At the halfway point in the year, we’re taking stock of what’s been published and what’s coming, highlighting some of the best (and most attention-grabbing) publications of recent months: Belle Burden ...
The math hits hard. Roughly 37 percent of US financial advisors plan to retire over the next decade, taking some $10.4 trillion in client assets with them, according to Cerulli Associates. This means ...
The nonfiction and novels we can’t stop thinking about. Credit...The New York Times Supported by By The New York Times Books Staff We’re halfway through 2026 and we at The Book Review have already ...
Dishing about what you’re reading is one of life’s greatest pleasures. Even better if your audience has read the same book. Reading with others also provides space to deepen community, ignite ...
If I could see the world through a 2-year-old’s eyes, I’d see endless wonder, imagination and curiosity. These characteristics are precisely why toddlers love books so much—books provide a way for ...
This issue is preventing our website from loading properly. Please review the following troubleshooting tips or contact us at [email protected]. Books: The 5 Best ...
In his 2019 book, How to Hide an Empire, US historian Daniel Immerwahr argues that America began losing its appetite for territorial expansion in the 20th century as flag-­waving colonialism fell out ...
This award follows a $581 million contract with Amazon Web Services as the Air Force continues to build out its multi-cloud infrastructure. The Air Force has added another major cloud service provider ...
Oracle nodes create visions of yourself or enemies, and correctly matching your actions to these visions triggers massive damage bonuses, guaranteed critical effects, or powerful utility buffs. This ...
Artificial Intelligence is no longer a future technology. We are witnessing the AI revolution right now, and it’s improving at a breakneck pace. So to understand this essential technology, we have ...
Our favorite books this year (in no particular order) included definitive memoirs by music figures as varied as Ozzy Osbourne, Lionel Richie, and Cameron Crowe; chronicles of bands long gone and those ...