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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 hour ago

Not just love, actually: why romance fiction is booming

During crises people buy small beautiful comforts like lipstick and romantic fiction, driving significant spikes in romance book sales and sustained market growth.
Books
fromwww.npr.org
1 hour ago

When a loved one dies, where do they go? A new kids' book suggests 'They Walk On'

Framing death as "walking on" allows grief to coexist with a sense that deceased loved ones continue influencing daily life through memory and ritual.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
2 hours ago

The Top Twenty-five New Yorker Stories of 2025

Daily reading for pleasure has fallen steadily for two decades to 16% participation and an average of sixteen minutes per day in 2023.
Books
fromwww.npr.org
2 hours ago

Sunday Puzzle: BE-D with two words

All answers are familiar two-word phrases or names with the first word beginning with BE- and the second word beginning with D-.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
2 hours ago

"The Welfare State," by Nell Zink

A woman struggles with fear and imbalance on a narrow, mist-shrouded mountain trail while her confident friend remains sure-footed.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
2 hours ago

Nell Zink on German and American Stereotypes

Two longtime friends from Bavaria confront clashing personalities and cultural differences during a tense summit walk along Mt. Niesen in the Swiss Alps.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

There's a sense of our freedoms becoming vulnerable': novelist Alan Hollinghurst

Alan Hollinghurst receives major honours and continues producing acclaimed novels while his earlier works are successfully adapted for stage and screen.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Unseen Tennessee Williams radio play published in literary magazine

Tennessee Williams's early radio play 'The Strangers' foreshadows his later themes—isolation, fear, blurred reality—and employs classic radio-horror theatrical devices.
Books
fromwww.eastbaytimes.com
1 day ago

Library Lines: Contra Costa branches to take part in Picture Book Month

Reading picture books builds children's vocabulary, comprehension, story-structure understanding, and strengthens bonds through shared experiences and library-supported activities and resources.
fromGameSpot
1 day ago

Save Up To 25% On The Akira Manga Hardcover Edition

While the Akira manga has been available in print for decades, a new Akira Hardcover Edition kicked off earlier in 2025, offering the most authentic presentation of Katsuhiro Otomo's groundbreaking sci-fi saga. If you've ever wanted to experience the full Akira saga, this is one of the best ways to do so--and as luck would have it, you can save a few dollars on these premium hardcover releases. Four volumes
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Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Each year, word of the year gets darker. Six-seven' may be annoying but it's bucked that trend | Coco Khan

Words of the year chronicle cultural change, revealing shifting priorities, technologies, anxieties, and shared experiences across time.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

From her pen sprang unforgettable females': 16th-century Spanish author's knight's tale given reboot

Sixty years before a gaunt and deluded nobleman from La Mancha was overdosing on tales of derring-do, visiting his madness on those around him and single-handedly rewriting the rules of fiction the deeds of another heroic knight had already made literary history. Though completely eclipsed by Don Quixote, Cristalian de Espana, which was first published in 1545, has a unique claim to fame. Its 800 pages, bristling with swords, sorcerers, dragons and damsels, make up the earliest known work by a female Spanish novelist.
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Books
fromGameSpot
1 day ago

Become A Pokemon Professor With The Upcoming Pokecology Guidebook

Pokecology is an official illustrated guide on Pokemon habitats; pocket guide volumes provide stats and evolutions; Pokopia and related releases arrive in 2026.
Books
fromPortland Mercury
20 hours ago

Intuition

Secretive Raven and Crow activities at the zoo involve hidden ravens, a silent Raven Facility, mysterious funding, ritual chants, and a possibly mutated condor.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Yael van der Wouden : The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy cured my fear of aliens'

Childhood reading ranged from encyclopedias and joke books to Thea Beckman and Douglas Adams, later reshaped by Nathan Englander's powerful novel.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

A Peek at an Alternate Venice

Venice preserves secluded, artistically rich corners—deserted campos, less-traveled islands, and cool churches—that sustain its enduring cultural allure amid tourism and criticism.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

The Guardian view on the rise of romantic fiction: finally getting the respect it deserves

Romantic and women’s popular fiction is gaining overdue recognition and reflects social, economic, and gendered realities across different eras.
fromAnOther
2 days ago

