With comic book adaptations dominating the zeitgeist for more than two decades, pop culture conventions like San Diego ...
There are many brilliant adaptations of Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu’s seminal gothic horror novella, Carmilla, but Kat Dunn’s ...
Black literature is far too expansive to cover in just a month, especially if you look back through history at the works of luminaries like Langston Hughes, Toni Morrison, James Baldwin and Nikki ...
Spend the shortest month of the year with a book that is worth your time. The best new books to read in February include best-seller Ali Hazelwood’s latest romance, transgender activist Jennifer ...
Robin isn't often seen as the scary one in his partnership with Batman, but in a dark new cosplay design that idea is flipped ...
Reading a book cover to cover takes time and energy, so it’s important to choose one that’ll keep you engaged across every page. Half the battle is knowing your tastes. What works for your ...
By Marjoleine Kars A new book by the journalist Katherine Stewart finds a far-right movement seething in resentment, suspicious of reason and determined to dominate at all costs. Paul Fussell’s ...
If the world isn’t already scary enough, horror can provide a safe, controlled release of tension. It’s no wonder, then, that today horror is more popular than ever. 2025 has already seen the ...
Whether you're looking for a classic or the latest and greatest, start here. By The New York Times Books Staff Here are the year’s notable fiction, poetry and nonfiction, chosen by the staff ...
Glamour! Parties! And a LOT of money… with the Formula 1 season just a few weeks away a new book explains how it's become the world's hottest sport. Nick Rennison discovers quite how much of our ...
Here’s how it works. Seeing as the game is now over 50 years old, it's hard to narrow down the best D&D books. There are quite literally enough to fill a small library these days, so which ones ...
It has been tempting to view the C.I.A. as omniscient. Yet Coll’s chastening new book about the events leading up to the Iraq War, in 2003, shows just how often the agency was flying blind.