapse and loss.
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

Poem of the week: Missing You by Miles Burrows

Missing You Did you know the moon was so old It might have to go into a home? It keeps edging nearer The way old people do. Goya wore candles on his hat But Humphrey Davy invented the miner's lamp. On Enceladus a day is longer than a year. Tonight, we have the Spanish Civil War. You can't go on like this, moon, Peering into people's bedrooms And the stars have their own lives to lead. When did you last think of Cassiopeia? Really? Think!
Books
fromNature
6 days ago

The Internet is broken and the inventor of the World Wide Web wants to fix it

This Is for Everyone reads like a family newsletter: it tells you what happened, recounting the Internet's origin and evolution in great detail, but rarely explaining why the ideal of a decentralized Internet was not realized. Berners-Lee's central argument is that the web has strayed from its founding principles and been corrupted by profit-driven companies that seek to monetize our attention. But it's still possible to "fix the internet", he argues, outlining a utopian vision for how that might be done.
Books
fromThe New Inquiry
6 days ago

Nessuna Torno Indietro - 1938, 2025

Speaking from her book-lined New York apartment, Goldstein tells me that she chose to translate There's No Turning Back because of its intensity. It's the sort of novel, she says, like Forbidden Notebook (the first De Céspedes' novel Goldstein translated) that pulls you in immediately. Indeed, from its first line, There's No Turning Back propels the reader into the midst of daily life at the Grimaldi pensione-convent: 'As the nun read the last words of the evening prayer, an indolent chorus of girls responded: "Amen"'.
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Books
fromwww.newyorker.com
6 days ago

What Does Capitalism Really Mean, Anyway?

Capitalism tends toward near-universal commodification, transforming goods and aspects of life into standardized, fungible, tradable commodities.
fromThe New Yorker
6 days ago

Where Dante Guides Us

Levi, a young chemist from Turin, went on to become a major chronicler of life in the camps, but at the time he didn't believe that he had what it took to survive. He thought too much. He was hollow with hunger and painfully aware that his hands were covered in sores and that he smelled. Worst of all, he felt that the things he'd seen would leave him dead inside even if he survived.
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Books
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Daniyal Mueenuddin Reads "The Golden Boy"

Daniyal Mueenuddin reads "The Golden Boy" (Dec 1, 2025); his novel "This Is Where the Serpent Lives" will be published in January.
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 week ago

An alternative to capitalism is possible, at least in comic books

We have to understand economics for ourselves, or we're at the mercy of any charlatan, warns writer Michael Goodwin. He himself has contributed his two cents: first, he delved into decades of treatises and thinkers; then, in Economix (2012), he summarized in comic strips with illustrations by Dan E. Burr what he had gleaned: theories, practices, and pitfalls of the last two centuries of development.
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Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

He was just trying to earn a few kopecks': how newly translated stories reveal Chekhov's silly side

Chekhov's early 1880s stories are supremely juvenile, experimental, comical, and previously untranslated, showcasing playful wordplay, nonsense names, and onomatopoeic idiocy.
Books
fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

Gather 'round the table it's time for a 'Family Feast!'

A picture book celebrates joyous, multigenerational family gatherings centered on cooking, storytelling, and shared traditions.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Daniyal Mueenuddin on the Great Curve of History

Bayazid, found as a child in a Rawalpindi bazaar, is modeled on a charismatic 1975 driver amid Lahore's colorful household and driver culture.
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Edwidge Danticat on Jamaica Kincaid's "Girl"

As girls, we may find it difficult to picture our mothers-especially if they are stern Caribbean mothers-as anything other than the poised ladies they're so determined to mold us into. We struggle to imagine that they were ever little girls themselves, flying kites, climbing trees, playing hopscotch and marbles with their siblings. As mothers, some of us are so fearful for our daughters that we issue long lists of instructions that we hope will shield them from a hostile and menacing world.
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Books
fromThe Mercury News
1 week ago

