
Critics Love It. But Who Wrote It?
A best-selling novel about disability was written via letter board. Or so the story goes.
Introducing The Atlantic’s expanded books coverage: essays, criticism, fiction, poetry, and recommendations from our writers and editors

A best-selling novel about disability was written via letter board. Or so the story goes.

Testing has become so advanced that doctors now miss important elements of diagnosis.

Her new memoir captures the cost of being an impossibly popular target.

Humankind has devised a new form of debasement.

A new book by an unremarkable Republican accidentally illuminates the devolution of the party.
Our culture editors’ weekly guide to the best in books.

Gary Shteyngart finds the universal in Cape Town.

A recently published book casts doubt on the composer’s insistence that his enduring musicals were never autobiographical.

Annoying characters let us admit that we might be annoying too.

In a time of AI sex and looksmaxxing, a new book calls on humans to rediscover intimacy.

Searching for the Nobel laureate in Cape Town, the city he left behind

Jordy Rosenberg’s Night Night Fawn is autofiction told from a sidelong distance.

Can a generation of graduates frustrated by their economic prospects change American labor politics?

A poem

Montserrat Roig’s classic novel captures Barcelona on the cusp of unimaginable change.