The Puzzle of Fitzcarraldo Editions

In 1941, during the German occupation of France, the then relatively unknown writers Jean Bruller and Pierre de Lescure came together to edit, publish and distribute a book called Le Silence de la mer (The Silence of the Sea). The story centred on two family members who refuse to speak to the officer occupying their house - their way of maintaining control of a tense dynamic and a rejoinder to the Nazi propaganda campaigns and newspaper censorship widespread in France at the time.
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Books
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Near-Death Experiences: When Sales Matter More Than Truth

Trade publishing can sensationalize near-death claims, exploiting vulnerable people and distorting narratives about dying, with serious ethical consequences for grieving or terminally ill readers.
Books
fromBig Think
1 day ago

Great stories share the revelations in life's quiet undertakings

Characters reveal themselves through what they don't, won't, or can't say as much as through their spoken words.
fromFast Company
2 days ago

Best books on leadership of 2025

Every leader leaves their mark on the hearts and minds of a workforce. This can go one of two ways: leaders can leave behind a legacy of inspiration, or infuriation. Based on thousands of perspectives collected from around the globe, Adam created a systemic formula for choosing and earning the lasting impact you want to have on others. Listen to our Book Bite summary, read by author Adam Galinsky, in the Next Big Idea app or view on Amazon.
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#david-walliams
fromOpen Culture
2 days ago

Hunter S. Thompson Sets His Christmas Tree on Fire, Nearly Burning His House Down (1990)

I gave up on the inter­view and start­ed wor­ry­ing about my life when Hunter Thomp­son squirt­ed two cans of fire starter on the Christ­mas tree he was going to burn in his liv­ing-room fire­place, a few feet away from an unopened wood­en crate of 9‑mm bul­lets. That the tree was far too large to fit into the fire­place mat­tered not a whit to Hunter, who was sport­ing a dime-store wig at the time and resem­bled Tony Perkins in Psy­cho.
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Books
fromDesign Milk
1 day ago

The Penguin x MOEBE Book Stand Helps You Keep Your Place

Penguin x MOEBE Book Stand is a minimalist, multifunctional steel stand that preserves book spines, organizes reading spots, and displays books across interiors.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Children and teens roundup the best new picture books and novels

The Great Christmas Tree Race by Naomi Jones, illustrated by James Jones, Ladybird, 7.99 Star always goes on top of the Christmas tree until new decoration Sparkle kicks off a race. Who will win: Lights, Bauble, Snowflake or Reindeer? A festive picture-book caper with a child-pleasing twist. The Boy Who Grew Dragons: A Christmas Delivery by Andy Shepherd, illustrated by Sarah Warburton, Templar, 12.99 Tomas, Lolli and the dragons in Grandad's garden
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Books
fromGameSpot
2 days ago

Preorders For Diablo 4: Lord Of Hatred's Official Prequel Novel Are Now Live

Lord of Hatred expansion for Diablo IV launches April 28; the prequel novel Diablo IV: The Lost Horadrim releases a week earlier, introducing Skovos Isles.
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

What Jeffrey Epstein Didn't Understand About Lolita

Some spines are better turned inward. A pederast might hide away Thomas Mann's Death in Venice, in which a middle-aged German author ogles a lithe young Polish boy. A hyper-literate rapist should camouflage his copy of A Clockwork Orange with a more consensual dust jacket. It is therefore curious that the late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein-who died in jail in 2019 while awaiting trial on charges of trafficking minors-flaunted his supposed love of Vladimir Nabokov's Lolita.
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fromTime Out New York
2 days ago

Here are the 10 most borrowed books from the New York Public Library in 2025

NYPL's 2025 most-borrowed books are overwhelmingly fiction, led by a retelling of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn told from Jim's perspective.
Books
fromConde Nast Traveler
1 year ago

The Best Books 'Conde Nast Traveler' Editors Read in 2025

The best books of 2025 form an eclectic, travel-friendly list ranging from satirical merman romance and Tokyo nightlife fiction to Tina Knowles's memoir.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
2 days ago

All of The New Yorker, Now Online

The New Yorker made its full archive publicly accessible online, adding over one hundred thousand pieces spanning thousands of issues.
Books
fromwww.npr.org
2 days ago

