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Best of The New York Review, plus books, events, and other items of interest
November 7, 2024
Current Issue
Homage to Kharkiv
In the besieged city, the cost of the remorseless Russian assault is painfully visible despite the Ukrainians’ courage and innovation.
November 21, 2024 issue
An Inflection Point in Sri Lanka
In the aftermath of a protracted economic crisis and a historic popular struggle, a left-wing party has come to power. Can it address the country’s deep-rooted structural issues?
October 28, 2024
Planet 2025
Donald Trump’s war on what he calls the “deep state” and his broader war on climate science are neatly aligned.
October 30, 2024
The Protection Racket
For his supporters, Donald Trump’s misogynist attacks against Kamala Harris turn his own history as a predator into an asset.
‘We Got Kidnapped Again’
Migrants are facing unprecedented dangers traveling to—and waiting at—the US–Mexico border, but the Democratic Party has yet to rethink its immigration policy.
October 25, 2024
“A simpler, more efficient, healthier, and fairer alternative has long been available: universal single-tier coverage.”
The Forty-Fourth Year of the Reagan Administration
What would it sound like if the Democratic elite said the quiet part out loud?
November 7, 2024 issue
Words Not Said
On the undecided voter
How to Solve the Housing Crisis
What the next president can do
The Flailing Superpower
The spectacle of America on the global stage
Antigone’s Law
Who can make the world a better place?
Stop Infantilizing Moderates!
Democrats need a stronger message for the uncommitted voter.
‘The Joke Turns Fearful Earnest’
On taking democracy seriously
Silent Spring
Why aren’t the candidates talking about climate change?
On the joyful Kamala Harris and the mirthless Donald Trump
Another Change Election
On the need to preserve our institutions
Executions prevent any possibility that the condemned might someday reconcile with the world, and the Catechism of the Catholic Church maintains that they are “an attack on the inviolability and dignity of the person.” So why do powerful American Catholics still support the practice?
October 20, 2024
Getting Out the Fear Vote
As Trump improvises at his rallies, his grim imaginings of a mongrelized, crime-ridden country are transformed into unfalsifiable myths.
Playing for Time
With the boisterous energy of direct speech, the novelist Ferdia Lennon takes on both the playfulness and the harsh realism of Euripides.
‘A Woman Who Wins’
In her series of historical novels about the life of Saint Hilda of Whitby, Nicola Griffith explores how a woman of modest means became one of the most influential people in seventh-century Britain.
Ralph Ellison’s Alchemical Camera
The novelist’s photographs reveal an aestheticizing impulse that is difficult to reconcile with the relentless seriousness of his observations and critiques of American society.
The Coming Tech Autocracy
A functional government, committed to safeguarding its citizens, might be keen to create a regulatory agency for AI or pass comprehensive legislation, but we in the United States do not have such a government.
Expanding the Vocabulary
With great discipline and sanity, Kamala Harris has been navigating a minefield of Trumpian insults and attempts to debase her.
As I Lay Dying
Across thousands of pages, Karl Ove Knausgaard’s Morning Star series presents a relentless excess of its characters’ inner lives; at its best, it poses troubling questions about the scope of human knowledge.
The Peril of Civil Breakdown
The US political situation radiates instability. How likely is extremist violence in the aftermath of the election?
Where Freedom Ends
Law can oppress as easily as it can liberate, and it is the everyday life we lead at our kitchen tables and in our bedrooms that is most dangerously threatened by a return of Trump to power.
Calculated Risks
Since the overturning of Roe , it has once again become a subversive act to provide medical care for women as though their lives are as valuable as men’s.
Hitler’s Enablers
The complicity of conservative nationalists in the Nazi takeover of Germany in 1933 offers disturbing parallels to the current American political situation.
Sonnet in Which Most of the Rhymes Fail
October 17, 2024 issue
Thoughtfully chosen gifts for readers and writers
A Living Requiem
In her new installation, the sculptor Nour Mobarak transforms the hymns of the powerful into the complaints of the weak.
A ‘Primal Paper Forest’
In the first decade of his career, the artist CF seemed to be reinventing comics from first principles, assembling strange new worlds only to smash them into pieces.
October 24, 2024
Fragile Unity in South Africa
Short of a majority for the first time in three decades, the African National Congress now has to govern with its longtime rival. Will the alliance hold?
October 23, 2024
Pennsylvania’s Grassroots Revival
Since 2017, middle-aged women have been rebuilding the state’s Democratic party infrastructure, not just in its liberal suburbs but in its rural Republican strongholds.
