How does his latest book hold up in an age of eroding reality? Credit...Photo illustration by Mike McQuade Supported by By ...
The four characters, and the way their lives interact, are the very core of the story itself. As McMullen determined their ...
This fall, check out these noteworthy British mysteries from Richard Osman, Elizabeth George, Ann Cleeves and Charles Finch.
Thomas Moore Sr., a retired U.S. Air Force master sergeant, had hoped to pay off his mortgage, become debt-free and set up a ...
From FitzGerald v Haughey and ‘Bailout Babies’ to Dan Brown and Anne Enright, Marjorie Brennan rounds up a selection of new ...
As the legendary American author releases his long-awaited new novel, Martin Chilton explores Pynchon’s reputation as one of the most ‘reclusive’ writers working right now ...
Shadow Ticket,” Pynchon’s first book in a dozen years, unfolds its conspiracies in Depression-era Milwaukee and beyond, but ...
The lesson is clear: refugee integration is not only about jobs or English — it is about the community resilience that makes them possible.
Shadow Ticket, Thomas Pynchon’s new novel, is built around doubles. It takes place in 1932, and there’s a strong feeling that “unfinished business” from the Great War – ...
America’s best-known, least-seen writer is back with a swaggering, hard-boiled caper set in a 1930s US toying with fascism ...