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  • I See, Therefore You Are: PW Talks with Robert Lanza and Nancy Kress

    Scientist Lanza conveys his theory that “the universe springs from life, not the other way around” in 'Observer' (Story Plant, Jan.), a thriller coauthored with Kress.

  • Finding Gifts in a Childless Life: PW Talks with Elizabeth Felicetti

    PW talks with Rev. Elizabeth Felicetti about women's lives 'bursting with creativity and influence.'

  • Hoop Activism: PW Talks with Theresa Runstedtler

    In 'Black Ball' (Bold Type, Mar.), historian Runstedtler explores the turbulent atmosphere of 1970s pro basketball.

  • Witchy Women: PW Talks with Celia Bell

    In Bell’s 'The Disenchantment' (Pantheon, May), two 17th-century French noblewomen lovers get caught up in anti-witch hysteria.

  • Chronicle of Deaths Foretold: PW Talks with Masahiro Imamura

    In Imamura’s 'Death Within the Evil Eye' (Locked Room International, Jan.), university students Yuzuru Hamura and Hiruko Kenzali must crack a seemingly impossible mystery.

  • 40 Years of Love and Rockets: PW Talks with Gilbert and Jaime

    To mark the 40th anniversary of a groundbreaking literary comics series, Fantagraphics Books is releasing 'Love and Rockets: The First 50 ' by the cartooning brothers Gilbert and Jaime Hernandez, a boxed eight-volume hardcover set collecting the series’ first 50 issues.

  • Q & A with Valerie Bolling

    We spoke with Valerie Bolling about how she uses her skills and intuition in her roles as instructional coach and author, and why she hopes her readers will put her books down after reading them and go outside.

  • 100% Genuine Snake Oil: PW Talks with Matthew Hongoltz-Hetling

    The medical freedom movement, which opposes government regulation of healthcare (see, for starters, anti-maskers), is the subject of journalist Matthew Hongoltz-Hetling's 'If It Sounds Like a Quack...' (PublicAffairs, Apr. 2023).

  • A Stand-Up Whodunit: PW Talks with Benjamin Stevenson

    In Stevenson’s 'Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone' (Mariner, Jan.), members of a family of killers gather at an Australian ski resort.

  • Q & A with Laura Weymouth

    In 'A Consuming Fire,' Laura Weymouth's fourth YA historical fantasy, a young woman sets forth from her isolated village as the latest in a long line of sacrifices to the god of the mountain who rules over an alternate version of Britain.

  • The Heat Is On: PW Talks with Kosoko Jackson

    In 'A Dash of Salt and Pepper,' a man reeling from a bad breakup and a career setback finds himself working as a prep chef in the kitchen under—sometimes literally—the chef/owner.

  • Just a Girl, Standing in Front of a Boy: PW Talks with Jayne Denker

    The author of 'The Rom-Com Agenda' talks about meeting reader expectations and why she prefers other writers’ sex scenes.

  • The Unwelcome Guest: PW Talks with Pico Iyer

    In 'The Half-Known Life' (Riverhead, Jan.), essayist Iyer reflects on his visits to sites known as “paradise on earth” in Ethiopia, India, Iran, and Sri Lanka.

  • Beyond Anne Frank: PW Talks with Nina Siegal

    In 'The Diary Keepers' (Ecco, Feb.), novelist Siegal recreates the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands with firsthand accounts from the ordinary people who lived through it.

  • Old Injustices in New Zealand: PW Talks with Michael Bennett

    New Zealand filmmaker Bennett’s first novel, 'Better the Blood: A Hana Westerman Thriller' (Atlantic Monthly, Jan.), explores the prolonged effects of 19th-century wounds perpetrated by the British military on the Maori people.

  • Illustration Meets the Ivory Tower: PW Talks with Mona Oraby

    Works of scholarship rarely include graphics, but author Mona Oraby introduces a "new structure and style" in the genre-bending 'A Universe of Terms: Religion in Visual Metaphor' (Indiana Univ., out now).

  • Q & A with Hayley Rocco and John Rocco

    PW spoke with collaborating couple Hayley and John Rocco about their new picture book 'How to Send a Hug.'

  • Q & A with Jyoti Rajan Gopal and art twink

    We spoke with Jyoti Rajan Gopal and art twink about their new picture book, 'My Paati's Saris,' gender and identity, and the shortcomings of South Asian representation in books for children.

  • Mom vs. the Machine: PW Talks with Jessica Grose

    In 'Screaming on the Inside' (Mariner, Dec.), 'New York Times' opinion and parenting newsletter writer Jessica Grose explains the ways in which “morally charged” American cultural narratives and societal messaging hurt mothers.

  • Navigating the Hyphen: PW Talks with Omer Aziz

    In 'Brown Boy: A Memoir' (Scribner, Apr.), Pakistani Canadian writer Aziz questions concepts of identity and success.

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