Shortly after the publication of Lea Ypi’s 2021 memoir “Free,” which recounts her childhood in Albania before and after the ...
Editor’s note: The opinions of the smart, well-read women in my Denver book club mean a lot, and often determine what the ...
The chilling thriller from New York Times best-selling Cincinnati author Mia Sheridan releases on paperback Nov. 1.
A brisk new portrait by Anthony Gottlieb emphasizes the philosopher’s restless, ambivalent mind and Viennese family ...
In a world of dwindling reviews, the author Lydia Davis’s new work charts a more serendipitous path to reading.
While an old storyteller and a young listener retell highlights of the first three seasons of The Witcher, Liam Hemsworth ...
Atwood's 'Book of Lives' has to be the most spectacular, hilarious, and generous autobiography of the last quarter century — ...
Banished to the orchestra’s back row, the tuba is rarely highlighted on its own. Playing one is an exercise in breath control ...
One of the hostages that survived the ordeal is Eli Sharabi, a resident of Kibbutz Be’eri who was kidnapped by Hamas and held ...
There are a few words in the English language that carry as much quiet discomfort as menopause. It’s the point ...
Listen to more stories on the Noa app. “A writer,” Saul Bellow once observed, “is a reader moved to emulation.” But what if it’s also the other way around? What if, when we think about writing, we are ...
If all we really know about anyone else is what they show us, how do we decide who that person actually is? “The Correspondent” is the smash hit debut novel that explores that question.