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fromThe New Yorker
11 hours ago

Katy Waldman on Mary McCarthy's "One Touch of Nature"

Nature imagery in modern fiction has thinned as descriptive prowess waned, with social contexts intruding and artistic movements reshaping landscape portrayals.
Books
fromTheoldguybicycleblog
7 hours ago

10 Timeless Cycling Books Every Rider Should Read

Ten cycling books offer enduring stories, practical guidance, history, humor, and hard-earned wisdom valuable to riders of all ages and experience levels.
Books
fromHarper's Magazine
5 hours ago

Picturing a Future, by Brontez Purnell, Jess Bergman

Brontez Purnell is prolific across disciplines; his work centers on language and portrays queer marginal life with humor, tenderness, and stark honesty.
fromwww.theguardian.com
11 hours ago

Margaret Atwood: The Handmaid's Tale has become more and more plausible'

Speaking to BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs, Atwood said she believed the plot was bonkers when she first had the concept for the novel as the US was the democratic ideal at the time. It was the land of freedom and people in Europe just didn't believe that it could ever go like that, she said. Despite this, Atwood added: I've always been somebody who has never believed it can't happen here. It can happen anywhere, given the circumstances.
Books
fromwww.mercurynews.com
6 hours ago

San Jose Chamber Orchestra hosts New Year's Eve Celebration'

Taking the crown as the most checked-out adult title this year at San Jose Public Library branches is Kristin Hannah's The Women, a compelling coming of age story. The prequel to The Hunger Games, The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes by Suzanne Collins, remains the top pick for teen readers for the second consecutive year. And once again, a Dav Pilkey title comes out on top among children's books: Dog Man: The Scarlet Shedder was the most-checked out title for that age group.
Books
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

The best books of 2025

Annual picks highlight standout books across genres: major fiction returns, prize-winning novels, memoirs, crime, history, poetry, children's, science, and translated fiction.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

The best fiction of 2025

2025 saw major new novels by elder literary figures—Pynchon, Rushdie, McEwan, Adichie, Desai—exploring fascism, mortality, climate, gender, and globalization.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
4 days ago

Olga Tokarczuk Recommends Visionary Science Fiction

Porous boundaries between nations, identities, reality and fiction are explored through supernatural and science-fiction elements set in Eastern Europe.
fromwww.nytimes.com
1 day ago

Video: A Singular Character | Karl Ove Knausgaard

I'm going to ask you to describe this man in as much detail as you can. What's the most distinctive feature on his face? It would be the eyes. He's called Kristian Hadeland. Twenty years old. Narrow eyes, high cheekbones. He's a photographer, wants to be a photographer. And he is ruthless, obsessive. He wants to be an artist for whatever price it takes. There's something that kind of releases all of that and he's very successful.
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Books
fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

Debate Your Favorite Books of the Year

The Atlantic 10 celebrates books that distinguish themselves as worth reading and remembering, reflecting diverse tastes through deliberation and consensus.
Books
fromSlate Magazine
2 days ago

The 10 Best Audiobooks of 2025

Audiobooks range from subtle psychological domestic tension and layered historical revenge to firsthand corporate whistleblower memoirs, each enhanced by distinctive narrators and narrative structures.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Five of the best science fiction books of 2025

Speculative fiction uses inventive premises to explore climate catastrophe and ecological recovery through satirical, character-driven narratives that balance urgency with hope.
fromThe Walrus
2 days ago

How "Cozy Lit" Became the Latest and Most Shameless Form of Digital Escapism | The Walrus

A fter reading that Selena Gomez looked ethereal in a custom Ralph Lauren wedding dress, that the Vitamix 5200 is a legend for a reason, and that scientists made a yogurt using ants, I feel sufficiently bad about myself because of how much time I have spent staring at inconsequential words and meaningless images on my little screen that I transition to the big screen that is my laptop.
Books
fromMedium
2 days ago

