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            <![CDATA[ 13 New Books to Watch For in February Show ]]>
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            <![CDATA[ <p class=css-w6ymp8 e1wiw3jv0>Show-business biographies of Mike Nichols and Tom Stoppard, environmental treatises by Bill Gates and Elizabeth Kolbert, debut novels of life online and more.</p>
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<h3 id=link-16740998 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Between Two Kingdoms: A Memoir of a Life Interrupted,’ by Suleika Jaouad (Random House, Feb. 9)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Soon after graduating from college, Jaouad received an alarming diagnosis:<strong class=css-8qgvsz ebyp5n10> </strong>Her unexplained rashes and fatigue were the result of an aggressive type of leukemia. Jaouad documented much of her chemotherapy and treatment in a <a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://well.blogs.nytimes.com/author/suleika-jaouad>column for The Times</a>, and her book reflects on life after remission. A cross-country trip allowed her to meet people who had written to her during treatment — and figure out what kind of life she wanted to lead.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-large wp-image-12098 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/The-Black-Church-674x1024.jpg alt=The Black Church width=674 height=1024 />
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<h3 id=link-7e0ddbb class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘The Black Church: This Is Our Story, This Is Our Song,’ by Henry Louis Gates Jr. (Penguin Press, Feb. 16)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Gates interweaves his own childhood experiences with more than 400 years of history to analyze how Christianity, and the community of Black churches, helped create a culture that subverted centuries of oppression. “We need only look at the brilliant use of the church in all of its forms — from W.E.B. Du Bois’s triptych of ‘the Preacher, the Music, and the Frenzy’ to the use of the building itself — to see the revolutionary potential and practice of Black Christianity in forging social change,” Gates writes. “There is no question that the Black Church is one of the parents of the civil rights movement, and today’s Black Lives Matter movement is one of its heirs.”</p>

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<h3 id=link-20dfc7d class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Fake Accounts,’ by Lauren Oyler (Catapult, Feb. 2)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Shortly before Donald Trump’s inauguration, the narrator of Oyler’s debut novel discovers her boyfriend is an online conspiracy theorist, which eventually frees her to leave New York and move to Berlin. Oyler uses the premise to explore how social media has reshaped not only intimate relationships but also the idea of individual identity and selfhood.</p>

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<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0><em class=css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0>[ </em><a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/26/books/review-fake-accounts-lauren-oyler.html><em class=css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0>Read our review</em></a><em class=css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0>. ]</em></p>

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<div class=css-z3e15g data-testid=photoviewer-wrapper-hidden><img class=aligncenter size-full wp-image-12094 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/How-to-Avoid-a-Climate-Disaster.jpg alt=How to Avoid a Climate Disaster width=701 height=1024 /></div>
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<h3 id=link-1f107171 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘How to Avoid a Climate Disaster: The Solutions We Have and the Breakthroughs We Need,’ by Bill Gates (Knopf, Feb. 16)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>This book arrives at a <a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/climate/2020-climate-change.html>critical moment</a>: 2020 was one of the hottest years on record, California had its worst fire season, a record number of storms formed and made landfall in the United States, among plenty of other reasons for alarm. Gates outlines how, using a combination of science and technology, humans can bring greenhouse gas emissions per year to zero.</p>

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<h3 id=link-788cfd89 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Mike Nichols: A Life,’ by Mark Harris (Penguin Press, Feb. 2)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Nichols had a singular career: He directed four consecutive hit plays, made his film directing debut with “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” and followed it with “The Graduate,” and amassed critical and commercial success almost instantly. Harris, a longtime entertainment reporter, did hundreds of interviews, talking to Meryl Streep, Glenn Close, Stephen Sondheim and other luminaries for a cleareyed — if not always generous — account.</p>

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<h3 class=css-1p08cbr>Lizzie Borden’s Notoriety Is This Home’s Selling Point</h3>
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<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0><em class=css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0>[ </em><a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/25/books/review-mike-nichols-biography-mark-harris.html><em class=css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0>Read our review</em></a><em class=css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0>. ]</em></p>

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<h3 id=link-500932f9 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Milk Fed,’ by Melissa Broder (Scribner, Feb. 2)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>This new novel, from <a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/26/books/the-pisces-melissa-broder.html>the author of “The Pisces,”</a> explores hunger in all its permutations through the eyes of Rachel, a young employee at a Los Angeles talent agency, who begins a romance with a woman who works at the frozen yogurt shop she frequents. As their relationship deepens, so does Rachel’s capacity for nourishment and pleasure, bodily and spiritually.</p>

