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Top Book News provided by The New York Review of Books©

  • East Side Story
    The Hungarian poet Géza Röhrig, the Shark Tank shark Kevin O’Leary, and Timothée Chalamet walk into a bar. The bar is the restaurant of the London Ritz, and it’s 1952. Gwyneth Paltrow is also there, at another table. O’Leary, playing the part of the ink tycoon Milton Rockwell in Josh Safdie’s Marty Supreme, notices the […]
  • A Medicine Ball in Your Stocking
    The final art newsletter of 2025 covers the art and illustrations in the Review’s Holiday Issue and has a more practical purpose than previous newsletters: I’ve been inundated with gift guides for things I can’t afford, so I’ve decided to make my own guide. Herewith, twelve tried-and-true gifts that I’ll be giving or have already […]
  • ‘The Ancient and Long-Forgotten Language of Cinematography’
    Films are rarely made in response to film critics, so it is unlikely that Bi Gan’s wildly ambitious new film was inspired Susan Sontag’s 1996 essay “The Decay of Cinema.” In any case, Bi was six years old, living in Kaili, China, when Sontag declared in The New York Times that “cinema’s 100 years seem […]
  • The Liberator
    One of the first things I thought of when I heard that Frank Gehry had died was a line from Orson Welles’s 1941 masterpiece, Citizen Kane. A reporter visits the title character’s former business manager, Mr. Bernstein, to interview him following the newspaper mogul’s death, and he comments that the old man had known Kane […]
  • The Scramble for the Seafloor
    Since 1779 photosynthesis has been the standard-issue explanation for the continuation of life on earth: plants absorb sunlight, which fuels their metabolism, and create oxygen as waste. This is such basic, grade-school science that it normally wouldn’t bear mentioning, but in July 2024 a team led by Andrew Sweetman at the Scottish Association for Marine […]
  • ‘Want in the Midst of Abundance’
    Most of us grumbled through the latest federal government shutdown, vexed by airport delays, minimally staffed national parks, and shuttered local offices. But the forty-three-day disruption in federal service hit hard for hundreds of thousands of furloughed federal employees going without pay and for the roughly 42 million Americans served by the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance […]
  • Investing in the Wrong Securities
    “The less coherent and self-confident ‘the West’ is, the more it needs an outside threat.”
  • When the Spleen Ran Out
    I arrived in New York City from Madison, Wisconsin, on June 10, 1977, driving a U-Haul truck containing all my worldly possessions. My girlfriend, Gretchen, had preceded me by several months and rented a third-floor, $150-per-month apartment in a block of nine crumbling tenements on East 14th Street between Avenues B and C, right across […]
  • A Total Breakdown of All the Easter Eggs
    In December 2019, three months before the pandemic, I was standing on a subway platform in Brooklyn when I recognized a prominent older film critic also waiting for the train. I had been reading his work for many years, so I decided I would introduce myself. It can be awkward or presumptuous to bother a […]
  • ‘But Not Yet’
    “For those people who feel that they haven’t accomplished enough yet—which is to say, almost all of us!—Amy Clampitt’s life provides an allegory of persistence rewarded.”
  • The Dude Ranch Above the Sea
    As a teenager, growing up in New Jersey during the 1960s, the pianist Donald Fagen routinely took a bus into Manhattan to hear his jazz heroes in the flesh. The ecstatic improvisational rough-and-tumble of Charles Mingus, Thelonious Monk, Bill Evans, and Willie “The Lion” Smith stayed hardwired inside his brain, and soon Fagen landed at […]
  • ‘Botany of Sorrow’
    The world, Georgi Gospodinov seems to say in his novel Death and the Gardener, will always remain split into two parts: before and after the catastrophe of losing a parent.
  • Democracy Italian Style
    Alcide De Gasperi and the Christian Democrats constructed the foundations of postwar Italian politics, in which what looked like one-party rule was in fact a complex interaction between the left and the right.
  • Why ‘The West’?
    The idea of the West survived a once-shared civilization as a code for its fractious heirs. A new book suggests its enduring constants have been a fear of Russia and of internal decay.
  • The Anti-Trans Playbook
    The current crusade against trans people imperils not just their rights but the survival of the legal doctrine built to protect all women from discrimination.
  • It Takes a Village
    The Trinidadian writer Harold Sonny Ladoo’s novel Yesterdays is relentlessly rude and crude, but also bold, experimental, truthfully ugly, and unforgettable.
  • Madonna
    The baby has a stuffed rattle shaped like a fox.It curls around itself, closing its eyes,while his soft voicecomes from very far away.Outside the March rain freezes.It’s not patience you see on my facebut knowledge of a kind of timein which I myself do not exist.
