In January, the Book Review Book Club will read and discuss Xenobe Purvis’s debut novel, about a small English village ...
Greg Kincaid, who authored “A Dog Named Christmas,” is a practicing attorney who lives on a farm in eastern Kansas with his wife, Michale Ann, and their dogs and cats.
In Gentler Valleys Roaming,” author Julie Verrette writes about the dogs she adopted from Iditarod racers Susan Butcher and ...
“The Singularity is Nearer,” Ray Kurzweil, was on my library’s new bookshelves when I desperately needed reading material. I decided to risk it. Sadly, my expectations were met. It has almost all the ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Esther Choy covers leadership with a focus on business storytelling. In 2015, Inc. magazine made a choice that now reads like a ...
A Book Review art director selects the book jackets that made a compelling impression. A Book Review art director selects the book jackets that made a compelling impression. Credit... Supported by By ...
Tech and the Dark Side of Prosperity in the San Francisco Bay Area" by Richard A. Walker for Insurgent Notes #18, October ...
We are now at the beginning of the year 2026. If we reflect on the wishes we extended to others and those we received in ...
Charlie English begins “The CIA Book Club” by describing a 1970s technical manual: a dull cover, as uninviting as anything. A book that practically begs you to put it back on the shelf and move on.
This review was originally published on February 24. We’re republishing it now that Dream Count is out. The novel’s regressive strain will not surprise those who have tracked Adichie’s public missteps ...
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