@WSJ 2 years ago From @WSJBooks: Here's our annual guide to savvy gift-giving for discerning readers of all ages, interests and attention spans on.wsj.com
@WSJ 3 years ago Selected by the editors of @WSJBooks, here are this year’s most distinguished works of fiction and nonfiction on.wsj.com
@WSJ 3 years ago Selected by the editors of the @WSJBooks pages, here are this year’s most distinguished works of fiction and nonfiction on.wsj.com
@WSJ 3 years ago This season’s new works of fiction promise immersion, reflection and the particular delights of storytelling. @WSJBooks highlights stories from Jonathan Franzen, Anthony Doerr, Gayl Jones, Colson Whitehead and more. on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago The women who guided a powerful British clan; Shirley Jackson’s family circus; a moment of truth in divided Berlin; a tale of paternal vengeance and more. Here’s what to read this week from @WSJbooks. on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago Having great books on hand for kids of every age is bound to make your family summertime even richer—and more relaxing. Explore these reviews from @WSJbooks to perfect your summer reading list: on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago Here’s your summer reading guide from @WSJbooks, featuring vacation-ready fiction and nonfiction—and the best books on road trips, nature, golf and more. on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: Marcus Aurelius was confident that goodness can be attained—that we can choose virtue, and avoid vice, with every decision we make on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: Throw him to the lampreys! Ancient Romans had plenty of ways—some more grisly than others—to dispatch everyone from disobedient servants to emperors. on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJBooks: Here are 12 of the month’s most noteworthy books, according to WSJ reviewers on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: Why do flourishing cities vanish? And can answering that question help us protect our cities from the challenges to come? on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: How should economic liberty be balanced against the social interest? And are they different? on.wsj.com
@WSJ 3 years ago Here is a selection of February’s most noteworthy books, as discussed by The Wall Street Journal’s reviewers. This month, @WSJBooks critics reviewed books about America’s bird, the Navy’s atomic pioneer, a legendary sports partnership and more. on.wsj.com
@WSJ 3 years ago Selected by the editors of the @WSJBooks pages, here are this year’s most distinguished works of fiction and nonfiction on.wsj.com
@WSJ 3 years ago Here are the best books to buy this holiday season, according to @WSJBooks contributors on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: Our picks for fiction, history, children’s books—and more. Here's what to read this fall. on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJBooks: A Nobel Prize-winning psychologist and economist and his co-authors explain how noise undermines the workings of professionals in fields such as medicine, law and economics. “Wherever there is judgment, there is noise.” on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago Having great books on hand for kids of every age is bound to make your family summertime even richer—and more relaxing. Explore these reviews from @WSJbooks to perfect your summer reading list: on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: The unsung heroism of a Japanese-American combat unit, Francis Spufford’s act of resurrection, the mind of Kurt Gödel, Claire Fuller’s timeless novel and more. Here’s what to read this week on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: In “Of Human Kindness: What Shakespeare Teaches Us About Empathy,” Paula Marantz Cohen finds empathy central to the manifold power of Shakespeare’s work, the element which has allowed it to outlast the time that gave rise to it. on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: Her charm was legendary, but White House watchers knew Lady Bird Johnson’s power ran well below the surface. Judith Martin reviews “Lady Bird Johnson: Hiding in Plain Sight” by @JuliaSweig on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: A refugee from Nazi Germany, Kurt Wolff made it a mission to introduce the world’s voices to American readers. Benjamin Balint reviews “Endpapers” by @alexander_wolff on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: A scandal within Baltimore’s police culture revealed a cancer of criminal activity. Could it be rooted out? @sarahw reviews “We Own This City” by @justin_fenton. on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: Sometimes the details tell the story: An obscure painting, an open book and a controversy that shook the learned world on.wsj.com