  • Madonna
    Today in a beam of sunthe baby’s eyelashes had gold in themand closed down on his cheek.Then clouds then sleet:April is fickle and all the worldis blowing, full of change.The baby holds my breast in his hand.The baby holds a goldfinch in his hand.The baby holds a piece of cloth against my cheekas if I […]
  • ‘A Cartoon Revival’
    The illustrated poems, satirical ads, and talking shoes that filled the pages of C Comics.
  • Madonna
    The tiny baby flails at my chest.The tiny nails, they tearme up, they shred me to pieces.Nothing will ever be the same.In the cold March windare pink blossoms suspended,yellow blossoms white blossomsand snow all hung, suspended, the March windripping—and nothing comes back together.I am not what you think I am.
  • Hearing Your Ears Pop
    In Patricia Lockwood’s latest novel, catching Covid intensifies her relationship to language.
  • Jefferson Divided
    Though his writings grappled with the contradiction between bondage and liberty, Thomas Jefferson’s life was indebted to those he enslaved.
  • That Sinking Feeling
    Memoirs of survival at sea plunge the reader deep into the heart of human nature.
  • It’s a Racket!
    Cryptocurrency has largely managed to remain free of government regulation, and as a result has often become a vehicle for fraud and criminality.
  • Henry James’s ‘Dear Native Land’
    The writer’s 1904 tour of America left him little less than horrified at what he encountered there.
  • The Calders of Philadelphia
    At Calder Gardens, art, architecture, and horticulture achieve a well-nigh perfect equilibrium.
  • The Plunderers’ Dilemma
    Museums have been apologizing for the overlap of their ethnology collections with the subjects of colonial occupation, yet many still struggle to articulate a clear mission.
  • An Outsider from the Beginning
    Sifting the contradictions of the Bible can bring Jesus and Mary into sharper focus and illuminate their surprisingly human features.
  • Inter Alia, North Carolina Trees
    Willow oaks melting into sidewalks,propagating grass with daylong jokes,or, listen, the American holly alivewith robins flitting quicksilver throughperpetual shadow as gray foxes set offthe rainstick music of pine needles,repeating Civil War betrayals on the wind,all that undying Gothic covering fieldsof potatoes and strawberries, the antiseptictruth burns like an oil refinery in Sanford,there redbuds burst into […]
  • Magic from Elsewhere
    The best of British postwar cinema portrays a country in the aftermath of catastrophe and uncertain about its future.
  • The Plague That Won’t Die
    As my recent diagnosis shows, tuberculosis is not a relic of medical history. It remains the leading infectious cause of death worldwide—and America is hardly immune.
  • How Strict?
    To the Editors: David Cole’s generally excellent article “Umpires No More” [NYR, August 21] is flawed only in its treatment of Mahmoud v. Taylor (2025), which held that schools in Maryland’s Montgomery County must, in Cole’s words, “provide notice to parents whenever their lessons might include any material that any religious adherent might find offensive […]
  • The Soundtrack of a Generation
    The Oasis reunion tour was a series of football stadium nostalgia-fests, with the fans the unmistakable stars of the show.
  • Gaza: The Threat of Partition
    On Monday the United Nations Security Council endorsed President Donald Trump’s twenty-point peace plan for Gaza, which creates a “Board of Peace,” chaired by Trump and with the participation of foreign leaders including former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair, to oversee governance of the Strip. Trump hailed the approval as “a moment of true Historic […]
  • The Road to Miaoxi
    During the Cold War, educated people in free societies were so familiar with figures on the other side of the Iron Curtain that they were referred to just by their last names: Solzhenitsyn, Kundera, Havel, Forman. They knew the name, too, of the Soviet system’s most notorious instrument of control, the Gulag network of forced […]
  • ‘Adventures in Sensations’
    On December 18, 1974, Peter Hujar ate breakfast, met with an editor from Elle magazine, talked to Susan Sontag on the phone, spent the afternoon photographing a recalcitrant Allen Ginsberg, got Chinese takeout with the critic Vince Aletti, worked in the darkroom, practiced harpsichord, and fell asleep listening to the conversations of sex workers on […]
  • Runaway Short-Termism
    Since retaking the presidency in January, Donald Trump has initiated a blitz of chaotic, damaging economic policies. For months, as Nic Johnson wrote in the NYR Online this past April, he has been waging an unprecedented trade war against much of the world, “imposing punitive tariffs and threatening to retract America’s security umbrella” in the […]
  • Non Nom
    A dispatch from the Art Editor
  • Shithole Cinema
    In Radu Jude’s Romania, people don’t have a good word to say about the country or its citizens; on the contrary, they curse the place with a vehemence as funny as it is obscene. Making crude jokes about “Romanianness” passes for the country’s national pastime and even, in the form of Jude’s cinema, its chief cultural […]

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