New Yorker writer David Denby chronicles an effort to get young people reading
Tag Archives: New Yorker
Book review: The Art of Controversy: Political Cartoons and Their Enduring Power
Victor S. Navasky’s new book on images that sting worse than words
What is it about Spring Breakers?
Jessica Allen on the (slightly repulsive) allure of Harmony Korine’s new film
REVIEW: The Cursing Mommy’s Book of Days
Book by Ian Frazier
Hey, ‘New Yorker’: En français, please
Quebecers aren’t allowed to submit captions for the magazine’s famous cartoons
Why hockey is the smartest game in the world
And how a good mind can turn the game upside down
Newsmakers: June 2-9, 2011
A tiny Wolfe at the bathroom door, a flirty old Castro in Cuba and the Times’ new editor needs her red pen
Hillary’s loss was Mama Grizzlies’ gain
Plus, the birth of forensic science, Portia de Rossi’s eating disorders and a New Yorker writer’s new novel
Let us now think deeply about Chris Osgood
Slapshot, the New York Times’ hockey blog, considers Michael Ignatieff’s hockey watching, as revealed in Adam Gopnik’s profile for the New Yorker.
Is the web’s ‘free’ ride over?
A new book says ‘free’ is the future. Critics say that’s just crazy.