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Cormac McCarthy's underage 'secret muse' tells her story (and reveals the stories she inspired)
Great American novelist Cormac McCarthy was defensively private and didn't share much about the inspiration behind his books — or about himself. However, the author, who died in 2023, apparently lived out much of his bestseller "All the Pretty Horses" with a woman named Augusta Britt.
She was 16 when she met the then 42-year-old writer in ...Read more
This week's bestsellers from Publishers Weekly
Here are the bestsellers for the week that ended Saturday, Nov. 16, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide, powered by Circana BookScan © 2024 Circana.
(Reprinted from Publishers Weekly, published by PWxyz LLC. © 2024, PWxyz LLC.)
HARDCOVER FICTION
1. "To Die For" ...Read more
This week's bestsellers from Publishers Weekly
Here are the bestsellers for the week that ended Saturday, Nov. 16, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide, powered by Circana BookScan © 2024 Circana.
(Reprinted from Publishers Weekly, published by PWxyz LLC. © 2024, PWxyz LLC.)
HARDCOVER FICTION
1. To Die For. ...Read more
Review: Love animals? You'll love them even more after reading about their wonders in 'Vanishing Treasures'
Katherine Rundell wears several hats with style and aplomb. She is a fellow of St. Catherine’s College, Oxford; she is an award-winning children’s writer; and she is a biographer, author of the magisterial “Super-Infinite: The Transformations of John Donne” — the Renaissance poet she convincingly claims to be “the greatest writer of ...Read more
Review: 'Pony Confidential' is 'Remarkably Bright Creatures' with a horse instead of an octopus
Books are often sold with “If you’re a fan of X, you’ll love Y” pitches, but I’ve seldom encountered one that was more clearly a “If you’re a fan of” book than “Pony Confidential.”
It’s “Remarkably Bright Creatures” fans that “Pony Confidential” may appeal to. Instead of an octopus who observes and comments ...Read more
Review: New graphic novels look at vampire love, goblins and Mark Twain's Jim, who is having a big year
Four new graphic novels showcase a range of approaches and subjects, from deadpan horror comedy to a subversive retelling of an American classic, a fantasy adventure about a magical world next to our own and an odds-and-ends collection from an American master that is more than the sum of its parts.
Big Jim and the White Boy
By: David F. Walker...Read more
Column: An exhibition and a book revisit the life and death of Emmett Till
CHICAGO -- Of the many people whose lives still cast shadows on our history, one of them is that of a little boy, a 14-year-old named Emmett Till who left Chicago full of playful life and returned, as his mother, Mamie, said in 1955, “in a pine box, so horribly battered and waterlogged that someone needed to tell you this sickening sight is ...Read more
'Olive Days' author Jessica Elisheva Emerson says she's one book's biggest fan
Jessica Elisheva Emerson’s debut novel, “Olive Days,” is out now from Counterpoint. Set in L.A.’s Pico-Robertson neighborhood, the story follows Rina Kirsch, a Modern Orthodox Jewish woman struggling with her faith and her marriage.
She recently took the Book Pages Q&A.
Q: Is there a book or books you always recommend to other ...Read more
'Guide Me Home' novelist Attica Locke recalls a life-changing moment
Attica Locke’s new novel, “Guide Me Home,” is the final installment in her critically acclaimed Highway 59 trilogy of crime novels featuring Darren Mathews, a Black Texas Ranger.
Here, she takes the Book Pages Q&A.
Q: Is there a book or books that you always recommend to other readers?
“We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves” by ...Read more
Searching inside 'The Letters of Seamus Heaney' for the poet (and myself)
It’s ordinarily only the famous who first approach a nonfiction book by thumbing through the index, looking for their own name.
Unfamous, I nevertheless found myself doing just that this past summer while meandering through the stacks at Blackwell’s in Oxford, one of the largest and grandest bookstores in the world.
I had pulled from the ...Read more
This week's bestsellers from Publishers Weekly
Here are the bestsellers for the week that ended Saturday, Nov. 9, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide, powered by Circana BookScan © 2024 Circana.
(Reprinted from Publishers Weekly, published by PWxyz LLC. © 2024, PWxyz LLC.)
HARDCOVER FICTION
1. "The Book of ...Read more
This week's bestsellers from Publishers Weekly
Here are the bestsellers for the week that ended Saturday, Nov. 9, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide, powered by Circana BookScan © 2024 Circana.
(Reprinted from Publishers Weekly, published by PWxyz LLC. © 2024, PWxyz LLC.)
HARDCOVER FICTION
1. The Book of ...Read more
'Orbital,' which looks down on Earth in awe, wins the 2024 Booker Prize
A slim science fiction novel that looks at our "precious and precarious" world through the eyes of six astronauts on the International Space Station has won the 2024 Booker Prize. Samantha Harvey, author of "Orbital," took home the award Tuesday.
The book focuses on a single day in the life of the astronauts on the ISS, where they discuss fears...Read more
11 new books out this month: Fiction, nonfiction and more
Recently, I picked up a book to distract myself from my phone, which was blowing up with social media alerts, election prognostications and sweaty-palmed predictions about who the Dodgers might sign for next season.
That book, “Stranger Than Fiction: Lives of the Twentieth-Century Novel,” lands in stores on Nov. 19, and it immediately ...Read more
Review: 'Bandit Heaven' brings wild, wild West back to life
Theoretically, “Bandit Heaven” is about three bandit havens— Robbers Roost, Brown’s Hole and Hole in the Wall — in Wyoming and Utah. Canyons with only one way in, easily guarded by a few men from perches high above any approaches, they provided refuge for criminals on the run.
According to author Tom Clavin, these three were the most ...Read more
10 new novels, romances and nonfiction books inspired by Shakespeare
A 400-year-old spirit has been making its presence known. This voice from a long-gone past isn’t a Halloween haunt, though. It’s just never gone away.
Still, the spirit of William Shakespeare, who died in 1616, seems to be having an especially good time right now: In Washington D.C. over the summer, the Folger Shakespeare Library reopened �...Read more
Will 'Bosch' and 'The Lincoln Lawyer' writer Michael Connelly kill off his detective hero?
Bestselling author Michael Connelly is grappling with real-life woes (his Siesta Key, Fla., house was pummeled by Hurricane Milton).
So are his characters.
“The Waiting,” Connelly’s 39th book and the sixth featuring cold-case cop Renee Ballard, finds Ballard’s team tackling multiple mysteries, including two that are ripped from the ...Read more
Professor measures her life against 'The Mary Tyler Moore Show'
MINNEAPOLIS — It is no exaggeration to say that without “The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” writer Julie Marie Wade’s life might have turned out very differently.
Since the Florida professor discovered the classic sitcom in 1992 reruns, she has marked important points in her life by referencing similar moments from the show.
Wade, 45, ...Read more
Review: Manchester United soccer players were among the crash victims whose tale is told in novel 'Munichs'
Munich is notorious as a backdrop for historical events — the ascent of the Third Reich, the slaughter of Israeli athletes during the 1972 Olympics — but a lesser-known tragedy dominates David Peace’s electrifying novel, “Munichs.”
It’s the crash of a chartered propeller plane on February 6, 1958, just after a blizzardy take-off, ...Read more
Column: Al Pacino writes in 'Sonny Boy' about life, love, death and the movies
I met Al Pacino one September afternoon long ago at the wedding of David Mamet and Rebecca Pidgeon at a place called Stillington Hall in Gloucester, Massachusetts, about an hour’s drive northeast of Boston. As the family gathered for pictures under a huge tree on the lawn, Pacino said, “C’mon, let’s get in on the pictures,” to me and ...Read more