Toupees have long been a punchline in film and TV. The stigma is real, but a new TikTok trend might be helping to end it.
Author: Barbara VanDenburgh, USA TODAY
Summer suspense: 10 page-turning thrillers from S. A. Cosby, Jake Tapper, Riley Sager and more
Nothing flies faster than the pages of a good thriller, which makes it perfect summer reading. Here are 10 new books we can’t wait to read.
It’s OK to spend hundreds of hours playing ‘The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom.’ Here’s why.
I’m prepared to lose entire weeks of my life playing “The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom.” Here’s why that’s a good thing, actually.
My mom is dead, but I’m drowning in Mother’s Day marketing emails. There’s a kind solution.
My mom is dead, and Mother’s Day marketing emails are ruining my life. But there’s a kind solution to this nuisance.
The 13 most banned books of 2022: ‘Gender Queer’ tops library association’s list for second year
Book bans are at a record high. Here are the books that were targeted the most, sometimes removed from schools, libraries and public institutions.
‘Lucky Hank’: How Bob Odenkirk and Mireille Enos escape the darkness of earlier roles in new comedy
Bob Odenkirk (“Better Call Saul”) and Mireille Enos (“The Killing”) discuss their new comedy and the “drop of hope” it brought to their lives.
20 spring books from Paris Hilton, Laura Dern, Andy Cohen that we can’t wait to read
This spring brings new books from Paris Hilton, Rainn Wilson, and Laura Dern with her mother Diane Ladd. Here are 20 books we can’t wait to read.
Author Susan Meachen announces she’s alive years after apparent suicide: We explain
Romance author Susan Meachen returned to social media this week. The problem? Her suicide was announced two years ago. We explain the controversy.
Kelly Ripa’s ‘Live Wire,’ Namwali Serpell’s ‘The Furrows’: 5 new books you need to read
Talk show host Kelly Ripa makes her literary debut with “Live Wire,” and Namwali SerpellĀ returns with haunting novel “The Furrows.”
‘Gender Queer’ author Maia Kobabe talks banned books: ‘Part of a widescale political attack’
Maia Kobabe, author of the most banned book in the U.S., speaks up against censorship: “I absolutely see it as part of a widescale political attack.”