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.
These two tiny books are absolutely full of dips and tragedy ... escape a day job so they can commit themselves to writing, but Kafka famously wrote prolifically in his free time between very ...
Featuring Nobel Laureates Esther Duflo and Venki Ramakrishnan alongside Booker Prize winners like Jenny Erpenbeck, Michael ...
Misha Berson, theater critic for The Seattle Times for 25 years and a passionate advocate for the performing arts in Seattle ...
Director Terry Gilliam makes the impossible happen. A harmless-looking rabbit can turn into a vicious, man-eating monster. A ...
A new exhibition at the Center for Book Arts in New York features a range of items — transistor radios, lanterns, cigarette ...
Six months after Drew’s death, Nadia drives to Montreal to visit her sister, who’s dating a very attractive man—a “mimbo”—who ...
If the retail price of a book were pegged to the number of high-quality ideas it contained, the two books below would sell ...
NEW YORK — There’s a reason the terms “romantic” and “romanticism” are so often preceded by the adjective “hopeless.” ...
8. “Don’t Believe Everything You Think (expanded ed.)” by Joseph Nguyen (Authors Equity) ...
It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a man of letters, in possession of a goodly number of books, must be in need of a ladder.