#1 New York Times bestselling author Brad Thor returns with his twenty-fourth gripping Scot Harvath thriller.
A thoroughly researched and deeply personal examination of how women unintentionally condone workplace abuse in a post-#MeToo world—and a guide to changing things for the better
In this sharply funny solo debut, an aspiring lawyer is forced to work alongside the opposing counsel in her best friend’s divorce case, which leads to the biggest irreconcilable difference of all: love.
A coming-of-age tale that follows its quintessential musical enthusiast narrator from his stormy, blue-collar childhood in Michigan to his striving twenties in 1990s New York and the making of Rent, his first astronomical triumph, and later on the Broadway sensation, Hamilton.
A memoir from the greatest swimmer of all time—Katie Ledecky.
Based on her popular newsletter Agents & Books, literary agent and author Kate McKean offers charismatic, no-nonsense advice to guide writers through all the complicated feelings and nuances of the publishing industry.
The hilarious and controversial host of HBO's "Real Time" has written his funniest, most opinionated, and most necesssary book ever -- a brilliantly astute and acerbically funny vivisection of American life, politics, and culture.
This classic bestseller--with more than 200,000 copies in print--is THE job-hunting bible for college grads... Læs mere
From journalist and professor at University of Texas-Austin, SLIP presents a revelatory new framework to understand the experience of eating disorder recovery by weaving together moving personal narrative, immersive reporting, and emerging science.
From the creator of Morning Person, one of Substack's most popular newsletters, comes a complex, reality-bending debut novel about love, AI, and motherhood. Set in the near future, not... Læs mere
The Afterlife of Malcolm X is the first major study of the remarkable influence that the iconic black leader has had not in life but in death, in the sixty years since his bloody assassination in the Audubon Ballroom on February 21, 1965.