The Undying: Pain, Vulnerability, Mortality, Medicine, Art, Time, Dreams, Data, Exhaustion, Cancer, and Care The Undying dispels her anger in startling terms, pointing to a vital conversation about how we treat those who are dealing with illnesses—and how we should start to truly listen to them.
Nov 7, 2024 / Books & the Arts / Beatrice Loayza A conversation with the art historian Claire Bishop about technology's influence on museums and galleries, and her recent book Disordered Attention.
Since time immemorial, horror has found its way into various art forms, whether in fairy tales, books, paintings, sculptures, ...
A new children’s book tells the tale of a young South Dakota woman who flew dozens of mercy missions during the great blizzards of 1949. A new play explores the enduring fascination for a ...
Book Arts and Papermaking offers both traditional and explorative classes at all levels in papermaking, bookbinding, decorative paper techniques and letterpress printing. Papermaking and Book Arts ...
Watching it go about its life in the small ecosystem of the terrarium put me at ease.” Her book “The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating” is partly an autobiographical reflection on health and ...
By Marisa Meltzer CreditFrom left: Alexandra Milovanovich/Penske Media, via Getty Images; Eve Babitz Papers, the Huntington Library, Art Museum ... Wong In his latest book, the Rolling Stone ...
The Book & Publication Arts program emphasizes both the book as an art form (from artist’s books and fine press printing to sculptural and abstract bookworks) as well as the field of publishing as ...
Barnes & Noble booksellers and Amazon editors pored through this year's new releases, and both came to the same conclusion: This is the best book of 2023. Get ready to meet your next favorite author!
The latest from the chronicler of urban grit known for “Lush Life” and “Clockers” — as well as writing on “The Wire” TV series — is set in 2008 in East Harlem, where a five-story ...
Steve McQueen’s racial-identity tale takes revenge on his art patrons. Historians Niall Ferguson, Victor Davis Hanson, and Andrew Roberts appear together for the first time in a public forum.