To lure him out, you can always try leaving a trail of pages from a compelling screenplay that leads him right out your front ...
New Yorker writers and contributors on the books keeping them company this winter. The New Yorker’s editors and critics ...
The eight people you meet on Slack. A look back at March 12, 2020. The semi-sadistic seven-minute workout. Here’s why it was ...
In today’s edition, David Remnick on Rachel Aviv’s piece about the allegations against Alice Munro, and then: True writers ...
Robert Eggers’s take expands significantly on the 1922 classic—and makes a pivotal change, with sickening implications.
This year’s figurative lumps of coal include a “Star Wars” tree ornament, a knockoff Yeti tumbler, faulty training wheels, a ...
An amateur U.F.O. hunter at Grovers Mill, of “The War of the Worlds” fame, makes a shocking discovery.
The celebrated writer’s partner sexually abused her daughter Andrea. The abuse transformed Munro’s fiction, but she left it ...
Investors’ enthusiasm for A.I. has converted some longtime Wall Street bears into optimists. Jeremy Grantham is still waiting ...
Peter Gelb thinks “experimental” music leads to dwindling audiences, but performances around the country suggest otherwise.
The history of recorded music is now at our fingertips. But the streamer’s algorithmic skill at giving us what we like may ...
Our basic sense of right and wrong appears to be the product of blind evolution. The hard question is how unsettling that ...