Picture-Book Editions of Two Children’s Stories by Clarice Lispector

Prickly, eccentric, endlessly complex — the Brazilian novelist Clarice Lispector (1920-77) has remained a bundle of contradictions years after her death. Lispector was idolized for her best-selling stories of emotional tumult and alienation; her glamorous appearance — she was famously compared to a “she-wolf” — and immensely private nature only added to the mystique. Her … Read more

Book Review: ‘Red Scare,’ by Clay Risen

RED SCARE: Blacklists, McCarthyism, and the Making of Modern America, by Clay Risen When the end came for Joe McCarthy, it was Edward R. Murrow who delivered the knockout blow. On his CBS program “See It Now,” Murrow ran damning footage of the red-baiting Wisconsin senator, who appeared hectoring and disheveled to viewers. Murrow proclaimed … Read more

Book Review: ‘Trespassers at the Golden Gate,’ by Gary Krist

There were always those who did not conform: Krist’s wide canvas is peopled with intriguing minor figures like Ah Toy, a Chinese immigrant sex worker; a French frog-catcher, Jeanne Bonnet, who fell afoul of restrictions on cross-dressing; and Mary Ellen Pleasant, a civil rights pioneer who fought to desegregate the city’s streetcars. But these individuals … Read more

Jennifer Johnston, Irish Novelist Who Probed Country’s Fault Lines, Dies at 95

Jennifer Johnston, an admired Irish novelist whose precise, carefully woven fictions depicted historic fault lines in her country’s upper crust and frailties in its latter-day middle class, died on Feb. 25 in Dun Laoghaire, outside Dublin. She was 95. Her death, in a nursing home, was announced by President Michael D. Higgins of Ireland, who … Read more

8 New Books We Recommend This Week

We recommend a bounty of good fiction this week, with a collection by Torrey Peters, a mystery by Deanna Raybourn and new novels from Chaim Grade, Karen Russell and others. In nonfiction, we like a journalist’s look back at a little-remembered episode of police brutality from the 1980s and a damning, juicy tell-all by a … Read more

Book Review: ‘Hypochondria,’ by Will Rees

HYPOCHONDRIA, by Will Rees As a cultural attitude, “ignorance is bliss” has sort of fallen out of favor. Much more de rigueur: “Do the work,” “the only way out is through,” “see something say something.” Never mind that Thomas Gray’s 18th-century adage happens to be true, and, in the case of the inner machinations of … Read more