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

  • Mark Polizzotti on André Breton, Translation, and Surrealism
    In this episode of Private Life, Jarrett Earnest is joined by Mark Polizzotti to discuss André Breton’s surrealist novel, Nadja, originally published in 1928 and translated into English by Polizzotti for NYRB Classics in 2025. Click the “Subscribe” link in the player above to follow this podcast on your favorite listening platform. Polizzotti gives insight into the […]
  • The Neocons’ Revenge?
    Since Donald Trump’s improbable first win in 2016, pundits have passed countless hours trying to understand how his rise, and the populist movement that powered it, have changed American conservatism. If Ronald Reagan’s Republican Party was, famously, a three-legged stool consisting of social traditionalists, free-market champions, and foreign interventionists, Trump’s MAGA coalition has swelled its […]
  • Bottling the World Economy
    Amid the destruction of the US–Israeli war against Iran, much of the world’s attention has fixed on the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow passage through which roughly a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas passes. In normal times ships traversing the Strait—which runs between Oman and the United Arab Emirates on one […]
  • The Gaza Doctrine
    On Friday, March 13, nearly two weeks into the Lebanese front of “Operation Roaring Lion,” Israeli forces bombed Burj Qalaouiyah, a village in the country’s south. The strike destroyed a health care center, killing twelve doctors, paramedics, nurses, and patients; The New York Times reported that “only one severely injured worker survived.” Among the victims, […]
  • Spirit in the Sky
    What do Italian astronomers, cloistered nuns, levitating saints, and the “sexy dreams” of desert church fathers have in common? In the pages of the Review, they’re all the domain of the critic and scholar Erin Maglaque. Maglaque is a student of archival texts, often written by women, that challenge conventional secular and religious interpretations of […]
  • Elegy for Rafah
    Since the beginning of the year, my phone has been a window through which I watch the Rafah crossing from my bedroom in Paris three thousand kilometers away. Every piece of news about it awakes something in me that neither the cold of this city nor the long distance can quiet. After nine months in […]
  • Rigging the Vote: Trump’s Threats to Elections
    Sue Halpern hosts the attorney and voting rights expert Marc Elias for a wide-ranging conversation on threats to American voting rights, including gerrymandering, ballot seizures, and the SAVE Act. This conversation originally aired on March 12, 2026.
  • Rivals of the Landscape
    The more we learn about J.M. W. Turner and John Constable, the more extraordinary it seems that two such breathtakingly original painters could emerge and flourish at the same time in the British art world.
  • In Defense of Algebra
    The mathematician Paul Lockhart believes to his core that math is the purest of the arts, and anyone can learn to love it.
  • Interminable Ignorance
    Why has the will to ignorance become so virulent in our time?
  • A Man-Made Disaster
    There has never been a moral and historical reckoning with the horrors inflicted by the Allied firebombing of Japan during World War II.
  • Mother Daughter Sister Wife
    A new anthology of female Hungarian poets engages with the nation’s often tragic history through various forms of reticence, misdirection, and playfulness.
  • The Marbles & the Muses
    A.E. Stallings’s reflections on the Elgin Marbles illustrate how beautiful objects have the power to inspire both the noblest effusions and the pettiest efforts at acquisition.
  • The Tennissance
    Two young tennis stars have revived the sport by embodying the sort of athletic-aesthetic duality that made Nadal and Federer so fascinating.
  • Ondine
    To speak freely, I could never land on anything worth talking about    but from the moment they shut me up, I’ve been full of things to say.It’s not that the mind is tricking itself but that the mind itself is a trick    played on silence by the body. You might imagine a cool black pond completely devoid […]
  • ‘Not Insane!’
    The Firesign Theatre, a comedy group formed in the 1960s, created surreal albums that mixed satire and science fiction, and inspired a generation of misfits.
  • Who Built France?
    A new history explores France’s empire from the perspective of the indigenous and enslaved people who participated, willingly or not, in its creation.
  • Possessing the Painful Parts
    Tyriek White’s We Are a Haunting traces the lives of Black Brooklynites dealing with the porous boundaries between the past and the present as they forge lives amid the detritus that others have discarded.
  • The Possibility of Humor
    In his novel A Fool’s Kabbalah, Steve Stern writes in a manic whirl of disturbing and hilarious images as he follows the great historian of Jewish mysticism Gershom Scholem on his journey to gather up the remains of a vanished civilization.
  • Dantès’s Inferno
    When I first read The Count of Monte Cristo, it offered something irresistible: the possibility of reinvention. If, against all odds, Edmond Dantès could remake himself, so could I.
