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fromwww.npr.org
3 hours ago

Put these 12 eye-opening books on your 2026 reading list

Investigative history of Argentina's stolen children and a cultural analysis of blue's meaning in Black history exemplify eye-opening nonfiction of 2025.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
12 hours ago

Many schools don't think students can read full novels any more. That's a tragedy | Margaret Sullivan

Many high school students now read fewer full novels because schools assign excerpts and digital texts driven by attention-span beliefs and testing standards.
fromwww.cntraveler.com
31 minutes ago

BookTok Fans Can Walk in the Footsteps of "People We Meet on Vacation" With This New Tour

2026 is the year of the book club, and there's never been a better time to explore a new city based on your favorite read. In fact, according to a recent study from Skyscanner, 55% of travelers have booked or would book a trip based on literature. Whether you're looking to get between the pages of your favorite tome by spending time on a reading retreat
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
8 hours ago

What we're reading: Alan Hollinghurst, Samantha Harvey and Guardian readers on the books they enjoyed in December

the prose is rich, precise, disciplined and meticulously detailed; the many characters are so vividly rendered that none appears two-dimensional; each experiences and processes reality in a way that feels distinct and unmistakably individual; and the pacing of events feels perfectly judged. Although the novel is threaded with philosophical reflections on goodness and love, these never feel laboured or artificially imposed. Rather, they emerge naturally as an integral part of the novel's dense and intricate tapestry.
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fromThe Atlantic
8 hours ago

Six Books for the Chronic Daydreamer

What is available is the daydream-a limitless realm of freedom. In this other world, one might be famous or rich, finally catch the attention of their beloved, or simply sit on a beach as a waiter brings them cocktails. They might fly or speak to animals, heroically save a child, tell off their boss with no consequences, win the Super Bowl at the whistle, or travel to another continent, planet, or time period. No one can stop them; no one can even object.
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fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
7 hours ago

How an artist and a writer forged a frank friendship-and a book

"I have been reading your book The Lonely City: The Art of Being Alone and I wanted to write and say how very good it is," "I discovered Henry Darger's work about 15 years ago. I am so interested in how you write about him and [Edward] Hopper, [Andy] Warhol and [David] Wojnarowicz."
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#reading-decline
fromFortune
5 hours ago
Books

Nearly half of Americans didn't read a single book last year-it's the one daily habit separating them from billionaires | Fortune

fromFortune
5 hours ago
Books

Nearly half of Americans didn't read a single book last year-it's the one daily habit separating them from billionaires | Fortune

fromBig Think
7 hours ago

The most successful information technology in history is the one we barely notice

Joel Miller opens his new book, The Idea Machine, with this famous scene from The Confessions because it sparked his own epiphany. Not a spiritual conversion, mind. What struck Miller during his recent reread was how Augustine marked his place with his finger. This seemingly unremarkable detail - a move any reader has made countless times - forced Miller to reevaluate books as not simply a vessel for ideas, but as history's most successful "information technology."
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Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
14 hours ago

Arborescence by Rhett Davis review why would people turn into trees?

Cross-species human-to-tree transformation becomes large-scale voluntary protest and ecological strategy, centered on an ambivalent man and an advocate promoting arborescence.
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fromWIRED
11 hours ago

Margaret Atwood on Doomscrolling: 'I Want to Keep Up With the Latest Doom'

An 86-year life recounts childhood, career struggles, settled grudges, political commentary, and enduring optimism about the United States.
fromwww.theguardian.com
9 hours ago

Love, desire and community: the new generation of readers bonding over romance novels

In a packed room in Sydney, an excited crowd riffles through stacks of stickers and bookmarks searching for their favourite characters. Another group flicks through racks of clothing, pulling out T-shirts that say romance readers club and probably reading about fairies. A poster on the wall, with tear-off tabs, invites visitors to take what they need: a love triangle, a love confession mid-dragon battle, a morally grey man or a cowboy. Half of the tabs have already been taken.
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Books
fromKotaku
7 hours ago

Amazon Practically Gives Away the Kindle Colorsoft to Clear Out Last Year's Remaining E-Reader Stock - Kotaku

The Kindle Colorsoft is available for $200 (20% off) and offers a 7-inch color display with adjustable lighting, color highlights, and features for illustrated books and comics.
Books
fromianVisits
12 hours ago

New book reveals the overlooked modern architecture of Britain's Big Four railways

