Book Review (original) (raw)

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

  1. What to Read
  2. Staff Critics
  3. Best Sellers
  4. By the Book
  5. Book Review Podcast
  6. Children's Books

Highlights

  1. How a Gen X Graphic Novelist Reinvented the Romance Comic

To fully understand Charles Burns’s remarkable graphic novel, “Final Cut,” you have to look closely at the way in which it was rendered.
By


CreditCharles Burns/Pantheon 2. ### Cher Can, and Does, Turn Back Time
In the first volume of her memoir (which she hasn’t read), she explores her difficult childhood, her fraught marriage to Sonny Bono and how she found her voice.
By Elisabeth Egan
Cher met Sonny Bono at a coffee shop when she was 16 and he was 27. It wasn’t easy for her to relive parts of their marriage, she said.
Cher met Sonny Bono at a coffee shop when she was 16 and he was 27. It wasn’t easy for her to relive parts of their marriage, she said.
CreditSilver Screen Collection/Getty Images 3. 1. Science Fiction and Fantasy

Murderous Emperors, Plagues, Killer Lobsters: New Speculative Fiction

Recent books by Minsoo Kang, Margaret Killjoy and James S.A. Corey.
By Amal El-Mohtar


CreditJing Wei
2. Fiction

Haruki Murakami’s New Novel Doesn’t Feel All That New

“The City and Its Uncertain Walls” features all the author’s signature elements — and his singular voice — in a story he has told before.
By Junot Díaz


CreditBalint Zsako


  1. CreditRebecca Clarke
    By the Book

  2. Credit
    Fiction
  3. Alice in Moominland
    Tove Jansson’s illustrations for a rare 1966 edition of “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” are melancholy, complex and occasionally scary.
    By Sadie Stein

    Credit
    Up Close

  4. CreditThe New York Times

  5. CreditThe New York Times

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Books of the Times

More in Books of the Times ›

  1. Roger Penrose at Oxford University in 1982.
    CreditAlan Hillyer, via Associated Press

  2. CreditChau Luong
  3. The band R.E.M. in 1984, from left: Bill Berry, Michael Stipe, Mike Mills and Peter Buck.
    CreditPaul Natkin/Getty Images
  4. Edwin Frank, the editorial director of New York Review Books, worked for more than a decade on “Stranger Than Fiction.”
    CreditYana Paskova for The New York Times
  5. Oliver Sacks received thousands of letters a year from readers. He felt compelled to reply to each one.
    CreditSara Krulwich/The New York Times

  1. T 25
    The 25 Most Influential Cookbooks From the Last 100 Years
    Chefs, writers, editors and a bookseller gathered to debate — and decide — which titles have most changed the way we cook and eat.
    By Jenny Comita, Jessica Battilana, Tanya Bush, Martha Cheng, Jonathan Kauffman, Michael Snyder, Amiel Stanek and Korsha Wilson