chosen by the staff of The New York Times Book Review. In “A Century of Tomorrows,” Glenn Adamson offers a hurtling history of the art, science and big business of looking ahead. A posthumous ...
The staff of The New York Times Book Review choose the year’s top fiction and nonfiction. By The New York Times Books Staff Here are the year’s notable fiction, poetry and nonfiction ...
Clocking in at over 200 pages, The Art of The Batman is a deluxe hardcover art book full of fascinating insight into how the film came to be. Inside, you'll find concept art of the film's costumes ...
To celebrate the book’s release this week, Insight Editions offered Polygon an exclusive excerpt from The Art and Making of Arcane. The pages detail some of the thought process that went into ...
Almost 70 years ago, Niklaus Pevsner called his book The Englishness of English Art a contribution to ‘the geography of art’ (rather than its history). The same could be said of Bendor Grosvenor’s The ...
Publications like this (as above) make life for the weary historian of 18th-century art worth living ... The size of the book, a little larger than a hardback novel, lends itself perfectly ...
Dec 10, 2024 / Books & the Arts / Emily McBride His art criticism fixated on the narcissism of the entire enterprise. But over six decades, his work proved that a critic could be an artist too.
This 208-page hardcover book comes from Piggyback, written in collaboration with Nintendo and Retro Studios, and features a metallic foil Samus etched into the cover. As is always the case with ...
December 12, 2024 • These true stories range from a "meow-moir" of a Siberian cat to an exploration of what U.S. presidents do after the White House. Check out these nonfiction reads recommended ...
Spend more time enjoying and less time searching the best Books for Tweens. Our curated list features top-rated Books, whether fun and entertaining or educational and learning-focused. Don't miss out ...
It has been tempting to view the C.I.A. as omniscient. Yet Coll’s chastening new book about the events leading up to the Iraq War, in 2003, shows just how often the agency was flying blind.