5 Books to Read This Winter (Designers Edition)

Winter is the perfect time to curl up with a good book, sip on some hot cocoa (or coffee, if you're me), and get smarter. But hey, let's not limit ourselves to design books alone. As a designer, growth isn't just about mastering tools, it's about mastering life and the skills that can help you elevate your work and your hustle. So, here's a list of books that will level up your game in ways you didn't see coming.
Books
Books
fromwww.mercurynews.com
2 days ago

10 notable books of 2025: A posthumous memoir about Epstein, Hunger Games' and reliving 2024

2025 saw major book releases spanning a Hunger Games prequel, prominent self-help, campaign books, a posthumous trafficking memoir, and a return from a reclusive novelist.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

What If the Moon Were Cheese? John Scalzi's Latest Book Has the Answer

If the moon were to suddenly turn to cheese, the movie pitches would be insufferable. Astronauts would be irritated, grad students would be demoralized and news articles would overflow with terrible puns. The great jaws of the Internet would get hold of the details, churning out doomsday scenarios, memes and conspiracies. And that's even before the moon cheese would start to compress, creating geysers of material and a dangerously unstable lunar landscape.
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Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Turner's mother's frustration and a memorable brush with Bacon | Letters

Mary Turner’s mental distress intensified by poverty and domestic instability; Turner found refuge with his uncle and developed lifelong cultured friendships.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

From the Gruffalo to Dog Man: how to put children's classics on the stage

Successful stage adaptations must capture the original books' tone and playful anarchy so young audiences accept changes in appearance or dialogue.
Books
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Daniel H. Wilson on Finding a Native Take on Traditional Alien Invasion Stories

An alien landing on the Cherokee Nation reservation reframes invasion tropes by contrasting military, Native, and non-Native civilian responses to the unknown.
Books
fromMedium
2 days ago

Expectation is a subtle form of violence

Expectation mimics affection but makes the present self feel contemptible, driving performative identities and treating deviation as failure.
#memoir
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago
Books

The best memoirs and biographies of 2025

Memoirs reveal personal lives, maternal influence, creative processes, and candid reflections mixing wit, everyday observation, and familial complexity.
fromwww.mediaite.com
5 days ago
Books

Olivia Nuzzi's New Book Gets Absolutely Pummeled by The New York Times and Other Critics: Aggressively Awful'

Olivia Nuzzi's memoir American Canto receives harsh criticism as melodramatic, boring, stylistically affected, and lacking substantive revelations about her RFK Jr. affair.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

All My Precious Madness by Mark Bowles review a deliciously sweary, prize-winning monologue

All My Precious Madness is a sweary, audio-suited monologue giving voice to Henry Nash, exploring working-class identity, masculinity, and academic resentment, narrated by Paul Hilton.
Books
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

Scientific American's Best Fiction of 2025

2025 fiction highlights science-infused narratives that combine space exploration, climate crises, personal relationships, and disaster-driven storytelling.
#memory
fromThe Atlantic
3 days ago
Books

The Atlantic 10: The Best Books of 2025

Selected books prioritize lasting memorability, vividly depicting memory, past convulsions, intimate lives, class dynamics, and speculative futures through detailed characterization.
fromThe New Yorker
6 days ago
Books

Briefly Noted Book Reviews

Two contemporary novels explore memory, self-deception, loss, artistic decline, and philanthropy through personal crises in Venice and Los Angeles.
fromSlate Magazine
3 days ago

The 10 Best Books of 2025

In a chaotic and distressing year, books provided a respite, a chance to commune with works of coherent voice and vision. Some people find it harder to read during days overflowing with one-minute distractions and incessant notifications, but when I took the time, I was rewarded with a slightly bigger foothold in a world of decency, humanity, patience, and compassion. Here are 10 good reasons to give that a try.
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Books
fromBusiness Insider
3 days ago

15 holiday romance books to get you in the festive spirit

December is ideal for reading holiday-themed romance novels set around Christmas, Hanukkah, or wintry nights for cozy, festive, swoony reading.
Books
fromTravel + Leisure
3 days ago

Google Maps Says This Is the Most Searched Bookstore-and It's Known as the Most Beautiful in the World, Too

