Save this article to read it later.

Find this story in your accountsSaved for Latersection.

Each month,Boris Kachkaoffers nonfiction and fiction book recommendations.

Article image

You should read as many of them as possible.

See his picks fromlast month.

Then Helen starts getting texts from Charlies phone that only Charlie could have sent.

Women Talking, by Miriam Toews (Bloomsbury, April 2)

Reichl isa seasoned handat memoirs about food and life.

Then the recession and general decline of Conde Nasts fortunes swept the glossy away.

Two journalism memoirs on one list, you ask incredulously?

Lost and Wanted, by Nell Freudenberger (Knopf, April 2)

Yes, and theyve both earned their place.

In Constantinople it was possible for an upper-class Palestinian to have a French education.

The young Irish novelists work seems, like her titles, deceptively simple.

Save Me the Plums: My Gourmet Memoir, by Ruth Reichl (Random House, April 2)

(Her first book,Conversations With Friends, earned her an obsessive fan base.)

Tags:

Working: Research, Interviewing, Writing, by Robert Caro (Knopf, April 9)

The Parisian, by Isabella Hammad (Grove, April 9)

Normal People, by Sally Rooney (Hogarth, April 16)

The Besieged City, by Clarice Lispector, trans. by Johnny Lorenz (New Directions, April 30)