December is traditionally a slender month for new book releases —but there are still plenty of titles to please any reader, ...
The prevailing notion is that the Alanis Morissette's song “Ironic” is not ironic at all, but instead simply full of bummers, ...
Earlier this year, Ryan Reynolds revealed that he was asked to remove one particular joke from Deadpool and Wolverine, and we ...
What 2024's rising stars of Wall Street say about the TV shows, movies, or books that best represent their daily lives at work.
Clint Hurdle taught players to hit through wit. He managed 17 years in the big leagues, suffered 1,345 losses, but won over organizations with his leadership and sense of humor. Hurdle has lived a ...
Kathy Baum, who curates new books for the Denver-area independent-bookstore institution, shares some of her fall and winter ...
Want to spice up your family gatherings? These epic TV insults and comebacks will have everyone laughing (or cringing) in no ...
“Everyone Who is Gone is Here: The United States, Central America, and the Making of a Crisis” by Jonathan Blitzer (Penguin, ...
The store had just been sitting here full of clocks. We didn’t really know what to do with them. For years, he said to ...
IF YOU JUDGE how well-read someone is by the number of books they get through, your correspondent is a veritable bibliophage.
Here are the year’s notable fiction, poetry and nonfiction, chosen by the staff of The New York Times Book Review.
“A Little Queer Natural History” is a smart book, perfect for quick reads at random at this busy time of year. If that’s what ...