Carl Hiaasen “Double Whammy” reaches back early into Carl Hiaasen’s career. The book was published in 1987 and introduces ...
With a wink to every writing teacher’s favorite adage, Curtis Sittenfeld’s “Show Don’t Tell” delivers a dozen short stories ...
For members of The Bangles, the quintessential all-female band of the 1980s, “Walk Like An Egyptian” was an aberration — not ...
The narrative-lyric structure of Taking Apart the Bird Trap is anchored in a locale that straddles a bustling main road and a ...
Amid all the hoopla surrounding Saturday Night Live’s 50th anniversary in February, one part of the show received little fanfare: Mary Ellen Matthews' portraits of each show's host and musical guest t ...
She was writing at 5 years old, wrote a novel at 8, and published “The House Without Windows,” a hugely successful children’s ...
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s “Dream Count” feels like a homecoming. The Nigerian author’s first work of longform fiction in ...
In “Raising Hare,” Chloe Dalton writes movingly of rescuing a newborn hare and finding herself more open to the wonders of ...
Paul Diamond reviews Toitu Te Whenua by Lauren Keenan published by Penguin Random House NZ ...
Miss Newton took on the post at the Field Road school, which forms part of The Lighthouse Federation, in September last year ...
BrightLocal report reveals consumer review trends: less focus on perfect ratings, new platform preferences, and more ...
Writer of history and heritage Jane Dismore recommends some of her favourite reads. Her latest book, No Country For A Woman, is out now ...