First, here are three new stories from The Atlantic ’s Books section: ...
Best read as a series of vignettes, Luca Serra’s new book examines the immigrant experience from a variety of different ...
In her latest collection, “A Suit or A Suitcase," poet Maggie Smith explores how solitude can bring insight and clarity, even ...
Nearly a decade after her hit debut novel, The Idea of You, the romance author returns with Crash into Me, about an artist ...
If the work of today mirrored that of the 20th century, Americans would have a lot more savings. And that would be too bad.
In his new travel book, "Who Needs Friends," the actor and author embarks on a 10,000-mile road trip to reconnect with old ...
In Charlotte Wood’s The Natural Way of Things, a group of captive women discover who they might become beyond the control of ...
It is a relief to hear Pattinson in his natural voice after so many gimmicky accents. Pattinson has authority here in the ...
How Anton Corbijn’s photographs shaped the history of rock music. Andrew Holter In the beginning, the rock star was an ...
After an eighty-two-million-dollar renovation, the museum has put on a sprawling show about the war between our species and ...
NTU associate professor Teo You Yenn's forthcoming book Unease: Life In Singapore Families (2026) is the follow-up to her national bestseller This Is What Inequality Looks Like (2018). The book is ...
The French director was determined to break taboos of colonialism in Camus’s enigmatic novel — and modern-day France ...