Dear BookBrowsers, In our second-to-last issue of the year, we feature recent books from acclaimed authors that paint vivid pictures of lives in retrospect. Alan Hollinghurst’s Our Evenings spans a British actor’s... Read more »
Dear BookBrowsers, In this issue, we review Dinaw Mengestu’s latest novel Someone Like Us, the dark but lyrical story of an unconventional immigrant family living in Chicago and the DC suburbs, and... Read more »
Dear BookBrowsers, In this issue, Kate Quinn’s The Briar Club, a mystery centered on a murder at a boardinghouse in 1950s Washington, D.C., brings the McCarthy era to life through a striking... Read more »
Dear BookBrowsers, In this issue, Kate Quinn’s The Briar Club, a mystery centered on a murder at a boardinghouse in 1950s Washington, D.C., brings the McCarthy era to life through a striking... Read more »
Dear BookBrowsers, In this issue, Kate Quinn’s The Briar Club, a mystery centered on a murder at a boardinghouse in 1950s Washington, D.C., brings the McCarthy era to life through a striking... Read more »
Dear BookBrowsers, In this issue, we review Colm Tóibín’s Long Island, the long-awaited sequel to Brooklyn that catches up with Eilis Lacey two decades later, following her on a trip from New... Read more »
Dear BookBrowsers, In this issue, we review Colm Tóibín’s Long Island, the long-awaited sequel to Brooklyn that catches up with Eilis Lacey two decades later, following her on a trip from New... Read more »
Dear BookBrowsers, Percival Everett, a quietly prolific writer of noteworthy novels over the past four decades, may have gained a new audience from the recent Oscar-nominated film American Fiction, based on his... Read more »
Dear BookBrowsers, Percival Everett, a quietly prolific writer of noteworthy novels over the past four decades, may have gained a new audience from the recent Oscar-nominated film American Fiction, based on his... Read more »