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A New Kind of Lost Generation

Far from Mount Rushmore

Safe Haven

Outside of Washington and Manhattan, John F. Kennedy Jr. had a rich, little-explored life on Cape Cod, his sanctuary from childhood up until his death

Matrons of the Arts

Act of Faith

Serving as a pilot in World War I, Hans Christian Adamson was staunchly agnostic. After he survived a plane’s crash landing, a religious medal took on new meaning

Dance with the Devil

The debut novel from Melanie Hamrick, a former ballerina and the partner of Mick Jagger, explores the brutal world of professional dance

Fit for a King

Old-School

A new book looks at the persistent inequality at Clinton High School, the first all-white school ordered to de-segregate in the 1950s

Freedom, According to Azzedine Alaïa and Arthur Elgort

A dazzling new book celebrates the joyful, lively collaboration of a legendary designer and a master photographer

Muscle Memory

Logic and Madness

Bad Girls’ Book Club

Eat, Pray, Love author Elizabeth Gilbert cancels her latest novel because it’s set in Siberia. What’s next? Tolstoy and Dostoyevsky removed from our libraries?

Back in the U.S.S.R.

Life in the Fast Lange

The first full-length biography of Jessica Lange reveals how the actress’s bohemian 1960s lifestyle paved the way for her acting career

Face Value

Inside South Korea’s booming plastic-surgery district, where hundreds of faces and bodies are tweaked every day

A Charmed Life

Poet, human-rights activist, world traveler, wife of the Pulitzer Prize–winning novelist William Styron—a new memoir chronicles the many sides of Rose Styron

Murder, They Wrote

This month in mystery books, we recommend reading former F.B.I. director James Comey’s crime-fiction debut, which draws from a lengthy career in and out of the courtroom

All That Jazz

Frosty Reception

The Bard of Berkshire

Best-selling novelist Robert Harris—his books have sold more than 10 million copies—still writes 800 words a day. Just don’t expect any sex scenes

Editor’s Picks

This week, don’t miss a retelling of Western history through 14 thinkers, a deep dive into the places that define Manhattan, and an exploration of private space travel

Tall Tales

How super-tall, pencil-thin buildings are changing Manhattan’s classic skyline

The Diary of Hannah Goslar

In an excerpt from her memoir, Anne Frank’s closest childhood friend recalls the years leading up to their deportations, and their against-all-odds reunion

Kathryn Bromwich

How a bout of long COVID during the height of the pandemic gave way to a London editor’s debut novel