and more.
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We Only Wear Different Clothes: 'PW' Talks with Jessica Fellowes
In 'The Mitford Murders' (Minotaur, Jan.), Downton Abbey expert Fellowes, the niece of the show’s creator, Julian Fellowes, kicks off a series featuring the members of the aristocratic Mitford family and providing plausible solutions to real-life crimes.
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Four Questions for Oliver Jeffers
PW spoke with Jeffers about his new picture book, and the ways that fatherhood has given an immediacy to his storytelling.
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Trading the Immortal for the Transitory: PW Talks with Jonathan Moore
Moore explores the link between shopping and sexual desire in 'The Night Market' (HMH, Jan.), a futuristic thriller.
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Q & A with Shane Burcaw
PW spoke with Burcaw about his first foray into writing for young readers, and his mission of changing the public perception of disability.
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Four Questions for Jeff Kinney
PW spoke with Kinney about his beloved and bestselling Diary of a Wimpy Kid series, which is now celebrating 10 years in print.
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Bringing It Home: 'PW' Talks with A.J. Tata
Tata, a retired brigadier general, imagines a terrorist plot that targets America’s top military leadership in 'Direct Fire' (Kensington, Jan.).
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Health & Fitness 2017: Austerity Measures
In 'The Economists’ Diet' (Touchstone, Jan. 2018), Rob Barnett and Christopher Payne present a guide to weight loss that reimagines food as “supply” and hunger as “scarcity,” gustatory restraint as “austerity” and careful eating as “budgeting.”
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Health & Fitness 2017: Leslie Jamison on Creativity in Recovery
Leslie Jamison's new book, 'The Recovering' (Little, Brown, Apr. 2018), documents her years-long struggle with alcohol addiction and meditates on how others, especially fellow writers, have navigated dependence.
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Q & A with Barbara Lehman
PW spoke Lehman about wordless books, how children react to her stories, and her sequel to 'The Red Book.'
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It Was the State: 'PW' Talks with John Gibler
In 'I Couldn’t Even Imagine That They Would Kill Us: An Oral History of the Attacks Against the Students of Ayotzinapa' (City Lights, Nov.), journalist Gibler reconstructs the events of Sept. 26, 2014, in Iguala, Mexico, that left six people dead and 43 students missing.
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