Q&A: Amy Schwartz on Whether Robots Can Be Jewish, and Other Spiritual Quandaries
/The Answer on Jewish Robots is "It Depends," of Course!
Read MoreThe Answer on Jewish Robots is "It Depends," of Course!
Read MoreWar Hero Father Emil Kapaun of Kansas Was an Extraordinary ‘Ordinary Man’
Read More‘You want to convey what it’s like to be alive, or to articulate how mysteriously disturbing life can be.’
Read MoreAdam McOmber Has a Very Different Take on the Story of Jesus’s Life and Death
Read MoreShe Discovered that ‘Miller grew up in a family that was a lot like Trump’s’
Read MoreThe Highly Improvised Cable News Network Seemed Like a Crazy Idea When It Launched
Read MoreEscaping a Rough Chicago Neighborhood for the Lure of the Open Water
Read MoreThe Author of Endless Love Discusses His New Novel, An Ocean Without a Shore
Read MoreWhat to Do When the Ground Underfoot is Not Bedrock, and the Sky Above is Not Predicable
Read MoreAnd How if Feels to Write a Book that Becomes a Broadway Play
Read More‘I Decided to Get off the Hollywood Train Before it got too Bleak and Went Back to School to Learn the Craft of Fiction’
Read More‘Dwellers in the House of the Lord’ Melds Two Stories About Love
Read MoreOn Collaboration, Shoeleather Reporting — and All of those Greek and Latin Chapter Names
Read MoreOn the Occasion of the Re-Release of His Classic Children’s Book, ‘Wally the Wordworm’
Read MoreAnd the Subject of Her New Book, William Monroe Trotter, Who Said, “Agitate, Agitate, Agitate”
Read MoreLes Standiford Talks About His New Book on the Rise and Rise of Florida’s Toniest Enclave
Read More“We all spend a large chunk of our lives in the ordinary and the familiar. Exploring that is endlessly interesting.'“
Read MoreHunter’s Moon is, Caputo Says, Largely about Masculine Relationships
Read MoreAnd Making New Contributions to the Tradition of Midwestern Literature.
Read More“The Right Book at the Right Time Can Expand Our Lives,” He Says
Read MoreThe National Book Review -- A journal of books and ideas