
THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW (February 16, 2024): The latest issue features ‘Philip Gefter’s sizzling, “unapologetically obsessive” new book, “Cocktails With George and Martha: Movies, Marriage and the Making of ‘Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?’” Our critic Alexandra Jacobs calls it “a shot glass filled with one work that, alongside contemporaneous books like Richard Yates’s novel ‘Revolutionary Road’ and Betty Friedan’s polemic ‘The Feminine Mystique,’ showed how the ‘cartoon versions of marriage’ long served up by American popular culture always came with a secret side of bitters.”
Filming ‘Virginia Woolf,’ the Battles Weren’t Just Onscreen

With Burton and Taylor as stars and a writer and director feuding, adapting the scabrous play wasn’t easy. “Cocktails With George and Martha” pours out the details.
‘Neighbors’ Opens the Door to a Literary Career Cut Short

A story collection from Diane Oliver, who died at 22, locates the strength in Black families surviving their separate but equal surroundings.
Writer, Mother, Ex-Wife: Leslie Jamison Is a Self in ‘Splinters’
In her powerful new memoir, the author examines a life composed of conflicting identities — and fierce, contradictory desires.