As this work's subtitle suggests, Wiegand, a professor emeritus at Florida State University's School of Information, takes a user-centered approach in this history of American public libraries.
Metropolitan takes Mahmoud Khalil’s memoir, Hogarth signs two from National Book Award longlister Saou Ichikawa, and more.
The Late Show’s final broadcast last night marked the end of Colbert’s two-decades-long tenure as a frequent interviewer of ...
The Association of American Publishers is looking to stem the tide of illegal AI-generated audiobooks, which have ...
In explaining remarks made on the Today show, the Barnes & Noble CEO noted that, as far as his aware, the company does not ...
The metafictional novel, published in the U.S. by Graywolf, is the first book translated from Mandarin Chinese to win the ...
Judge Jed S. Rakoff ordered the pirate site to immediately stop copying and selling copyrighted material that it had ...
With no new Sarah J. Maas book last fiscal year, sales in the consumer group fell, but sales in the academic and professional ...
The new partnership between the San Francisco–based publisher and romantasy author, facilitated by IMG Licensing and ...
With Marvel’s longtime head of comics stepping down after nearly 30 years, TV chief Brad Winderbaum will now oversee the ...
The Religious Left (NYU Press, June) sees the influential scholar of faith in American public life examine the hits and ...
The author’s second novel, ‘Crocodilopolis’ (Bloomsbury, Aug.), chronicles a sibling rivalry rooted in a Costa Rican ...
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