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Book Review

Highlights

    1. Paperback Row

      6 New Paperbacks to Read This Week

      Recommended reading from the Book Review, including titles by Anne Berest, Brandon Taylor and more.

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  1. Kara Walker’s Favorite Literary Villain Is Scarlett O’Hara

    Audiobooks have let the artist “stay invested in stories while working with my hands.” Her new project: illustrating Jamaica Kincaid’s “An Encyclopedia of Gardening for Colored Children.”

     

    CreditRebecca Clarke
    By the Book
  2. A Novel of Nantucket’s Unglamorous Side

    In “Wait,” Gabriella Burnham examines island life from a fresh angle.

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    Fiction
  3. The Massacre America Forgot

    In a new book, the historian Kim A. Wagner investigates the slaughter by U.S. troops of nearly 1,000 people in the Philippines in 1906 — an atrocity long overlooked in this country.

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    Nonfiction
  4. Alice Munro, a Literary Alchemist Who Made Great Fiction From Humble Lives

    The Nobel Prize-winning author specialized in exacting short stories that were novelistic in scope, spanning decades with intimacy and precision.

     By

    Alice Munro in 1979. “With implacable authority and command she demonstrated throughout her career that the lives of girls and women were as rich, as tumultuous, as dramatic and as important as the lives of men and boys.”
    CreditPaul Stephen Pearson/Fairfax Media, via Getty Images
    An Appraisal
  5. Alta, Irreverent Feminist Poet and Small-Press Pioneer, Dies at 81

    She wrote lusty work about her life. She also started what may have been America’s first feminist press, Shameless Hussy, in her garage.

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    The poet Alta with a printing press in the garage of her home in San Lorenzo, Calif., in 1972. A few years earlier she had created what some say was the country’s first feminist press.
    CreditPaul Steinbrink, via Gerrey family

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Books of The Times

More in Books of The Times ›
  1. The Massacre America Forgot

    In a new book, the historian Kim A. Wagner investigates the slaughter by U.S. troops of nearly 1,000 people in the Philippines in 1906 — an atrocity long overlooked in this country.

     By

    Credit
  2. Sex, Drugs and Economics: The Double Life of a Conservative Gadfly

    The professor and social commentator Glenn Loury opens up about his vices in a candid new memoir.

     By

    Glenn Loury’s “Late Admissions” recounts his smash-and-grab life.
    CreditBea Oyster for The New York Times
  3. Adultery Gets Weird in Miranda July’s New Novel

    An anxious artist’s road trip stops short for a torrid affair at a tired motel. In “All Fours,” the desire for change is familiar. How to satisfy it isn’t.

     By

    CreditAnna Morrison
  4. Can a 50-Year-Old Idea Save Democracy?

    The economist and philosopher Daniel Chandler thinks so. In “Free and Equal,” he makes a vigorous case for adopting the liberal political framework laid out by John Rawls in the 1970s.

     By

    The political philosopher John Rawls in 1990. Rawls’s theory combined a liberal respect for individual rights and differences with an egalitarian emphasis on fairness.
    CreditSteve Pyke/Getty Images
  5. A Portrait of the Art World Elite, Painted With a Heavy Hand

    Hari Kunzru examines the ties between art and wealth in a new novel, “Blue Ruin.”

     By

    CreditKlaus Kremmerz
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  2. Queen of the Book Club

    Sitting down for lunch with Reese Witherspoon, whose book picks have become a force in the publishing industry.

    By Elisabeth Egan

     
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  9. Children’s Books

    Whose Folk Tale Is It Anyway?

    A comics collection’s sibling narrators and a graphic novel’s hapless heroine change their stories as they go along.

    By Sabrina Orah Mark

     
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