close
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20201111235652/https://www.nytimes.com/section/books

Highlights

  1. PhotoThe comedian Steve Martin, left, and the illustrator Harry Bliss in Manhattan last month. As collaborators, they have something of an odd-couple dynamic.
    CreditCaroline Tompkins for The New York Times

    They Are Also 2 Wild and Crazy Guys

    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.”

    By

    1. PhotoCato the Younger/George Washington
      CreditFrom left: Hulton Archive/Getty Images; National Archive/Newsmakers

      nonfiction

      What America Owes to the Greeks and Romans

      Thomas E. Ricks’s “First Principles” examines what the founders learned from ancient texts and how that affected the future of the country.

      By

  1. PhotoBERJAYA
    CreditThoka Mayer

    Globetrotting

    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

  2. Recommendations

    PhotoBERJAYA
    Credit

    What to Read Right Now

    Book recommendations from editors at the New York Times Book Review.

  3. The Book Review Podcast

    PhotoBERJAYA
    Credit

    The Birth of the Animal Rights Movement

    Ernest Freeberg talks about “A Traitor to His Species,” and the illustrator Christian Robinson discusses his career in picture books.

Books of The Times

More in Books of The Times ›