The Morning News needs your support
The Morning News needs your support. Please join us as a Sustaining Member!
Our series of contemporary Russian literature continues—six months, six stories from some of Russia’s best working writers, plus interviews with their authors, all of it sponsored by Powells.com. This month we feature one of Moscow’s finest chroniclers.
What was the book about? It is an animal story. It is about a mother wolf and her son. What was your favorite part? She hopes her son can become...
What was the book about? This book is about Barbabelle, who wants a dress and who decides to make it herself. What was your favorite part? My favorite part is...
Our man in Boston sits down with the author of The Financial Lives of the Poets to talk about his latest novel, how to survive in Hollywood, the ins and outs of contemporary publishing, and that unheralded Paris of the Northwest, Spokane.
What was the book about? It was about the Gruffalo’s child trying to find the Big Bad Mouse. What was your favorite part? When the little mouse was...
What was the book about? This book is about a mammoth named Oscar who is going to school and finds funny footprints, with two feet instead of four. One day,...
What was the book about? The story was about a sailor from Colombia who was in a navy ship. A big wave crashes the ship and the sailor falls out...
A trilogy of erotic novels are sweeping America, scheduled to sell 20 million copies this week. Here, a state-by-state guide on how the books are being adapted for local markets.
Our man in Boston and the author discuss her latest novel, Enchantments, the writing process, how book reviewing works at the New York Times, what it’s like to be nastied, and the life and times of two writers raising children without a television in the house.
Portraits that find Manhattan’s Lower East Side in 1980 and 2010 showing different faces—blight, renewal, and the pursuit of hipsterdom—and also many things that (thankfully) never change.
Our man in Boston talks to the Pulitzer-winning novelist about his new memoir, Thoughts Without Cigarettes, as well as nights in New York, parks in Berlin, how publishing currently compares to Indian restaurants, what life would be like if Mambo Kings hadn’t hit it big, and the difficulties of writing about yourself.
From 3:00 to 3:30 p.m. ET today, tell the Biblioracle the last five books you’ve read, and he’ll recommend your next favorite novel.