From toddlers to teens, here's your one-stop shop for young readers

Recommended children's and young adult titles span picture books, middle-grade reads, and YA novels, offering humor, emotional depth, vivid illustrations, and suggested age ranges.
fromFast Company
3 days ago

These sites and apps will help you assemble the perfect holiday reading list

Whichbook employs human readers to classify books along dimensions like moods, levels of violence and sexual content, attributes of the main characters, and length. It's a process Van Riel says artificial intelligence can't yet replicate, though it's still quite mathematical in nature, with new hires guided in tuning their scores to the site's standard. Then, Whichbook users can indicate their own current preferences with a set of sliders to find a set of books that match.
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Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Freezing Point by Anders Bodelsen review a prescient classic of cryogenics

A man chooses experimental suspended animation to cure cancer, awakens decades later to a society where purchased near-immortality creates systemic inequality and commodifies life.
fromFast Company
3 days ago

Indie bookstores are making a shocking, triumphant comeback

The industry's success was far from inevitable. For a long time, indie bookstores were struggling. In 1995, when Amazon opened as the "Earth's largest bookstore" and started undercutting the prices at brick and mortar stores, readers quickly started shopping online. Small stores, which were already facing competition from chains like Borders, started to close. By 2009, the number of independent bookstores across the country had dropped to an all-time low. Experts predicted that the industry would collapse.
Books
fromNature
3 days ago

Living water and whispering rocks: Books in brief

"Awakening yourself to the whispers of rock", she says, "can transform the way you connect with and understand the world".
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Books
fromThe Atlantic
3 days ago

The 'Filthy Little Slum Child' Who Remade the American Right

Norman Podhoretz combined ambitious self-invention, provocative literary style, and political influence, shaping American conservatism while provoking controversy and enduring critical debate.
Books
fromThe Walrus
3 days ago

Canadian Literature Needs to Stop Talking Only to Itself | The Walrus

Canadian literary culture relies on government subsidies and cultural protectionism, creating an inward-looking, insular national literature with limited international reach.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

A Cartoonist's Complicated Search for the Truth

Immersive graphic reportage reconstructs contested history by juxtaposing divergent eyewitness accounts and on-the-ground reporting to reveal complex, contested truths.
Books
from48 hills
4 days ago

Tip-top tomes: Our favorite books of 2025 - 48 hills

2025 offered an abundant, steady stream of notable books across genres, with memorable cookbooks emphasizing community, local sourcing, and compelling culinary memoirs.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Are we falling out of love with nonfiction?

Nonfiction book sales have declined as readers, fatigued by real-world crises, favor escapist fiction and Hollywood-friendly memoirs.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
3 days ago

What to Read Before Your Trip to Atropia

Fiction pieces depict characters clinging to simulated roles and surreal coping mechanisms, exposing bureaucratic cruelty, war's absurdities, and gallows humor amid bleak, uncertain realities.
Books
fromBoston.com
3 days ago

Here are the Boston Public Library's most-borrowed books of 2025

All top ten most-borrowed books at the Boston Public Library in 2025 were written by women, with romance/romantasy occupying the top three positions.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Bog Queen by Anna North review a tale that could dig deeper

Bog Queen braids voices—moss, a modern forensic pathologist, and an Iron Age druidine—to examine bodies, landscape, and personal displacement.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
4 days ago

A Graphic Novel About Rage and Repression in Montreal

Home functions as the place where characters resist and suppress genuine emotion, making domestic spaces emotionally inhospitable.
Books
fromDefector
3 days ago

American Cant | Defector

Dante Alighieri wrote The Divine Comedy after exile to settle personal scores and seek return; Olivia Nuzzi linked her post-scandal memoir to Dante.
Books
fromwww.eastbaytimes.com
4 days ago

Berkeley couple's new book attempts to define the meaning of home'

Kirsten Dirksen and Nicolas Boullosa document and promote diverse eco-friendly, unconventional homes and minimalist living through self-funded media, a book, and ongoing home renovation projects.
Books
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
5 days ago

DramaWatch: Roping in holiday shows, looking ahead to a brand new year * Oregon ArtsWatch

