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

  • Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams
    In 1945, as the spring air of the Japanese countryside poured in through the unfinished roof of their house, twelve-year-old Yoko Ono and her little brother, Keisuke, scions of the fabulously powerful Yasuda family, stared into the blue sky and starved. Their money was worthless, and their rural neighbors had little pity for the city […]
  • The Politics of Raw Power
    On Wednesday a group of Border Patrol agents in Minneapolis pinned a man to the ground and, while he was immobilized, blasted pepper spray into his face at point-blank range. On Thursday the House of Representatives, with the necessary support of seven Democrats, passed a government spending bill that appropriated $10 billion to Immigrations and […]
  • Is the Constitution ‘Dead, Dead, Dead’?
    The difficulty of amending the Constitution does not mean that it is a flawed and outdated relic of a distant past.
  • Rolling with the Economic Tides
    Ian Kumekawa’s Empty Vessel follows the lifespan of one barge, from bunkhouse to floating prison to barracks and back, as it traces the shadowy outer limits of the maritime economy.
  • Teacher’s Pet
    Jane DeLynn’s autobiographical novel In Thrall recounts a same-sex affair between a teenager and her closeted English teacher in the early 1960s, a time when exposure could be more traumatic than exploitation.
  • Things Fall Apart
    Gabriele Tergit’s Effingers chronicles how one prosperous German Jewish family struggled to answer the question: When is it time to leave?
  • The Undefined Gothic
    At the turn of the twentieth century, a Gothic fever swept Europe as artists searched for meaning in a lost age.
  • Childhood
    I did die. Dying was a venetian blind, all parts working together but not in the same direction.Like a succulent, an aloe leaf—break it and it heals.I died like boxes in a storage locker—no hurry to open.Died like a myth—the watermonster leapt out, snatched me from myself. There was a honed instrument—there was a small […]
  • Liberalism’s Pianist
    Can Igor Levit restore classical music’s claim to cultural and political authority, or is it irrevocably lost?
  • Bangladesh’s Stalled Student Revolution
    The young radicals who ousted the country’s authoritarian prime minister have so far failed to implement the democratic reforms they promised. Will elections in February correct their course?
  • Bang the Drumstick Slowly
    About 26 billion chickens occupy Earth, but apart from the lucky ones in backyards, most are condemned to the hellscape that is industrial farming.
  • Wars of Religion
    It is a problem of organization, angelsIn their syndicates look down, elitesHave always looked down on us, she said,But if everyone refuses to dieSimultaneously, a kind of general strikeThen they will have no choiceBut to come to the table, she said, strikingHer fists on the table, which caused our drinksWhich were also candlesTo spill. It […]
  • Epic Ambitions
    A new life of Gertrude Stein treats her as a philosopher of language to trust, not explain—and gathers force from archival discoveries and intriguing plots of her reception and reputation.
  • Trump’s Attack on Philanthropy
    Universities, law firms, and news media have already been targeted by the administration. As the Justice Department pushes to investigate the Open Society Foundations, it seems that philanthropies that support critical voices may be next.
  • All That Glitters
    The science of gemstones has always been intertwined with their value as luxury items.
  • Whose Hemisphere?
    The US capture of Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro reinforces the Trump administration’s capacity to invent any pretext to justify the use of armed force.
  • Darfur’s Endless War
    As paramilitaries tear through their already devastated province, self-defense fighters in North Darfur have taken up arms to defend their homes.
  • Two Odes by Ricardo Reis
    42/I [1923–1924] Seated securely on the solid pillar            Of the verses in which I remain,I have no fear of the endless future influx            Of times and oblivion;For the mind, when it steadfastly sees in itself            The reflections of the world,Becomes malleable clay, and it is the world            That creates art, not the mind.Just as the external instant engraves its […]
  • Neigh!
    A dispatch from the Art Editor
  • A More Pliant Chavista
    President Trump’s decision to support Delcy Rodríguez as Venezuela’s new leader makes clear that oil, not democracy, is his main concern.