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<h3 id=link-68b803e2 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘My Year Abroad,’ by Chang-rae Lee (Riverhead, Feb. 2)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>The life of Tiller, a young man in New Jersey, is changed once he meets Pong, a charismatic Chinese-American businessman who has made a fortune. Together, they travel across Asia, ginning up excitement for a health elixir that Pong believes will be his next success. But this novel, from the author of “<a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/14/books/on-such-a-full-sea-chang-rae-lees-tale-of-dystopia.html>On Such a Full Sea</a>,” is more than a high-octane picaresque: It’s also an examination of cultural identity and belonging.</p>

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<h3 id=link-743f1842 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘No One Is Talking About This,’ by Patricia Lockwood (Riverhead, Feb. 16)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>“Can a dog be twins?” That post brought the unnamed narrator of Lockwood’s first novel modest fame in the portal — Lockwood’s stand-in for the internet. The narrator is, arguably, <em class=css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0>too</em> online, spending hours and hours in a mix of memes, outrage and absurdity. Midway through the story, an urgent family crisis pulls the narrator out of the stream of the internet and firmly back into “real life,” raising questions about whether online exposure fundamentally rewires how we live.</p>

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<h3 id=link-166ac338 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Super Host,’ by Kate Russo (G.P. Putnam’s Sons, Feb. 9)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Bennett, the middle-aged artist at the heart of this novel set in West London, seems to be foundering: His professional prospects are dwindling, his wife has left him and resettled in the United States, and his precarious finances have forced him to move into a studio in his back garden and list his house on a site for vacation rentals. His guests — four women over the course of the story — offer him a chance to reawaken parts of himself that had fallen dormant.</p>

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<h3 id=link-2fcbce30 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘This Is How They Tell Me the World Ends<strong class=css-8qgvsz ebyp5n10>: The Cyberweapons Arms Race</strong>,’ by Nicole Perlroth (Bloomsbury, Feb. 9)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Perlroth, a cybersecurity reporter for The Times, dives into the shadowy and frightening world of cyberwarfare. Hackers have infiltrated American infrastructure (nuclear plants, power grids) and corporations to devastating effect, but why do these attacks continue to happen? Perlroth gives a fast-paced account of the U.S. government’s digital vulnerability, how it has been exploited and why the stakes couldn’t be higher.</p>

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<h3 id=link-585ba778 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Tom Stoppard: A Life,’ by Hermione Lee (Knopf, Feb. 23)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Lee is among the most acclaimed biographers working now, known for her previous books about <a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/books/97/06/08/reviews/970608.08merkint.html>Virginia Woolf</a>, <a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/19/books/penelope-fitzgerald-a-life-by-hermione-lee.html>Penelope Fitzgerald</a> and others, and here she offers an authoritative biography of the renowned playwright. Born in Czechoslovakia to Jewish parents, Stoppard and his family left suddenly for Singapore before the arrival of the Nazis, moved to India and finally settled in England after his mother remarried. Stoppard didn’t know much of his family story until late in life, when he discovered all four of his grandparents were Jewish, and Lee explores his artistic motivations as well as analyzing his work. As the character of Oscar Wilde says in “The Invention of Love,” one of Stoppard’s most celebrated plays, “Biography is the mesh through which our real life escapes.”</p>

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<h3 id=link-51397dae class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Under a White Sky: The Nature of the Future,’ by Elizabeth Kolbert (Crown, Feb. 9)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Kolbert sounded the alarm about man-made ecological disaster in her earlier book “<a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/16/books/review/the-sixth-extinction-by-elizabeth-kolbert.html>The Sixth Extinction</a>,” which <a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.pulitzer.org/winners/elizabeth-kolbert target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>won the Pulitzer Prize</a>. Now, she investigates whether any of our efforts can save the planet, after generations of damage. There are only a few comparable examples of destruction in the earth’s history, Kolbert writes — “the most recent being the asteroid impact that ended the reign of the dinosaurs, 66 million years ago.”</p>

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<h3 id=link-38b4e241 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Wild Rain,’ by Beverly Jenkins (Avon, Feb. 9)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>In post-Civil War Wyoming, a female rancher becomes romantically entwined with a reporter for a Black newspaper sent out West on assignment. This book is the second in Jenkins’s best-selling <a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://beverlyjenkins.net/series/women-who-dare/ target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Women Who Dare series</a>.
Source: New York Times</p>

