Mind the Gap
/A new historical thriller hearkens back to the sensation novels of the 1860s, offering up a twisty tale of murder and madness. But can it live up to its predecessors?
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A new historical thriller hearkens back to the sensation novels of the 1860s, offering up a twisty tale of murder and madness. But can it live up to its predecessors?
Read MoreBruce Springsteen's therapist was one of the inspirations for his memoir Born to Run. Does the book help him make sense of his transformation from wild and innocent rock 'n' roller to millionaire icon?
Read MoreAn English-language translation of a monumental biography of the founder of modern essay form urges readers to remember the man, not the legend.
Read MoreLeonard Bernstein's symphonies have long been neglected in favor of his popular work, but Marin Alsop breathes new life into them by surpassing the composer himself.
Read MoreDown below the sidewalks of London, a warren of secret rooms housed the war effort while bombs were falling on the city; a lavish new book tours the war rooms.
Read MoreFormerly unknown, Mieczylaw Weinberg stature as a composer is growing--deservedly so, as these chamber symphonies attest.
Read MoreAs a new book about Eisenhower and Kennedy makes clear, transitions of presidential power, especially between rival parties, have always been testy.
Read MoreLong before the Soviet gulag, Russian dissidents, criminals, and political exiles were sent to the vast frozen wasteland of Siberia. A grim new book tells their stories.
Read MoreThe Egyptian Revolution and its cataclysmic aftermath forms the subject of a riveting new book by a journalist and keen-eyed witness.
Read MoreDespite how they're often played, Shostakovich's piano concertos weren't intended for virtuoso performers. Boris Giltburg tries an originalist approach.
Read MoreFrom the late and much-honored poet CK Williams, one final work
Read MoreThe quintessential human feature - the large, expressive face - gets a thorough and fascinating scientific examination.
Read MoreThe famed writer of "You Know Me Al" was also a life-long prolific deadline writer. An invaluable new book collects the journalism of Ring Lardner.
Read MoreThe magnificent catalogue from Yale University Press of the paintings and drawing of John Singer Sargent comes to its conclusion with volume IX
Read MoreThe release of a long-forgotten opera proves, finally, that Pietro Mascagni was not a one hit wonder.
Read MoreIn the first story-arc in the newest era of the ultimate comic-book hero, a deadly enemy threatens the young son of Superman
Read MoreVictorian author Thomas DeQuincey will forever be known mainly as the author of the fantastic Confessions of an English Opium-Eater, but a vivid new biography introduces readers to the man behind the masterpiece.
Read MoreA keenly felt nostalgia mixes with themes of race, loneliness, and forgiveness in Jerry Spinelli's latest novel, The Warden's Daughter.
Read MoreMichael Johnson interviews Jack Kohl, a Juilliard-trained pianist who also finds challenge and inspiration in writing fiction.
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