Interwar Big Four railway architecture transformed from ornate Neo‑Classical to Streamline Modernist mainline stations now comprehensively photographed and catalogued in a limited hardback.
Books
fromThe Mercury News
7 hours ago

Rejection of award-winning novel for Sonoma County high school class sparks debate about censorship

A Windsor school board blocked teaching Scythe, citing concerns that depictions of state-sanctioned killings and suicide could be triggering for students.
fromwww.berkeleyside.org
23 hours ago

Remembering Joanne Wilkens, teacher, writer, restorer of historic barns

Joanne Wilkens, beloved wife, mother and grandmother, passed away peacefully on Nov. 27, 2025, at the age of 84, surrounded by her loving family. Her lifelong connection to her family and to her cherished Gilmanton farmhouse was there to the very end; she was tending her wood stove and making breakfast in her warm kitchen when she suffered a severe stroke.
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#book-recommendations
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

The Ten Year Affair by Erin Somers review the midlife adultery story our generation deserves

A millennial mother yearns for passionate adultery amid smug, self-conscious suburbanites but spends a decade fantasizing and overthinking instead of acting.
fromwww.npr.org
1 day ago

Feeling cooped up? Get out of town with this delightful literary road trip

Tom Layward, the narrator and main character of Ben Markovits' new novel, The Rest of Our Lives, introduces himself in a curious way: On the very first page of the book, he talks, matter-of-factly, about the affair his wife, Amy, had 12 years ago, when their two kids were young. Amy, who's Jewish, got involved at a local synagogue in Westchester; Tom, who was raised Catholic and is clearly not a joiner, remained on the sidelines.
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Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Michael Schumacher, author of Francis Ford Coppola and Eric Clapton biographies, dies aged 75

Michael Schumacher, a Wisconsin biographer and chronicler of Great Lakes history, died at 75 on December 29.
fromThe New Yorker
1 day ago

Briefly Noted

In 1921, Anderson was prosecuted by the U.S. government-the novel was thought "obscene"-and though Morgan focusses much of his attention on her trial, he also takes in her childhood, in Indianapolis; her years in Chicago, New York, and Paris; and her association with prominent figures of her time, such as Ezra Pound, T. S. Eliot, and the anarchist Emma Goldman.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

Why Authors Can't Let Go of Greek Myths

When I was 8 or 9 years old, my uncle and aunt gave me a copy of D'Aulaires' Book of Greek Myths, a standard-bearer for children's folklore that was originally published in 1962. I was immediately dazzled by the book: D'Aulaires' was my first exposure to Greek mythology, and I marveled at its vibrant cosmology, its richly illustrated tales of deities whose omnipotence was matched only by their strikingly human, self-indulgent caprice.
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fromOpen Culture
1 day ago

J.R.R. Tolkien, Using a Tape Recorder for the First Time, Reads from The Hobbit for 30 Minutes (1952)

Tolkien begins with a pas­sage that first describes the crea­ture Gol­lum; lis­ten­ing to this descrip­tion again, I am struck by how much dif­fer­ent­ly I imag­ined him when I first read the book. The Gol­lum of The Hob­bit seems some­how hoari­er and more mon­strous than many lat­er visu­al inter­pre­ta­tions. This is a minor point and not a crit­i­cism, but per­haps a com­ment on how nec­es­sary it is to return to the source of a myth­ic world as rich as Tolkien's,
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fromGameSpot
1 day ago

Award-Winning Sci-Fi Series Children Of Time Gets New Box Set, And Amazon's Launch Discount Is Wild

The first three Children of Time hardcovers are reissued as a box set on Amazon for $29, a deep discount before the fourth novel's release.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Poem of the week: Renegade by Lionel Johnson

A voice mourns lost ideals and disillusionment, preserving an ineradicable echo of memory through recurring refrains, musical cadences, and layered imagery.
Books
fromwww.newyorker.com
2 days ago

Allegra Goodman Reads Deal-Breaker

Allegra Goodman reads "Deal-Breaker"; she has written ten fiction books, including Kaaterskill Falls, and a linked-story collection, This Is Not About Us, arrives in February.
Books
fromKqed
4 days ago

Encore: LA's Former Poet Laureate on Storytelling and Survival | KQED

Luis Rodriguez credits reading and writing with sustaining his resilience throughout his life.
Books
fromBusiness Insider
2 days ago

I've lived in Vegas for over a year, and haven't visited The Strip. Instead, I've found a cozier side of Sin City.