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                <![CDATA[ 13 New Books to Watch For in February Show ]]>
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                <![CDATA[ <p class=css-w6ymp8 e1wiw3jv0>Show-business biographies of Mike Nichols and Tom Stoppard, environmental treatises by Bill Gates and Elizabeth Kolbert, debut novels of life online and more.</p>
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<h3 id=link-16740998 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Between Two Kingdoms: A Memoir of a Life Interrupted,’ by Suleika Jaouad (Random House, Feb. 9)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Soon after graduating from college, Jaouad received an alarming diagnosis:<strong class=css-8qgvsz ebyp5n10> </strong>Her unexplained rashes and fatigue were the result of an aggressive type of leukemia. Jaouad documented much of her chemotherapy and treatment in a <a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://well.blogs.nytimes.com/author/suleika-jaouad>column for The Times</a>, and her book reflects on life after remission. A cross-country trip allowed her to meet people who had written to her during treatment — and figure out what kind of life she wanted to lead.</p>
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<h3 id=link-7e0ddbb class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘The Black Church: This Is Our Story, This Is Our Song,’ by Henry Louis Gates Jr. (Penguin Press, Feb. 16)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Gates interweaves his own childhood experiences with more than 400 years of history to analyze how Christianity, and the community of Black churches, helped create a culture that subverted centuries of oppression. “We need only look at the brilliant use of the church in all of its forms — from W.E.B. Du Bois’s triptych of ‘the Preacher, the Music, and the Frenzy’ to the use of the building itself — to see the revolutionary potential and practice of Black Christianity in forging social change,” Gates writes. “There is no question that the Black Church is one of the parents of the civil rights movement, and today’s Black Lives Matter movement is one of its heirs.”</p>

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<h3 id=link-20dfc7d class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Fake Accounts,’ by Lauren Oyler (Catapult, Feb. 2)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Shortly before Donald Trump’s inauguration, the narrator of Oyler’s debut novel discovers her boyfriend is an online conspiracy theorist, which eventually frees her to leave New York and move to Berlin. Oyler uses the premise to explore how social media has reshaped not only intimate relationships but also the idea of individual identity and selfhood.</p>

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<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0><em class=css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0>[ </em><a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/26/books/review-fake-accounts-lauren-oyler.html><em class=css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0>Read our review</em></a><em class=css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0>. ]</em></p>

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<div class=css-z3e15g data-testid=photoviewer-wrapper-hidden><img class=aligncenter size-full wp-image-12094 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/How-to-Avoid-a-Climate-Disaster.jpg alt=How to Avoid a Climate Disaster width=701 height=1024 /></div>
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<h3 id=link-1f107171 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘How to Avoid a Climate Disaster: The Solutions We Have and the Breakthroughs We Need,’ by Bill Gates (Knopf, Feb. 16)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>This book arrives at a <a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/climate/2020-climate-change.html>critical moment</a>: 2020 was one of the hottest years on record, California had its worst fire season, a record number of storms formed and made landfall in the United States, among plenty of other reasons for alarm. Gates outlines how, using a combination of science and technology, humans can bring greenhouse gas emissions per year to zero.</p>

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<h3 id=link-788cfd89 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Mike Nichols: A Life,’ by Mark Harris (Penguin Press, Feb. 2)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Nichols had a singular career: He directed four consecutive hit plays, made his film directing debut with “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” and followed it with “The Graduate,” and amassed critical and commercial success almost instantly. Harris, a longtime entertainment reporter, did hundreds of interviews, talking to Meryl Streep, Glenn Close, Stephen Sondheim and other luminaries for a cleareyed — if not always generous — account.</p>

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<h3 class=css-1p08cbr>Lizzie Borden’s Notoriety Is This Home’s Selling Point</h3>
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<a class=gtm-tagged href=https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/27/books/new-february-books.html?action=click&amp;module=editorContent&amp;pgtype=Article&amp;region=CompanionColumn&amp;contentCollection=Trending#after-pp_edpick>Continue reading the main story</a>
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<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0><em class=css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0>[ </em><a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/25/books/review-mike-nichols-biography-mark-harris.html><em class=css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0>Read our review</em></a><em class=css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0>. ]</em></p>

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<img class=aligncenter size-large wp-image-12102 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Milk-Fed-669x1024.jpg alt=Milk Fed width=669 height=1024 />

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<h3 id=link-500932f9 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Milk Fed,’ by Melissa Broder (Scribner, Feb. 2)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>This new novel, from <a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/26/books/the-pisces-melissa-broder.html>the author of “The Pisces,”</a> explores hunger in all its permutations through the eyes of Rachel, a young employee at a Los Angeles talent agency, who begins a romance with a woman who works at the frozen yogurt shop she frequents. As their relationship deepens, so does Rachel’s capacity for nourishment and pleasure, bodily and spiritually.</p>