October 18, 2024
The Problems with Polls
Political polling’s greatest achievement is its complete co-opting of our understanding of public opinion, which we can no longer imagine without it.
Bring Back the Fight!
In recent weeks, Harris and Walz have replaced a dynamic movement with a meat-and-potatoes campaign. That needs to change.
October 3, 2024
Free from the Archives
“Every country in the world has dimwits and crooks in politics, but no country treats them with greater respect than we do—or with such gutlessness.”
A Dance to the Music of Death
Thomas Adès turns fleetingly recognizable musical elements into unstable, volatile substances tending toward evanescence and escape.
May 13, 2021 issue
The Witch Hunters’ Crusade
Why did sixteenth-century investigators of witchcraft place such an inordinate emphasis on demonic sex, and why did they concentrate their inquiries on women?
September 26, 2002 issue
The Hide That Binds
A medical librarian’s history of books covered in human skin.
November 5, 2020 issue
Arthur Kern's Creatures
Arthur Kern’s unsettling, grotesque sculptures bring to mind twins fighting for space within the womb, disembodied heads frozen in cryogenic pods, an astronaut doomed to float forever through outer space.
June 1, 2016
Frankenstein’s Mother
As Muriel Spark points out in her biography of Mary Shelley, Shelley’s lucid, rational, and straightforward prose makes the surreal horrors of her story much more effective than the inflated rhetoric of her contemporaries’ Gothic tales.
November 19, 1987 issue
On Edgar Allan Poe
Crypts, entombments, physical morbidity: these nightmares figure prominently in Edgar Allan Poe’s tales, a fictional world in which the word that recurs most crucially is horror .
February 5, 2015 issue
The Edge of Horror
William Sloane might have become a master of the horror genre, or created an entirely new one. Yet we must be grateful for what we have, which is a splendid rediscovery.
September 18, 2015
One of America’s Best
Ambrose Bierce had no use for the refined eeriness of the English-style ghost stories of Henry James and Edith Wharton, instead setting his haunting descriptions of fateful coincidence and horrific revelation in uncut forests and abandoned mining towns.
May 10, 2012 issue
Leaving the Fold
The memoir of a former nun who left her convent after twelve years reveals the contradictions of the monastic life as well as the limits of memoir.
June 20, 2024 issue
Love in Plague Time
In Sylvia Townsend Warner’s The Corner That Held Them , a novel that follows several hundred years in the life of an English nunnery in the Middle Ages, prioresses come and go, novices prove better or worse bets, and the masons leave the new chapel spire unfinished. But the interior voice speaks across the centuries.
January 16, 2020 issue
Our Literary Foremothers
Diane Watt, a professor of medieval literature, shows that the earliest English women writers lived centuries before Julian of Norwich or Margery Kempe.
October 22, 2020 issue
Harrisburg: The Politics of Salvation
By 1970 Sister Elizabeth McAlister, a devout nun in the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary and an art history teacher at Marymount College, had been transformed by the recent revolution in the Church and the political turbulence of the 1960s. Then in 1970, she was arrested for allegedly conspiring to kidnap Henry Kissinger.
June 1, 1972 issue
Somali and American, a Minnesotan Community
Established by European settlers in the nineteenth century, it was once referred to as “White Cloud.” But today, this town of 68,000 inhabitants has seen a growing number of Somali refugees arrive in the last two decades to work in meat factories or to attend the local campus of the state university.
July 2, 2019
The Power Brokers
A recent history centers the Lakota and the vast territory they controlled in the story of the formation of the United States.
December 3, 2020 issue
The People’s Choice
When Jesse Ventura revealed that he does not wear underwear, Fruit of the Loom sent him 12,000 pairs of undershorts. He donated them to two charities. Even boorishness, in the alchemy of this moment, became a benefaction. The citizens of Minnesota treat Ventura as a sly practical joke they are playing on themselves.
August 12, 1999 issue
The Frog Prince
One of Garrison Keillor’s greatest gifts is his ability to modulate from realism to fantasy, or from low farce to high comedy.
November 24, 1988 issue
The Heights of Charm
“Though all FDR’s medical advice indicated the job might kill him, he had grown into it. It was what he did and who he was. His love for it was so obvious that millions would have cried out in disbelief if told that he was quitting.”
September 29, 2016 issue
The Ages of Jackson
“If the frontier was the force driving the Jacksonian upheaval, how to account for the preoccupation in the pamphlet literature by Jackson’s supporters with problems of a commercial society—with monopoly, with banking, with the business cycle, with the unequal distribution of the fruits of labor, with workingmen, with trade unions, with class conflict?”
