A Poet Who Embraced Recklessness, in Surreal Swerves and Zigzags
Dean Young’s posthumous collection, “Creature Feature,” applies his characteristically giddy sense of unraveling to his own life and ill health.
By

Advertisement
Dean Young’s posthumous collection, “Creature Feature,” applies his characteristically giddy sense of unraveling to his own life and ill health.
By

Merlin Holland has spent decades dismantling the myths that grew up around his grandfather. He hopes his new book may finally settle the record.
By

With “Transcription,” the writer makes a case for the vitality of the form.
By

“Antigone” gave us the original “bad girl,” but its themes go beyond that. How do adaptations keep making Sophocles’ ideas about democracy and theater new?
By

Advertisement
Lena Dunham Brought Her Own Pillows This Time
Forget demure conversations in spindly chairs. To promote “Famesick,” a new memoir, she’s taken to her bed and invited friends to jump in. Onstage.
By

Two Delicious Food Memoirs, Two Very Different Menus
Both authors share uncanny similarities of upbringing. But their culinary paths diverged sharply.
By

Great Books to Bring Young Readers Into the Wilderness
The author of “A Wolf Called Wander” recommends titles old and new, fantastical and true, that celebrate the natural world.
By

After 10 Years, She’s Still Waking Up on the Same Day
Solvej Balle’s cult hit series about a woman trapped in a time loop continues with a fourth volume.
By


Our critic assesses the achievement of Martin Amis, Britain’s most famous literary son.
By

Columns That Scrutinized, and Skewered, the Literary World
“NB by J.C.” collects the variegated musings of James Campbell in the Times Literary Supplement.
By

After Writing About Mental Illness, Kay Redfield Jamison Turns to Healers
In “Fires in the Dark,” Jamison, known for her expertise on manic depression, delves into the quest to heal. Her new book, she says, is a “love song to psychotherapy.”
By

A Classic of Golden Age Detective Fiction Turns 100
Dorothy L. Sayers dealt with emotional and financial instability by writing “Whose Body?,” the first of many to star the detective Lord Peter Wimsey.
By

Did She Cheat? A Century Later, a Novel’s Mystery Still Stumps.
“Dom Casmurro,” by Machado de Assis, teaches us to read — and reread — with precise detail and masterly obfuscation.
By

Advertisement
Aging in a Brightly Lit, Big City
In 1984, Jay McInerney was a famous, young, hedonistic novelist. Now 71, he is wistful as he wraps up his tetralogy about a couple whose city, and marriage, are tested by the pandemic.
By

Kendrick Lamar’s Protégé Baby Keem Tells the Whole Story, Warts and All
The 25-year-old rapper and producer knows he’s benefited from his cousin’s support. But the path to his autobiographical album, “Casino,” was his alone.
By Ross Scarano and

Will Sister Mary Kay Turn Out the Lights?
An influential order of nuns decided to complete its mission when the last sister dies. The only question left is how to finish well.
By Kurt Streeter and

The Rise and Fall and Rise of Michael Jackson
A new biopic is the latest move in the Jackson estate’s posthumous — and lucrative — rehabilitation campaign.
By

He Warned About the Dangers of A.I. If Only His Father Had Listened.
Ben Riley was already writing about the risks of chatbots when his dad started trusting A.I. over his doctor.
By


Three protagonists who changed how postwar U.S. thought of itself.
By Rose Courteau

The poets Major Jackson and Frederick Seidel share the verses they always return to.
By Rose Courteau

Six myths that remain essential to understanding literature and the human psyche.
By Rose Courteau

Dua Lipa, Bernardine Evaristo and others share what to read over a lifetime.
By Rose Courteau

Writers pick the classic and contemporary novels you must read from each country.
By Rose Courteau

Just 22 and still a student, Nelio Biedermann has been compared to Thomas Mann thanks to “Lázár,” his sweeping family saga.
By Thomas Rogers

Major publishing houses risk unwittingly putting out books generated with A.I. tools. Authors and readers are frustrated, nervous and grasping for solutions.
By Alexandra Alter

In his free time, Jeff Martin mobilized best-selling authors to travel to sold-out events in his hometown. He will soon expand his horizons.
By Elisabeth Egan

She vividly recalls what the novel, and others like it, meant to her mother. Her own new book is “The Glorians: Visitations From the Holy Ordinary.”

Two Shakespeare adaptations — Teatro La Plaza’s uplifting remix and Red Bull Theater’s gore fest — place very different values on human existence.
By Laura Collins-Hughes
Advertisement
Advertisement