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Murder, They Wrote

Some Things Never Change

The author of a book on the Black Death reflects on how little human nature has evolved since that crisis

Nonfiction Books for the Quarantine

What to read this season, including memoirs by Woody Allen and Princess Margaret’s lady-in-waiting

The Road to Nazism

Painted Ladies

Child’s Play

Robert Stone’s biographer pieced together the novelist’s life by delving into his early years

Battle-Ready

Erik Larson

From Hemingway to Nancy Drew: for the writer, inspiration comes in many forms

Surfin’ U.S.A.

Before commercialism and branding caught up with the sport, it was just about riding waves. A new book conveys the spirit of 70s surf culture

Novels for the Quarantine

The season’s must-read fiction, from Hilary Mantel’s final Cromwell volume to Lawrence Wright’s book about a killer virus taking over the world. Yes, you read that right.

All Good Things …

Casey Cep

Harper Lee’s biographer recommends the most revolutionary books in the genre

Murder Is Her Muse

Writer Sarah Phelps is shocking Agatha Christie purists—and re-inventing the genre

Allies on Wheels

Murder, They Wrote

Talk of the Town

Nothing to See Here

The author of a new biography on the Dalai Lama demystifies the leader’s unassuming stoicism

The Roaring Writers

The Little Old Lady Who Enjoyed Murdering People

After Shakespeare, Agatha Christie is the world’s most widely published author

Short List

Bohemian Rhapsody

Photographs of Andy Warhol, Loulou de la Falaise, and Marisa Berenson capture the birth of 60s cool

Old Head, Young Shoulders

It Takes One to Know One

The author of a biography of Dave Brubeck on the jazz pianist’s little-known friendship with bebop sensation Charlie Parker

Mark Morris

When one of the most influential choreographers alive today has a minute to himself, he reads