Book Review: The Girl on the Train
/In this New York Times bestseller, a hapless woman spots a mysterious event from the window of her commuter train and is soon caught up in a police investigation.
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In this New York Times bestseller, a hapless woman spots a mysterious event from the window of her commuter train and is soon caught up in a police investigation.
Read MoreDriven into hiding by the victorious forces of William the Conqueror, the heroic Hereward the Wake and his band of freedom fighters must struggle to survive
Read MoreA strong-willed Bavarian princess captures the eye of the young Austro-Hungarian emperor in Allison Pataki's opulent new historical novel. Steve Donoghue reviews.
Read MoreIn Jo Walton's latest novel, the "just city" of Plato's Republic is brought to life via Greek gods, robots, and a little discreet time travel
Read MoreIn Dewey Lambdin's latest rousing Alan Lewrie adventure, our dashing hero sees action off the coast of a Spain imperiled by Napoleon
Read MoreIn V. E. Schwab's new fantasy novel, a young man can travel between a string of alternate-reality Londons
Read MoreIn Matt Sumell's debut, his main character manages to alienate every other person in the book, often by punching them.
Read MoreWhen a 21st-century woman travels to the hometown of Emily Dickinson, she finds herself caught between a passionate present and a past far more human than she imagined
Read MoreIn the very engaging latest from Sharma Shields, one family has a very unusual encounter with the legendary Bigfoot
Read MoreA small group of Americans visit a super-secret Chinese nature-park with a very unusual star attraction.
Read MoreThe author of "Dogwalker" returns with a new collection of interlinked short stories that revel in their own straight-faced absurdity
Read MoreIn this arresting debut, a young woman working in Paris is hiding from her past - and she worries that the old friends she betrayed are hunting her.
Read MoreTo shut down his internal censors, Karl Ove Knausgaard wrote My Struggle at the astounding rate of over a thousand pages a year. The result is fiction that is vibrantly alive.
Read MoreAny new translation of a classic like Anna Kareninainevitably raises an awkward question: what was wrong with all the old translations? Debut writer Zach Rabiroff takes it line-by-line
Read MoreClaudia Rankine articulates the truths of the black experience so poignantly in her celebrated collection Citizen by putting them, paradoxically, both plainly and artfully.
Read MoreA slim picaresque novel that was a runaway bestseller in France gets a stylish English-language translation
Read MoreA true believer in the tenets of Darwinism in the 19th Century goes on what amounts to a pilgrimage to that great Darwinian destination, the Galapagos Islands, in James Morrow's glowing new novel
Read MoreOnly one man can possibly save a plague- and fire-stricken sub that's burning and adrift at the top of the world ...
Read MoreMichael Mewshaw comes not to praise Gore Vidal but to bury him in this new memoir of a friendship that did not outlast Mr. Vidal's funeral.
Read MoreHorror fiction may not at first compare with more respectable genres, but look a bit closer. Horror is one of the oldest emotions known to man, and the artists who've evoked it have been some of our most brilliant and most strange ...
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