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Writers to Watch: Fall 2022 Nonfiction Debuts
From an examination of the ravages of Jim Crow to a meditation on the idea of happiness, this fall’s noteworthy nonfiction debuts span the range of human experience.
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Debbie Macomber, Queen of Hearts
The author, who overcame dyslexia to become a force in women’s fiction, is poised to publish her 25th Christmas novel in 25 years.
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Noah Van Sciver: A Machine of Empathy
This month cartoonist Noah Van Sciver released two new works: ‘Joseph Smith and the Mormons’ (Abrams ComicArts), a graphic biography of the Mormon church founder; and ‘As a Cartoonist’ (Fantagraphics), a collection of short autobiographical comics.
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Sara Farizan: Writing for Her Inner Kid
The critically acclaimed author of three character driven coming-of-age YA novels, including the Lambda Literary Award–winning 'If You Could Be Mine,' branches off in new directions in two upcoming releases.
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Hail to the Chef, Jacques Pépin
Decades and more than 30 cookbooks into an illustrious career, the dean of cooking isn’t slowing down.
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Buzz Bissinger Is Back at the Bowl Game
With 'The Mosquito Bowl,' the 'Friday Night Lights' author returns to the subject that made him famous: football.
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Writers to Watch Fall 2022
With settings ranging from a Sydney suburb to a Harlem apartment complex, this fall’s inventive fiction debuts have a lot to offer.
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Helena Andrews-Dyer's Mother Lode Memoir
'Washington Post' reporter Helena Andrews-Dyer tackles race and parenting in her new memoir.
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Author William MacAskill on 'What We Owe the Future'
Planning for the future can feel insurmountable in the face of looming present-day challenges, but in 'What We Owe the Future' (Basic Books, Aug.), philosopher and author William MacAskill advocates for longtermism, a view that suggests that looking to the health of our future civilization and shared planet is not only imperative for generations of people to come but also can positively impact the present. (Sponsored)
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Emiko Jean's Labor of Love
The author's adult fiction debut, 'Mika in Real Life,' tackles the joys and pains of motherhood.
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Jessie Burton's Move from Stage to Page
After pivoting from acting to writing, the author found success with 'The Miniaturist.' Its follow-up, 'The House of Fortune,' arrives just as she’s coming to grips with another big change: motherhood.
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Ideas Worth Fighting For: Spotlight on Robert W. Sweet
In his new book, 'Life Fighting: Why We Must Sometimes Fight and How to Do So Well,' author Robert W. Sweet sets out to answer the thorny question: Is it always wrong to use force to achieve a goal?
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Dan Fesperman Goes Abroad in a New Thriller
In 'Winter Work,' set in Berlin just after the wall comes down, change is the most frightening enemy.
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Ruth Ware Is Back with a New Murder Mystery
A woman investigates her friend’s murder in Ruth Ware’s seventh psychological crime thriller.
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Writing for Readers of All Ages: Spotlight on Emunah La-Paz
With a romance series, a memoir, and a picture book, the versatile author leverages social media to grow her fan base and interact with readers.
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Anthony Marra Takes a Walk of Fame
In his new novel, 'Mercury Pictures Presents,' the author explores Hollywood’s golden age.
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Chinelo Okparanta's New Novel Changes Perspectives
In her new novel, 'Harry Sylvester Bird,' the Nigerian author looks at the world through the white male gaze.
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The Hopeless Romanticism of Jamie Ford's Latest Novel
‘The Many Daughters of Afong Moy,’ Ford’s emotional fourth novel, blends historical and speculative fiction as it bends time.
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Ada Calhoun on the Paternal and the Poetic
Calhoun’s new memoir, 'Also a Poet,' explores the life of Frank O’Hara through the prism of her relationship with her father.
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Sandra Newman Envisions Another World
With 'The Men,' the author of 'The Heavens' returns to the promise, and limitations, of utopia.