This year’s top titles run the gamut and include an adaption of a Korean folk tale, a highly entertaining question-and-answer ...
In mystery and crime, another divisive issue, immigration, is faced in “Danger No Problem” and “Sunday or the Highway,” the ...
Best-selling author Craig Johnson released a new Sheriff Walt Longmire Christmas story -- "Scents of the Season" -- on ...
A new romance-focused bookstore, Love Story Book Co., has opened in Tallahassee's Mahan Square Shopping Center. Owner Sarah Babchuck was inspired by her lifelong passion for reading and the romance ...
Surveys consistently rank Patagonia as one of the most reputable brands in America, not just for its outdoor gear, but also ...
The staff of The New York Times Book Review choose the year’s top fiction and nonfiction. Credit...By Sebastian Mast Supported by The envelope, please: After a full year spent reading hundreds of ...
“We do one book after state testing, and we did ‘The Great Gatsby.’ … A lot of kids had not read a novel in class before.” — Laura Henry, 10th-grade English teacher near Houston “My son in 9th grade ...
‘Tis the season for reflecting on a well-read year. So, after all that reading, which books are we still thinking about now? The truth is, the best book of the year is deeply personal to every reader.
Author Suzanna Palmer has released “Jingle Hands,” a children’s book based on Bob’s Candy Cane Parade, a traditional part of the Christmas Walk festivities in Geneva.
Buckeye is an historical novel set, as its title indicates, in Ohio. Stretching from pre-World War II to the close of the 20th century, the story focuses on two married couples whose lives intersect.
Books can be a refuge from (waves arms) all this, even when they take you deeper into the darkness of 2025. There is a grace in the relationship between book and reader, with nothing but your eyes and ...
A Bobcat's Tail' is the story of Jerry Harwin. The story behind the creation of Elings Park — when the Santa Barbara community came together starting in ...