Arts >>

Books

080628_archie_list

Master builders

Books on, and by, architects
A good architectural monograph is more than just a big colorful book with too-good-to-be-true photos; it’s a window into the heart and mind of the architect it profiles.
By: DAVID EISEN  |  June 24, 2008

0805620_dewitt_list

Confessions of an editor

DeWitt Henry's candid new collection of essays meditates on manhood
There’s a quiet courage in these essays, and a revelatory sense of the continuing challenge of pressing on.
By: NINA MACLAUGHLIN  |  June 20, 2008

wonderlist.jpg

Priorities, rediscovered

In her first book, actress Debra Winger focuses on home, not Hollywood
Instead of checking into rehab, the actress spoke her mind.
By: JENNY HALPER  |  June 19, 2008

080630_bidart_list

Frank Bidart’s ambivalent appetite

The poet probes human opposites in his latest collection
Frank Bidart adores the savage Catullan paradox.
By: SVEN BIRKERTS  |  June 17, 2008

books_pec89uliarlist.jpg

Small presses

Big ideas, and a match made in heaven
Rose Metal Press focuses on unique, non-traditional literary forms such as flash fiction, prose poetry, or novels-in-verse.
By: DEIRDRE FULTON  |  June 11, 2008

080613_edison_list

Mike Edison walks alone

Funhouse
On his death bed, Mike Edison probably won’t lament that he didn’t do this or he didn’t go there.
By: AMY FINCH  |  June 10, 2008



080606_furst_list

Spy games

Alan Furst’s “Night Soldiers” novels
The gray afternoon, the loveless assignation, the endless bureaucracy.
By: CLEA SIMON  |  June 10, 2008

080606_office_list2

The great American (office) novel

Thirteen fictional perspectives on your 9-5
They are coming regularly now, like buses, like bulletins — the great office novels of the 21st century.
By: JAMES PARKER  |  June 06, 2008

080606_jco_list

Booked up

Several shelves’ worth of summer reads
Summertime, and the reading is easy.
By: BARBARA HOFFERT  |  June 09, 2008

080660_nabb_list

Masterful mysteries

Rendell and Nabb transcend genre
Not in the Flesh is Ruth Rendell’s 21st Inspector Wexford novel since she and the character debuted in 1964.
By: CHARLES TAYLOR  |  June 10, 2008

080606-monty_list

Fore!

The thief who reinvented himself as a Hollywood celebrity
The new guy showed up as a guest at the Lakeside Golf Club in 1932, and to the surprise of absolutely no one, he won the club championship the first time he entered it.
By: GEORGE KIMBALL  |  June 10, 2008



080606_miles_list

Flying high

Interview: Jonathan Miles’s airport novel
There’s nothing new about the complaint as literature, says author Jonathan Miles.
By: CLEA SIMON  |  June 02, 2008

080606_amis_list

Second thoughts

Amis yes and no
Amis hasn’t had this much press since he fell out with Julian Barnes.
By: JAMES PARKER  |  June 03, 2008

080530_greatest+_list

‘Great’ is definitely the wrong word

Richard Bradley’s fact-challenged book on the Sox-Yanks’ ’78 season finale is filled with Buckner-esque errors.
When I come across an obvious factual error in a book, my initial inclination is to wince in sympathy for the soon-to-be-embarrassed author. Unless, that is, the mistake is infuriatingly egregious, in which case I’m more apt to throw the book up against the wall in disgust.
By: GEORGE KIMBALL  |  January 28, 2010

080530_list_motion

Past and present

Andrew Motion's is a memoir to savor
A book as scrupulously observed and beautifully wrought as Andrew Motion’s In the Blood can provide a shock of recognition. This, you think, is what memoir was meant to be.
By: CHARLES TAYLOR  |  May 27, 2008

080523_bipolar_list

Sweet madness

Marya Hornbacher’s bipolar life
Just reading this book exhausted me, so I can only imagine how tired Marya Hornbacher must have been after writing it. Or perhaps it came easily to her. Most things seem to.
By: KARA BASKIN  |  May 19, 2008



080516_simic_list

Selected and otherwise

A sheaf of post-April poetry and poets
Simic is a poet not of big gloomy poems but of small glooms and fears that haunt our waking lives and disturb our sleep.
By: WILLIAM CORBETT  |  May 13, 2008

080509_balanchine_list

Decoding Balanchine

Nancy Goldner on Mr. B
Nancy Goldner’s diminutive new book about George Balanchine’s choreography is deceptively readable.
By: MARCIA B. SIEGEL  |  May 06, 2008

080502_grammar_list

Yet another path to enlightenment

A grammatical spiritual journey
The book is “meant for people who . . . like to have their consciousness of life’s big questions refreshed,” says Weinstein.
By: KRISTINA WONG  |  April 30, 2008

080425_new_rol_list

Shaping the Crescent

The making of New Orleans
Even before Katrina wreaked its havoc on New Orleans, a popular T-shirt proclaimed the city “Third World and Proud of It,” and numerous more-literary types have long referred to it as the “northernmost Caribbean city.”
By: CLEA SIMON  |  December 22, 2008

080425_jumpa_list

Rooted

Jhumpa Lahiri tends her garden
Jhumpa Lahiri won a Pulitzer Prize with her first collection of short stories, Interpreter of Maladies .
By: ED SIEGEL  |  April 22, 2008


<< first  ...< prev  17  |  18  |  19  |  20  |  21  |  22  |  23  |  24  |  25  |   next >...  last >>

21 of 26 (results 511)

Most Popular
Ski Guide

Best Emo

Best Goth

Best Brit Pop

WFNX