Battered dreams
Even tough love is hard to find in Ayana Mathis' debut novel about the Great Migration.
Even tough love is hard to find in Ayana Mathis' debut novel about the Great Migration.
British novelist Julian Barnes a unique palette to a memoir of personal grief.
J.M. Coetzee conjures a superb modern parable about foreigness and being.
Leaning to accept things as they are goes with the Italian (train) landscape.
Gabrielle Hamilton's remembrance of growing up in (and out of) a crazy, culinary home is top notch.
Emma Chapman's Marta Bjornstad remembers nothing about her life, until the past creeps forward.
Tom Wolfe's latest blasts the American Dream courtesy of porn-iferous Miami.
Irish-Canadian writer Emma Donoghue again gorgeously merges fiction and fact.
If you think the 21st-century world can bypass ancient fears, think again.
Ian McEwan's slow-to-cook "Sweet Tooth" eventually makes for appetizing reading.
"Dare Me," Megan Abbott's taught cheerleader thriller, doesn't let up.
Probing a city that is (and always has been) the sum of nooks, crannies, commerce, and violence.