December 7, 1989 issue
The Party Isn’t Over
“Carter is criticized for his Georgia mafia, his personal righteousness, his remaining an ‘outsider’ even while in office. But all of these are necessary if he is to retain some claim upon the South. Denied the easy appeal of Wallace and Nixon to repression and veiled racism, he must cling to the distinctive style that links him to the South.”
June 15, 1978 issue
Buchanan Redux
“James Buchanan’s great accomplishment as president was to relieve Lincoln of the burden of provoking the Civil War.”
August 8, 1974 issue
Flaubert’s Planet
Do novelists, and their readers, bear some responsibility for the climate crisis?
July 21, 2022 issue
A Hotter Russia
The cliché, avidly promoted by Moscow, is that Russia will be a relative winner in climate change, but a new book argues that the country will find itself in trouble.
June 23, 2022 issue
Reasons for Concern
The IPCC’s latest report, with warnings for supply chains and food security, may be the most suspense-filled document in human history.
March 9, 2022
Lebanon: Memories of War
Israel’s attacks on Lebanon are striking not just individual Hezbollah members but my family’s entire social world.
September 23, 2024
Killing Their Way to Peace
Israel’s targeted assassinations have never succeeded at dismantling Palestinian resistance movements. Now they threaten to set off a regional war.
August 15, 2024
A ‘Moral, Strategic, and Diplomatic Abyss’
In the latest round of disputes within Israel’s ruling coalition, the eliminationist, messianic far right seems poised to triumph.
July 2, 2024
Acts of Language
Amid the actual violence of Israel’s assault on Gaza, why have so many writers treated pro-Palestine speech as a threat?
June 13, 2024
True as True Can Be
“The answer to habitat and species destruction, to climate change and pollution, is always the same: stop doing the things that cause them.”
October 26, 2024
Illuminating the Scriptorium
“There is possibly too much emphasis on the ‘wackiness’ of medieval life and thought. How easily we chortle at the goings-on in the margins of Gothic manuscripts, as if the pages were meant only to be silly.”
October 12, 2024
Vegetative States
“Just about everything we have learned about the natural world in recent decades suggests that qualities like intelligence and sentience are much more widely distributed across the animal kingdom.”
September 28, 2024
Accounts of the Struggle
“The work for Palestinians today is to explore how we can reclaim our revolutionary legacy and extend it into the twenty-first century.”
September 21, 2024
Why Do You Do It This Way?
Episode Eleven of “The Critic and Her Publics”
July 9, 2024
The Tuning Fork in the Ear
Episode Ten of “The Critic and Her Publics”
June 25, 2024
The Problem of Other Minds
Episode Nine of “The Critic and Her Publics”
June 11, 2024
Documents of Mundanity
Episode Eight of “The Critic and Her Publics”
May 28, 2024
The latest releases from New York Review Books
Lutz Seiler
Simon Critchley
The Oceans of Cruelty
Douglas J. Penick
The Pornographer
John McGahern
Three by Tsvetaeva
Marina Tsvetaeva
The Beatles Effect
What the Ocean Holds
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A Glass of Water, a Burning Boy: Fady Joudah on Images From Gaza
“is the language of his killers not part of our life is there a death we have not cheapened”, the issues 2024: reproductive rights are truly on the ballot, because every american deserves the right to choose, nick hornby: the older you get, the less time you have for bad books, “reading a bad novel when you are approaching pensionable age is like taking the time left available to you and setting it on fire.”, indie booksellers and lying liars: this week on the lit hub podcast, featuring lefty booksellers, dodgy paperbacks, and some thoughts on fact-checking, the issues 2024: on america’s uniquely deadly gun problem, how do we redress the violent legacy of the second amendment, from torpedo bras to whale tails: a brief history of women’s underwear, nina edwards explores the popular reception of thongs, bras, boy shorts and other intimate items, “america’s literary giant.” on the legacy of edgar allan poe in vietnam, nguyễn bình explores the author’s influence on vietnamese literature, andré aciman on displacement, family and the struggle to find home in the eternal city, “what i felt was the persistent, undefinable numbness that eventually overtakes you and won’t let go.”, james ivory tells his 1940s queer coming-of-age story, looking back on an adolescence spent in sunny southern california, the issues 2024: the high costs of the for-profit american healthcare system, from the opioid crisis to the cost of insulin, what the bottom line has done to our lives, five essential books for understanding native american history, cundill prize finalist kathleen duval recommends david treuer, ned blackhawk, brenda j. child and more, the issues 2024: why the labor movement is so important to