The Best Books of 2019: Works in Translation!
/Another entry in the epic Stevereads Best of 2019 series: Works in Translation!
Read MoreAn Arts & Literature Review
Another entry in the epic Stevereads Best of 2019 series: Works in Translation!
Read MoreAs the Stevereads 2019 year-end list continues, everything old is new again: Best Reprints!
Read MoreThe Stevereads extravaganza of 2019’s best and worst books begins at last! First up: Reference!
Read MoreA definitively researched explanation for a phenomena many of us still don’t understand.
Read MoreThe latest “Wicked City” novel from Beatriz Williams continues to broaden the world of Ginger Kelly.
Read More“Moron Marries Monster for Money” would be a much more accurate title.
Read MoreThis beautifully-produced hard cover reprint demonstrates why this book sold the way it did a century ago.
Read MoreActions fueled by love are not always attractive or even right but they are always meaningful.
Read MoreThe memoir of the woman assaulted by Stanford freshman Brock Turner.
Read MoreAn angry grizzly bear (is there any other kind?) interrupts a group of young friends on a Canadian camping trip
Read MoreA television critic assesses the symbiotic relationship between TV and Donald Trump
Read MoreYou don’t really need to be aware that Parade is a loose sequel to Kawakami’s previous novel, 2017’s Strange Weather in Tokyo.
Read MoreBrand’s enthusiasm for foxes is brightly infectious in this slim, enchanting new book.
Read MoreWhat powers this book more than bullets and bombs are the people Giglio encounters and the stories they share.
Read MoreDonald Trump’s former UN ambassador writes a memoir about her time in the administration.
Read MoreA meticulously contextualized volume just brimming with supporting information.
Read MoreAn enthusiastic new biography of the heir apparent to the Throne.
Read MoreNobody alive today is in a better position to write an enormous, definitive biography of this artist.
Read MoreGlowing with life but unblinkingly clear about the limitations these women faced.
Read MoreObservations that have been made in a hundred other places, and a hundred times better.
Read MoreAn arts and literature review.
Steve Donoghue
Sam Sacks
Britta Böhler
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Eric Karl Anderson
Olive Fellows
Jack Hanson
Jennifer Helinek
Justin Hickey
Hannah Joyner
Zach Rabiroff
Jessica Tvordi