Once, the Hudson River was crammed with pleasure boats, taking city folks to picnics and parks all summer long.
Two years before Liz Moore’s novel “Long Bright River” ever hit shelves in 2020 and became a bestseller — and one of Barack Obama’s top books of the year — she was approached by ...
“A beautifully structured series, Long Bright River is about sisterhood ... making it to former President Barack Obama’s favorite books of the year list and one of Good Morning America ...
When I was a young science-fiction sponge, growing up on the East Coast, I fell hard for a weird little novel called “The Lathe of Heaven” by Ursula K. LeGuin.
Russell has published excellent short story collections since her 2011 debut novel Swamplandia!, but this is her first novel ...
“Sunrise on the Reaping,” by Suzanne Collins, explores the devastating story of Haymitch Abernathy, a mentor in the original “Hunger Games” novels. By Jennifer Harlan Our columnist on ...
In her children’s stories, Clarice Lispector disguised philosophical questions in cheerful, kooky fables about exuberant animals with places to be. By Joumana Khatib In Linda Joan Smith’s ...
Christopher Summerfield’s book “These Strange New Minds” offers a lucid intellectual history of AI and argues that chatbots are more than clever copycats. Joshua Hammer’s “The ...
This deeply disturbing account of how mobile phones are irreparably harming the next generation is both harrowing and timely The Daily Mail Books department chooses their favourite fiction of the ...
The subtitle of Sergey Radchenko’s book makes it sound like an aspirant bestseller from ... armies had spread overnight and were now threatening to leap across the Moskva river to consume the palace.
Right now you can read almost fifty free Marvel comics that run from exciting number ones like Venom, Giant-Size X-Men and Thanos to Free Comic Book Issues and even entertainingly weird ...
This historically significant book is perfect for the collections of every devotee of the river. You may purchase your book by mail from the Northern Kentucky Tribune — or you may find the book ...