The Story of Edgar Sawtelle
A voiceless young man and his canine companions are the center of a reimagined Hamlet.
A voiceless young man and his canine companions are the center of a reimagined Hamlet.
The author of The Corrections shares his thoughts about fiction in the Internet age and much, much more.
How a con man with a paintbrush pulled one over on the art world ?- and the Nazis.
Our review of the just-announced Man Booker Prize winner — first run on June 16, 2008.
Salman Rushdie discusses the Mughal Empire, Machiavelli, and the storytelling that animates his new novel.
A story of the siege of Leningrad, a dozen eggs, and a quest for survival itself.
In her new memoir, the author of Paula returns to chronicle the emotional tumult of family life.
A shooting in Chicago prompts a European odyssey — a century later.
Ted Sorensen, JFK’s chief counselor, talks about campaigns past and present.
A family in the aftermath of World War II, from the author of The Confessions of Max Tivoli.
A group portrait of one of America’s most eccentric — and influential — circles of friends.
A century-old storm of violence haunts the descendants — white and Native American — of those first caught in its…
A father maps his son?s harrowing ordeal as a methamphetamine addict.
The author argues that the creation of the WPA was one of the most enduring achievements of FDR’s New Deal.
We talk with Nicholson Baker about his new book, Human Smoke, World War II, and the grain of events.
A new collection of linked tales from the author of Amy and Isabelle maps the life of an imposing character.
The author of Written on the Body visits a future Earth, damaged by humanity.
A new collection of short stories from the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Interpreter of Maladies.
Liz Rosenberg looks at a comprehensive new collection of her poems and prose.
Two new volumes unearth the life and correspondence of the author of Angle of Repose