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Q&A: The Editor Behind the Book Review

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The ‘New York Times Book Review’ Mixes It Up

When Pamela Paul stepped down as editor of the New York Times Book Review in April 2022, the news came as a shock to many of her colleagues. Paul had joined the Book Review , the paper’s standalone Sunday book reviews section, in 2011, and served as its editor since 2013. In 2016, Dean Baquet, who was then executive editor of the Times , decided to bring all of the paper’s books coverage—the daily Books section, book news, publishing industry news, and the Book Review —under Paul’s aegis.

“Everyone was surprised,” said Tina Jordan, deputy editor of the Book Review , of Paul’s departure. “She’d been there almost 10 years. We weren’t expecting it.” (Soon after leaving, Paul joined the paper’s Opinion section as a columnist, where she has developed a bit of a reputation in media circles for her subject matter and style.) While the search for Paul’s successor was underway, Jordan took over on an interim basis.

In July 2022, Gilbert Cruz was named to succeed Paul, having previously served, since 2018, as the culture editor at the paper. Like Paul before him, Cruz oversees all books coverage at the Times . He started the job in August, when the book publishing industry is notoriously quiet, but nevertheless immediately set to work. The transition in leadership, Jordan said, was “pretty seamless.”

First on Cruz’s to-do list was to solidify the Book Review as the face of all of the paper’s books coverage. Overseeing a team of more than 20 editors, critics, and reporters, he has spent the past year “making sure the staff feels like a whole”—that is, a single unit united under one banner. “Something I’ve been telling the entire staff is that there’s one brand here, and it’s the New York Times Book Review ,” he explained. “Everyone on this desk works for the New York Times Book Review —even if you’re a reporter, and your stuff never appears in the Book Review because it closes 10 days before it hit stands, you still work for the Book Review . Because when most people think of our books coverage, the Book Review is the thing that stands out in their mind.”

The Book Review is the nation’s largest and most storied standalone newspaper book reviews section, having been in print since 1896—and it’s one of the few remaining. At a time when books coverage has been slashed at papers around the country and reviewers on Goodreads and BookTok hold increasing sway over sales, what role the Book Review plays in today’s publishing ecosystem is something of an existential question.

One way to retool the Book Review for the current age, Cruz said, is to grow its digital readership. “That’s really what I came here to do,” he added. For him, this means doubling down on digital efforts and launching new digital franchises, as well as “trying to think about audiences that we’re not reaching right now.”

Under Cruz, the Book Review is also streamlining its coverage. It no longer runs “double-reviews” (two reviews by different critics of a single book), which Cruz felt “sends a mixed message to the reader.” It has also begun running reviews by the paper’s staff book critics—Dwight Garner, Alexandra Jacobs, Jennifer Szalai, and Molly Young, who had traditionally only appeared in the daily paper, which Cruz saw as a missed opportunity. (“We have this amazing product that is more than 100 years old, and our main voices on books never appeared in there!”)

Moreover, the Book Review has started publishing different kinds of features, such as author profiles and a new “Read Your Way Around the World” series, which is spearheaded by deputy news and features editor Juliana Barbassa. Barbassa has also led much of the Times ’ coverage of industry news, including the proliferation of book bans and AI’s impact on publishing.

Though the Book Review covered an estimated 2,300 books last year, its print editions have noticeably slimmed down in recent years. While occasional special issues—its summer reading and holiday issues, for instance—remain robust, Cruz doubts it will ever return to the larger page counts of yore.

“I can’t tell the future,” he said, “but I would challenge anyone to show me a print publication that has gotten bigger” over time. Nevertheless, he hopes that during his tenure, “people who primarily experience the Book Review through the print product get their money’s worth.”

In describing his vision for books coverage at the Times , Cruz repeatedly used the word experiment . He spoke of testing new things, keeping what works and scrapping what doesn’t. He believes that over the course of many experiments that “the Book Review is going to become more of a book publication.” One of his primary goals, in this first year at the helm, “is to try a lot of stuff.” His other goal: “not to mess this up.”

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Staff News From Books

The fall book season is upon us, and what better time to announce three exciting developments on the Books desk, bringing good news to readers and those who follow literary journalism.

First, please join us in welcoming not one but two new book critics who will join Dwight Garner and Jennifer Szalai as staff Times critics.

Molly Young comes to us from New York magazine, where she has been the literary critic for the past two years and all-around literary superstar — in addition to her stylish reviews, she has written essays (like this gem on garbage language , truly a public service) and profiles, like this excellent one of Katie Kitamura . Since 2015, she has also been a contributing writer at The New York Times Magazine, where she has written about subjects ranging from Jonah Hill to escape rooms (yes!) to pandemic yoga t o celebrity wellness . She is the co-author, with Joana Avillez, of “D C-T” (Penguin, 2018) and — a special bonus — has written two crossword puzzles for The Times. Molly will be writing book reviews, a newsletter, profiles and essays about language and literature, and contributing to “The Book Review Podcast.”

