Omniscient Reader just lost a major award to a romance manhwa named How to Win My Husband Over, and it was actually well ...
In his insightful book about America's housing crisis, Yoni Appelbaum argues that more than a century of restrictive ...
The famed twentieth-century photojournalist Weegee was just as fascinated with tragedy—fires, car crashes, murders—as he was ...
The highlights were familiar to any left-wing critic of American power: The U.S. Agency for International Development’s ...
Meet the writer who helped turn a book into a cultural phenomenon.
We talk with author Ricky Riccardi about how Louis Armstrong became the first Black pop star and provided the foundation of improvisation for other musicians. Riccardi's book is Stomp Off, Let's Go.
If you’re confused by a turn of phrase in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “The Great Gatsby” or a startling metaphor in Kafka’s “Metamorphosis,” just ask the book to explain itself, and it will.
The magazine has gained a cult following, partly by branding itself as a beacon of intellectualism. Here’s how it has changed ...
Belle da Costa Greene, the first director of the Morgan Library, was a Black woman who passed as white in the early 20th ...
For anyone who has experienced loneliness, María Medem’s “Land of Mirrors” contains a strange yet stunning world in which ...
The mastermind behind the "Suits" universe insists he's more concerned about meeting the bar he's set for himself and "Suits ...
Laurence Rees asks: Are we in danger of history repeating itself? The Daily Mail Books department chooses their favourite fiction of the century. When 50 American hostages were released on Reagan ...
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