Portland stages touring musicals and local theater productions in January, with Lakewood Theatre opening the year with an adaptation of The Murder of Roger Ackroyd.
Books
fromVulture
4 days ago

A Fresh, Sharp Tartuffe That Shakes the Powder off the Wigs

Lucas Hnath's new translation of Molière's Tartuffe revitalizes the play with sharp comedy, preserving subversive poetry and delivering biting satire.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
3 days ago

Henry James's Venice Is Still Here

A hidden Venetian garden in Henry James's The Aspern Papers embodies secrecy, literary obsession, and moral ambiguities of seeking private artifacts.
Books
fromNature
4 days ago

Beauty is in the eye of the beholder

An irascible tentacled alien, Spooky, seeks Smokey Blast in a bar to relive peaceful reef memories through sensory color shows and communal synchronization.
Books
fromwww.esquire.com
3 days ago

Every Real Adult Needs a Notebook. Here Are Our 11 Favorites.

Choose notebook size, cover type, paper weight, and binding based on handwriting, portability, durability, paper quality, and personal use.
Books
fromAdvocate.com
4 days ago

Tennessee whistleblower says library board chair sought private data as part of state's book purge

A Rutherford County library director alleged the board chair sought patron records and book removals, requested whistleblower protection amid intensified local censorship disputes.
Books
fromKotaku
3 days ago

LEGO Rescues Your Christmas Gifts, Harry Potter Hogwarts Castle at Price That Crushes All Other Sets - Kotaku

Hogwarts Castle and Grounds LEGO set recreates Hogwarts in 2,660 pieces, discounted to $140 with guaranteed pre-Christmas delivery on Amazon.
Books
fromThe Nation
5 days ago

Helen DeWitt and Ilya Gridneff's Sweeping Anti-War Novel

Your Name Here is an ambitious, experimental, anti‑war novel using digressive, self‑reflexive narrative to examine collaboration, literature's role, and publishing industry constraints.
Books
fromBustle
4 days ago

Felicity Jones Can't Get Enough Of 'Wuthering Heights,' Either

Felicity Jones prioritizes a clear contemporary reason when adapting classics and chooses projects that can meaningfully translate to film.
Books
fromScary Mommy
4 days ago

11 New Year's Reading Resolutions That Aren't Just "Read More"

Set specific New Year's reading resolutions focused on personal goals, including reading well-researched books that clarify current events instead of doomscrolling.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Noopiming: The Cure for White Ladies by Leanne Betasamosake Simpson review startlingly original

Noopiming reclaims Ojibwe worldview by centering reciprocity between humans, animals, and plants through poetic-prose narratives set between Toronto, reserve, and wild spaces.
#jane-austen
fromKqed
4 days ago
Books

What Was on Jane Austen's Nightstand? 'The White Lotus' of Its Time

fromKqed
4 days ago
Books

What Was on Jane Austen's Nightstand? 'The White Lotus' of Its Time

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fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Why Rejection Is a Worthy Goal

Reframing rejection as proof of courage builds resilience and enables breakthroughs when met with coping strategies, perseverance, and intentional risk-taking.
fromPinkNews | Latest lesbian, gay, bi and trans news | LGBTQ+ news
4 days ago

An entire library board just disbanded over a single trans book

An entire library board in North Carolina has disbanded over a single trans book. The Randolph County Board of Commissioners dissolved its nine-member library board over a picture book about a trans boy, which initially caused backlash because it was located in the children's section. County spokesperson Amy Rudisill said the governing body for the county made the 3-2 decision earlier this week, hearing from about 40 people.
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Books
fromEngadget
2 years ago

The best board games to gift and play with the family for the 2025 holiday season

League of the Lexicon is a fast-paced, Trivial Pursuit–style word trivia game with 2,000 questions across two difficulty levels suitable for mixed groups.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
6 days ago

Briefly Noted Book Reviews

A blackly comic tale of an envious writer's moral descent for success; a diaristic novella examines contemporary anxieties and fading practices amid political turmoil.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

William Golding: The Faber Letters review the making of a masterpiece

Charles Monteith rescued and rigorously edited William Golding's initially rejected Lord of the Flies, initiating a 40-year collaborative author-editor relationship that shaped Golding's career.
Books
fromThe Verge
6 days ago