Alexandra Jacobs is a familiar name to Times readers and to readers of the Book Review, for which she has freelanced for more than a decade. Alexandra comes from the Styles desk, where she has been the deputy editor since 2018. Alexandra has been reviewing books since her first job in journalism, opening boxes of them for Tina Jordan at Entertainment Weekly, and has never stopped, through stints as a features editor and fashion critic. At The New York Observer, she profiled authors including the feminist Susan Faludi and the naturalist James Prosek; wrote about publishing trends such as the rise of the media coach in the world of literary fiction; and was an editor of ”The Kingdom of New York,” an anthology of the publication’s glory years. For The Times, she has written about a glitzy edition of “Our Bodies, Ourselves ,” the “Eloise” illustrator Hilary Knigh t and the triumphant resurgence of a certain first-person pronoun , and about works by Barbara Ehrenreich, Jackie Collins, Mary Cheney and dozens of memoirists, novelists and showbiz figures. She is herself the author of “Still Here,” an acclaimed biography of Elaine Stritch, and has also contributed to The New Yorker, The Washington Post Book World and many other publications.

And now, some happy news from the Book Review:

Jennifer Wilson , one of the smartest freelance literary critics working today, will also become a contributing essayist for the Book Review. Readers of the Book Review will have encountered Jennifer’s reviews and essays in recent months, including pieces about Yan Lianke , Dostoevsky’s wife and more. Jennifer is a contributing writer at The Nation magazine, where she writes for the Books & the Arts section. She holds a Ph.D. in Russian literature from Princeton University, and currently directs the Arts & Culture Reporting concentration at the CUNY Newmark School of Journalism. She will be writing essays and book reviews for us on a regular basis.

Please join us in celebrating and welcoming these three talented women to our report. Molly, Alexandra and Jennifer will take on these new roles this month.

Pamela Paul, John Williams and Tina Jordan

Explore Further

Celebrating 15 years of “the book review” podcast, jennifer szalai named new nonfiction critic, new poetry columnist for book review.

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A grid of bulbous shapes shows portions of 18 book covers, on an orange and teal background.

19 New Books Coming in September

New novels by Sally Rooney and Richard Powers, a memoir by the first Black woman on the Supreme Court — and more.

Credit... The New York Times

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The cover of “Creation Lake” has a green and magenta close-up photograph of a woman’s eye, overlaid with a white drawing of a person holding two sticks.

Creation Lake , by Rachel Kushner

An American agent infiltrates a commune of French environmentalists in Kushner’s philosophical rendition of the spy novel. The anarchists should be no match for the agent’s clever tactics, but her loyalties and opinions prove to be vulnerable after she meets the group’s mysterious leader.

Scribner, Sept. 3

Lovely One , by Ketanji Brown Jackson

“My march to this shining moment has sometimes been a steep and emotionally grueling climb,” writes Jackson, the first Black woman named to the Supreme Court, in a memoir that nevertheless emphasizes the “blessings” that sustained her: dedicated parents, encouraging teachers, cheerleading roommates, loving daughters and her college boyfriend — now husband — whose “partnership, which made this possible, is everything.”

Random House, Sept. 3

Colored Television , by Danzy Senna

The eternal conflict between making art and selling out gets a fresh take in Senna’s new novel, which follows a struggling fiction writer into the thrilling yet treacherous TV industry, where she lands a deal to make a biracial comedy with a hotshot producer.

Riverhead, Sept. 3

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COMMENTS

  1. The New York Times Books Staff

    By The New York Times Books Staff The 100 Best Books of the 21st Century As voted on by 503 book lovers — with a little help from the staff of The New York Times Book Review.

  2. Book Review

    Credit The New York Times The 100 Best Books of the 21st Century As voted on by 503 book lovers — with a little help from the staff of The New York Times Book Review.

  3. Staff News at the Book Review

    Staff News at the Book Review. Tina Jordan becomes the new deputy editor, and David Kelly will take on the new role of managing editor. In addition, writes Pamela Paul, Elisabeth Egan is joining on a permanent basis as a preview editor. We are excited to announce new roles for two current editors and a new hire at the Book Review this month.

  4. 2022 Reading Picks From Times Staff Critics

    100 Best Books of the 21st Century: As voted on by 503 novelists, nonfiction writers, poets, critics and other book lovers — with a little help from the staff of The New York Times Book Review.

  5. The New York Times Book Review

    0028-7806. The New York Times Book Review ( NYTBR) is a weekly paper-magazine supplement to the Sunday edition of The New York Times in which current non-fiction and fiction books are reviewed. It is one of the most influential and widely read book review publications in the industry. [ 2] The magazine's offices are located near Times Square in ...

  6. A New Hire and Promotions in Book Review

    We are excited to announce that Neima Jahromi will be joining The New York Times Book Review as our newest preview editor. Since 2011, Neima has worked at The New Yorker as one of the magazine's rigorous fact-checkers while writing on topics as wide-ranging as video games, the periodic table and unionization efforts at Medieval Times (in verse, no less!).

