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Heather Morris Unearths a Love Story from Auschwitz
Morris’s novel, 'The Tattooist of Auschwitz,' is based on a true story of love and survival in the notorious concentration camp.
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Kate Atkinson's Woman in London
In her latest novel, 'Transcription,' Atkinson follows the fortunes of an MI5 recruit during WWII and after.
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Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's Holmes Brothers Keep Changing
Set in 1872, Abdul-Jabbar’s second novel coauthored with Anna Waterhouse, 'Mycroft and Sherlock' (Titan, Oct.), finds the brothers investigating a series of bizarre murders in London.
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You Say You Want a Revolution? Elaine Mokhtefi Has One For You.
In Mokhtefi’s memoir 'Algiers, Third World Capital: Freedom Fighters, Revolutionaries, Black Panthers,' she recounts her life in France and Algiers, and her time with Black Panther Eldridge Cleaver.
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Collateral Damage In Stephen Markley's Debut
In 'Ohio,' Markley’s first novel, friends in small-town Ohio come together to confront the aftereffects of 9/11.
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Hanan al-Shaykh’s Girls Just Want to Have Fun
The acclaimed Lebanese author's latest novel follows two young women—one Christian, one Muslim—misbehaving on the Italian Riviera.
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Every Day is Magic: Ada Limón
In her 2015 collection, Bright Dead Things, a National Book Award finalist for poetry, Ada Limón writes of moving to Kentucky: “Confession: I did not want to live here.” It’s perhaps not a surprising sentiment coming from a coastally oriented person who was raised in Northern California, attended college in Seattle, and then spent over a decade in New York City.
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Writers to Watch Fall 2018: Anticipated Debuts
This fall’s collection of promising debuts features problem children, supernatural freedom fighters, captive mermaids, mad scientists, righteous vigilantes, and, last but not least, a narrating dog.
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Ottessa Moshfegh's New Protagonist Snoozes Her Life Away
The privileged unnamed narrator of Moshfegh’s new novel, 'My Year of Rest and Relaxation,' decides to sleep through life.
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Spotlight on Mike Jenne
In his breakneck trilogy of techno-thrillers, Jenne, a retired Special Forces officer, imagines the plausible could-have-been catastrophes of the Cold War. (Sponsored)
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Jonathan Santlofer Is a Man Thinking Magically
Santlofer’s memoir, 'The Widower’s Notebook,' tells his story of loss and recovery with honesty and humor.
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What Would Beyoncé Do? Michael Arceneaux's Asking.
The author's debut essay collection, 'I Can’t Date Jesus,' tells the story of his tumultuous early life and his quest for identity.
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Crime Fiction That Reads Like True Crime: Spotlight on Bernard Schaffer
A veteran police officer and a lifelong writer, Schaffer has infused this thriller with his real-life experiences of killers' cruelty. (Sponsored)
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Maria Dahvana Headley Finds the Monsters and Heroes In Suburban Life
In her latest novel, 'The Mere Wife,' Dahvana Headley turns 'Beowulf' on its ear.
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Kensington Embraces Innovation in Partnership with Marie Force
Force has sold millions of books through traditional and indie channels; with Kensington on board, she'll grow her audience further with new print formats, beloved ongoing series, and a foray into a new romance genre. (Sponsored)
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A.M. Homes Knows: If You See Something, Write It
The writer's first short story collection in 28 years, 'The Days of Awe,' showcases her sharp dialogue, her humor, and her keen visual sense.
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Allison Pearson's Double Whammy
In 'How Hard Can It Be?,' Pearson returns to Kate Reddy, the heroine of her debut, who is pushing 50 and facing a whole new set of problems.
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Spotlight on Tom Baker
A series of novels follows a gay man's journey from dancing and theater to the military and Madison Avenue in the 1960s and '70s. (Sponsored)
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Transatlantic Love Story
In Autumn in Venice, Andrea di Robilant returns to his Venetian roots to uncover a love affair between Ernest Hemingway and his young muse.
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Spotlight on Stuart Turton
Journalist Turton's fiction debut melds time travel and body swapping into an Agatha Christie–style whodunit. (Sponsored)



