Carly Tagen-Dye is the Books editorial assistant at PEOPLE, where she writes for both print and digital platforms. Lizz Schumer is the senior books editor at PEOPLE. She has been working at PEOPLE ...
Salas-Wright, the inaugural Barry Family Professor in Social Work, will be inducted into the honorific society of distinguished scholars and practitioners at the Society for Social Work and Research ...
Making resolutions is easy. Making them stick? Not so much. That’s why we’ve combed through the newest self-help books to bring you the 12 most useful published now through April. We’ve found advice ...
The expected decline in sales makes week-on-week comparisons hard to make, as even the most successful of books have seen a decline, while year-on-year comparisons are complicated by the phasing ...
What's past is not always prologue, sports remind us, and so we pause now to remember the players who won their first PGA TOUR event, made their first TOUR Championship, broke through in a major ...
Here are the most exciting books we're most looking forward to sharing in 2025 Lizz Schumer is the senior books editor at PEOPLE. She has been working at PEOPLE since 2024. Her work has previously ...
Opinion: A few months ago, The Times of London reported that an Oxford professor of English, Shakespearean scholar Sir Jonathan Bate, warned that his present-day students had trouble reading long ...
LASTING IMPACT. 1 MILLION BOOKS WILL SOON BE IN THE HANDS OF IOWA FIRST GRADERS. IT’S AN EFFORT FROM THE GOVERNOR AND DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION TO SUPPORT CLASSROOM LEARNING WITH READING AT HOME.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times. As we prepare to turn the corner into 2025, poetry is in the spotlight this week, with new books of verse from Percival Everett ...
Novels by Adam Ross, Han Kang and Nnedi Okorafor; nonfiction by Imani Perry and the “Hipster Grifter”; and more. Credit...The New York Times Supported by “In the fall of 1980, when I was 14 ...
Television “conditions our minds to apprehend the world through fragmented pictures and forces other media to orient themselves in that direction,” he argued in an essay in his book ...