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Sign In Not a Subscriber?Join NowFrancesca Segal pushes a modem family through The Awkward Age (Riverhead). Susannah Meadows pulls back the hospital curtain to reach The Other Side of Impossible (Random House). Readers will rejoice for My Life with Bob (Henry Holt) by Pamela Paul, a book collector's book collector. Richard Rothstein divvies up the history of segregated America in The Color of Law (Liveright). Holger Hoock plucks at the sutures of the American Revolution in the Scars of Independence (Crown). Stephen Kennedy Smith and Douglas Brinkley celebrate the centennial of the birth of JFK (Harper). In You Don't Look Your Age (Flatiron), famed documentary producer Sheila Nevins reflects on her reflection. Leading Lady (Crown Archetype) and studio head Sherry Lansing shines in Stephen Galloway's biography. Neil deGrasse Tyson makes a big bang with Astrophysics for People in a Hurry (Norton). Richard Ford's memoir is born Between Them (Ecco). Edouard Louis fashions beauty out of biography in The End of Eddy (Farrar, Straus and Giroux). James Moore is fashion's focus in this Nicolas Moore_edited retrospective (Damiani). Fiona Lewis reconstructs her life in Mistakes Were Made (Some in French) (Regan Arts). Cabin porn goes coastal in Nina Freudenberger's Surf Shack (Clarkson Potter). War correspondent Jeffrey Gettleman has a heart of boldness in Love, Africa (Harper). Haruki Murakami's cats are back in Men Without Women (Knopf). Sam Walker'sThe Captain Class (Random House) is a real team player. The M.B.A. reaches its limit in Duff McDonald'sThe Golden Passport (Harper Business)—all that Scholes is not gold. The aspirational class gets a kick in the quinoa, courtesy of Elizabeth Currid-Halkett's The Sum of Small Things (Princeton). Last but never least, a sans-adjective salud to Mary V. Dearborn on her biography of Ernest Hemingway (Knopf).
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