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Book Review

Highlights

  1. Nonfiction

    The Massacre America Forgot

    In a new book, the historian Kim A. Wagner investigates the slaughter by U.S. troops of nearly 1,000 people in the Philippines in 1906 — an atrocity long overlooked in this country.

     By

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    1. The Essential Alice Munro

      The only prerequisite for reading the Nobel laureate, a master of short stories, is: having lived. Here’s where to start.

       By

      CreditIan Willms for The New York Times
  1. The Scrappy World War II Pilots Who Took Flight for a Perilous Mission

    In the riveting “Skies of Thunder,” Caroline Alexander considers what it took to get supplies to Allied ground troops in China.

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    The Curtiss C-46 Commando aircraft, used to fly over “the Hump,” could carry a great deal of cargo, but was vulnerable to engine failure.
    CreditNational Museum of the United States Air Force
    Nonfiction
  2. The Book Review’s Best Books Since 2000

    Looking for your next great read? We’ve got 3,228. Explore the best fiction and nonfiction from 2000 - 2023 chosen by our editors.

     By

    CreditThe New York Times; Photo by naphtalina/Getty Images
  3. 17 New Books Coming in May

    New novels from R.O. Kwon, Kevin Kwan and Miranda July; a reappraisal of Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy; memoirs from Brittney Griner and Kathleen Hanna — and more.

     

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  4. Let Us Help You Find Your Next Book

    Reading picks from Book Review editors, guaranteed to suit any mood.

     By

    CreditThe New York Times
  5. Best-Seller Lists: May 19, 2024

    All the lists: print, e-books, fiction, nonfiction, children’s books and more.

     

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    Best Sellers

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Books of The Times

More in Books of The Times ›
  1. Sex, Drugs and Economics: The Double Life of a Conservative Gadfly

    The professor and social commentator Glenn Loury opens up about his vices in a candid new memoir.

     By

    Glenn Loury’s “Late Admissions” recounts his smash-and-grab life.
    CreditBea Oyster for The New York Times
  2. Adultery Gets Weird in Miranda July’s New Novel

    An anxious artist’s road trip stops short for a torrid affair at a tired motel. In “All Fours,” the desire for change is familiar. How to satisfy it isn’t.

     By

    CreditAnna Morrison
  3. Can a 50-Year-Old Idea Save Democracy?

    The economist and philosopher Daniel Chandler thinks so. In “Free and Equal,” he makes a vigorous case for adopting the liberal political framework laid out by John Rawls in the 1970s.

     By

    The political philosopher John Rawls in 1990. Rawls’s theory combined a liberal respect for individual rights and differences with an egalitarian emphasis on fairness.
    CreditSteve Pyke/Getty Images
  4. A Portrait of the Art World Elite, Painted With a Heavy Hand

    Hari Kunzru examines the ties between art and wealth in a new novel, “Blue Ruin.”

     By

    CreditKlaus Kremmerz
  5. Does a Small Cough Make You Think the Worst? Here’s a Book for You.

    Caroline Crampton shares her own worries in “A Body Made of Glass,” a history of hypochondria that wonders whether newfangled technology drives us crazier.

     By

    Surviving Hodgkin’s lymphoma led Caroline Crampton to worry about her health. John Donne and Howard Hughes are among other hypochondriacs mentioned in her book.
    CreditJamie Drew
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  4. Nonfiction

    1907 Was a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World

    In “The Race to the Future,” Kassia St. Clair chronicles the 8,000-mile caper that helped change the landscape forever.

    By Peter Sagal

     
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  6. Nonfiction

    Being Nick Kristof

    In “Chasing Hope,” the veteran Times journalist remembers the highs and lows of his storied career.

    By Reeves Wiedeman

     
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  8. Can You Find The 13 Book Titles Hidden in This Text?

    A baker’s dozen of sports books — including athlete memoirs, biographies, team histories and a few classics of the form — are tucked away in this very short story. Can you find them all?

    By J. D. Biersdorfer

     
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