Boris Kachka
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Boris Kachka is the former books editor of the Los Angeles Times. Previously, he was an editor and writer at New York magazine for two decades. He has written profiles of authors including Joan Didion, Toni Morrison and Harper Lee; investigated turmoil at various cultural and media institutions; expanded books coverage across the publication’s many verticals; and covered film, television, theater and book publishing. He is also the author of “Hothouse,†a cultural history of the publisher Farrar, Straus and Giroux; “Becoming a Veterinarianâ€; and “Becoming a Producer.â€
Latest From This Author
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Times contributing book critics ponder 2023’s trends, favorites and pet peeves. Plus 2024 predictions, final lists, notable stories and a Happy New Year
Remembering author Gabe Hudson, a “sad, funny cheerleader†of writers from South Korea to Southern California, plus the latest book news in our Book Club newsletter.
We asked leading writers from a range of backgrounds to recommend books to help understand the Israel-Hamas war. Here are 14 titles to start with.
The Times’ newsletter head recommends six Palestinian memoirs, plus book awards by the numbers, Hollywood exposés and more in the Book Club Newsletter
2023 is the year of the star-studded gift book, with memoirs and biographies covering rockers, auteurs, poets, controversial executives and, yes, Julia Fox.
Black horror is having a big moment. A critic who profiled its pioneer, Tananarive Due, reflects on the booming genre — and other books highlights of the week.
After an award ceremony for a Palestinian author at the Frankfurt Book Fair was canceled, more than 1,000 literary figures have signed an open letter denouncing the decision.
While on tour for his new book about a West Bank tragedy, Nathan Thrall reflects on how this week’s horrors change everything. Plus, more books news of the week
October sees a glut of celebrity memoirs — Kerry Washington, Julia Fox and more to come. Why so many claim they wrote it themselves, and other book news