News

Free Speech v. Paxton is a gift to any Democratic politician smart and bold enough to seize it. Republicans in Texas and on ...
About the good or bad of democracy, Hamid is clear about his mixed, and constantly evolving feelings. The bet here is that in ...
The author of Lake of Darkness, the latest read for the New Scientist Book Club, on why, in a world awash with fictional dystopias, he set out to write the opposite ...
Here's a look at some of the best hotels for redeeming IHG 60,000-point free night certificates, including properties in the ...
Ryan Knutson, host of The Journal, speaks with travel expert and author Rick Steves about traveling in 2025 and Americans’ reception outside our country after the recent shakeup in the world order.
Picture this: you're reading a story and suddenly realize it's talking directly to you. Not at you, but to you. You're making decisions. You're feeling emotions. You're living the narrative.
Why do we love animal stories? A well-written novel with written from an animal’s point of view presents whimsical insight. And animal protagonists are not just for picture books, these ...
The book, published in December, was described as “a crucial book for understanding how control is currently exercised not by repressing truth but by multiplying narratives, making it impossible ...
That’s the Point. A new exhibition at the Center for Book Arts in New York features a range of items — transistor radios, lanterns, cigarette lighters and more — designed to look like books.
Until, that is, you realise this is only the index of Malcolm Gladwell’s latest work Revenge of the Tipping Point. It is a sub-genre that has become characteristic of the writer.
Sometimes, the right book shows up just at the right time. Our book critic encountered two such books this week: Water, Water, by Billy Collins, and The Dog Who Followed the Moon, by James Norbury.