Las Vegas offers a calm, community-rich side centered on independent bookstores, cozy cafés, birdwatching, and scenic hikes rather than casinos.
fromThe Atlantic
3 days ago

Books That Open the Mind

This is an edition of The Wonder Reader, a newsletter in which our editors recommend a set of stories to spark your curiosity and fill you with delight. Sign up here to get it every Saturday morning.
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fromenglish.elpais.com
3 days ago

Literature that crosses the line: Cocaine in books

Cocaine permeates all social strata and profoundly influences personal lives, politics, finance, and cultural production.
Books
fromInsideHook
4 days ago

The 11 Books You Should Be Reading This January

January book releases offer biographies, novels, and nonfiction on music, culture, history, and the brain for immersive winter reading.
fromThe Atlantic
4 days ago

A Reading Resolution You Can Keep

I reassured her that in some respects, making your way through the world's great literature is a numbers game: Someone twice your age has simply spent more time on the planet-and has therefore had more time to turn pages. But no number of hours can fill every gap in the knowledge of a mortal reader, even one who's a professional critic.
Books
fromIndependent
4 days ago

Liz Ison: 'If a bout of flu comes along, I'll always reach for a PG Wodehouse Jeeves and Wooster story. They are deeply comforting and funny'

The books on your bedside table? I just counted and there are 17 books in the pile. On the top is John Milton's Paradise Lost. I am a member of an online shared reading group who each week read a couple of hundred lines together. It's a long-term commitment but immensely rewarding and far easier than reading it alone.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Andrew Miller: DH Lawrence forced me to my feet I was madly excited'

My earliest reading memory Sitting on the sofa with my mum reading Mabel the Whale by Patricia King, with beautiful colour illustrations by Katherine Evans. I think it was pre-school. My mother was not always a patient teacher, and I was often a slow learner, but the scene, the tableaux, in memory, has the serenity of an icon. My favourite book growing up Rosemary Sutcliff's The Eagle of the Ninth.
Books
fromBusiness Insider
4 days ago

All 6 of Emily Henry's romance novels, ranked

Any romance reader knows that not all romance novels are created equally: Some leave you swooning, others leave you shrugging, and the worst ones leave you shutting the book and never picking it back up. Emily Henry, a fantasy-YA author turned romance queen, is easily one of the most beloved romance novelists of the last five years. All six of her romances caused quite a stir on BookTok, and all but one have been optioned for on-screen adaptations.
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Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

The best recent poetry review roundup

The three poetry collections examine war, memory, death, labor, masculinity, and spiritual redemption through diverse forms and narrative sequences rooted in everyday and ritual imagery.
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Blank Canvas by Grace Murray review a superb debut from a 22-year-old author

Lies offend our sense of justice: generally, we want to see the liar unmasked and punished. But when the deception brings no material gain, we might also be curious about what purpose the lie serves what particular need of their own the liar is attempting to meet. This is precisely what Grace Murray's witty, assured debut explores: not just the consequences of a lie but the ways in which it can, paradoxically, reveal certain truths.
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fromenglish.elpais.com
4 days ago

John Berger and the loss of rural culture

John Berger shaped late 20th-century thought through heterodox Marxism, blending art criticism, fiction, film, and deep engagement with peasant life and emigration.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
4 days ago

What Dante Is Trying to Tell Us

Dante's Divine Comedy moves from Inferno's vivid sinners to arduous purification in Purgatorio and transcendent ascent through Paradiso culminating in trasumanar.
Books
fromConde Nast Traveler
4 days ago

7 Libraries Set Inside UNESCO World Heritage Sites

UNESCO World Heritage Sites house stunning libraries that combine architectural, historical, and cultural significance while preserving rare collections and reflecting intellectual priorities across centuries.
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

The Greek Myth of Demeter and Persephone Reinterpreted

While researching for my Ph.D., I decided to delve into Greek mythology to determine whether I could find a story that could illuminate my understanding of mothering and my interest in maternal ambivalence. I discovered the myth of Demeter and Persephone, which, while thousands of years old, demonstrates how a mythical mother, Demeter, the goddess of the harvest, weathers changes and obstacles
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

How to start anything: expert tips for trying something new

Why start reading for fun? Among its numerous benefits, studies have found that reading fiction specifically can make people more empathetic, less stressed and protect cognitive function in later life. Three tips to get started: Figure out what you enjoy by checking out a variety of books from the library, but don't force it. If you're not enjoying a volume, put it down and move on to the next. Start with short books and whichever medium physical books, ebooks or audiobooks works best for you.
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Books
fromThe Atlantic
5 days ago

