Bas Fisher Invitational Makes Its Weird Miami Tours Even More Accessible With New Book
BFI partnered with Exile Projects to release a collection of zines with self-guided tours.
BFI partnered with Exile Projects to release a collection of zines with self-guided tours.
Not much was off the table for the self-professed “B-minus nepo baby” when it came to writing Does This Make Me Funny?
The Colonial Palms Plaza shop is now open, with another location set to open nearby next month.
Community and corporate shops alike are expanding the literary landscape in South Florida.
The appearance is part of the former vice president’s 15-date tour in support of her new book, 107 Days.
Our suburban bookstore scene is in a state of flux at the moment.
Caridad Moro-Gronlier was selected as one of the Academy of American Poets’ 2025 Poet Laureate Fellows.
The poet and activist wrote the book in Little Haiti, and it contains tributes to Purvis Young and the Maroons.
Tired of Netflix? The ancient art of reading is thriving at these local stores.
The year’s edition is free to attend and chock-full of activities throughout its five-hour running time.
Welcome to Florida: True Tales from America’s Most Interesting State is less “Disney” and more “nudist resorts.”
The local eight-time novelist dishes on her unconventional journey to publishing success.
“The most literary place I’ve ever lived is right here, ” the author and FIU professor tells New Times.
The 284-page book tells the story of one of Miami’s best-known and most frequented neighborhoods.
The 13 local spots featured in artist Justin Long’s new zine are frequently overlooked.
From Amy Tan to Kathleen Hanna, the Miami Book Fair has a plethora of gifted scribes on this year’s schedule.
While Juan Vidal’s new novel, A Second Chance on Earth, is a young-adult novel, its themes are universal regardless of age.
From gritty crime thrillers to powerful memoirs, discover Miami’s literary gems on National Book Lovers Day.
“Being Bad gives others permission to feel just as wrong and weird and ugly and as ashamed as I once did,” says Miami author Arielle Egozi.
Pink Glass Houses offers a peak into a life “where cocaine playdates, $100,000 kiddie birthday parties, and relentless social climbing are a way of life.”
T.D. Allman is best remembered locally for Miami: City of the Future, a 1987 tour de force of literary journalism.
The Right to Read Celebration will feature panel discussions and book readings by authors whose work has been targeted.