
21 Books Coming in March
Dream Count
It's been years since Adichie, the author of 'Americanah,' released a work of fiction; now she returns with the stories of four women navigating life during the pandemic. Centered on Chiamaka, a Nigerian travel writer based in the United States, the story also swivels to her cousin, her best friend and her housekeeper, as each woman grapples with familial and romantic love.
Raising Hare
During the height of the Covid lockdowns, a workaholic British writer and political adviser rescues a newborn hare — and soon adapts her frenetic existence to the daily rhythms and environmental awareness introduced by her furry new housemate. 'I'd been waiting for life to go back to normal,' Dalton writes, 'but if I could derive this much pleasure from something so simple, what else might be waiting to be discovered?'
The Unworthy
The Argentine writer's slim, suspenseful third novel is a dystopian eco-horror story set in a religious order called the House of the Sacred Sisterhood, which promises a sadistic kind of salvation from the global drought and hunger beyond its walls. When a wanderer arrives at the Sisterhood's walls seeking refuge, the narrator and the convent's leaders must contend with a compassion they've long been missing.
The Trouble of Color
In a deeply personal work of social history, Jones, an award-winning writer and scholar, looks back at more than 100 years of her own family's experience to examine how America's 'jagged color line' has shaped their destinies and sense of identity. From enslavement to 'passing' to anti-miscegenation laws, no one in the six generations Jones chronicles has been untouched by the question of color.
The Antidote
In April 1935, an otherwise sunny Sunday afternoon in America's Dust Bowl turned black in a powerful storm that gave the region its name. The 'Swamplandia!' author's latest, historical novel imagines the event's effects on five distinct characters — including a farmer and his niece, a photographer and a mystical 'prairie witch' — in the fictional Uz, Neb.
Stag Dance
In her new collection, which gathers three stories and a long novella, Peters introduces a series of explosive scenarios — a hormone-destroying pandemic, an unexpected boarding school romance, a gender-bending party of lumberjacks, a taboo fling at a trans women's community weekend — that explore the complexities of queerness and trans life.
Care and Feeding
Woolever's memoir of life in the food world's fast lane is populated with boldfaced names; she worked closely with both Mario Batali and Anthony Bourdain. But ultimately, this is her story — one of being a woman in a changing industry, as problematic as it is exciting.
We Tell Ourselves Stories
Joan Didion grew up in the California of Hollywood's Golden Age and with her husband, John Gregory Dunne, worked in the film industry writing screenplays. In this fresh take on the iconic writer, Wilkinson, a New York Times film critic, argues that the movies — from Didion's childhood obsession with John Wayne to her aesthetic of dread and estrangement and the cinematic shots that structured her work — profoundly shaped her outlook on the country and her signature style.
On Air
It is a truth universally acknowledged: Public radio has always needed support from listeners like you. In this brash, swear-y backroom history, a decade and a half in the making, Oney shows how a loose network of radio stations called NPR struggled to stay on the airwaves and became a singular force in American life.
Hypochondria
Part philosophical treatise, part memoir, part history, Rees's genre-bending meditation on hypochondria references everyone from Freud to Kafka to Seinfeld in a provocative search to find out why, exactly, we believe we're sick.
Sunrise on the Reaping
Fans of apocalyptic fiction can rejoice: Collins is back with another installment of her best-selling 'Hunger Games' series. This book focuses on the 50th running of the titular games — in which adolescent tributes must compete in a battle royale to the death — and its eventual champion, Haymitch Abernathy, whom readers of the original trilogy will know as Katniss Everdeen's louche mentor.
Stop Me if You've Heard This One
What do a lesbian clown, an aquarium store, an older magician and an existential crisis have in common? They all feature in Arnett's latest, a funny and heartfelt tale of one woman grappling with grief, love and how to move forward.
Red Scare
Conspiracy thinking run amok? Antifascist institutions turning against themselves? A cowed public terrified of its government? With more than a few winks at the present, Risen, a New York Times journalist, draws readers into the zealous panic that seized Capitol Hill in the 1940s and '50s and explores the culture beyond McCarthyism that made it possible.
Theft
The Nobel laureate's 11th novel follows three young people in post-revolutionary Tanzania: Karim, a gifted student and future government official who was all but abandoned by his mother as a child; his schoolteacher wife, Fauzia, whose adult life is overshadowed by her bouts of childhood illness; and Badar, a servant who becomes entangled in the couple's lives as they get older.
The Buffalo Hunter Hunter
Jones's latest horror novel opens with a discovery: A century-old diary is found in the walls of a parsonage. Inside is the story of Good Stab, a Blackfoot man who was turned into a vampire after a massacre of Indigenous people and, using his terrifying new powers, sought revenge for America's sins.
Abundance
The New York Times columnist Ezra Klein and the Atlantic writer Derek Thompson want you to hold space to dream about utopia. No need to tighten the belt, they argue: We have everything we need to build the future that liberals want, clean energy and affordable housing included, today! Their book explains how.
The Colony
In the Swedish musician's disturbing, engrossing first novel, an incongruous group of individuals — a rootless Hungarian man, an animal-rights activist, a woman who murdered her husband, an ant specialist and her unwanted child — form a tiny, virtually silent commune cut off from society. Taking place over many years, with interludes into the characters' back stories, 'The Colony' asks: Is this an Edenic laboratory of human cooperation, or something more like a cult?
Twist
McCann's latest novel takes readers onto a cable repair ship, whose crew maintains the vast network of undersea tubes that carry the world's data and power the internet. Among those on board are an Irish journalist hoping to revive his career and the crew's chief, who must contend with a series of cable breaks off the western coast of Africa.