The Benefits of Reading a 'Hard' Book

Deliberate reading challenges expand literary habits, fill blind spots, and reveal overlooked, intimidating books that can transform reading pleasure and confidence.
Books
fromwww.newyorker.com
5 days ago

Bryan Washington Reads Yiyun Li

Bryan Washington and Deborah Treisman read Yiyun Li's 'A Small Flame,' originally published in The New Yorker in 2017.
Books
fromFast Company
5 days ago

What you need to know about hidden markets to get lucky in love, work, and life

Hidden markets determine who gets scarce resources; identifying their rules and strategically playing them lets people create more favorable outcomes.
Books
fromCN Traveller
5 days ago

Where the Chefs Eat: Diana Henry's favourite tables in London

Five favourite home-city restaurants reflect a sensibility rooted in evocative spices, sensual fruits, vivid language, and memories from a life of cooking and travel.
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

The Dead Don't Bleed by Neil Rollinson review a gripping tale of family and forbidden love

Andalucia is famous for its variety: high alpine mountains and snow-capped peaks, river plains and rolling olive groves, sun-baked coastlines and arid deserts. It is the perfect setting for Neil Rollinson's debut novel, which is its own kind of spectacular mosaic. Built from short, seemingly discrete chapters that take us between Spain in 2003 and the coalfields of Northumberland in the 70s and 80s, The Dead Don't Bleed coheres into an extraordinarily tense and tender portrait of two brothers trying to escape their father's gangland past.
Books
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
6 days ago

LitWatch January: Launch the new year with Everybody Reads, Ellen Waterston, Leni Zumas * Oregon ArtsWatch

With what stillness at lastso this is the sound of youhere and now whether or notanyone hears it this is where we have come with our ageour knowledge such as it isand our hopes such as they areinvisible before us untouched and still possible you appear in the valleyyour first sunlight reaching down to touch the tips of a fewhigh leaves that do not stir as though they had not noticedand
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

The Master of Contradictions by Morten Hi Jensen review how Thomas Mann wrote The Magic Mountain

Morten Hi Jensen's approachable and informative study of The Magic Mountain positions Mann as a writer who was contradictory to his core: an artist who dressed and behaved like a businessman; a homosexual in a conventional marriage with six children; an upstanding burgher obsessed with death and corruption. Very much the kind of man who would send someone a book and tell them not to read it.
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Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

Rage bait, goblin mode do words of the year have any real value?

Multiple dictionaries pick different words of the year, choices shaped more by publicity and capturing imagination than by strictly scientific linguistic analysis.
Books
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
6 days ago

Music 2025: The light shines in the darkness * Oregon ArtsWatch

Sustained societal upheaval has made the year feel exceptionally long, yet invoking spiritual light and linguistic insight offers restraint against panic and renewed hope.
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fromInsideHook
1 week ago

What Were New Yorkers Reading in 2025?

Percival Everett's novel led New York City library checkouts in 2025, propelled by major awards and a high-profile film adaptation.
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fromOpen Culture
1 week ago

Brian Eno's Book & Music Recommendations

Three recommended works: Printing and the Mind of Man; A Pattern Language; and Norman Lewis's World War II diary offer historical, architectural, and personal insights.
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fromThe Nation
1 week ago

The Dislocations of Shuang Xuetao

Obsessions reveal intimate social and personal transformations in post–Cultural Revolution China through downwardly mobile urban characters.
Books
fromBig Think
1 week ago

10 of Big Think's favorite books in 2025

A diverse selection of outstanding 2025 books across science, history, language, birds, chemistry, and philosophy offers compelling reads, presented as a fifteen-title, release-date-ordered list.
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fromOpen Culture
1 week ago

J. R. R. Tolkien Admitted to Disliking Dune "With Some Intensity" (1966)

Lord of the Rings and Dune are mid-20th-century epic fantasy series that build detailed invented worlds, examine heroic action, and inspired large-scale film adaptations.
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fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Finishing School: Hands Off Our Pencils

Tariff-driven supply disruptions threaten availability and price of imported graphite pencils, prompting hoarding and frantic searches for favored Blackwing pencils.
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fromThe Nation
1 week ago

An Absurdist Novel That Tries to Make Sense of the Ukraine War

Ukrainian comedians and writers preserve dark, absurdist humor despite war, using performance and literature to blend tragedy with satire and resist Russian aggression.
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fromThe Mercury News
1 week ago