Livraria Lello in Porto, Portugal was the most searched bookstore worldwide in 2025, acclaimed for its neo-Gothic architecture and iconic crimson spiral staircase.
Books
fromFuncheap
3 days ago

Bazaar Writers Salon

Bazaar Writers Salon hosts a December literary reading at Bazaar Cafe featuring Michael Tod Edgerton, Cate Lycurgus, Katie Peterson, Bernardo Wade, hosted by Peter Kline.
Books
fromIrish Independent
3 days ago

'Galway has lost one of its quiet pillars' - Kennys Bookshop lead tributes to 'outstanding bookseller' Dessy following his death

Dessy Kenny, lifelong bookseller at Kennys Bookshop in Galway, died December 2; renowned storyteller, book recommender, author, community reader, husband, father and grandfather.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
3 days ago

James Patterson's Maxims for a Happy Life

Creative pursuits—painting, composing music, and other arts—boost well‑being, reduce stress and symptoms of depression and anxiety, and treating life as a creative work increases happiness.
Books
fromThe Nation
3 days ago

Solvej Balle and the Tyranny of Time

Solvej Balle's septology follows a bookseller reliving the same day to examine how time's absence or distortion shapes human experience and narrative.
Books
fromGameSpot
3 days ago

New Lord Of The Rings & The Hobbit Illustrated Box Set Restocked With Nearly 50% Discount At Amazon

A new Alan Lee–illustrated slipcased four-volume box set of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings has been restocked and is discounted to about $78.33.
Books
fromOpen Culture
3 days ago

Did Tintin Creator Herge Collaborate with the Nazis? A Historical Investigation

Hergé created Tintin for a conservative Catholic paper, producing widely popular adventures including anti-Bolshevik and colonial stories that provoked later controversy.
Books
fromVulture
3 days ago

Southern Charm Recap: Book Smarts

Costume choices reveal personality; authentic, nerdy costumes attract genuine connection while flashy, inaccurate costumes signal performative attention-seeking.
Books
fromInsideHook
4 days ago

The 10 Books You Should Be Reading This December

Late-year book releases are eclectic yet contain notable, gift-worthy titles like annotated lyrics, intimate songwriter memoirs, speculative nonfiction on embodiment, and complex journalistic biographies.
fromABC7 Los Angeles
4 days ago

20 must-have holiday gifts for book lovers: Shop our picks now to help unwrap the magic of reading

Make their holidays even more magical. Find the perfect gift for the reader in your life. Shop our list of top picks for book lover essentials. Sofa Sack Bean Bag Chair What better way to enjoy a good book than to cozy up in a comfy chair? This simple and soft, medium-sized bean bag chair could be a great addition to reading time. The chair is designed to resist stains and discoloration, making maintenance easier.
Books
Books
fromThe New Yorker
3 days ago

Our Favorite Books of 2025

A rigorous year-round staff process produces a curated list of twenty-four essential books—twelve fiction and twelve nonfiction—drawn from wide internal recommendations.
Books
fromBusiness Insider
4 days ago

6 executives share the books that shaped their leadership

Executives recommend leadership and soft-skill books—management staples like Extreme Ownership and works on emotional intelligence—as influential guides for ownership, empathy, and adapting to AI.
Books
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

The Scientific American Staff's Favorite Books of 2025

Sixty-seven books across nonfiction, fiction, and backlist categories present compelling reads of 2025, covering history, policy, memoir, science, and more.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

The best science and nature books of 2025

Unchecked development of superintelligent AI could annihilate humanity; extinction intertwines with colonialism and social justice, prompting reconsideration of ecological and river rights.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Illustrating the postcolonial experience': 40 years of Peepal Tree Press

Peepal Tree Press sustained Caribbean and diaspora literature by self-publishing, overcoming distribution barriers, and operating independently since 1985.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

From Climate Catastrophes to Space RomanceScientific American's Favorite Science Books of the Year