@WSJ 3 years ago From @WSJbooks: Here's a roundup of the best book reviews from the business world this year, featuring tales of inventors, investors, innovators and more on.wsj.com
@WSJ 3 years ago Selected by the editors of the @WSJBooks pages, here are this year’s most distinguished works of fiction and nonfiction on.wsj.com
@WSJ 3 years ago From @WSJbooks: Investigating the secrets of the universe—and the physics of everyday life—has never been so much fun. on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: Colson Whitehead’s “Harlem Shuffle,” Christopher Clarey’s “The Master,” Daniel M. Gade and Daniel Huang’s “Wounding Warriors” and more. Here are the best book reviews of September. on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago "Dangerous Ideas," "Dream Girl," "Helgoland" and more. Here are this month's most noteworthy books, according to @WSJbooks reviewers. on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago Edgar Allan Poe’s scientific prophecy, a desperate World War II naval mission, the hope and heartbreak of Mets’ fandom, the reign of Serena Williams on the court and more. Here’s what to read this week from @WSJbooks on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: The secrets of the forest, a double agent’s last confession, Paul Theroux’s surfing tale, a friendly pack of dog stories and more. Here’s what to read this weekend. on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago “The Committed,” “A Beginner’s Guide to America,” “When Brains Dream” and more. Here’s the best books of March, according to @WSJbooks reviewers on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: A New England minister and his betrothed were stars of the 1820s evangelical community—then a rival spoke up on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: Abraham Lincoln was largely self-educated, but he wisely chose a handful of mentors and role models who helped shape his political life on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: Organizational psychologist @AdamMGrant goads us to be humble in our convictions, curious about the alternatives—and open to discovery. Philip Delves Broughton reviews “Think Again: The Power of Knowing What You Don’t Know.” on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: In the face of extinctions, a writer’s call to cherish the voices that make a symphony out of the natural world. @DannyHeitman reviews “Earth’s Wild Music” by Kathleen Dean Moore. on.wsj.com
@WSJ 3 years ago A simple question—“What did you read this year?”—unlocks a world of fascinating conversations. @wsjbooks asked leading lights in business, politics, writing and the arts to share their most memorable reading of 2021. on.wsj.com
@WSJ 3 years ago A selection of the month’s most noteworthy books, as discussed by @WSJBooks reviewers on.wsj.com
@WSJ 3 years ago From @WSJbooks: Voting fraud happens, but is it "massive"? Mollie Hemingway and others weigh in with new books. on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJBooks: Abraham Lincoln had to shoulder the unique burden of leadership during a civil war—but the trials of his dysfunctional domestic life surely added to the strain. We review “An American Marriage” and other noteworthy books this month. on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago How Polynesians wove a net of island cultures, the curious power of color, girl-group harmony and new fiction from Diane Johnson and Francine Prose. Here’s what to read this week from @WSJbooks on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago Here’s what to read this week from @WSJbooks: Five books that illuminate the experience of D-Day, new fiction from Rivka Galchen, myth versus history at the Alamo, the Roman art of political humor and more. on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago “The Agitators,” “The Man Who Lived Underground,” “Mom Genes” and more. Here are this month’s most noteworthy books, as selected by @wsjbooks reviewers. on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: An innovative painter in her 1950s Manhattan milieu, the prehistory of work, a family saga of war and renewal, fly fishing’s quiet allure, and more. Here’s what to read this weekend on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: An immigrant writer offers a reflection on the nature of arrival in the “promised land” on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: Richard Ovenden’s “Burning the Books” is a timely reminder and a tribute to those who have fought diligently to protect the works of the past on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: We are in the midst of a full-blown loneliness epidemic and it was gathering steam well before Covid arrived, writes Billy Baker in “We Need to Hang Out: A Memoir of Making Friends” on.wsj.com
@WSJ 4 years ago From @WSJbooks: Fearing the competition for women patients, physicians barred the door to female doctors—until the Blackwells wrenched it open. @donnarifkind reviews “The Doctors Blackwell” by @janicenimura. on.wsj.com