All Chapter & Verse
- Amy Schumer: Here's what we know about her upcoming memoir
Schumer, who wrote and starred in this summer's movie 'Trainwreck,' will reportedly release a memoir through Gallery Books in 2016.
- Has Chelsea Clinton written a children's book? Not really.
Chelsea Clinton has written a wonky, 402-page non-fiction tome and call-to-action dense with charts, graphs, statistics, and bullet points about the world's great challenges.
- Man Booker Prize 2015: Here are the authors who made the shortlist
Marlon James, the author of 'A Brief History of Seven Killings,' is the first Jamaican author to have his or her work make it to the finals.
- Trump 1.0: What’s in his first bestseller?
In 1987’s ‘Art of the Deal,’ GOP frontrunner acknowledges a ‘little hyperbole,’ but the book also tells us a lot about the man and his method.
- Greg Iles and others on how literature, journalism renew Civil Rights-era cold cases
Iles, as part of a panel at the AJC Decatur Book Festival, talked about the contribution that authors and journalists have to make in reviving unsolved cases of murdered black men.
- 'The Divergent Series': Here's a look at the new titles for the final two movies
The upcoming final two movies in the 'Divergent' film series, which are both based on Veronica Roth's book 'Allegiant,' recently got a name change. The next 'Divergent' movie is due to be released this March.
- What book helps Tom Brady weather life's highs and lows?
In a recent radio interview, New England Patriors quarterback Tom Brady mentioned a transformative self-help book that serves as a 'mantra' for his life. Brady says he's been reading the book every year since 2002.
- What does new Trump bio tell us about the real estate mogul who would be president?
According to early reviews the book is neither a hit nor dry campaign literature, but a examination of Trump's roots and his rise in business and politics, full of the sort of gems political watchers have been enjoying all summer.
- Dick Cheney's new book: a '324-page broadside' that blasts Obama
After a sobering tour of the devastation reportedly wrought by Obama and Clinton, Cheney offers a ray of hope in the form of the 2016 election.
- Back to Hogwarts: 'Harry Potter' fans celebrate the traditional first day of school
In the 'Potter' books, Hogwarts students always head back to school on Sept. 1. Many fans are celebrating today and 'Potter' fanatics have a new book (by Rowling although not set in the 'Potter' universe), a new theme park, and – a bit further out – a new movie to look forward to.
- William McKinley: As a president, did he move mountains?
Historian Scott Miller talks about the legacy of William McKinley, the 25th US president and, suddenly, a newsworthy figure.
- My letter from Oliver Sacks
Sacks’s short letter – sweeping, evocative, articulate – had come to me in early 1994 when, just a year out of my 20s, I was still trying to be a little of all of those things.
- Latest Stieg Larsson novel isn't by Larsson – and some readers are not happy
'The Girl in the Spider's Web' brings back characters Lisbeth Salander and journalist Mikael Blomkvist as they join forces to hack into the US National Security Agency in a plotline that includes stories about hacking, corruption, and national security.
- Hugo Awards: Who won, who didn't, in the most controversial voting ever
Why weren't there winners announced in five categories for the prestigious science fiction Hugo Awards? The prizes have been engulfed in controversy this year.
- The true, heroic, and complex story of how water came to Los Angeles
As southern Californians grapple with drought, ‘Water to the Angels’ tells the fascinating history behind the state's water politics.
- Warren Harding: the world takes another look at scandalous claims
DNA findings give new credibility to 'The President's Daughter,' a controversial 1928 memoir.
- Hitting bookstores soon: J.R.R. Tolkien's first fantasy story
'The Story of Kullervo,' a dark retelling of the 19th-century Finnish poem 'The Kalevala,' is the latest in a number of previously unpublished works by J.R.R. Tolkien.
- Female author submits novel under man's name. You will totally believe what happens next.
Writer Catherine Nichols submitted the opening pages to her novel to 50 literary agents under her own name, and then again using a man's name. Can you guess which name got more positive responses?
- Generosity united the South in the aftermath of 2011 superstorm
‘What Stands in a Storm’ tells one woman's story in the face of the 2011 tornado that tore through Alabama and how social media allowed Southerners to rally and support one another.
- Why one bookstore is offering refunds on Harper Lee's 'Go Set a Watchman'
Brilliant Books in Traverse City, Mich., is offering customers who bought the newly released Harper Lee novel 'Go Set a Watchman' refunds because it says marketing for the highly anticipated volume was misleading.