Kindle app now answers questions about the book you're reading

Amazon's Kindle app adds Ask this Book, an in-book AI assistant providing spoiler-free answers tied to pages read; creators cannot opt out.
Books
fromLove and Lemons
5 days ago

The Best Cookbooks to Gift in 2025, According to a Bestselling Cookbook Author

Cookbooks provide inspiration and practical recipes for every type of cook and make thoughtful, customizable holiday gifts.
Books
fromSherdog
5 days ago

Henry Cejudo Shares Surprising Career Plans After Retirement

Henry Cejudo plans to write children's books telling truthful fighter stories and provide business education to veteran fighters after retiring from MMA.
Books
fromIndependent
1 week ago

My Money: 'My biggest financial regret? Paying 8,000 for a Tony Robbins seminar in London'

Emma Ledden transitioned from children's TV and MTV presenter to author, coach, and podcast host focusing on confidence and presentation skills.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

Poem of the week: Winter Walk by Lynette Roberts

A winter-walk scene portrays crystalline snowy landscapes, animal and human tracks, an encountered figure, and a returned companionship marked by retraced footprints.
Books
fromFuncheap
5 days ago

Wedding Themed Book Launch Party

Our Ex's Wedding launch party will be held January 20, 2026 at Book Passage in San Francisco's Ferry Building with a wedding-themed celebration.
Books
fromwww.dw.com
6 days ago

Jane Austen at 250: From Regency roots to TikTok reels DW 12/15/2025

Regency-era novels use sharp social satire, memorable characters, and adaptability to remain resonant across cultures and modern media.
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

Using Bedtime Stories to Create Healthy Narratives in Kids

Reading your child a bedtime story-or making one up yourself-has so many benefits, but there's one that is often overlooked: Bedtime stories create powerful narratives in your child that you choose. (For more on narratives and why they're crucial for parents to know about, see this post.) How stories become narratives Children's stories affect kids on an emotional level. For instance, let's take the common absent-parent-returns-home story.
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Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Suddenly, it was everywhere': why some books become blockbusters overnight

Sleeper literary hits can revive obscure books through online enthusiasm, translation, design, political mood, bookseller advocacy and serendipity, sometimes achieving huge belated sales.
Books
fromThe Cipher Brief
6 days ago

The Cipher Brief's Recommended Reads for the Holidays

Annual holiday book roundup highlights top-rated fiction and non-fiction espionage and war histories, featuring standout spy novels praised for authentic HUMINT and thrilling plots.
Books
fromEngadget
6 days ago

Kindle's in-book AI assistant can answer all your questions without spoilers

Amazon's Kindle iOS app now includes Ask this Book, an always-on AI that answers reader questions up to current reading position with no author or publisher opt-out.
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

A hidden life in the era of social media can still change history, as the story of Jesus shows

In that case, maybe the spiritual instruction you need emerges in the famous final lines of George Eliot's 1871 novel Middlemarch: the growing good of the world is partly dependent on unhistoric acts; and that things are not so ill with you and me as they might have been, is half owing to the number who lived faithfully a hidden life, and rest in unvisited tombs.
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Books
fromMission Local
6 days ago

Vaquera/x/o on display: Michael Papias' new photo exhibit is a Mexican American love letter

Michael Papias documents the Mexican American Vaquera/x/o community, celebrating horse-centered cultural traditions, spiritual care for horses, and communal heritage in intimate photography.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

This extraordinary story never goes out of fashion': 30 authors on the books they give to everyone

Books make enduring, meaningful gifts that foster reflection and connection to place, exemplified by The Living Mountain, Stoic meditations, and philosophical critiques of modernity.
fromTasting Table
1 week ago

The Unusual Job Anthony Bourdain Had Before Becoming ... Anthony Bourdain - Tasting Table

Anthony Bourdain has always had a way with words, but his writing didn't always surround cooking. Before he was giving his unfiltered opinions on all things food and the restaurant industry, Anthony Bourdain was penning mysteries. In 1995, five years before his iconic debut of " Kitchen Confidential," Bourdain published his very first crime-fiction novel. Titled "Bone in the Throat," the suspenseful novel takes readers into the mafia world via stereotypical kitchen mayhem.
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Books
fromMedium
2 weeks ago