County behavioral health advisers will visit Los Gatos Library on Jan. 6

Free community workshops and events in Los Gatos offer accordion-book making, social stitching gatherings, and in-person behavioral health navigation services.
Books
fromDefector
1 week ago

The Best Things We Read In 2025 | Defector

The Trials of Gabriel Ward series offers early 1900s English barrister-centered murder mysteries blending legal detail, dry narration, moral commentary, and formal cleverness.
#romance
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fromSun Sentinel
1 week ago

Book review: Meltzer's characters take the lead in 'The Viper'

Fast-paced thriller follows Zig and Nola investigating a decades-old murder tied to family secrets, witness protection, veterans' mental health, and Dover AFB.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

This Is Where the Serpent Lives by Daniyal Mueenuddin set to be a standout novel of 2026

Interlocking novellas portray Pakistani class divisions and power dynamics through ordinary lives — a tea-stall upbringing, ambitions, betrayals, rural corruption, and social consequences.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

ChatGPT, cooking and Christopher Walken: how parents got their kids to love reading in 2025

Children's reading enjoyment and skills are declining, prompting parents to use unconventional tactics, including AI and dramatic reading, to revive interest.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The English House by Dan Cruickshank review if walls could talk

History used to be about wars and dates, but to the architecture writer and TV presenter Dan Cruickshank, it's more about floors and grates. In his new book, he takes a keen-eyed tour of eight English houses, from Northumberland to Sussex, dating from the early 1700s to exactly 100 years ago, and ranging from an outlandish gothic pile to one of the first council flats.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Poem of the week: The Man in the Wind by Anne Stevenson

The man in the wind who keeps us awake tonight is not the black monk of the wind cowering in corners and crevices, or the white face under the streetlight stricken with the guilt of his noise, or the great slapping hand of the wind beating and beating the rainy alleyways while the torturer proceeds with the interrogation and the prisoner's risen voice bleeds over cymbals and timpani.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

What other silences filled my childhood?': Tareq Baconi on excavating his queer and Palestinian identities

Seven decades after Tareq Baconi's grandmother fled in terror from the port city of Haifa, carrying a Bible, a crucifix and a week's worth of clothes, he followed her directions to the family home a few blocks from the sea. The building was still standing, almost as she had left it in 1948, instantly familiar from childhood stories. Standing beside his husband, Baconi could not bring himself to ring the bell,
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Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The Guardian view on the National Year of Reading 2026: time to start a healthy habit for life | Editorial

Shared early reading boosts happiness, educational success, empathy and social mobility and must be expanded due to falling child reading rates and limited parental reading.
fromArs Technica
1 week ago

A quirky guide to myths and lore based in actual science

Earthquakes, volcanic eruption, eclipses, meteor showers, and many other natural phenomena have always been part of life on Earth. In ancient cultures that predated science, such events were often memorialized in myths and legends. There is a growing body of research that strives to connect those ancient stories with the real natural events that inspired them. Folklorist and historian Adrienne Mayor has put together a fascinating short compendium of such insights with Mythopedia: A Brief Compendium of Natural History Lore,
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fromFast Company
1 week ago

These common beliefs are holding leaders back

Sustainable leadership growth requires examining and changing internal beliefs rather than merely increasing actions or skills.
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fromThe Verge
1 week ago

You need to read the subversive cosmic horror novella The Ballad of Black Tom

The Ballad of Black Tom reimagines Lovecraft's Red Hook as an anti-racist narrative examining police brutality, racism, and the psychological toll of oppression.
Books
fromThe Mercury News
1 week ago

Love is on the shelves of new Los Altos bookstore

A Novel Affair is a new Los Altos bookstore dedicated exclusively to romance novels, aiming to elevate the genre and serve growing reader demand.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The Cat by Georges Simenon review Maigret author's tale of a toxic marriage

The Cat depicts an elderly couple's escalating domestic cruelty and grotesque revenge that culminates in tragic consequences.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Books to look out for in 2026 fiction

January 2026 delivers major new literary releases from established writers, featuring themes of memory, mortality, environmental accountability, family sagas, and social resistance.
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
1 week ago

Books 2025: A year of triumphs and tensions * Oregon ArtsWatch

Yes, we had our travails. As in much of the country, libraries faced hurdles both fiscal and philosophical in the form of budget shortfalls and book challenges. A flagging economy hurt bookstores, including the monolithic Powell's Books, which suffered a series of staff cuts. Orders by the Trump Administration that cut grants and fellowships affected local writers. But generally, in the words of a former state slogan, things look different here.
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fromFast Company
1 week ago

