Inside The New York Times Book Review: The Future of Work

Inside The New York Times Book Review: The Fu...

Suivant

Book Club: Let’s Talk About ‘What We Can Know’

Ian McEwan’s latest novel, “What We Can Know,” is many things at once: It’s a science fiction imagining of a future world devastated by climate catastrophe; it’s a literary mystery about a scholar’s search for a long-lost poem; it’s a deep dive into complicated marriages; and it’ ...  Afficher plus

What Did 2025 Mean for Books?

From political tell-alls to the continued triumph of romantasy novels, it’s been an eventful year in the publishing world. On this week’s episode, host MJ Franklin talks with his Book Review colleagues Alexandra Alter, Tina Jordan and John Maher about the biggest book stories and ...  Afficher plus

Épisodes Recommandés

Here Comes the Sun
The TLS Podcast

This week, TLS editors and writers guide you through a summer of reading; and Sarah Watling explores the extraordinary story of an artistic double act.'Dorothy Hepworth and Patricia Preece: An Untold Story', Charleston, Lewes, Sussex'The Secret Art of Dorothy Hepworth, aka Patric ...  Afficher plus

Margaret Atwood Reads Mavis Gallant, Live
The New Yorker: Fiction

Margaret Atwood joins Deborah Treisman to read and discuss “Varieties of Exile,” by Mavis Gallant, which was published in The New Yorker in 1976. Atwood is the author of more than forty books ...

  Afficher plus

#25 Laurie Penny - On Freelancing, Online Life & The Power of Reading
Ctrl Alt Delete

Laurie Penny is a journalist, feminist and author of five books including Unspeakable Things (Bloomsbury 2014), Cybersexism (Bloomsbury 2013) and Meat Market (Zer0 2011). She is a contributing Editor at New Statesman and writes and speaks on social justice, pop culture, gender is ...  Afficher plus

Eliza Griswold discusses "First Person"
The New Yorker: Poetry

Eliza Griswold joins Kevin Young to discuss her poetry sequence "First Person," featured on<span> </span>newyorker.com. Griswold is a po ...

  Afficher plus