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

  • ‘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 […]
  • Trading with the Enemy
    Friday’s Supreme Court decision rebuffing President Trump’s signature foreign policy initiative—worldwide tariffs imposed pursuant to an asserted national emergency—was extraordinary in multiple respects. In its nearly 250-year history, the Court has rarely ruled against presidential assertions of emergency power. It authorized, for example, the imprisonment of war critics during World War I, and the internment […]
  • Timekeepers
    Brazil’s military dictatorship, which lasted from 1964 to 1985, retaliated fiercely against whoever contested its monopoly over the country’s public image. Opponents of the regime were kidnapped, tortured, and in some cases disappeared. Artworks deemed subversive or morally corrupt were banned and censored, if not destroyed. At the 1967 São Paulo Biennial cops stormed the […]
  • Home Free
    “Every writer, sooner or later, must face the fact that our characters are taken directly from our own lives, so there will be friends, relatives, and acquaintances who are going to feel like they’ve been pushed under the bus.”
  • The Men Who Sold the World
    Social disaster is becoming increasingly affordable. On February 12 the Trump administration rescinded the Endangerment Finding, a 2009 EPA determination that “the current and projected concentrations of the six key well-mixed greenhouse gases…in the atmosphere threaten the public health and welfare of current and future generations.” For more than sixteen years the finding had required […]
  • Jason Statham Asks Nothing of Me
    And for this I’m grateful. The scene:I’m in my convalescent’s nest—a corner of the sofa.Floral pajamas, oily roots. The pain refersinto my shoulders, as they foretold. A flashof the anesthetist: This will feel cold. Your face will prickle. A male voice: She’s out. Let’s do this. Now, in the weeks betweenvisits to the theater, I […]
  • The Wandering Physicist
    Luis Alvarez brought a scientific pragmatism to many of the twentieth century’s greatest mysteries, including the secrets of pyramids, the Kennedy assassination, and the disappearance of the dinosaurs.
  • Sappho 27
    σὺ τοῦτ᾿ ἀλλ᾿ ὄττι τάχιστα It makes me ill to think about it too,how the people I love the mostsometimes treat me the worst. Don’t let that be you. Let’s go to their wedding, and drink their aperitifs,and nibble a few petits fours. I’ll offer a toast,then we’ll leave by the service door. Let them […]
  • If These Walls Could Talk
    In A House for Miss Pauline, the Jamaican novelist Diana McCaulay examines her family’s shadowy history by telling the story of a woman who builds her house with the remains of the manor of a former slave plantation.
  • A Real Live Socialist
    What Bernie Sanders brought to the job of mayor of Burlington and what he did with it help explain what matters to him and how he fits into American political argument.
  • The Poet’s Double
    In the early years of the Soviet Union, Konstantin Vaginov wrote fiction and poetry characterized by a sense of doubleness, ambiguity, and perverse humor.
  • As Kennedy Went
    Justice Anthony Kennedy often confounded Supreme Court observers with his seemingly unpredictable opinions, but during the years when a majority could be achieved only through some measure of compromise, he wielded enormous power over the Constitution’s contemporary meaning.
  • ‘An Entirely New Domain of Knowledge’
    The Torah scholars who came to be called “rabbis” emerged as figures of authority after the destruction of the Jewish Temple in 70 CE and the later exile of Jews from Judaea—and created Judaism’s founding literature.
  • Road Trippers
    In a thirty-three day ramble along the Hudson and Connecticut rivers in 1791, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison encountered many of the issues that would end up plaguing the United States.
  • Alexei Ratmansky’s Leap of Faith
    Having wrested himself from Russia after the invasion of Ukraine, the great choreographer has sought to remake himself and his work in Denmark.
  • Paths of Resistance
    Those who challenged the Nazi regime knew they were almost certainly doomed to failure. What roused them from complacency to defiance?
  • ‘We Think They’ll Kill Someone’
    Indigenous communities in Mexico who oppose the construction of megaprojects on their lands do so at great risk.
