must reads

8 New Books You Should Read This June

A family epic from a National Book Award winner, a gonzo account of Britney Spears’s unraveling, and an inner monologue of an obsessive snob.
podcast
brain dump

How I’m Fixing My Broken Attention Span

The infinite scroll has ruined our ability to focus. Is wasting more time the key to getting it back?
book review

Susan Choi Is Still Outlandishly Talented

A father’s disappearance, and the black hole of uncertainty surrounding it, are the subject of her prickly new novel.
  1. announcements
    Read Rob Franklin’s Great Black Hope With New York’s Summer Book ClubJoin a group of our writers and editors for a weekly discussion newsletter, starting next month.
  2. coming soon
    The Sun Hasn’t Set on the Sunrise on the Reaping CastGlenn Close will play Druscilla Sickle opposite Billy Porter as her husband.
  3. book review
    Cheating On Your PoliticsIn her new book, Spent, Alison Bechdel once again gives us people whose lofty ideas about society exceed their ability, or willingness, to change it.
  4. power
    E. Jean Carroll Has Written a Secret Book — And Learned to ShootA year and a half after defeating Trump for the second time, Carroll is showing a side of herself kept hidden in the trials.
  5. book review
    A Worthy Novel About These Times™Jess Walter’s So Far Gone is a madcap road novel that aptly captures the absurdity of the past ten years.
  6. spellcasting
    Harry Potter and the Next Generation of British CelebritiesHBO’s new Draco gets Johnny Flynn as his father, Lucius Malfoy.
  7. remembrance
    How I’ll Remember Edmund WhiteBooks and boys and big dinners at home.
  8. best of 2025
    The Best Books of 2025 (So Far)Including the millennial answer to bell hooks’s All About Love.
  9. vulture lists
    50 Book-to-Screen Adaptations to Add to Your 2025 Reading ListMike Flanagan is back with another Stephen King movie.
  10. vulture lists
    6 Great Audiobooks to Listen to This MonthIncluding a thriller this is as preposterous as it is genius.
  11. summer preview 2025
    28 Books We Can’t Wait to Read This SummerWhether you want to make sense of reality or escape it — through climate fiction, searing memoirs, and tight thrillers.
  12. chapters
    Twilight Was Just What an Oversexualized Generation NeededIn its depictions of teenage desire, the series took a cue from chaste high-school movies of long ago.
  13. up next
    ACOTAR Book 6: Everything Sarah J. Maas Has Said So FarSarah J. Maas confirmed she’s been working on the next installment of A Court of Thorns and Roses.
  14. book review
    The Romance of Being UnreadableIn his debut novel, Ocean Vuong took pains to be illegible, then blamed the reader for reading. In his new book, he is finally ready to talk.
  15. and the winner is…
    Branden Jacobs-Jenkins Finally Wins His First Pulitzer for PurposeAnd New York theater critic Sara Holdren is a finalist in Criticism.
  16. graphic design is my passion
    What Kind of Ugly Should a Book Cover Be?The new Europa all-in-one edition of Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan quartet is the wrong kind of garish.
  17. must reads
    8 New Books You Should Read This MayA grumpy bookshop employee’s musings, an investigation of parenthood in the digital age, and an essential history of OpenAI.
  18. a long talk
    ‘I’m Looking for Someone to Fight, Not Someone to Run Over With My Car’Andrea Long Chu on her new book, Authority; the so-called crisis of criticism; and how she chooses her subjects.
  19. the uptown girl
    Christie Brinkley Gave Billy Joel One Too Many ChancesIn her new memoir, the model recounts her ex-husband’s drunken outbursts, including a chaise longue thrown through patio doors.
  20. shameless
    ‘It’s Cynical, Manipulative, and Cruel’Booksellers are not happy about the tech giant’s decision to hold its big annual book sale during Independent Bookstore Day.
  21. coming soon
    Belly Faces the Battle of the BrothersOne final decision for the last season of The Summer I Turned Pretty.
  22. azkaban for all
    The Harry Potter TV Show Casting Is Getting MessyBook fans are spamming HBO’s socials begging the channel to recast Snape.
  23. careers
    Carol Leifer’s Many Comedy LivesShe wrote on SNL’s weirdest season, dozens of Seinfeld episodes, and the Conan-hosted Oscars. She’s got stories.
  24. books
