Browse archive by date:
  • The Bipolar Cartoonist: Ellen Forney’s 'Marbles'

    Ellen Forney's brave new graphic memoir Marbles: Mania, Depression, Michelangelo, and Me (Gotham Books, Nov.) looks at bipolar disorder through the prism of her own troubled past: her manic sprees, debilitating depression, and strained relationships.

  • Girl with the Dragon Tattoo: The Comic: Denise Mina

    It should come as no surprise that award-winning crime novelist Denise Mina was selected by DC to adapt Stieg Larsson’s blockbuster The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo as a graphic novel, even though when she first received a call from DC (to write a Hellblazer arc), it was a complete shock.

  • Shutterbabes: Whitney Otto

    “Photography is this ideal marriage of art and technology,” says Portland, Ore., novelist Whitney Otto, her collection of photography books on display behind her.

  • Sam Sifton: Turkey Boss

    Sam Sifton knows Thanksgiving—he loves Thanksgiving—and he wants to teach you Thanksgiving, his way. His new book, Thanksgiving: How to Cook It Well (Random House, Oct.), is a guide/cookbook with everything you need to know to pull off the perfect meal for this quintessential American holiday.

  • Man Club: T Cooper

    The first thing prospective readers should know about T Cooper’s new book is that, although Cooper writes about the experience of being born a woman and living as a man, Real Man Adventures (McSweeney’s, Nov.) is not the standard “trans narrative we know from TV and films,” says Cooper. For one thing: it’s not a memoir.

  • Exploring Alternate Paths: David Nasaw

    David Nasaw didn’t plan to write biographies, he says, sitting in his office in the history department at the City University of New York Graduate Center. By the time he began his book on William Randolph Hearst in the mid-1990s, he had already written histories of American public amusements and public schools, as well as a book called Children of the City.

  • After 'The Shack,' a Crossroads: William Paul Young

    The author of the sleeper mega-hit The Shack has an intense yet self-deprecating manner for someone whose debut book sold 18 million copies. “I didn’t need a next book,” he says, in a sit-down chat this summer. “I have everything that matters to me.” Young has written a new novel, though; Cross Roads, with an announced first printing of one million, will be published by FaithWords on November 13.

  • Rhinemaiden: Mary Sharratt

    “At first I wrote about completely invented characters. Then I started writing about real-life historical figures—some of this stuff, you can’t make up if you tried.” Mary Sharratt’s fifth novel, Illuminations (Houghton Mifflin, Oct.), weaves fiction into the historical record to flesh out the life and times of the 12th-century mystic and philosopher, Hildegard von Bingen who, this year, 833 years after her death, was declared a saint in the Roman Catholic Church.

  • The Ultimate Culinary Tour of Latin America

    Maricel Presilla's "Gran Cocina Latina: The Food of Latin America and the Spanish Caribbean" is a major coup in the crowded cookbook category, with authentic recipes and Presilla's personal interpretations of traditional recipes.

  • Monsters, Myths, and Music: Seanan McGuire

    Three days into the annual World Science Fiction Convention, at 9:30 on Sunday morning, when most attendees are drooping with exhaustion, Seanan McGuire is almost unforgivably perky, even though the Hugo Awards ceremony is less than 12 hours away.

  • Taking on the Vote

    Armed with sarcasm and independence, journalist Greg Palast pounds the pavements of America—however ugly they are—like the hard-boiled PIs of pulp novels, searching for truth and justice. His practices are unconventional in today’s journalism, not to mention in investigative reporting. His newest book is Billionaires & Ballot Bandits: How to Steal an Election in 9 Easy Steps (Seven Stories) with a 50-page comics section by Ted Rall.

  • A Bootlegger's Story: Dennis Lehane Takes on Prohibition-Era Boston

    The epic new novel from Boston crime master Dennis Lehane spans from Prohibition-era Boston to Batista's Cuba.

  • Religion Update Fall 2012: In Profile

    Conversations with four religious authors.

  • From South-Central to Noir Cool: Gary Phillips

    Gary Phillips, 57, is the epitome of the noir cool he writes about in his mysteries, looking like a linebacker with an attitude—until something makes him laugh, and the big grin on his face reveals the genial guy inside.

  • 'We the People' and Beyond: Akhil Reed Amar

    “I think scholars often end up just writing for other specialists,” says Akhil Reed Amar, “and I think that’s particularly unfortunate when we’re talking about scholars of the American Constitution.” He produces a well-thumbed, pocket-sized copy from his jacket.

  • Sleuthing in Feudal Japan: Laura Joh Rowland

    A criminal investigator of unswerving integrity, tackling crimes that often have implications for the stability of his government, set in feudal Japan—this is the premise, and unusual time and setting, that Laura Joh Rowland has chosen for her long-running Sano Ichiro series, which began with 1994’s Shinju (Random House). In September, Minotaur will publish the 16th entry, The Incense Game, probing the poisoning of three women in the aftermath of a catastrophic earthquake.

  • Taking Care of Business: Jonathan Evison

    Jonathan Evison’s new novel, The Revised Fundamentals of Caregiving (Algonquin, Aug. 28), is as much a cathartic exercise in healing as it is an intimate story of the unusual bond between Ben, a charmingly pathetic character who’s lost his wife, children, and home, and Trev, a “tyrannical” teenager with the debilitating disease of Duchenne muscular dystrophy, for whom Ben works as a caretaker.

  • Guns and Roses: Junot Diaz

    “I like human endings,” says Junot Díaz. “For me, human endings are ones that represent the full complexity of what I consider human experience. For me, the consequences of surviving sometimes give you great pause.”

  • First Fiction 2012: Lisa Lang: Unusual Utopian

    Lisa Lang’s debut novel, Utopian Man (Allen & Unwin, dist. by Trafalgar Sq.), is a fictionalized biography of the real-life Edward William Cole, who in Melbourne, Australia, in the 1880s established Cole’s Book Arcade, a wacky institution with more than one million books, a Chinese tea room, wall-to-wall mirrors, monkeys, and more.

  • First Fiction 2012: Richard Kramer: A Talent for Writing Teens

    “Except for a stint scooping ice cream at Baskin-Robbins while in high school and a job right after college as a singles director on a cruise ship, my day job for nearly 40 years has been the same as my night job,” says Richard Kramer, “which is writing in one form or another.”

X
Stay ahead with
Tip Sheet!
Free newsletter: the hottest new books, features and more
X
X
Email Address

Password

Log In Forgot Password

Premium online access is only available to PW subscribers. If you have an active subscription and need to set up or change your password, please click here.

New to PW? To set up immediate access, click here.

NOTE: If you had a previous PW subscription, click here to reactivate your immediate access. PW site license members have access to PW’s subscriber-only website content. If working at an office location and you are not "logged in", simply close and relaunch your preferred browser. For off-site access, click here. To find out more about PW’s site license subscription options, please email Mike Popalardo at: mike@nextstepsmarketing.com.

To subscribe: click here.