Kane: So in trying to find the best fiction and the best nonfiction of a year it means doing a ton of research, which, thankfully, we're a bunch of good-natured nerds, and we love any excuse to research and any excuse to read more books. I mean, it was a great self-assigned homework project this year. [Laughs.] So some of the most important things that we were looking at for every book is it had to have an exceptional voice in writing and an incredible story.
Books
Books
fromThe New Yorker
4 days ago

Samuel Beckett on the Couch

Samuel Beckett underwent psychoanalysis with Wilfred R. Bion early in both men's careers, profoundly influencing Beckett's mental health and creative development.
fromItsnicethat
4 days ago

Murugiah reimagines George Orwell's 1984 with psychedelic illustration and dripping paint

For the hand-painted cover, Murugiah recreated his digital mock up drawings onto heavy stock watercolour paper with red ink. After the ink drawings were done, they were then taped to the drawing board where Murugiah dripped paint and moved the paper around, applying randomised brush strokes onto the paper. The result is a richly textured background wash, made in reaction to the natural dripping of the paint.
Books
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Tom Gauld's best cultural cartoons of 2025: buy a fine art print

Tom Gauld is a London-based cartoonist and illustrator who produces weekly editorial cartoons, comic books, children's work, and sells museum-grade fine-art prints globally.
fromFast Company
4 days ago

Mark Manson is launching an AI app to help more people 'Subtly not Give a F*ck'

unrealistic, not very evidence based-just designed to make you feel good,
Books
fromThe Nation
4 days ago

Muriel Spark's Magnetic Pull

Death comes for us all, but if you're a character in a Muriel Spark novel, it may come faster than you think. In Not to Disturb, a poetry-quoting butler orchestrating the murder-suicide of his master and mistress says of two intruders that they are nothing more than minor characters: "They don't come into the story." The unhappy pair is later dispatched, as if by afterthought, in a subordinate clause:
Books
Books
fromLGBTQ Nation
4 days ago

Gregory Maguire says he never expected "Wicked" to reflect America's slide toward authoritarianism - LGBTQ Nation

Wicked reframes the Wizard as a charismatic authoritarian whose political themes resonate with contemporary politics while adaptations generated vast cultural and commercial impact.
Books
fromCN Traveller
4 days ago

Where the Chefs Eat: Skye McAlpine's favourite restaurants in Venice

Skye McAlpine celebrates Venice's Christmas traditions, seasonal seafood menus, and home-focused entertaining rooted in her English–Italian heritage.
Books
fromElite Traveler
4 days ago

Behind the Wheel of 007: Chris Corbould on James Bond's Auto Legacy

Assouline released James Bond Cars, curated by Chris Corbould, featuring over 300 rare images, design sketches, technical drawings and special-effects commentary.
Books
fromThe Good Life France
4 days ago

The history of the bistro chair - a Paris icon - The Good Life France

The history of the Parisian bistro chair embodies the city's café culture and its evolution through World Expositions, becoming an iconic feature of French life.
fromconsequence.net
4 days ago

Jillian Lauren Files for Divorce from Weezer Bassist Scott Shriner

Jillian Lauren has filed for divorce for from Weezer bassist Scott Shriner after 20 years of marriage, according to TMZ. She cited irreconcilable differences as the reason for their separation. Back in April of this year, Lauren was arrested and charged with attempted murder after allegedly firing a gun at police who were pursuing three suspects in a hit-and-run chase in Los Angeles.
Books
fromNature
4 days ago

A bothy among the stars

It took the last traces of Homo sapiens 10,000 desperate years to reach the semi-oxygenated rock orbiting Proxima Centauri. Widely known as a cosy bothy among the stars, it was a place where stellar ramblers in all their multitudes could pause and rest as they meandered the lightyears. They came in so many forms it took the humans a couple of decades to realize they weren't alone.
Books
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

The best crime and thrillers of 2025

Contemporary novels and historical accounts probe state power, ethical failures in forensic and algorithmic systems, and human courage under extreme pressure.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

