• [HRDlauren]

    Shopping for Young Set

    Dr. Seuss and Shel Silverstein may have some competition in the children's book department, thanks to Polo Ralph Lauren's first storybook, 'The RL Gang.

  • [bkrv.villain2]

    Dangerous and Strange

    Tom Nolan reviews two mystery novels: "Villain," set in contemporary Japan, and "Unexpectedly Milo," set in Connecticut. In each, murder seems less mysterious than the people surrounding it.

  • A Master of Sweet Deals

    In "The Sugar King of Havana," John Paul Rathbone draws a portrait of both pre-Castro Cuba and the island's "last tycoon," Julio Lobos. Eduardo Kaplan reviews.

  • [bkrv.skating]

    The Hazards of Safe-Keeping

    At the Department of Homeland Security, Stewart Baker struggled to put in place post-9/11 security policies, only to run up against "the privacy lobby." He recounts his experiences in "Skating on Stilts." Gabriel Schoenfeld reviews.

  • [ARTTopper2]

    The Angst and the Passion

    New Yorker Jonathan Tropper emerges as a literary star.

  • [HEardbooks]

    Amid E-Book Rise, Two New Bookstores

    Books & Books and Montauk Bookshop have opened in the Hamptons despite a rise in e-books.

  • [bkrv.hacker]

    Ignorance by Degrees

    In "Higher Education?" Andrew Hacker and Claudia Dreifus fault colleges and universities for serving the careerism of professors and administrators more than helping students to learn.

  • [BRLede]

    In the Realm of Peers

    In "Aristocrats," James Lawrence traces the history of Britain's nobility—a tale, as reviewer Ferdinand Mount notes, of privilege, plunder, brutality, eccentricity and even duty.

  • [BK_Cover3]

    Rom-Com Meets Dot-Com

    Allegra Goodman's novel "The Cookbook Collector" is set in tech-bubble days, but it centers on the romantic dilemmas faced by Jess, a graduate student who must choose the environmental activist or the millionaire.

  • [bkrv.enlightene]

    A Revolution of the Mind

    In "The Enlightened Economy," Joel Mokyr shows how the Industrial Enlightenment—in 18th-century Britain—put knowledge in the service of production, changing the course of history.

  • [bkrv.supersad]

    Down and Out in Gotham

    Alexander Theroux reviews "Super Sad True Love Story," Gary Shteyngart's latest novel, about desperate love and New York on the brink of doom.

  • [bkrv.hottime]

    When the City Really Sizzled

    In "Hot Time in the Old Town" Edward P. Kohn revisits the summer of 1896 in New York City, when a 10-day heat wave killed hundreds. Terry Golway reviews.

  • [BRLede]

    When Lindy Dared

    Thomas Kessner's "The Flight of the Century" is an account of Charles Lindbergh's historic transatlantic flight in 1927—and of the achievement's effect on America. Daniel Ford reviews.

  • [BOOKS_1]

    Touring Apps for the Alps

    Travel book publishers are looking to smartphones and the new wave of tablet devices, including Apple's iPad, to help lift the flagging guidebook business.

  • [ccshteyn]

    A Wry Dystopian Seer

    Author Gary Shteyngart—whose latest novel, "Super Sad True Love Story," comes out Tuesday—talks with Matthew Kaminski about the decline of American literacy.

  • [BOOKS1]

    A Combatant in the Battle of Ideas

    In "Ernest Gellner," John A. Hall offers a portrait of an uncompromising postwar thinker who was at odds with lazy thinking on both sides of the political spectrum.

  • [bkrv.sciencefic]

    Many Angles on the Future

    "The Year's Best Science Fiction," edited by Gardner Dozios, brings together stories of hard men on rough planets, sinister drug experiments and much else. Martin Morse Wooster reviews.

  • [Hiassen2]

    Satirizing the Sunshine State

    Carl Hiaasen's latest novel, "Star Island," once again focuses on his homestate of Florida—this time on its obscene celebrity scene.

  • [luxun]

    Mao's 'First-Rate Sage'

    The writer Lu Xun—considered China's first modern author—devoted his life to bringing a revolution to China. Michael J. Ybarra visits the Lu Xun Museum and Lu Xun Final Residence, both in Shanghai.

  • [National Skybox]

    Fiction's Global Crime Wave

    Detective novels from Japan, Nigeria, Germany and Korea are pouring into the U.S. as publishers hunt for the next "Girl With the Dragon Tattoo."

  • [Book_Vere]

    Tolstory and Trollope Fans, Meet Couperus

    Louis Couperus's "Eline Vere," a novel in the grand 19th-century tradition and a classic of Dutch literature, has been newly translated by Ina Rilke. Michael Dirda reviews.

  • [BK_Cover2]

    'The Shadow'

    Donna Diamond's "The Shadow" is a picture book that makes hidden fears visible. Meghan Cox Gurdon reviews.

  • Books on Success

    Tad Friend on novels that show us success in its many guises, from W. Somerset Maugham's "Of Human Bondage" to Charles Portis's "True Grit."

Food

Fashion

Travel

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Sports

  • [SP_BIGTEN1]

    Nebraska to Big Ten Is a Win-Win

    The one development this college-football offseason that has made complete sense is Nebraska's move to the Big Ten for the 2011 season.

  • Books on Female Adventurers

    Frances Osborne on books that track the exploits of female adventurers, from the ocean journey of Annie Allnutt Brassey to the romantic escapades of Jane Digby.

  • [BOOKLOV_C_G]

    Underrated Literature

    Cynthia Crossen on books and writers that should get more attention.

  • [BOOKLOV_C_G]

    Gentle Reads, Cozy Mysteries

    Cynthia Crossen offers suggestions on books that eschew sex and violence.

  • [BOOKLOV_C_G]

    English 101

    Cynthia Crossen recommends books for adult English-language learners.

  • [OB-JF907_winebo_A_20100714115710.jpg]

    Wine by the Books

    A few new wine books are out or being published soon. Some are more memorable than others, but there are two titles worth reading.

  • [NYBTOUR]

    Authors Ask: Where Do I Sign?

    Securing a book signing at one of the city's big stores can be like 'getting your name up in lights on Broadway,' as one author described it.

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