Our columnist on three sparkling new romances. Credit...Michela Buttignol Supported by By Olivia Waite Olivia Waite is the Book Review’s romance fiction columnist. She writes queer historical romance, ...
Multi-award-winning writer best known for his speculative fiction, but whose novels and novellas also spanned genres from crime to historical ...
The Village Voice reviews Sergei Loznitsa’s "Two Prosecutors," film about prisoners trapped in Stalin's authoritarian maze of bureaucracy.
Kate Edwards Breaks Down the Cultural Responsibility in Indiana Jones: The Great Circle. Kate Edwards does not approach ...
These new releases, from sweeping historical retellings to gripping psychological thrillers, deserve a spot on your TBR.
Intended to rehabilitate “incorrigible” women, the prison’s real history tells a darker story, one that Toronto author Heather Marshall set out to share in her latest historical fiction novel, Liberty ...
Publishers of Christian fiction are seeing strong sales for dual-timeline novels, where characters and plots slip between ...
Dr. Christopher Stanley, professor emeritus of Theology and Franciscan Studies, has published the final novel in a historical fiction trilogy that has earned praise from historians and ordinary ...
Celebrate St Patricks Day with The Mirror Book Club as book critic Dr Aimée Walsh hand picks the essential Irish reads from ...
Set in the dual timelines of 1664 and 1939 Paris, “Skylark” follows two main storylines: that of Alouette, whose father is in ...
Longtime Suffolk County Community College professor and author Stephen Lewis often thinks about the breeze coming off the ...
Set in the wild, untamed lands of Britain in 43AD, Britannia is a clash of historical fiction with epic warfare and a dash of ...
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