  7. Updates From The Book Review

    Updates From The Book Review. Jennifer Harlan joins as a service journalism editor, and Elisabeth Egan moves to writing narrative features. Read on for more in this note by Gilbert Cruz and Tina Jordan. Some exciting staff news for the Book Review, including a new editor. We're excited to announce that Jennifer Harlan will join the Book ...

  8. The New York Times

    The Book Review Podcast. Read Like the Wind. Up Close. By the Book. Newly Published / Graphic Books. Letters. WHAT OUR READERS ARE READING. 150 10. 2. Amanda Jones. Higher Learning. Day-Glo Days. DO SOMETHING. Here, There and Everywhere. Friends of the Führer. HITLER'S PEOPLE. Bright Voice, Dark Turns. BEAUTIFUL DAYS. Literary Destinations

  9. Q&A: The Editor Behind the Book Review

    Gilbert Cruz, the editor of the New York Times Book Review. (Credit: Tony Cenicola) Tom Lake. Entertainment Weekly. King: A Life The Wager. Washington Post Wall Street Journal. Poets & Writers Magazine. The editor of the New York Times Book Review discusses his vision for the Book Review, how he and his staff decide which titles to cover ...

  10. Gilbert Cruz Named New York Times Books Editor

    July 28, 2022. The New York Times on Thursday named Gilbert Cruz as its Books editor, handing him the task of transforming the newspaper's book review "for the digital age.". Mr. Cruz has ...

  11. The 'New York Times Book Review' Mixes It Up

    When Pamela Paul stepped down as editor of the New York Times Book Review in April 2022, ... It has also begun running reviews by the paper's staff book critics—Dwight Garner, Alexandra Jacobs ...

  12. Staff News from The Book Review

    We are delighted to announce that Miguel Salazar will be joining The Book Review as a fact checker this month. Previously, Miguel ran The Nation's fact-checking department and internship program. ... News, Staff Updates Jennifer Krauss Named New Children's Books Editor. May 13, 2020. News, Staff Updates News From the Books Desk. June 23 ...

  13. The New York Times Book Review

    During the Covid-19 pandemic, The New York Times Book Review is operating remotely and will accept physical submissions by request only. If you wish to submit a book for review consideration, please email a PDF of the galley at least three months prior to scheduled publication to [email protected]. . Include the publication date and any related press materials, along with links to ...

  14. The Best Books of 2021

    100 Best Books of the 21st Century: As voted on by 503 novelists, nonfiction writers, poets, critics and other book lovers — with a little help from the staff of The New York Times Book Review.

  15. List of New York Times employees

    Gilbert Cruz, editor, The New York Times Book Review [12] Hanya Yanagihara, editor, T: The New York Times Style Magazine [13] Kevin Quealy, editor The Upshot [14] Main hubs of newsroom operations. ... William E. Sauro, staff photographer. Won George Polk Award 1965. [citation needed] Sydney Schanberg, Pulitzer Prize and George Polk Award winner

  16. Sadie Stein Joins The New York Times Book Review

    A longtime contributor to the Book Review (see her piece on the mid-20th century "Career Romance" series), Sadie joined us earlier this year to help out when one of our editors went on leave. Not surprisingly, she didn't want to leave and we didn't want her to. Please join us in congratulating Sadie on her new staff position.

  17. Gilbert Cruz

    The 100 Best Books of the 21st Century. To mark the first 25 years of the century, The New York Times Book Review sent a survey to hundreds of literary luminaries, asking them to name the 10 best ...

  18. The Critics' Picks: A Year in Reading

    100 Best Books of the 21st Century: As voted on by 503 novelists, nonfiction writers, poets, critics and other book lovers — with a little help from the staff of The New York Times Book Review.

  19. Staff News From Books

    First, please join us in welcoming not one but two new book critics who will join Dwight Garner and Jennifer Szalai as staff Times critics. Molly Young comes to us from New York magazine, where she has been the literary critic for the past two years and all-around literary superstar — in addition to her stylish reviews, she has written essays (like this gem on garbage language, truly a ...

  20. Book Review: 'At War With Ourselves,' by H.R. McMaster

    100 Best Books of the 21st Century: As voted on by 503 novelists, nonfiction writers, poets, critics and other book lovers — with a little help from the staff of The New York Times Book Review.

  21. 7 New Books We Recommend This Week

    100 Best Books of the 21st Century: As voted on by 503 novelists, nonfiction writers, poets, critics and other book lovers — with a little help from the staff of The New York Times Book Review.

  22. 'The Hypocrite' Book Club: Main Conversation

    100 Best Books of the 21st Century: As voted on by 503 novelists, nonfiction writers, poets, critics and other book lovers — with a little help from the staff of The New York Times Book Review.

  23. 'The Hypocrite' Book Club: Book Pairing Recommendations

    100 Best Books of the 21st Century: As voted on by 503 novelists, nonfiction writers, poets, critics and other book lovers — with a little help from the staff of The New York Times Book Review.

  24. 19 New Books Coming in September

    100 Best Books of the 21st Century: As voted on by 503 novelists, nonfiction writers, poets, critics and other book lovers — with a little help from the staff of The New York Times Book Review.