americans, the second in our series of in-depth looks at the everyday issues facing americans, “ariadne sends a message,” a poem by margaret atwood, from her new book “paper boat: new and selected poems 1961-2023”, a beastly love: chronicling the transformative experience of motherhood on the page and on the screen, director marielle heller and author rachel yoder discuss their creative collaboration on "nightbitch", from beowulf to foucault: on the literary influences of cormac mccarthy, michael lynn crews investigates the inspiration behind “blood meridian,” “suttree” and other novels, the issues 2024: going deep on the problem of income inequality, introducing the first in a series of in-depth looks at the everyday issues facing americans, “those folks never had their lights turned off.” on the literary importance of highlighting the haves and the have-nots, from barroom chats with raymond carver to the aperçus of thomas piketty, douglas unger explores class consciousness in american letters, on the remarkable legacy of lewis lapham, elias altman remembers his boss' advice on writing, editing, and when a deal's a deal, the literary film & tv you need to stream in october, spooky action (and comedy, and drama) at a distance, which big fall book should you read, (a back-to-school themed flowchart), the ultimate fall 2024 reading list, 78 books the critics think you should read this season, 17 novels you need to read this fall, reading recommendations from the lit hub staff, lit hub’s most anticipated books of 2024, part two, 193 books to read in the second half of the year, here’s your 2024 literary film & tv preview, 53 shows and movies to stream and see this year, lit hub’s most anticipated books of 2024, 230 books we’re looking forward to reading this year, we need your help: support lit hub, become a member, you get editors’ personalized book recs, an ad-free reading experience, and the joan didion tote bag, jane hirshfield on time, mystery, and kinship.
This Week from the Emergence Magazine Podcast
Imagining a World Where Reproductive Justice is For Everyone
Renee Bracey Sherman on the Urgent State of Abortion Rights in America
“Mike Knew Apocalypses Had Been Coming at Us All Along.” Rebecca Solnit on the Great Mike Davis
On the Reissue of “Dead Cities”
An Unwinnable War: Why the United States Was Doomed To Fail in Vietnam
Geoffrey Wawro Explains the Faulty Reasoning Behind America's Decision to Intervene in Southeast Asia
The 10 Best Books on Reproductive Rights
Annie Ernaux, Joshua Prager, Katie Watson, and More
“Inis Meáin,” a Poem by Gustav Parker Hibbett
From the Collection “High Jump as Icarus Story”
October 30, 2024
- Thomas Hobohm considers the universes within Kevin Killian’s Amazon reviews
- The literary institutions pressuring authors to stay silent on Gaza
- Jamie Hood talks to Charlotte Shane
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A spooky story by Daphne du Maurier.
Call It Horses
From call it horses.
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The Annotated Nightstand: What Mike Fu is Reading Now, and Next
Conclave , a Quiet Masterpiece, is the Papal Thriller We’ve Been Waiting For"> Conclave , a Quiet Masterpiece, is the Papal Thriller We’ve Been Waiting For
A letter supporting six honorable journalists in northern gaza.
Steven W. Thrasher and Alice Wong in Support of the Palestinian Reporters Unjustly Targeted by Israel
Channeling Curiosity Into Language: How a Diverse Array of Influences Feeds Poetic Development
Philosopher of Change: How Henri Bergson’s Radical View of Reality Came to Be
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
5 Reviews You Need to Read This Week
The Best Reviewed Books of the Month: October 2024
A New Season of 'The Diplomat' – Political Intrigue in a Time of Political Intrigue
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We publish book reviews, book extracts, essays and poems by leading writers from around the world. Each week, we also review the latest in fiction, film, opera, theatre, dance, radio and television.
In Sylvia Townsend Warner’s The Corner That Held Them, a novel that follows several hundred years in the life of an English nunnery in the Middle Ages, prioresses come …
Reviews, essays, best sellers and children's books coverage from The New York Times Book Review.
In addition to our staff critics, Sarah Lyall, Janet Maslin and John Williams also review on occasion throughout the year, and here are some of the books they admired most in …
Literary criticism, book reviews and recommendations, and essays on literature and culture.
James Wood has been a staff writer and book critic at The New Yorker since 2007. In 2009, he won the National Magazine Award for reviews and criticism.
But publications aside, the sheer number of critics who take reviews seriously as a genre of creative nonfiction—with attention to style, momentum, humor, and surprise—feels to me like it’s only getting bigger. Here …