News

As The New Yorker turns a hundred, we asked Zadie Smith, Jhumpa Lahiri, and Ottessa Moshfegh to compose new stories that were ...
With the “Big Beautiful Bill” in flux, and federal funds for gender-affirming care hanging in the balance, protections for ...
In Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner, the sport has not only its next great rivalry but a moment that highlights everything ...
Is a River Alive?, by Robert Macfarlane (Norton). Rivers in Ecuador, India, and Canada provide the settings for this elegant travelogue, which asks whether a natural entity, such as a river, can be ...
“I’m ready for the exciting last thirty seconds of the basketball game which stretch into twenty-five minutes of fouls, time-outs, and commercials.” A drawing that riffs on the latest news and ...
Its ruling lets the President temporarily revoke birthright citizenship—and enforce other unconstitutional executive orders ...
Robert Giard spent his career photographing hundreds of cultural luminaries and niche literary figures in the hopes of ...
Also: Staffers’ favorite Brad Pitt movies, Carnegie Hall performances in the parks, the stargazing rap of Ab-Soul, and more.
Jordan Tannahill’s explicit new play fetishizes the British Royal Family but has more than sex on its mind.
But, even in the voluminous catalogue of world leaders who have engaged in ego-wilting acts of Trump sycophantism, this ...
How we got to a situation where a President can reasonably claim that it is lawful, without congressional approval, to bomb a ...
Decades after “28 Days Later,” the director Danny Boyle and the screenwriter Alex Garland return to—and advance—a ...