  • Crowds and Lovers
    In his novel G., John Berger shifts between the revolutionary possibilities of mass demonstrations and of erotic encounters, ultimately writing a historical novel about the present.
  • Deciphering Dame Muriel
    In Electric Spark, Frances Wilson attempts to crack the ingenious codes that were of prime importance in Muriel Spark’s life and writing.
  • Shenzhen Express
    In Shenzhen, the successes and failures of China’s remarkable new economy are on full display.
  • Richard Hell Reads from
    Episode 6 of Private Life
  • Lebanon’s Negations
    Since Monday, March 2, Israel’s armed forces have launched daily airstrikes on Lebanon. Begun after Hezbollah fired a small volley of rockets into Israel in response to the killing of Ali Khamenei (causing no casualties), the Israeli strikes have so far killed more than nine hundred people and displaced more than a million out of […]
  • Charade Night
    A dispatch from the Art Editor
  • ‘Like a Gossamer Sheet’
    “The first time I experienced life on the West Bank, staying over in Palestinian homes, a whole new horizon opened up for me. I entered into that life, its personal friendships, its language, its ravishing landscapes, and its evident suffering. All of it felt meaningful and real.”
  • Of Fire and Rain
    Rain I One balmy winter day in 1991, during the first Gulf War, I was sitting by the window in my classroom watching the clear blue sky above Ahvaz, the city in Iran’s southwest where I grew up. The teacher was working through a physics problem on the blackboard when, on the horizon, I noticed […]
  • Longing for My Tehran
    Since the outbreak of the current war between Israel and Iran—much like during the previous one last summer—I have been sought after for interviews by foreign media. An Iranian-born pro-Palestinian Israeli political activist is, it seems, a highly desirable commodity. Some want me to explain the Israeli position, others the Iranian one, still others to […]
  • Since
    Brianna knew her husband would claim the pregnancy was an act of God. Their marriage was falling apart. She was fed up with his infidelity and with managing their kids and home on her own. The couple had recently separated when she realized her period was late. Deciding to get the abortion was easy. Beyond […]
  • Signifying Absolutely Nothing
    Trump’s war of choice in Iran is a performance of horrific military strength that betrays a stark political weakness.
  • A Bitter Education
    In its quiescence to the West’s war on Iran, India is squandering a precious legacy.
  • Richard Hell on
    In this episode of Private Life, Richard Hell joins Jarrett Earnest to discuss his novel Godlike (newly reissued by NYRB Classics), his creative process, the love of poetry, and the stories behind his work.   Click the “Subscribe” link in the player above to follow this podcast on your favorite listening platform. Richard Hell is a writer and […]
  • The Docteur Is In
    In January 1960 Brussels hosted a “Round Table” conference of Congolese and European leaders to negotiate the future of the Belgian Congo. Anticolonial resistance had surged across Africa over the previous decade; in the Congo the antagonism had reached its peak in 1959 after colonial authorities killed dozens—possibly hundreds—of protesters in the infamous Léopoldville riots. […]
  • The New War on Speech
    Partway through his second inaugural address on January 20, Donald Trump started listing the executive orders he planned to sign that day. Among others, he said he would “declare a national emergency at our southern border,” designate “cartels as foreign terrorist organizations,” put an end to the Green New Deal, start a full “overhaul of […]
  • Iran Transformed
    On February 28 Israeli warplanes assassinated Ali Khamenei, Iran’s leader, by dropping thirty bombs on his compound in Tehran. It was the opening salvo of the US and Israel’s joint war of choice. Within a day missile attacks and aircraft sorties had done grave damage across the country: in southern Iran airstrikes hit a girls […]
  • En Pointe 
    “I’m struck by ballet’s ability to create something extraordinarily beautiful out of something so difficult and so taxing on the brain and body.”
  • The Lie of ‘Preventive’ War
    In January, during a lengthy New York Times interview with President Donald Trump, one of the paper’s reporters asked him whether he saw “any checks” to his “power on the world stage.” Yes, he answered: “There is one thing. My own morality. My own mind. It’s the only thing that can stop me, and that’s […]
  • Tick, Tick…Boom!
    Andrew Ross Sorkin’s history of the 1929 stock market crash reminds us that financial bubbles are inevitable—and that another one may be about to pop.
  • Who Speaks for Us?
    The representatives of our two-party system have made it into a weapon that works against the people.