Friends of the Milpitas Library's four-day sale set for Dec. 4-7

Milpitas Library hosts a Friends book sale Dec. 4–7 with discounts, a members-only preview, a Sunday bargain bag, and proceeds funding library programs.
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

"The Golden Boy," by Daniyal Mueenuddin

Bayazid never knew how he came to be a little boy alone in the streets of Rawalpindi. He had a memory more of forces than of people, a crowd, a hand, a hand no more. Yet the bazaars in those early nineteen-fifties were not so crowded as that, and Rawalpindi a town small enough that a lost little boy should be found.
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Books
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Ariel Levy on Emily Hahn's "The Big Smoke"

Emily Hahn embraced an adventurous expatriate life in 1930s Shanghai, experimented with opium curiosity, and traveled widely across diverse global locales.
Books
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 week ago

Friends of the Milpitas Library's four-day sale set for Dec. 4-7

Friends of the Milpitas Library will hold a four-day sale Dec. 4-7 with discounted books and media, plus a $5 bargain bag; proceeds support library programs.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

I knew I was doing something I shouldn't': Karl Ove Knausgard on the fallout from My Struggle and the dark side of ambition

Karl Ove Knausgard's new novel, The School of Night, explores artistic ambition, moral cost, and a supernatural return of the dead set in 1985 London.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Tim Dowling: my wife has always wanted to kick me out of book club. Now's her chance

A man repeatedly inserts himself into his wife's women-only book club, becomes its regular attendee and WhatsApp member, then misses a meeting and fears being overlooked.
Books
fromElite Traveler
1 week ago

The Most Interesting Books to Gift This Christmas

Coffee table books serve as both engaging reads and decorative design objects, prized for appearance and content across fashion, interiors, travel and watch subjects.
fromwww.berkeleyside.org
1 week ago

Remembering Tom Conroy, master bookbinder

Tom was a working historian or, perhaps, an experimental archeologist of the book, said Nicholas Yeager, who for many years taught bookbinding at San Francisco's Center for the Book. Not only did he train as a librarian, he studied bookbinding and conservation as well as practiced those skills. He also wrote about 19th century toolmaking for bookbinding and woodworking. There will be a huge gap in original research and synthesis of practical experience without his encyclopedic knowledge of the history of the book.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Things That Disappear by Jenny Erpenbeck review a kaleidoscopic study of transience

For while Erpenbeck adopted some of the features of the form apparently throwaway observations on daily life, such as minor irritation at the difficulty of sourcing proper splitterbrotchen, an unpretentious pastry now pimped for a more elaborate and wealthy clientele she consistently enlarged and complicated it. Into that recognisable tone of ennui and mild querulousness with which journalists hope to woo a time-pressed but disenchanted or nostalgic readership, Erpenbeck smuggled metaphysics, politics and history.
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fromVulture
1 week ago

Colleen Hoover Says the It Ends With Us Legal Drama Gave Her 'PTSD'

"It feels like a circus," Hoover says. "I'm just trying to stay removed from the negativity. I have my own story I could tell ... but I don't want to bring attention to it, and I don't want to have to put someone else down to lift myself up. So I'd rather just ignore it and let people think and say what they're going to say."
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Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Goblets of borscht, turkey-shaped madeleines: why Martha Stewart's fantastical menus are still an inspiration

Martha Stewart's Entertaining transforms meticulous decorative detail into extravagant, imaginative hospitality that blends domestic precision with theatrical excess.
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fromNature
1 week ago

Of masks and Mayans: Books in brief

Masks, Maya hieroglyphs, and leprosy shaped societies' perceptions, scientific knowledge, and stigma across history.
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fromGrub Street
1 week ago

Angela Flournoy Does Not Take Good Mexican Food for Granted

Much of a second novel was written at a small Los Angeles Italian restaurant while balancing family life and book tour routines in New York.
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fromVulture
1 week ago

Rabih Alameddine Wins National Book Award, Thanks Gastrointestinal Doctors

Rabih Alameddine won the 2025 National Book Award for fiction for The True True Story of Raja the Gullible (and His Mother).
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