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<h3 id=link-68b803e2 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘My Year Abroad,’ by Chang-rae Lee (Riverhead, Feb. 2)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>The life of Tiller, a young man in New Jersey, is changed once he meets Pong, a charismatic Chinese-American businessman who has made a fortune. Together, they travel across Asia, ginning up excitement for a health elixir that Pong believes will be his next success. But this novel, from the author of “<a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/14/books/on-such-a-full-sea-chang-rae-lees-tale-of-dystopia.html>On Such a Full Sea</a>,” is more than a high-octane picaresque: It’s also an examination of cultural identity and belonging.</p>

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<h3 id=link-743f1842 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘No One Is Talking About This,’ by Patricia Lockwood (Riverhead, Feb. 16)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>“Can a dog be twins?” That post brought the unnamed narrator of Lockwood’s first novel modest fame in the portal — Lockwood’s stand-in for the internet. The narrator is, arguably, <em class=css-2fg4z9 e1gzwzxm0>too</em> online, spending hours and hours in a mix of memes, outrage and absurdity. Midway through the story, an urgent family crisis pulls the narrator out of the stream of the internet and firmly back into “real life,” raising questions about whether online exposure fundamentally rewires how we live.</p>

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<h3 id=link-166ac338 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Super Host,’ by Kate Russo (G.P. Putnam’s Sons, Feb. 9)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Bennett, the middle-aged artist at the heart of this novel set in West London, seems to be foundering: His professional prospects are dwindling, his wife has left him and resettled in the United States, and his precarious finances have forced him to move into a studio in his back garden and list his house on a site for vacation rentals. His guests — four women over the course of the story — offer him a chance to reawaken parts of himself that had fallen dormant.</p>

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<h3 id=link-2fcbce30 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘This Is How They Tell Me the World Ends<strong class=css-8qgvsz ebyp5n10>: The Cyberweapons Arms Race</strong>,’ by Nicole Perlroth (Bloomsbury, Feb. 9)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Perlroth, a cybersecurity reporter for The Times, dives into the shadowy and frightening world of cyberwarfare. Hackers have infiltrated American infrastructure (nuclear plants, power grids) and corporations to devastating effect, but why do these attacks continue to happen? Perlroth gives a fast-paced account of the U.S. government’s digital vulnerability, how it has been exploited and why the stakes couldn’t be higher.</p>

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<h3 id=link-585ba778 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Tom Stoppard: A Life,’ by Hermione Lee (Knopf, Feb. 23)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Lee is among the most acclaimed biographers working now, known for her previous books about <a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/books/97/06/08/reviews/970608.08merkint.html>Virginia Woolf</a>, <a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/19/books/penelope-fitzgerald-a-life-by-hermione-lee.html>Penelope Fitzgerald</a> and others, and here she offers an authoritative biography of the renowned playwright. Born in Czechoslovakia to Jewish parents, Stoppard and his family left suddenly for Singapore before the arrival of the Nazis, moved to India and finally settled in England after his mother remarried. Stoppard didn’t know much of his family story until late in life, when he discovered all four of his grandparents were Jewish, and Lee explores his artistic motivations as well as analyzing his work. As the character of Oscar Wilde says in “The Invention of Love,” one of Stoppard’s most celebrated plays, “Biography is the mesh through which our real life escapes.”</p>

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<h3 id=link-51397dae class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Under a White Sky: The Nature of the Future,’ by Elizabeth Kolbert (Crown, Feb. 9)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Kolbert sounded the alarm about man-made ecological disaster in her earlier book “<a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/16/books/review/the-sixth-extinction-by-elizabeth-kolbert.html>The Sixth Extinction</a>,” which <a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.pulitzer.org/winners/elizabeth-kolbert target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>won the Pulitzer Prize</a>. Now, she investigates whether any of our efforts can save the planet, after generations of damage. There are only a few comparable examples of destruction in the earth’s history, Kolbert writes — “the most recent being the asteroid impact that ended the reign of the dinosaurs, 66 million years ago.”</p>

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<h3 id=link-38b4e241 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Wild Rain,’ by Beverly Jenkins (Avon, Feb. 9)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>In post-Civil War Wyoming, a female rancher becomes romantically entwined with a reporter for a Black newspaper sent out West on assignment. This book is the second in Jenkins’s best-selling <a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://beverlyjenkins.net/series/women-who-dare/ target=_blank rel=noopener noreferrer>Women Who Dare series</a>.
Source: New York Times</p>

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            <pubDate>Thu, 01 28, 2021 06:50 am</pubDate>
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