  • Artistic License
    When an angel in a recently restored Roman chapel was seen to resemble Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, it touched off a very Italian scandal.
  • The Island That Held Them
    In David Greig’s novel The Book of I, a monk, a Viking, and a ‘mead wife’ navigate a world torn between paganism and Christianity.
  • The Beach Where All Babies Are Born
    We mailed ourselves the moonstones home.Ten pounds of them, a private beachThat cuts and cuts and cuts the feet.Where all babies are born, but not any of mine. Who strews the gifts, who distributesThem, who carries them, what mailman.The stones were the way ToveJansson drew them. Empty circles,Somehow heavy. Shingle, beautifulMurmurous word. I think oftenOf […]
  • Rembrandt’s DNA
    The Leiden Collection—one of the largest private collections of Dutch art in the world—was conceived as a “lending library for Old Masters,” animated by the humanist spirit found in Rembrandt’s paintings.
  • A Most Particular Life
    The diary of the sixteenth-century physician Felix Platter is without precedent in early modern literature.
  • ‘Dirty Work’
    The Israeli writer S. Yizhar’s 1949 novella Khirbet Khizeh portrays the violent reality of the Nakba. For decades it was part of the canon of Hebrew literature. That has changed.
  • Untitled
    When Jeff Bezos bought The Washington Post in 2013 and promised to find inventive ways to make journalism profitable in the digital age, he seemed like a godsend. He wasn’t.
  • Diversity by Other Means
    Progressives may have lost the battle for racial affirmative action, but ironically, Supreme Court decisions should allow colleges to give advantage to groups defined by their income, geography, or heritage.
  • All of Us Yahoos
    A new history of satire wants to limit the genre to its political ramifications, but satirists are often interested in the whole person and their capacity for vice.
  • China’s Leader Manqué
    Chiang Kai-shek had enormous flaws as a leader, but something was nonetheless lost to China when he and his Republican government were forced into exile on Taiwan.
  • God’s Impertinent Prophets
    A new history brings to light the dissenting women who wrote, preached, and testified during England’s tumultuous seventeenth century, claiming the standing to speak as excluded outsiders who had un unfiltered knowledge of God.
  • Clown Show
    In every era a certain kind of unprincipled demagogue driven by an insatiable need for attention and a sense of what will capture the public's imagination rises to the fore. In the early years of France’s Third Republic, it was the ludicrous Marquis de Morès.
  • Policy, Not Biology
    To the Editors: This is a response to “The Anti-Trans Playbook,” published by Paisley Currah in The New York Review of Books on December 18, 2025. Currah misleads readers regarding the positions held by the authors. Currah’s opinion piece is wrong on the facts, the law, and the science, and reaches unsupportable conclusions. Currah imagines […]
  • Fool’s Errands
    It took Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu many years of persistent effort before he succeeded in finding a US president willing to help him realize his ambition to neutralize Iran, and maybe even end the Islamic Republic. Barack Obama pursued the diplomatic path, signing a nuclear deal in 2015. This was not to the liking […]
  • From the Archive: “The Mystery of JonBenét Ramsey”
    In the June 24, 1999, issue of The New York Review of Books, Joyce Carol Oates wrote about the murder of JonBenét Ramsey and dissected America’s fascination with “the category of nonfiction known as ‘true crime.’” Click the “Subscribe” link in the player above to follow this podcast on your favorite listening platform. In this episode of Private […]
  • ‘The Devil Himself’
    At first I am afraid to enter the library. I have arrived at the US Department of Justice website because my attention got snagged by a random post on Bluesky, or possibly X, and I want to see whether it is real. The post showed an email thread between Jeffrey Epstein and a correspondent whose […]
  • For the Fossil Record
    “I took the opportunity to observe the surviving lemurs in their natural habitats—and it was love at first sight.”
  • Building the Electrostate
    In the United States today, officials at all levels of government generally act as if private enterprise is the only way to provide goods and services. Yet a bastion of public ownership survives: more than a quarter of electricity customers—including the residents of Los Angeles, Omaha, San Antonio, Seattle, Jacksonville, and Tupelo, along with tens […]
  • Joyce Carol Oates on True Crime, Her Improbable Life, and Joan Didion
    Episode 3 of Private Life
  • The Stony Dark Within
    This is the 150th anniversary of Rilke’s birth. Or, you might say, the 99th anniversary of his death. I asked a small group of students if they knew of Rilke, the poet, if they had read Rilke. They did not. Had not. They were seventeen, eighteen years old. One immediately addressed his phone. Assessed that […]

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