The creator of such hit TV shows as Girlfriends and Being Mary Jane brings her sharp insight into Black women’s lives to The ...
The Gender Queer author never anticipated the graphic memoir would make national headlines as a frequent target of book bans, ...
The American Library Association worked and played hard for its sesquicentennial conference, held June 26–29, which drew some ...
In Saratoga Schaefer's 'A Thousand Monstrous Forms' (Crooked Lane Books, Sept. 15), a gothic horror reimagining of “Bluebeard ...
Linda Kass chronicles the spirit and soundtrack of 1969 through the lens of a precocious teenager named Lena who attends an ...
Other than some squeaks, hoots and one enormous roar, Pinkney's (Little Red Riding Hood) interpretation of Aesop's fable is wordless—as is its striking cover, which features only a head-on portrait of ...
Set against ecological crisis, political violence, and technological change, these collections grapple with the search for ...
The long-overdue move to chronicle American history in graphic novel form takes another great step forward with this first volume of a projected history of the civil rights struggle. Instead of taking ...
NAACP Image Award winner Due’s staggering follow-up to The Reformatory offers a sophisticated blend of Black Hollywood history, ...
The acquiring editor at the nation’s first university press, founded in 1869, looks back on its long history and the state of ...
Among this season’s most anticipated titles are new novels from Donald Antrim, Chad Harbach, Marlon James, and Min Jin Lee.
This season features bold debuts, intriguing follow-ups to bestsellers, and a few literary darlings trying their hands at ...