Teachers can support students in reading novels by front-loading the contextual information they need to make sense of the ...
Penny’s 19th installment in the beloved Gamache series is a particularly haunting and relevant mystery novel. Yael van der Wouden’s novel, shortlisted for this year’s Booker Prize, is about ...
Memorization and recitation of verse should have a central place in a child’s education. Photographer William Meyers explores American citizenship, which is in better shape than many think. Road ...
Zoho Books offers some unique automation tools that can be very useful once you get past their challenging setup processes. For example ... I took on reviews of other types of business and ...
Say cheese! This October, there’s something to beam about, which is a horror sequel that eclipses its predecessor. That’s right, “Smile 2,” the follow-up to the surprising 2022 hit ...
Reanimating a fictional superhero from days gone by is one of the trickiest jobs in literature. It gets trickier still when the hero’s lineage is as complex and drawn-out as that of George ...
By J. D. Biersdorfer J.D. Biersdorfer is the production editor for the Book Review and writes the weekly interactive literary quiz, as well as the monthly Tech Tip column for The Times.
A convoluted, messy screenplay A few too many fake-out twists An uneven balance of dark comedy and mean horror It’s a sequel that largely proves to be, much to its detriment in its second half ...
Following a bereaved three-generation family over the course of one idyllic Nordic summer, Charlie McDowell's film version of Tove Jansson's 1972 novel is high on comfort and low on incident.
A century into the future – possibly centuries – an unnamed narrator drives across deserts of ash in a solar-powered jerry-rigged truck full of gadgets for purifying water and growing food.
Zinnie Harris’s radical reworking of John Webster’s Jacobean gore-fest was first seen in 2019 and comes to the West End starring Jodie Whittaker in her first stage role for 12 years (her last was ...
That book comes on the heels of The Starving Artist Myth, released in August by Mark J. Jones, the dean of Sheridan College’s renowned faculty of animation, arts and design. Jones’s attention ...