  • Poisonous Objects
    Two exhibitions in Los Angeles respond to the racist monuments to Confederate soldiers that have been erected all over the United States.
  • Evil in the West Bank
    As long as the daily horrors in the occupied territories continue and the extreme right remains in power, democracy in Israel will be sick at the core.
  • Gaslight
    The case of Gisèle Pelicot, who for more than a decade was violated by her husband and dozens of other men, should mark the end of the regime that puts on women the responsibility for avoiding assault.
  • Deeper Than They Thought
    Although Margaret Kennedy has been largely forgotten as a popular writer, in her novels she wielded the most cunning techniques of literary modernism.
  • From the Archive: “Working Girls: The Brontës”
    Click the “Subscribe” link in the player above to follow this podcast on your favorite listening platform. In the May 4, 1972, issue of The New York Review of Books, Elizabeth Hardwick wrote about the lives and work of the Brontë sisters on the occasion of Winifred Gérin’s then-new biography of Emily (preceded by Gérin’s biographies […]
  • Cold Plunge
    A dispatch from the Art Editor
  • A Bitter Winter in Ukraine
    Four years after their full-scale invasion, the Russians are trying to freeze Ukraine into submission by relentlessly attacking the country’s energy grid.
  • Contempt of Court
    Since the Trump administration began its strategy of indefinitely detaining people it has targeted for deportation, federal judges across the country and ideological spectrum have been rejecting their efforts, ordering that detainees be released or given bond hearings in more than 1,600 cases. Yet Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials have repeatedly defied or ignored the […]
  • Authoritarianism from Below
    As National Guard troops and federal officers swarmed Washington, D.C., in August, sent by President Donald Trump to confront what he declared a “crime emergency,” members of the city council expressed their outrage. Janeese Lewis George, who represents a northern ward with many immigrant residents that was immediately crawling with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) […]
  • Medicaid Undone
    One year ago President Donald Trump promised to “love and cherish” Medicaid. Alas, his affection for the public insurance program was short-lived. The so-called One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBA) he signed into law on July 4—the most sweeping health care legislation since Barack Obama’s 2010 Affordable Care Act (ACA)—slashes about $1 trillion in federal […]
  • Pieces of Gaza
    Until 2024, the objects on display in “Trésors sauvés de Gaza” (“Treasures Saved from Gaza”), an exhibition at the Institut du Monde Arabe in Paris that closed last December, had been sitting in crates in Geneva for seventeen years awaiting their return to the Gaza Strip, where they were destined for a museum not yet […]
  • Darryl Pinckney on Memoir, Friendship, and Elizabeth Hardwick
    In the first episode of our podcast Private Life, Darryl Pinckney talks with host Jarrett Earnest about his close friend and former teacher Elizabeth Hardwick.
  • ‘Fill It with Reality’
    In 1962 Françoise Ega, a Martinican woman working odd jobs and raising five children in Marseille, stumbled upon a newspaper article about Carolina Maria de Jesus, a Black Brazilian woman who, “hunched over” in a favela and using “pieces of paper that [she] found in the trash,” wrote a highly acclaimed memoir, Quarto de despejo, […]
  • The Writer from the Dance
    Alma Guillermoprieto has spent her nearly fifty-year career writing about America—North and South, from New York to Argentina. From her earliest essay in the Review, in 1994, about Mario Vargas Llosa’s election campaign memoir, to her most recent, in our February 12 issue, about the Trump administration’s coup in Venezuela, she has focused in particular […]
  • Never Again, Once Again
    A few years ago, in the early summer of 2019, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum declared on its website that it “unequivocally rejects efforts to create analogies between the Holocaust and other events, whether historical or contemporary.” Apparently it felt that this declaration was necessary because Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the Democratic congresswoman from New York, […]
  • American Imperialism and the End of Sovereignty
    Fintan O’Toole hosts New York Review contributors Alma Guillermoprieto and Michael Ignatieff for a wide-ranging conversation on the Trump administration’s imperial ambitions in Venezuela, Greenland, and beyond. This conversation originally aired on February 5, 2026.