  • Life Storage
    At St. Michael’s, small graves sit in view of Home Depot. The triangular cemetery rests in the middle of a highway interchange, bounded on all three sides by humming roads that cordon its hills off from a sunbaked world of outlet stores and cheap motels. In the children’s section, headstones press up against the fence […]
  • Nepal’s Republic of Amnesia
    Four months after the revolt that overthrew the government of Nepal, Kathmandu seems calm. The new interim government has officially recognized the protests, led by Gen-Z activists, as the third “people’s movement” in the country’s history. Renovations have started on some of the buildings torched this past September, although the parliament remains a charred shell. […]
  • In the Despot Archives
    After Ugandan tyrant Idi Amin was ousted from power in 1979, his regime left behind mountains of paperwork generated by the state bureaucracy. Years later, the historian Derek Peterson painstakingly assembled it into an archive. As Helen Epstein writes in our January 15, 2026, issue, “crucial documents were buried under layers of old bicycles, junked […]
  • Machado Agonistes
    María Corina Machado, the Venezuelan opposition leader and recent recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, has been calling for a foreign—read: US-led—military intervention in her country for years. Since at least 2019 she has insisted that using outside force to overthrow the country’s president, Nicolás Maduro, was the only way to restore democracy to Venezuela. […]
  • Dead Ringers
    The first time I saw a sculpture by Tatiana Trouvé, in an uncommonly dim gallery at a museum in Mougins, in southern France, I assumed that I had found three blankets stacked tidily on a chair, supporting a book. The piece was called The Guardian. It was, I would later learn, one of a series by […]
  • The Gray Tick
    In July 1987 the Hajj ceremony in Mecca turned into a bloodbath. Shia pilgrims, mostly Iranians, staged a protest, chanting against America, Israel, and Saddam Hussein. Saudi security forces confronted them. Violence erupted. Nearly four hundred people were killed. I was seven years old. My favorite uncle happened to be among the pilgrims that year. […]
  • Community Poetry
    In her poem “The Swan, No. 20 (Hilma af Klint)” from the Review’s October 23, 2025, issue, Victoria Chang delineates the line of beauty (a word that appears five times in the poem) that she discovers while contemplating the eponymous painting. Chang translates af Klint’s combination of abstraction and representation—a shell, a fractured field of […]
  • The Power of the Source
    The night Zohran Mamdani won the Democratic primary for mayor of New York, I was at a dinner gathering of fair housing and tenants’ rights advocates in New Jersey. The occasion was celebratory—we were marking fifty years since the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled against exclusionary zoning in Mt. Laurel, New Jersey, setting in motion […]
  • The Scrolling Eye
    In early October Sinn Féin, one of the parties supporting Catherine Connolly’s bid for the presidency of Ireland, posted a clip of her playing ball in the concrete backyard of public housing, and it became clear that she would win. Connolly had made an ill-judged visit to Assad’s Syria in 2018, in the company of […]
  • Our Moments
    The situation in which we find ourselves at the beginning of Amit Chaudhuri’s A New World is familiar, from life and in fiction: He had come back in April, the aftermath of the lawsuit and the court proceedings in two countries still fresh, the voices echoing behind him. This is a divorce novel, or rather […]
  • Mamdanism Without Guarantees
    In an age when all of planning discourse has been reduced to a choice between YIMBY (“yes in my backyard”) and NIMBY (“not in my backyard”), Zohran Mamdani dodged the binary and offered something different. In his affordable housing plan, he criticized the city’s dependence on neighborhood rezonings, which channel growth toward particular locations, while […]
  • A Council Divided
    Ever since the late 1980s, when a Supreme Court ruling and resulting revised city charter essentially remade New York City’s government in the hope of resolving its sheer unconstitutionality and pervasive corruption, the overwhelmingly Democratic fifty-one-person City Council has acted as a foil to two Republicans (Rudy Giuliani and Michael Bloomberg), two Democrats (Bill de […]
  • ‘Imagination for the Other Fellow’
    In his victory speech, Zohran Mamdani vowed to put forward “the most ambitious agenda” New York City had seen since the administration of Fiorello La Guardia, whom he’s unhesitatingly named its greatest mayor. Fans and pundits have frequently wrapped Mamdani in La Guardia’s mythic mantle: La Guardia too was a courageous maverick bent on delivering […]
  • Trump’s War
    “It was a brilliant operation, actually.” So claimed Donald Trump early this morning in a phone call with The New York Times about the US military’s overnight invasion and bombing of Venezuela, culminating in the abduction of Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro and his wife, who have been brought to New York to face an indictment […]
  • Policies of Denial
    On November 14 the Guardian reported, on the basis of internal military documents, that the United States was “planning for the long-term division of Gaza.” Reconstruction of the devastated territory, according to the report, would begin in the Israeli-controlled half of the Strip, east of the “yellow line,” which dozens of Palestinians have been killed […]
  • Sanctuary City
    Come January, New York City will be led by an immigrant—and, in a series of firsts, by a Muslim Indian American from Uganda. This kind of representation is meaningful in and of itself for many New Yorkers who hail from elsewhere, “especially when immigrant communities are being grabbed off the streets,” as Ana María Archila […]
  • Wielding the Ice Pick
    There is a steeliness to Zohran Mamdani that wasn’t obvious when he first appeared as a candidate for mayor, ablaze with ideas while extending a panoramic embrace to New York’s most invisible communities that inspired a surge of new voters in November. I remember watching a video of him entering a community room bursting with […]
  • Until the Next Storm
    Climate policy didn’t feature much in this mayoral election, possibly because much of the exciting legislation necessary to start moving New York toward a carbon-free future has already been passed. The Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA), signed in 2019, which commits the state to net zero emissions by 2050, is one of the […]
  • Democratic Excellence
    Zohran Mamdani has introduced several changes to American politics—joining ideological maximalism to policy minimalism, crafting a winning political identity as a Muslim socialist, taking a stand on Palestine, listening to voters. One innovation has not received the attention it deserves: his pledge, on election night, to “leave mediocrity in our past” and make “excellence…the expectation […]
  • The Radiance of Tentative Hope
    In less suspenseful years a mayoral election in New York City would be a purely local event, but in precarious 2025 it was a national and even international one as well. The United States is still, in all its potentially catastrophic disarray and decline, the most powerful geopolitical entity on earth. Any little fuse might […]
  • Leaving Khartoum
    On the afternoon of Friday, April 14, 2023, as the last days of Ramadan drew to an end, I went to have iftar with my extended family in Omdurman, across the Nile from Sudan’s capital, Khartoum. It had been a while since I had last seen them there. Born in the US to Sudanese parents, […]

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