5 Books to Read This Winter (Designers Edition)

Reading beyond design books accelerates designer growth by teaching life skills, mental models, decision-making, and wealth principles that elevate work and professional hustle.
fromSlate Magazine
1 week ago

To Fully Appreciate the Brilliant New Knives Out, It Helps to Understand the Subgenres It's Riffing On

The locked-room mystery-otherwise known as the "impossible crime" mystery-is not to be confused with the closed-circle mystery often associated with the queen of Golden Age detective fiction, Agatha Christie. The classic "country house during a blizzard" setting with an array of suspects, each of whom might have committed the murder, is a closed-circle setup, as is Christie's Orient Express train, and the steamer in Death on the Nile. In a locked-room mystery, it seems that no one could have done it and escaped undetected.
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Books
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Charles Dickens and Christmas Carol Creativity

Rhythmic automatic motor activities like walking entrain brain networks, reduce cluttered thinking, and free creativity and calmness.
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fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Deep Insights Into Paradoxical Human-Animal Relationships

Human-animal relationships reveal identity, blend affection and dominance, and are shaped by culture, empathy, personality, and political beliefs.
Books
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 week ago

How your cat ended up on your lap: A book challenges the history of the domestication of the most popular feline

Cat domestication was a long, complex process spanning millennia, with archaeological finds showing human–cat relationships far earlier than ancient Egyptian domestication.
fromVulture
1 week ago

The Best Comedy Books of 2025

Mainstream comedy is frankly in a bit of a lull right now. Sitcoms and theatrical comedy movie are disappearing, few comic novels are getting published, and comedy podcasts are just comedians interviewing other comedians. It's perhaps of little surprise, then, that the best nonfiction comedy books released in 2025 were focused on the past - comedy's history, themes, and steadfast examples of greatness and insight.
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fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

Do We Really Know How Isabel Archer Felt?

Emotional categories and reactions change across time; assuming past people felt as modern people do risks misunderstanding their behaviors and social norms.
fromYoga Journal
1 week ago

Love, Lies, and Betrayal Define This Murder Mystery Novel Set in a Yoga Studio

At thirty years old, I have been teaching yoga for a third of my life. In my corner of the world, it's almost like a clique. Everyone knows who's who, and what's more menacing is that everybody seems to know each other's business. Of course, there are pluses and minuses, but for the most part, it feels more like a popularity contest than a viable career.
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fromThe Walrus
1 week ago

Souvankham Thammavongsa Doesn't Mind If You're Jealous of Her Career | The Walrus

Thammavongsa was born in Nong Khai, Thailand, in a Lao refugee camp. The family moved to Toronto when she was one year old. She grew up in a one-room apartment with her parents and brother; when she was fifteen and her parents decided to open their own business, she, her mother, and brother spent months sleeping in the family van to make the transition work.
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Books
fromFuncheap
1 week ago

Free Book Club: 1970s Sci-Fi at Gray Area (SF)

Gray Area hosts a free book club on December 20, 2025 to read Bio-Music (1974) by Manford Eaton at 2665 Mission Street, San Francisco.
#joanna-trollope
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fromTime Out New York
1 week ago

This Brooklyn bookstore and cafe celebrates Black food culture

BEM | books & more is a Black-owned, food-focused bookstore in Bedford-Stuyvesant showcasing books by Black authors linking food to culture, history, and identity.
Books
fromDefector
1 week ago

Maggie Nelson Sputters And Stalls In 'The Slicks' | Defector

An effort to equate Taylor Swift and Sylvia Plath as mutual victims of patriarchal disparagement fails through circular argumentation and diminished critical insight.
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fromInverse
1 week ago

Why It Took 20 Years For Lord of the Rings To Finally Make A Cozy Game

Tales of the Shire focuses on peaceful hobbit life, emphasizing everyday pleasures, community, and relationships instead of violence and epic battles.
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fromBig Think
1 week ago

America's post-apocalyptic maps reveal eerily familiar fault lines

American post-apocalyptic fiction depicts America surviving national collapse to expose present anxieties about democracy, morality, progress, and religious millenarianism.
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