  • The Struggle for the Fed
    The Fed is under attack. Can it be both protected and held accountable?
  • Painted Sermons
    The dazzling works of Fra Angelico both testify to the immense wealth and power of fourteenth-century Florentine society and attempt to heal its pride, greed, and brutal inequality.
  • Toni Plays the Dozens
    What’s so funny about Toni Morrison?
  • Still Life, Hilton Head
    No, not a logon the bank that risesfrom the lagoon— an alligator!Just one shade brownerthan the pristine golf-course greenof this lawn-mown,laundered neighborhood. An alligatorjust feet away—undead, unfunnily playing possumas if an exteriordecorator had staged it therelike a polar bearrug or a chair; or as if some matronhad pinned on the moundof her bosom a jeweled, […]
  • When the Chips Are Down
    President Trump’s reversal of a ban on sales of advanced semiconductors to China undercut the strategic logic behind years of American policy that was meant to keep the US ahead in the race to develop AI systems.
  • A Student of Power
    In his experiences and chronicles of the great ideological battles of the twentieth century, Curzio Malaparte was a shape-shifter—pitiless, clinical, cynical, unsentimental, indifferent to morality and idealism.
  • People Think
    Asad Haider, the foremost socialist thinker of his generation, staked his philosophy on the principle that everyone should be fundamentally free.
  • Mother Trouble
    In her new memoir, Arundhati Roy tries to find the language to grapple with the shadow of her formidable, extraordinary mother.
  • An American Reckoning
    Robert McNamara’s failure to reckon with the exceptionalism that led the United States into the Vietnam War contributed to fifty years of foreign policy failures. It can help us understand the crisis facing American democracy today.
  • Torn Asunder
    As Guatemala and El Salvador were being torn apart by violent US-backed regimes, tens of thousands of children—many of them war orphans, others forcibly taken from their birth parents—were being adopted overseas.
  • Lost and Forgotten
    Although his own writings are little known today, Malcolm Cowley became one of the great champions of American literature.
  • Chasing Ghosts
    With its brilliant prose and unrelenting darkness and pessimism, José Donoso’s The Obscene Bird of Night towers over Chilean literature.
  • Rescuing the Refugees
    After the fall of France many writers and artists fleeing the Nazis ended up in Marseille, desperately seeking a way out of occupied Europe.
  • Call Me by Your Names
    The quest to fathom the riotous diversity of nature is absorbingly told in a virtual double biography of the great taxonomist Carl Linnaeus and his contemporary, the count of Buffon.
  • Poland: Halfway to Democracy
    What do the far right’s fluctuating fortunes in Poland suggest about countries seeking an off-ramp from autocracy?
  • Thin Skin
    “If I’m thin,” said skin,“it’s because I have been cut.”The hands, who wanted nothingand were incapable of choice, didn’t feelresponsible. Earsweren’t listening; neither was the voice. “If I’m thin,” said skin, “it’s becauseI have been cut.”“Not enough,” said the hermit soul,who saved its lovefor what it couldn’t see or touchwhile spirit,patient survivor of schooling without […]
  • Is It Easy Being Green?
    To the Editors: Regarding Bill McKibben’s review of The Story of CO 2 Is the Story of Everything [“It’s a Gas,” NYR, January 15], and with all due respect to McKibben, I believe that his characterization of the transition to a wind and solar economy as something easily within our grasp, once the political obstacles […]
  • Promo Time
    “This is what it sounds like…” Readers of a certain generation will perhaps automatically complete this phrase by saying “when doves cry.” But it isn’t doves we’re talking about. It’s magpies. Prince’s funky epic of tortured love (“Why do we scream at each other?”) forms part of the extensive pop-culture back catalog ransacked by the […]

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