10 must-read business books from 2025

Leaders need practical, real-world ideas that reveal broader business patterns to guide product development and strategic decision-making.
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fromArtforum
1 week ago

LOVE IN A COLD CLIMATE

New York's art scene shows cautious optimism, shifting toward intimate, thoughtful cultural events amid political change after Zohran Mamdani's mayoral election.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Tim Dowling: my 2025 in numbers: not a year to forget, but one of forgetting

End-of-2025 personal statistics: adult sons moved home, memory lapses affected book recall, 27 books logged, social awkwardness and family upheaval.
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fromBuzzFeed
1 week ago

A Woman's Three Words At My European Book Signing Left Me Forever Changed

A surprise encounter at a book launch revealed my previously unknown half-sister and confirmed shared paternity and family secrecy.
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fromwww.bbc.com
1 week ago

How Charles Dickens was nearly called to the stage

Charles Dickens's life and works have been widely adapted for stage and screen; he nearly became an actor and became renowned for performing public readings.
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fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Malice in Wonderland: The Misuse of Classic Children's Lit

Beloved children's characters like Franklin the Turtle are being co-opted for boorish misappropriation, exposing unsettling cultural transgressions.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Six great reads best of 2025: a deep-cover KGB agent, Zadie Smith on Tracy Chapman, and the boy who came back

Coverage includes abuse revelations with royal fallout; Gaza war testimony; a child's near-fatal collapse and parenting challenges; a former KGB spy's double life; fertility fraud.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Like Kafka by way of Pedro Almodovar': 10 debut novels to look out for in 2026

Early 2026 fiction offerings center on migration, identity, class, loneliness, and cross-cultural relationships through intimate and generational narratives.
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fromFast Company
1 week ago

10 great books that Fast Company staff want you to read this year

Doomscrolling and attention-optimized content have eroded deep reading, shortened attention spans, and damaged mental focus, prompting a movement to reclaim sustained reading.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The best recent crime and thrillers review roundup

The award-winning Australian writer's third adult novel begins with a lone woman, Rowan, washed up on a remote island between Tasmania and Antarctica. Shearwater is a research outpost, home to the global seed vault created as a bulwark against climate catastrophe and to colonies of seals, penguins and birds. For eight years, Dominic Salt and his children have lived there, but dangerously rising sea levels mean that they, and the vault, will shortly be evacuated.
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fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

Hunker down with these 13 mysteries and thrillers from 2025

Mysteries and thrillers are enjoyable no matter the season, but there's something extra satisfying about curling up in the winter with a warm drink and an all-engrossing read. The 13 (spooked already?) books in this list, recommended by NPR staff and critics, fit the bill: stalkers, witchcraft, missing persons, suburban horror there's something here for every thrill-seeker. And for more nail-biters, check out Books We Love, our annual year-end reading guide.
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fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

The Best Poetry for Dark Winter Days

Poetry suits winter's inward, quiet moods and offers varied collections to accompany the season's comforts and harsher qualities.
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fromDefector
1 week ago

'Heated Rivalry' Is Bringing Me Back To Hockey | Defector

Rachel Reid's Game Changers series offers emotionally rich, humorous, steamy queer hockey romances that provided the reader with healing representation and immersive bingeable storytelling.
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fromTruthout
1 week ago

"January 6 Succeeded Here" - Arundhati Roy on Trump, Modi, and Her New Memoir

A daughter's complex relationship with her mother combined terror and inspiration, shaping her identity, political activism, and critique of authoritarianism and imperial policies.
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fromwordstotime.com
1 week ago

Talk Time Calculator

At typical adult silent reading speeds (200–250 words per minute), reading times range from about 2–25 minutes for 500–5000 words.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Books to look out for in 2026 nonfiction

Upcoming memoirs examine trauma, survival, family, fame, and historical memory through personal narratives from survivors, artists, and public figures.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

How the French fell in love with family-driven memoirs and autofiction | Anne-Laure Pineau

Blurred boundaries between fiction and nonfiction in French literature are prompting bookstores to reorganize shelving and create spaces for autofiction and personal memoirs.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Hamnet by Maggie O'Farrell audiobook review the life and loss of the woman behind the Bard

Hamnet centers on Agnes Hathaway's grief and a family's undoing after son Hamnet's death, combining lyrical, immersive narrative, historical detail and sensitive narration.
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