The best graphic novels of 2025

2025's standout graphic novels revisit historical subjects, blending memory, photography, adaptation and cultural threads to examine politics, violence and shared histories.
Books
fromColossal
5 days ago

Our Favorite Books of 2025

A curated 2025 selection highlights favorite monographs, surveys, and picture books across design, photography, diaspora art, and canine portraiture, available in the Colossal Shop.
Books
fromwww.npr.org
5 days ago

Books out this week come from Nobel winners and independent presses

Books by Olga Tokarczuk and Peter Handke are coincidentally released together, showcasing contrasting styles and reissues alongside indie novels.
Books
fromwww.nytimes.com
5 days ago

From NYT's 10 Best Books of 2025: A.O. Scott on Kiran Desai's New Novel

A 670-page story follows Sonia and Sunny across global locales, rendering vivid, hectic scenes and a complex, on-again/off-again romantic relationship.
Books
fromVulture
5 days ago

The Best Books of 2025

Five standout 2025 books include novels on fascism's aftermath, environmental history entwined with true crime, and a glamorous restaurant memoir, plus several notable runners-up.
Books
from(barcelona-metropolitan.com)
5 days ago

Shelf Awareness: English Language Bookstores in Barcelona

Barcelona hosts multiple English-language and multilingual bookstores offering new and secondhand titles, teaching materials, trade-ins and delivery services.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

The best history and politics books of 2025

A hyper-political yet unrevolutionary present contrasts with 1970s radicalism, transformative modernist architecture, and resilient urban life amid conflict.
Books
fromThe Nation
5 days ago

Luigi Pirandello's Broken Men

Luigi Pirandello's international prominence eroded largely because his artistic brilliance was overshadowed by his support for fascism.
Books
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
5 days ago

An expert's guide to late Pablo Picasso: five must-read books on the second half of the Spanish artist's career

Picasso's late career produced intense, formally free, thematically radical works revealing artistic urgency and complex personal contexts spanning drawing, painting, and biography.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
5 days ago

Now Watch Me Read

Performative reading treats books as status accessories signaling intelligence or desirability, amplified and satirized on social media amid declining genuine reading.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
6 days ago

What Makes Goethe So Special?

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s vast, multidisciplinary achievements grew from a relentless interrogation of how a life should be lived.
fromThe Atlantic
5 days ago

Olivia Nuzzi's Tell-Nothing Memoir

One of the many delights of America is that its geography is also a vocabulary. If I say "Portland, Oregon," or "the Hamptons," or "Appalachia," the reader knows instantly which stereotypes are being invoked: the middle-class Maoist, the summering WASP, the hick. This shorthand allows American authors to invest their prose with extra meaning, just by using it somewhere. The rollout for Olivia Nuzzi's new book, American Canto, has therefore leaned heavily into the elementary turbulence of California.
Books
Books
fromwww.nytimes.com
5 days ago

Video: Everybody Wants to Be Gen X

Gen X combined skeptical individualism, DIY creativity, inclusivity, and a strong work ethic to reshape culture through music, film, and grassroots collaboration.
Books
fromSlate Magazine
5 days ago

After Barbie's Creation, Consumers Demanded a Boy Version. There Was Just One Problem.

Mattel's rapid success forced executives to confront intense public scrutiny and consumer feedback over Barbie and Ken's design and brand decisions.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

What we're reading: Geoff Dyer, Andrew Michael Hurley, Marcia Hutchinson and Guardian readers on the books they enjoyed in November

Thoreau's Journal blends plain observation with soaring lyricism while contemporary books examine Britain, Brexit, campus romance, and sharp personal essays.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

Five of the best translated fiction of 2025

A haunting story merges bodily illness, dreamlike visions, and Korean political history into an intensely involving exploration of trauma, sight, and memory.
fromVulture
6 days ago

Winter's Bone Author Daniel Woodrell Dies at 72

It was only after I joined that I began to hear contrary notions. This was the most combustible part of my life. All these ideas were new to me. I'd never heard of pacifism. I didn't know about the idea of defying your government. I knew you could do that if you wanted to be a criminal, but I didn't know you could do it on moral grounds. I learned.
Books
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

