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Our guest host, Vinson Cunningham, looks at the particular joy of disconnecting from devices and diving into a book. (article)
July was, globally, the hottest month on record. The author of a climate-change novel tries to imagine how things could begin to turn around. (article)
Our guest host, Vinson Cunningham, looks at the joys of summer reading. Plus, Bill McKibben on a climate-change novel that tries to imagine how things might begin to turn around. (episode)
On a hot, muggy day at Brighton Beach, the staff writer explores the unique pleasure of diving into summer reading.
July was, globally, the hottest month on record. The author of a climate-change novel tries to imagine how things could begin to turn around.
“I always feel like books have a season,” the staff writer says, and “summer is the season of the classic Hollywood memoir . . . full of champagne and spangles.”
The guru of French cooking teaches David Remnick a thing or two about a crêpe, and the American author of “Cooking Solo” talks with Helen Rosner. (article)
The staff writer and author of “The Forever War” talks about how American involvement came to such a chaotic and ominous end. (article)
The cooking guru teaches David Remnick a thing or two about crêpes. Plus, the United States’ chaotic and ominous withdrawal from Afghanistan. (episode)
The staff writer and author of “The Forever War” talks about how American involvement came to such a chaotic and ominous end.
The French chef teaches David Remnick a thing or two about crêpes, and explains how much America’s food culture has changed since he first tried to buy mushrooms in the supermarket.
The author of “Cooking Solo” talks with our food correspondent about her underlying philosophy: you should treat yourself as well as you would treat anyone else.
David Remnick and the staff writer Naomi Fry match wits in The New Yorker’s new online quiz.
The new Aretha Franklin bio-pic was a labor of love for its filmmaker. (article)
The new Aretha Franklin bio-pic was a labor of love for its filmmaker. Plus, a frank conversation about a parent’s choices in a segregated public-school system. (episode)
The new Aretha Franklin bio-pic was a labor of love for its filmmaker.
The author of “Learning in Public” describes the dilemma of being a white mother trying to do the right thing in public education.
The novelist Jonathan Franzen loves birding, but he brings to it his “uncomfortable, obsessive” personality.
The songwriter is part of a lineage of Canadian musicians who write about ideas, not just stories; her new album is partly inspired by climate grief. (article)
The public-health expert on the impact of the Delta variant, and on a concerning new variant, Lambda, that’s hitting our shores. (article)