Following are literary biographies reviewed by The New York Times Book Review since Dec. 31, 2000. The book review publishes each week the widely cited and influential New York Times Best Seller list, which is created by the editors of the Times "News Surveys" department. Martin Scorcesse's "New York, New York" never pulls itself together into a coherent whole, but if we forgive the movie its confusions we're left with a good time. Alice Walker: A Life By EVELYN C. WHITE Evelyn C. White traces the writer's life from her days as the child of Georgia sharecroppers to the international triumph of "The Color Purple." There is no shortage of lovely images in “The Last Black Man in San Francisco,” from the Golden Gate Bridge wreathed in a gray morning mist to the flowers growing near the Hunters Point shipyard. In other words: Abandon your expectations of an orderly plot, and you'll end up humming the title song. “The Last Black Man in San Francisco” was funded in part by Kickstarter and was drawn from Fails’s own experience: he did grow up poor in the city, and his family did once live in such a house. Atlantis: The Lost Empire (June 8, 2001) Audition (August 8, 2001) Auggie Rose (November 16, 2001) August ( April 19, 1996) Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery (May 2, 1997) Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me (June 11, 1999) Austin Powers in Goldmember (July 26, 2002) Auto Focus (October 4, 2002) Autumn in New York (August 12, 2000) [5] Pamela Paul was named senior editor in spring 2013. Order food online at The Original SoupMan, New York City with Tripadvisor: See 358 unbiased reviews of The Original SoupMan, ranked #83 on Tripadvisor among 12,752 restaurants in New York …