Luvvie Ajayi Jones’ commanding, cheerful voice will hype up even the most fearful listener.
Luvvie Ajayi Jones’ commanding, cheerful voice will hype up even the most fearful listener.
Luvvie Ajayi Jones’ commanding, cheerful voice will hype up even the most fearful listener.
Anne Lamott’s narration of Dusk, Night, Dawn is the soundtrack for feeling better in the midst of a troubled landscape.
Actor Suehyla El-Attar reads in a calm, steady voice that emphasizes the sweeping gravitas of Jo Ann Beard’s collection.
There’s never a dull moment in Alexander Lobrano’s memoir of becoming a food writer in Paris. It’s a veritable feast of humility, humor and emotion.
Cute as can be, this fully hand-drawn interactive workbook contains 52 prompts, from whimsical to practical, nudging us to do one new thing each week.
Are you a sucker for luscious displays of color, pattern and texture in your personal space? Justina Blakeney’s new coffee-table book will be your jam.
Heather Corinna puts their activist mojo to use in a guide that argues forcefully for new thinking about perimenopause, with a lot of laughs along the way.
“This city barged into conversations,” Craig Taylor says about New Yorkers. With that kind of attitude, you’ll have no choice but to listen in.
This lucid, lyrical memoir recalls father-son episodes in South Dakota, with its biblical weather, rattlesnakes, long horseback rides and rodeos.
In her slim memoir, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie pays homage to her father’s remarkable life while observing her own surprising grief.
Pulitzer Prize winner Alan Taylor’s latest American history is sweeping, beautifully written, prodigiously researched and myth-busting.
Maddy Court assures us that our problems are not so uncommon and we’re all less alone than we think.
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