Bookstores say customers love “Blind Date With a Book,” which masks a book’s real cover and lets readers discover what’s inside. A new history by Roland Allen uncovers the wealth of ideas ...
Bookstores say customers love “Blind Date With a Book,” which masks a book’s real cover and lets readers discover what’s inside. Three new books make the case for music as medicine.
Emma Rose Milligan for The New York Times Supported by By Hank Sanders Never judge a book by its cover — even if the cover doesn’t say much at all. The first thing customers see when they walk ...
Shanghai straddles the past and the future, a dizzying prism of many histories and cultures. The poet Sally Wen Mao shares ...
Biersdorfer In Tumultuous Times ... love “Blind Date With a Book,” which masks a book’s real cover and lets readers discover what’s inside. Sally Rooney’s new novel explores the ...
Never judge a book by its cover — even ... The Seattle Times does not append comment threads to stories from wire services such as the Associated Press, The New York Times, The Washington ...
book "Tough on Crime." The Washington Post via Getty Images Ha! The expert brought on by The New York Times to launder away Kamala Harris’ plagiarism scandal has recanted. Quick recap ...
Le Carré, whose own career as a spy is said to have ended because Philby blew his cover ... and other book lovers — with a little help from the staff of The New York Times Book Review.
Children’s book publishers were invited to submit up to 10 picture books published this year in the United States. The judges ...
Never judge a book by its cover – even if the cover doesn’t say much at all. The first thing customers see when they walk into the Strand Book Store in the Manhattan borough of New York City ...