The best children's books of 2025

Recent children's books offer joyous picture books, inventive nonfiction, and stories of courage, companionship, and freedom emphasizing connection, justice, and hope.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

Five of the best food books of 2025

Middle Eastern recipes combine accessible techniques with fragrant ingredients to transform everyday meals into celebratory dishes, balancing ease and specialness.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
6 days ago

Today's Atlantic Trivia: Shakespeare and Company

Mark Twain advised colleges to learn less, criticizing excessive accumulation of impractical research and the burdens of classical and certain mathematical studies.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

Tired of being a woman in 2025? Why not become a nun | Emma Beddington

Interest in nuns and nun-inspired imagery reflects women's search for community, purpose, and escape from modern chaos rather than strict religiosity.
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

Crossword editor's desk: a genius uncloaked

When November's Genius puzzle germinated in July, no one knew how popular its hidden theme would be by the time of publication. A celebrity version of The Traitors? sniffed the sceptics. We and they will already know the personalities. Typical terrible TV idea. Won't work. Eleven million live viewers later, we can now have a look at the filled version of Glyph's remarkable grid. Or rather, grids.
Books
Books
fromThe New Yorker
6 days ago

The High-Born Rebel Who Took Up the Cause of the Commoner

The six Mitford sisters pursued radically divergent political and personal lives, including fascism, communism, aristocratic representation, literary critique, and deliberate solitude.
fromSlate Magazine
6 days ago

What Does "Pantry Cooking" Even Mean Anymore?

Alison Roman, star of online food culture in the 2010s, has a new cookbook out that is (in an apparent first for her) slumming it in the Budget Cooking category on Amazon. It's a pantry book called Something From Nothing, which promises recipes with ingredients that might already be lying around your house, ready to be made into something ... from nothing.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
6 days ago

Tom Stoppard Made a Spectacle of History

At necessary moments in my life, Tom Stoppard, the preeminent British playwright who died last Saturday, has popped up like one of his frenetic characters, spouting enigmatic lines and leaving me thrilled, confused, and somehow heartened. The first time, I was in graduate school, reading Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, his breakthrough homage to Hamlet; I was surely thinking grad-school thoughts when I came across the line "the toenails, on the other hand, never grow at all"-the best bad joke ever.
Books
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

Poem of the week: Rich or Poor, or Saint and Sinner by Thomas Love Peacock

Society condemns the poor for visible minor acts while the rich conceal comparable or greater vices behind wealth and privilege.
fromPortland Mercury
6 days ago

The Mercury's Do This, Do That: Your Top Events for December 1-7

Consider Do This, Do That your holiday advent calendar this month, where you'll pry open one of those little perforated cardboard doors (read our weekly round-ups) to reveal a foil-wrapped piece of chocolate shaped like a star (find events you should check out each day). If anything, Do This, Do That is a bit better than a physical advent calendar. It's less packaging-dense, just as joyous, and also, it doesn't cost you anything. Let's get into some glad tidings.
Books
Books
fromABC7 Los Angeles
6 days ago

'Rage bait' named Oxford University Press word of year as outrage fuels social media traffic in 2025

'Rage bait' names online content deliberately designed to provoke anger and outrage to drive engagement via social media algorithms.
Books
fromwww.npr.org
2 weeks 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.
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Joan Silber Reads "Safety"

Listen and subscribe: Apple | Spotify | Google | Wherever You Listen Sign up to receive our weekly Books & Fiction newsletter. Joan Silber reads her story " Safety," from the December 8, 2025, issue of the magazine. A winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award in Fiction and the PEN/Malamud Award for Excellence in the Short Story, Silber is the author of nine books of fiction, the most recent of which are the novels " Mercy" and " Secrets of Happiness."
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Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 week 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.
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fromInverse
1 week 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 week ago
Books

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

fromZDNET
1 week ago
Books

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

Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week 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
1 week 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
1 week 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.
Books
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week 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
1 week 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
1 week 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
1 week 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 week 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 week 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
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