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  • Paradise Lost

    Ariel Sabar's father, Yona, was from an Armenian-speaking Jewish community in remote Kurdistan. Yona immigrated to California and had a son who felt alienated from Yona's antiquated ways. In My Father's Paradise (Reviews, June 23), Sabar journeys to Kurdistan to bridge the barrier. What is the most surprising thing you learned? How central Iraq was to the history of the Jewish Diaspora.

  • Q & A with Lane Smith

    Lane Smith’s Madam President (Disney-Hyperion) concerns a girl who approaches every deed—from negotiating a dog/cat treaty to cleaning her room—as the sworn duty of the U.S. Commander in Chief. As the 2008 election approaches, Smith talks about this new picture book and his tongue-in-cheek John, Paul, George and Ben, on the childhood lives of the Founding Fathers.

  • The Next Weird Thing: PW Talks with Daryl Gregory

    Daryl Gregory blends psychology and demonology in his dark fantasy debut, Pandemonium.

  • Home on the Range: PW Talks with Annie Proulx

    Annie Proulx's new book, Fine Just the Way It Is (Scribner, Sept.), is the third collection in the Wyoming Stories, “the last,” Proulx says emphatically. And when Annie Proulx says it, you believe her. She wants to write about something else, she says. “I like to keep moving... shake things up.

  • Accelerate the Personal

    In Downtown Owl, the pop-culture critic and Esquire columnist tries his hand at fiction by examining a small town in North Dakota.

  • PW Talks with Paul and Anne Ehrlich: A Web-Exclusive Q&A

    In Dominant Animal (Island Press), ecologists Paul and Anne Ehrlich, who authored the highly influential The Population Bombforty years ago, recalibrate their vision and find that, despite some progress (heading off some of their more dire 1968 predictions), our species is still overshooting the capacity of the planet to sustain itself, and must change our ways.

  • Pen Pals

    In her new book, White Heat (Reviews, June 23), literary critic Brenda Wineapple looks closely at the 25-year epistolary friendship between the reclusive Emily Dickinson and activist and man of letters Thomas Wentworth Higginson, to whom she sent many of her most famous poems. Higginson was criticized for his part in the heavily edited posthumous versions of Dickinson's poems and, until now, ha...

  • Mongolian Noir

    Michael Walters's first novel, The Shadow Walker (Reviews, June 16), is a mystery set in modern Mongolia, to which the British author has traveled as a management consultant. When did you first visit Mongolia? In the early 1990s, when the country was going through dramatic change following the collapse of the U.

  • Hit Parade: PW Talks with Lawrence BlockA Web-Exclusive Q&A

    Prolific mystery writer Lawrence Blocks talks to PW about his latest series starring Keller, the laconic, stamp-collecting hitman on the brink of retirement. William Morrow will publish Hit and Run on Block’s 70th birthday.

  • Bad Moon Setting

    After nearly four decades of marriage, Anne Roiphe's husband collapsed from a fatal heart attack in the lobby of their apartment building. In her new memoir, Epilogue, she puts to the test the old saying, “Time is the widow's friend,” as she begins rebuilding her life. Tell me about the significance of the moon in the book.

  • Tolstoy in Queens

    Irina Reyn's debut novel, What Happened to Anna K., transports Anna Karenina to Queens, N.Y., where she struggles with familiar issues of identity, social rules, gender and loyalty a century later and a continent away.

  • Washed Up by 15

    The second thriller from former Cosmopolitan (U.K.) editor-in-chief Sam Baker starring fashion journalist Annie Anderson, Deadly Beautiful, takes a hard look at the too often brief careers of teen models, one of whom, Scarlett Ulrich, may be the victim of a serial killer in Japan.

  • Q & A with Diana Wynne Jones

    Bookshelf spoke with Diana Wynne Jones about her new novel, House of Many Ways (Greenwillow).

  • Critics Have Feelings, Too

    James Wood, 42, is from the U.K. He's tall, walks fast, drives a white Mini Cooper, speaks eloquently and enjoys a nicely tended garden. It's after lunch, and he's walking (quickly) down Brattle Street in Cambridge, Mass., when he spots two kids playing on the immaculate front lawn of a stately house.

  • The Mighty Jungle

    Kira Salak made her name as a chronicler of her daring adventures in the remotest corners of the globe. In The White Mary, she gives us Marika Vecera, an explorer who ventures into the jungles of Papua New Guinea and confronts the perils hidden within her own heart. After so much success with nonfiction, what inspired you to turn to fiction? While I love writing nonfiction, I'...

  • Women on the Edge

    Novelist Elizabeth Subercaseaux was born in Chile and worked as a journalist during the Pinochet dictatorship. She left Chile in 1990 and married an American academic. She now lives near Philadelphia, though she still writes a column for La Nación in Santiago, covering American politics. A Week in October is her first novel to be translated into English.

  • The Science of Murder

    Simon Baatz explores the role psychiatry played in the legendary 1924 Leopold and Loeb case, in For the Thrill of It.

  • No Bones About It

    It takes discipline,” bestselling crime writer Kathy Reichs says. “Any time that I'm not at my lab or testifying or traveling, I write all day.” Reichs, 57, embodies the age-old adage of writing what you know: she is a board-certified forensic anthropologist who divides her time between working for the state Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in North Carolina and the Labora...

  • Ann Leary--Wife of Comedian and Actor Denis Leary--Turns Novelist: A PW Web-Exclusive Q&A

    Out-Takes from A Marriage takes a look at our celebrity culture.

  • Burden of Revenge

    In Edgar-finalist Michael Koryta's Envy the Night, a stand-alone thriller, Frank Temple III struggles to come to terms with the violent legacy of his father, a government agent turned gun for hire.

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