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The Golden Years

An homage to the expansive and hilarious world The Golden Girls offered during the buttoned-up Reagan era

Editor’s Picks

This week, don’t miss a delicate exploration of privilege, a dissection of Russian writers’ tendency to write about existential questions, and a gossipy account of the publishing world

Shaman in Residence

From Hollywood to Heaven

True Lies

Beware of the quotes on the backs of books, as publishers play fast and loose with critical reviews

Down the Memory Hole

An arresting new biography gives George Orwell’s intrepid first wife her due

Shark Tales

Restoring New England’s great-white-shark population presented conservationists with a new challenge: convincing beachgoers it was good news

Editor’s Picks

This week, don’t miss a comic-strip biography of Charles M. Schulz, a look back at Germany’s turbulent 1923, and the story of how Borges, Heisenberg, and Kant challenged reality

Stands to Treason

A look back at the 1945 trial of Philippe Pétain, France’s World War II–era head of state who was accused of plotting to overthrow democracy

Not in the Old Kansas City Anymore

The Many Lives of Anna May Wong

Picasso Unseen

Rare, intimate pictures taken by the Irish photographer Edward Quinn over the course of his 19-year friendship with Picasso capture the artist in his downtime

Low Shelf Esteem

In the last decade, “sad girl” literature, novels about well-off girls who drink, go to therapy, and are consumed by self-loathing, has taken over contemporary fiction

Bad Romance

Set in the 19th century, William Boyd’s latest novel spans the life of a fictional writer who counts Percy Shelley and Lord Byron as friends

Better Fish to Fry

A look inside Toyosu, Tokyo’s largest fish market, where buyers congregate before dawn to bid on pricey bluefin tuna

Editor’s Picks

This week, don’t miss a memoir from the legendary producer of Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In, an account of life as a lighthouse keeper, and a classical composer’s search for her birth parents

A Burning Issue

Marriage Story

When Rome Stood Still

Pandemic-era photographs of deserted streets and empty monuments reveal a magical side to a city so often associated with the throngs of people it attracts

Making Trouble

In an interview, former Harvard president Drew Gilpin Faust discusses growing up in the American South, the ending of affirmative action, and her new memoir, Necessary Trouble

Bears in Mind

While researching the last remaining bear species, a journalist homed in on studies about the animals’ impressive cognitive abilities

Editor’s Picks

This week, don’t miss a tale of losing big on a CBD scheme; a re-issued Jazz Age novel; and a comedy about a former debutante

Murder, They Wrote

The best mystery books to read this month

Hit the Books

For the 2024 Summer Olympics, Parisian police have banned booksellers from setting up shop along the Seine River. The stall owners are fighting back