Our first book recommendations for 2023 are here. Check back every Wednesday to see what our editors and critics are reading.
This much anticipated and compellingly artful autobiography depicts the Duke of Sussex’s life in a tight three-act drama, consisting of his occasionally wayward youth, his decade of military service, and his relationship with Meghan Markle, with numerous bombshells sprinkled throughout. The memoir, luridly leaked, is worth reading not just for its headline-generating details but also for its voice and its sometimes surprising wit. Harry’s ghostwriter, J. R.
Moehringer, a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter turned memoirist, has a novelist’s eye for detail and a felicitous familiarity with the British literary canon; elevating Shakespearean flourishes may give readers a shiver of recognition, while descriptions of the patched, starched bed linens at Balmoral hint at the constricting fabric of monarchy.
Ireland Latest News, Ireland Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Books roundup: What to read in 2023Here are some fiction and nonfiction works to watch for in the new year.
Read more »
Meet The 17-Year-Old Author Of ‘Books N Bros: 44 Inspiring Books For Black Boys’As an elementary school student, he loved reading but rarely saw himself reflected in the characters, so he developed the Books N Brows book club at just ten years old. Now at 17, he's written his first book full of inclusive recommendations for other Black boys.
Read more »
The 20 Best Baby Memory Books to Record Their First YearWant to document all of baby’s milestones? Here, shop the best baby books for storing photos and recording important moments.
Read more »
All the 2023 best picture Oscar nominees ranked, from worst to bestBest picture is the only Oscars category that uses a preferential ballot, where voters rank all 10 nominees. Here's how our critic would rank them.
Read more »
'No Straight Lines' unearths the hidden history of queer comic booksIn the 1970s and '80s, LGBTQ artists created queer underground comics, strips, and zines, decades before these representations would be seen in mainstream circulation. The new documentary from PBS highlights these trailblazers and their creations.
Read more »