    There Is No Safe WordHow the best-selling fantasy author Neil Gaiman hid the darkest parts of himself for decades.
  25. well read
    McNally Jackson Is Starting a Book FestivalThe city’s big little indie-bookstore chain is betting on the idea that readers want something more than the standard launch party.
  26. chapters
    “It Feels Like We’re Lost in the East Village and Can’t Find a Way Out”Jeffrey Seller, co-producer of ‘Rent,’ on Jonathan Larson and his show’s bumpy road to success.
  27. say it ain’t so
    Weezer Bassist’s Wife Shot by Police, Arrested for Attempted MurderJillian Lauren is “all right,” her husband said — and so is his band’s Coachella set.
  28. endings
    What Sunrise on the Reaping Means for the World of the Hunger GamesSpoiler warning for just about every book in the series.
  29. book review
    Katie Kitamura Gets Too AbstractAudition’s lack of novelistic detail is both a strength and a weakness.
  30. books
    The National Book Foundation’s New ‘5 Under 35’ Is HereFrom a heady tale of non-monogamy to a haunted voice assistant, this year’s nominees confront a changing world.
  31. beast mode
    MrBeast Starts a New Chapter As a James Patterson Co-AuthorTheir joint thriller novel is reportedly already at the center of an eight-figure bidding war.
  32. we tell ourselves stories
    A First Look Into the Joan Didion ArchivesHer papers and John Gregory Dunne’s open to researchers at the New York Public Library today.
  33. chat room
    Mike Campbell Doesn’t Know How He Got So LuckyThe Heartbreaker on his unspoken bond with Tom Petty, “sideman syndrome,” and Bob Dylan being jealous of “The Boys of Summer.”
  34. chat room
    Bob the Drag Queen Doesn’t Play About Harriet TubmanHis debut novel imagines the abolitionist as a modern hip-hop artist, and he’s already writing a stage adaptation with a dream cast in mind.
  35. encounter
    Can Simon & Schuster Become the A24 of Books?The imprint’s new publisher is betting on it.
  36. let me in your window
    This Is Not the First Miscast Wuthering HeightsMargot Robbie doesn’t look like Cathy Linton — but neither do most Cathy Lintons.
  37. backstories
    The Gag Order That Birthed a BestsellerBehind the making of Careless People, the Facebook tell-all that its publisher insists is “not a book of news.”
  38. diet pepsi by addison rae
    How Did Colleen Hoover Get Here?Breaking down the romance author’s success and stagnation.
  39. a long talk
    Michelle Zauner’s Success Nearly Destroyed HerAnd then the Crying in H Mart film fell apart. But she’s changing her fortune with a new Japanese Breakfast album.
  40. double trouble boil bubble etc.
    Now These Two Are Fighting?The rapper and author go head-to-head on X.
  41. book review
    The Gay Dirtbag Lives OnKristen Arnett’s specialty is queer women in Florida who are Going Through Some Stuff.
  42. books
    Torrey Peters Speaks LumberjackThe Stag Dance author on exploring transness as a feeling through logger slang. “I was like, I just want to write these weird words.”
  43. metafiction vibes
    “It’s Pretty Human, But It’s Still Bad.”Analyzing OpenAI’s ‘metafictional literary short story’ with an open-minded English professor.
  44. books
    Cynthia Ozick Is UndiminishedNearing 97, she’s universally praised, freshly republished, and (maybe even) more widely read than ever. She’s also a world-class emailer.
  45. cheat sheet
    Say ‘I Do’ to the Divorce MemoirEveryone’s writing about the end of their marriage, for better or worse.
  46. book review
    Transness Gets Metaphorical in Torrey Peters’s Stag DanceShe examines the messy underbelly of DIY trans culture, diving into the cringier aspects of queer growing pains.
  47. backstories
    Toni Morrison’s Lost PlayWhy did the novelist’s only staged drama disappear for so long?
  48. book review
    The Minority Report Gets a Trump-Era UpdateLaila Lalami’s The Dream Hotel is an alarming dystopian approximation of what we might be headed toward.
  49. book review
    Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Frustrating ReturnHer new novel Dream Count suffers from the retrograde gender politics and bad writing that has defined her career of late.
  50. neighborhood news
    ‘So You All Got the Email …’At the launch for Susan Morrison’s Lorne after a reply-all blizzard.
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