
Books of The Times
‘I Am My Own Subject’: Celia Paul on Lucian Freud, Motherhood and a Life in Art
In her mesmerizing “Self-Portrait,” Paul recounts her fraught relationship with Freud and the challenges of realizing her artistic ambitions.
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In her mesmerizing “Self-Portrait,” Paul recounts her fraught relationship with Freud and the challenges of realizing her artistic ambitions.
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Steve Martin wanted to make cartoons, but he can only draw stick figures. He teamed up with the illustrator Harry Bliss, and the result is their new book, “A Wealth of Pigeons.”
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“African American Poetry: 250 Years of Struggle & Song,” edited by Kevin Young, contains an overwhelming amount of variety and history.
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Thomas E. Ricks’s “First Principles” examines what the founders learned from ancient texts and how that affected the future of the country.
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Your sneak preview of books coming out in 2020 from around the world, updated each season.
By The New York Times, Gray Beltran, Rebecca Lieberman and

In “Loved and Wanted,” Christa Parravani gets real about abortion access in West Virginia.
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Ernest Freeberg talks about “A Traitor to His Species,” and the illustrator Christian Robinson discusses his career in picture books.

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Hilary Holladay’s biography examines the upbringing, poems, and political and sexual awakenings of the vital and influential writer.
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In this book of essays, a finalist for a National Book Award, Jerald Walker writes that racism is “the great American disease with which we are all afflicted.”
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In “The Walker,” Matthew Beaumont profiles some of literature’s most obsessive pedestrians to analyze their troubled relationships to their eras.
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The award-winning Australian-American writer’s “Collected Stories” includes pointed observations about the natural world and human nature.
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In “American Contagions,” John Fabian Witt writes about how jurisprudence has influenced public health, from promoting the social good to compounding existing inequalities.
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