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Graphic Books Best Seller List: June 13
This week, the top two books on the hardcover list are based on video games.
Share your thoughts and memories of Hilly Kristal and his groundbreaking club.
“Kid Nation,” a CBS reality show that is scheduled to have its premiere on Sept. 19, took 40 children, ages 8 to 15, and placed them in a New Mexico desert “ghost town” near Santa Fe for 40 days, during which they had little to no contact with their parents.
Children who participated in the show, [...]
Published 50 years ago, “On the Road” still sells about 100,000 copies a year in various paperback editions, according to Viking. And while its era as a counterculture standard-bearer may have passed, it has far outlasted many other cult classics.
Viking is releasing a 50th-anniversary edition on Thursday (the original came out Sept. 5, 1957), and [...]
Do you agree with Howard P. Chudacoff, who suggests in his new book, “Children at Play: An American History,” that organized activities, overscheduling and excessive amounts of homework are crowding out free time and constricting children’s imaginations and social skills?
Share your thoughts.
Related Article
London Theater Journal: A 21-day marathon of theater-going draws to a close with a rather subdued public execution at the Globe Theater.
London Theater Journal: Two shows, two lead actors out with a sore throat, yet it made little difference in the end.
London Theater Journal: A dour day is turned around by one very good show at the National Theater, courtesy of Gorky.
The orchestra finally turned up in the Festival of Contemporary Music on Wednesday, and listeners got a blast of the color they had missed in this week of mostly piano, percussion and electronic music.
London Theater Journal: British critics worry that the West End is turning into a facsimile of Broadway, with mega-musicals crowding out serious plays
The Festival of Contemporary Music has held benefits for the young composition fellows of the Tanglewood Music Center, even though it does not directly include them.
In concert programming, you can make any case seem plausible simply by stacking the deck, as John Harbison did on Tuesday evening, by grouping together several composers with jazz leanings.
Can instrumental concert music, independent of text, address politics in any meaningful way? Probably not.
This week, the top two books on the hardcover list are based on video games.
How do you feel about the switch, or what it says about development in New York?
Daily reports on culture and the arts.
June 21
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Aural experiences during "Duet for One" and "Waiting for Godot" in London.
June 20
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At the National Theater's production of Racine's "Phedre," starring Helen Mirren.
June 19
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A slide show of photographs of cultural events from this week.
June 19
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That guy next to you on the train who is relentlessly tapping away at his iPhone could be a workaholic or a tech-savvy solipsist, or he might just be a lover of classical music.
June 19
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This week: Katie Roiphe on Cristina Nehring's "Vindication of Love"; Ross Douthat on Mark Helprin's "Digital Barbarism"; Motoko Rich with notes from the field; and Jennifer Schuessler with best-seller news. Sam Tanenhaus, the editor of the Book Review, is the host.
An insider’s guide to the media industry that tracks the massive transformation of the movie business, television, print, marketing and new media.
A blog about books and other forms of printed matter, written by the editors of The Book Review.
Read Melena Ryzik's UrbanEye report each weekday to find out about New York's newest restaurants, cultural events, weekend activities, latest styles and more.