4 S UNDAY, MARCH 13, 2022
ULYSSES,by James Joyce. (Folio,
$795.) With illustrations by John
Vernon Lord, this extravagant edition
of 500 copies celebrates the novel’s
100th anniversary.
BEATRIX POTTER: Drawn to Nature,
edited by Annemarie Bilclough. (Riz-
zoli Electa, $45.) The accompanying
catalog for an exhibition at the Vic-
toria and Albert Museum in London
collects the “Peter Rabbit” author’s
drawings, photos and letters.
YO!The Early Days of Hip Hop 1982-84, photography by Sophie
Bramly. (ArtBook, $49.95.) Images documenting the birth of
hip-hop in New York appear alongside texts by Fab 5 Freddy,
Lady Pink, Run-D.M.C. and more.
YVES SAINT LAURENT MUSEUM MARRAKECH, by Studio KO.
(Phaidon, $49.95.) A “candid diary” of the 1,423 days it took for
the architects to conceive and build this monument to the Pari-
sian designer and his partner, Pierre Bergé.
QUIET PLACES: Collected Essays,by Peter Handke. Translated
by Krishna Winston and Ralph Manheim. (Farrar, Straus &
Giroux, $30.) This collection by the 2019 Nobel Prize winner
includes essays on the refuge of bathrooms, the various mani-
festations of human exhaustion and the story of “the mushroom
maniac,” a friend who disappears in a fit of obsession.
THE TEARS OF A MAN FLOW INWARD:
Growing Up in the Civil War in Burundi,
by Pacifique Irankunda. (Random
House, $27.) In this moving memoir,
Irankunda recalls living through a
13-year civil war that upended his life
in Burundi when he was only 4 years
old and contemplates the loss of his
country’s culture and tradition to the
violence.
WORLDS OF EXILE AND ILLUSION,by Ursula K. Le Guin. (Tor
Books, $19.99.) This omnibus collection gathers the first three
novels of Le Guin’s celebrated Hainish series, including “Rocan-
non’s World,” “Planet of Exile” and “City of Illusions,” and is
introduced by the Book Review’s fantasy and science fiction
columnist, Amal El-Mohtar.
IN THE MARGINS: On the Pleasures of Reading and Writing,by
Elena Ferrante. (Europa, $14.99.) Ferrante reflects on style, her
literary influences, the “arduous journey” of women in literature
and details the struggles she’s faced as a fiction writer in this
crisp essay collection.
Newly Published/Visuals
...Also Out Now
A PULITZER PRIZE WINNER TAKES
YOU TO THE ULTIMATE FRONTIER
Sidecountry gathers the best of John Branch’s
breathtaking New York Times journalism
Tales of climbers and hunters, runners and racers, winners and losers—
including “Snow Fall,” “Dawn Wall,” “Children of the Cube,” and 17 more
“A MASTER OF NARRATIVE NONFICTION.”
—Michael Finkel
IN STORES NOW
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