Elphie
Thanks to Maguire's 'Wicked' (and the musical it inspired), we know what college life was like for the green girl who became L. Frank Baum's Wicked Witch of the West. This prequel — Maguire's eighth foray into the land of Oz — immerses readers in Elphaba's childhood as the elder daughter of a fanatical father and a self-involved mother, prone to jealousy but full of hope.
There Is No Place for Us
The phrase 'working homeless' should be an oxymoron but, as this book shows, in America it describes a common reality. Goldstone, a journalist based in Atlanta, follows five local families through stints of couch-surfing, car-living and squalid extended-stay hotels, all while the adults struggle to hold down jobs — heartbreaking evidence that, as he writes, there isn't a single city in the country where 'a full-time worker earning the local minimum wage can afford a two-bedroom apartment.'
Yoko
Sheff first interviewed John Lennon and Yoko Ono in 1980, months before the former Beatle was murdered. He and Ono stayed connected; now he's produced a capacious biography, foregrounding her work as an avant-garde artist and musician and attempting, once and for all, to banish the stereotyping that has shadowed her for decades.
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Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Wordle hints today for #1,449: Clues and answer for Saturday, June 7
Hey, there! Welcome to the weekend. We hope it's a wonderful one for you. Let's make sure we keep those Wordle streaks intact, shall we? Here's our daily Wordle guide with some hints and the answer for Saturday's puzzle (#1,449). It may be that you're a Wordle newcomer and you're not completely sure how to play the game. We're here to help with that too. Wordle is a deceptively simple daily word game that first emerged in 2021. The gist is that there is one five-letter word to deduce every day by process of elimination. The daily word is the same for everyone. Wordle blew up in popularity in late 2021 after creator Josh Wardle made it easy for players to share an emoji-based grid with their friends and followers that detailed how they fared each day. The game's success spurred dozens of clones across a swathe of categories and formats. The New York Times purchased Wordle in early 2022 for an undisclosed sum. The publication said that players collectively played Wordle 5.3 billion times in 2024. So, it's little surprise that Wordle is one of the best online games and puzzles you can play daily. To start playing Wordle, you simply need to enter one five-letter word. The game will tell you how close you are to that day's secret word by highlighting letters that are in the correct position in green. Letters that appear in the word but aren't in the right spot will be highlighted in yellow. If you guess any letters that are not in the secret word, the game will gray those out on the virtual keyboard. However, you can still use those letters in subsequent guesses. You'll only have six guesses to find each day's word, though you still can use grayed-out letters to help narrow things down. It's also worth remembering that letters can appear in the secret word more than once. Wordle is free to play on the NYT's website and apps, as well as on Meta Quest headsets and Discord. The game refreshes at midnight local time. If you log into a New York Times account, you can track your stats, including the all-important win streak. If you have a NYT subscription that includes full access to the publication's games, you don't have to stop after a single round of Wordle. You'll have access to an archive of more than 1,400 previous Wordle games. So if you're a relative newcomer, you'll be able to go back and catch up on previous editions. In addition, paid NYT Games members have access to a tool called the Wordle Bot. This can tell you how well you performed at each day's game. Before today's Wordle hints, here are the answers to recent puzzles that you may have missed: Yesterday's Wordle answer for Friday, June 6 — EDIFY Thursday, June 5 — DATUM Wednesday, June 4 — CEASE Tuesday, June 3 — ADMIN Monday, June 2 — PREEN Every day, we'll try to make Wordle a little easier for you. First, we'll offer a hint that describes the meaning of the word or how it might be used in a phrase or sentence. We'll also tell you if there are any double (or even triple) letters in the word. In case you still haven't quite figured it out by that point, we'll then provide the first letter of the word. Those who are still stumped after that can continue on to find out the answer for today's Wordle. This should go without saying, but make sure to scroll slowly. Spoilers are ahead. Here is a hint for today's Wordle answer: Utilize for at least a second time. There is a pair of repeated letters in today's Wordle answer. The first letter of today's Wordle answer is R. This is your final warning before we reveal today's Wordle answer. No take-backs. Don't blame us if you happen to scroll too far and accidentally spoil the game for yourself. What is today's Wordle? Today's Wordle answer is... REUSE Not to worry if you didn't figure out today's Wordle word. If you made it this far down the page, hopefully you at least kept your streak going. And, hey: there's always another game tomorrow.


San Francisco Chronicle
an hour ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
David Attenborough's 'Ocean' is a brutal, beautiful wakeup call from the sea
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USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Wordle hint today: Clues for June 7 2025 NYT puzzle #1449
Wordle hint today: Clues for June 7 2025 NYT puzzle #1449 WARNING: THERE ARE WORDLE SPOILERS AHEAD! DO NOT READ FURTHER IF YOU DON'T WANT THE JUNE 7, 2025 WORDLE ANSWER SPOILED FOR YOU. Ready? OK. We've seen some hard Wordle words over the years and if you're here, you're probably struggling with today's and are looking for some help. So let's run down a few clues with today's Wordle that could help you solve it: 1. It has three vowels. 2. Two are the same. 3. It's associated with recycling. And the answer to today's Wordle is below this photo: It's ... REUSE. While you're here, some more Wordle advice: How do I play Wordle? Go to this link from the New York Times and start guessing words. What are the best Wordle starting words? That's a topic we've covered a bunch here. According to the Times' WordleBot, the best starting word is: CRANE. Others that I've seen include ADIEU, STARE and ROAST. Play more word games Looking for more word games?