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  • TV Highlights This Week

News Articles: Books

Tagged as: 

  • Author Interviews

Q&A: Yashica Dutt on her life as part of an oppressed caste in 'Coming Out As Dalit'

When Dutt was a kid, her family pretended to be rich so no one would suspect their caste identity. In her memoir, she talks of her struggles — and her decision to publicly declare she is a Dalit.

March 11, 2024
|
By:
  • Kamala Thiagarajan

Tagged as: 

  • Books

The working class gets stubbed out in Russell Banks' posthumous 'American Spirits'

The late author often wrote about the loneliness and isolation of the working class. His new short story collection puts a sharper focus on the politics of small town life.

March 10, 2024
|
By:
  • Andrew Limbong
Cover of The Extinction of Irena Rey

Tagged as: 

  • Books

'The Extinction of Irena Rey' asks: Can anything be truly individual and independent?

Jennifer Croft's novel, centered on a group of translators working on a book, is surprising at every turn, moving from profound observations about nature, art, and communication — to surreal events.

March 08, 2024
|
By:
  • Ilana Masad
Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James shoots during the first half of an NBA basketball game against the Oklahoma City Thunder Monday, Feb. 8, 2021, in Los Angeles.

Tagged as: 

  • News

'The Book of James' chronicles basketball legend LeBron's power on and off the court

LeBron James is arguably the greatest basketball player to ever play the game — some argue even better than Michael Jordan. But James has brought more than tremendous skill to the court.

March 08, 2024
|
By:
  • Peter Biello
Jean Armour Polly was inducted into the Internet Hall of Fame in 2019 for evangelizing computers in public libraries.

Tagged as: 

  • Technology

Meet the woman who helped libraries across the U.S. 'surf the internet'

Jean Armour Polly was inducted into the Internet Hall of Fame in 2019 for evangelizing computers in public libraries, the precursor to the internet being offered as a core service in those spaces.

March 08, 2024
|
By:
  • Diba Mohtasham

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

3 collections take the poetic measure of America in the aftermath of the pandemic

New collections The Gone Thing, Silver and Modern Poetry offer, if not a solution to trying times in America, then a kind of truth-telling companion, a mirror with a real person on both sides of it.

March 07, 2024
|
By:
  • Craig Morgan Teicher
Gabriel García Márquez greets journalists and neighbors on his birthday outside his house in Mexico City on March 6, 2014.

Tagged as: 

  • Latin America

Gabriel García Márquez's last novel is published against his wishes

Until August is the last novel of the Nobel Prize-winning author, a work he asked his sons to destroy. But, nearly 10 years after his death, they have decided to publish his final novel.

March 07, 2024
|
By:
  • Carrie Kahn

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

'Anita de Monte Laughs Last' is a complex dissection of art, gender and marriage

Xochitl Gonzalez's novel looking at relationship power dynamics is a thought-provoking and brilliantly entertaining triumph that surpasses the promise of her popular debut Olga Dies Dreaming.

March 06, 2024
|
By:
  • Carole V. Bell
Rod Nordland looks at the Istanbul old city from Galata Tower on Nov. 20, 2016. Nordland was diagnosed with glioblastoma, a terminal brain cancer, in 2019.

Tagged as: 

  • Health Care

After years in conflict zones, a war reporter reckons with a deadly cancer diagnosis

Rod Nordland was diagnosed with glioblastoma, the most lethal form of brain cancer, in 2019. He writes about facing mortality from war and cancer in his new memoir, Waiting for the Monsoon.

March 05, 2024
|
By:
  • Terry Gross

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

Kennedy Ryan's new novel, plus 4 other new romances by Black authors

Black romance authors have been some of the leading advocates for change in the books industry. This Could Be Us, the latest by bestselling author Kennedy Ryan, hits shelves today.

March 05, 2024
|
By:
  • Carole V. Bell
Founded in 1955, the <em>Village Voice </em>stopped publishing print editions in in 2017.

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

This oral history of the 'Village Voice' captures its creativity and rebelliousness

Tricia Romano's The Freaks Came Out To Write chronicles the passion and talent that made a great American newspaper — and the forces that killed it.

March 05, 2024
|
By:
  • Maureen Corrigan
The American Library Association had its annual conference in Chicago last year. Several states have moved to disassociate with the ALA amid what some conservatives say has been politicization of the group. ALA officials deny having a political agenda.

Tagged as: 

  • National

In Georgia, a bill to cut all ties with the American Library Association is advancing

Several other states have made moves to disassociate from the nation's oldest library professional association. But Georgia's bill, the first of its kind in the nation, goes further than the others.

March 02, 2024
|
By:
  • Tovia Smith

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

A man fights expectations in 'I'm So Glad We Had This Time Together'

Maurice Vellekoop's graphic memoir is an impressive book by an artist, a cartoonist, staking a claim — presenting a life lived willfully resisting other people's inconsistent, harmful attitudes.

March 02, 2024
|
By:
  • Tahneer Oksman
A farmer works at an avocado plantation at the Los Cerritos avocado group ranch in Ciudad Guzman, state of Jalisco, Mexico.

Tagged as: 

  • Science

This data scientist has a plan for how to feed the world sustainably

According to the United Nations, about ten percent of the world is undernourished. It's a daunting statistic — unless your name is Hannah Ritchie. She's the data scientist behind the new book Not the End of the World: How We Can Be the First Generation to Build a Sustainable Planet. It's a seriously big thought experiment: How do we feed everyone on Earth sustainably? And because it's just as much an economically pressing question as it is a scientific one, Darian Woods of The Indicator from Planet Money joins us. With Hannah's help, Darian unpacks how to meet the needs of billions of people without destroying the planet.

Questions or ideas for a future show? Email us at shortwave@npr.org.

February 29, 2024
|
By:
  • Darian Woods,
  • Paddy Hirsch,
  • and 3 more

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

Sloane Crosley mourns her best friend in 'Grief Is for People'

Russell Perreault hired Crosley when she was 25 and the two became very close. He died by suicide in 2019. Her first full-length book of nonfiction is a noteworthy addition to the literature of grief.

February 28, 2024
|
By:
  • Heller McAlpin
  • Load More

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