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The New Yorker

The New Yorker

POWER PLAY

In Pam Bondi, Donald Trump has the Attorney General he always dreamed of.

10+ min  |

August 25, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

LOCAL CRITTERS DUMPSTRUCK

One humid afternoon in July, José Ramírez-Garofalo drove his large Toyota truck through the lush new hills, valleys, and meadows of Freshkills Park, a twenty-two-hundred-acre green space that the city is constructing on Staten Island.

3 min  |

August 25, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

COMMENT - BOOTS ON THE GROUND

Tourists who came to Washington, D.C., last week—tromping from one Smithsonian collection to another, eating ice cream on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial—witnessed a bit of history that they surely had not anticipated: the beginning of President Trump's takeover of the District.

4 min  |

August 25, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

ME, MYSELF, AND I

Helen Oyeyemi's novel of cognitive dissonance.

7 min  |

August 25, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

SOMETHING HAS COME TO LIGHT

I trust I'll be in Heaven when you read this, although God, in His wisdom, may have other things in store for me.

10+ min  |

August 25, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

THE LAST INDIE ROCK STAR

How Mac DeMarco got so popular.

10+ min  |

August 18, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

THE MESSENGER

The lives and loves of James Baldwin.

10+ min  |

August 18, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

COMING OF AGE

One of the world's rarest diseases causes rapid, brutal aging. Can it be stopped?

10+ min  |

August 18, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

THE CURSE OF HORROR

“Weapons” and “Harvest.”

6 min  |

August 18, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

THE TALK OF THE TOWN

The Texas legislature meets every Two years for a hundred and forty days, but there's an old joke that the state's governors, who never object to less legislative deliberation, would prefer that it meet for two days every hundred and forty years.

4 min  |

August 18, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

A SCREAMING SKULL

The science of headaches.

10+ min  |

August 18, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

THE NUMBER

How much is Trump pocketing off the Presidency?

10+ min  |

August 18, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

SEEING RED

Conservatism onscreen in 2025.

7 min  |

August 18, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

CITY OF LUCK

Four ways New Yorkers have gambled.

10+ min  |

August 11, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

ON THE WATER POWER TRIP

One foggy morning this spring, a ferryboat traversed the choppy waters between lower Manhattan and Governors Island. It was just after 7 A.M.—the first run of the day. But, for the boat, it was almost sunset. “She’s our tether,” a lightly bearded passenger named Sebastian Coss said. Coss, a former Governors Island staffer, was referring to the ferry, whose official name is the Lt. Samuel S. Coursen.

3 min  |

August 11, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

SPF Nostalgia

Sunscreen, as a consumer good, tends to fall into the gloppy gray area between need and want. We are all aware that the sun, as dazzling and mood-bolstering as it may be, is an unmerciful adversary. Sustained exposure to UV radiation, the science tells us, comes with a roster of terrible potentialities, from skin cancer to cataracts to leathery wrinkles. So the need is clear; but what about the want? I have rarely stood in the sunblock aisle of a drugstore and found myself overwhelmed with desire. My concerns are practical: I am pale and quick to crisp. Give me high SPF, at a reasonably low price, and I'm sold.

1 min  |

August 11, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

LIVE LONG AND PROSPER

The quest to extend the human life span and get rich doing it.

10+ min  |

August 11, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

HOW-TO DEPT.NEIGHBORHOOD WATCH

John Wilson, the thirty-eight-year-old filmmaker, was drinking iced coffee on his home turf of Ridgewood, Queens, one recent morning. He was in Rudy’s Bakery and Cafe, a venerable neighborhood joint, feeling on edge.

3 min  |

August 11, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

SENSE AND SENSIBILITY

What James Schuyler's poetry obscured and revealed.

10+ min  |

August 11, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

STERLING CHARACTER

“Washington Black,” on Hulu.

5 min  |

August 11, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

ROMANTIQUE

A torrent of forgotten French opera on the Bru Zane label.

6 min  |

August 11, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

Jane Mayer on John Hersey’s “Hiroshima”

Thirty years after this magazine published John Hersey’s “Hiroshima,” I sat in his classroom at Yale, hoping to learn how to write with even a fraction of his power. When “Hiroshima” appeared, in the August 31, 1946, issue, it was the scoop of the century—the first unvarnished account by an American reporter of the nuclear blast that obliterated the city. Hersey’s prose was spare, allowing the horror to emerge word by word. A man tried to lift a woman out of a sandpit, “but her skin slipped off in huge, glove-like pieces.” The detonation buried a woman and her infant alive: “When she had dug herself free, she had discovered that the baby was choking, its mouth full of dirt. With her little finger, she had carefully cleaned out the infant’s mouth, and for a time the child had breathed normally and seemed all right; then suddenly it had died.”

2 min  |

August 11, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

THE TALK OF THE TOWN

The young Donald Trump was the Nelson Muntz of Jamaica Estates. (Or was he its Draco Malfoy? Scholars will debate such questions for generations.)

4 min  |

August 11, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

DEATH TO THE SHAH

Nobody expected the Iranian Revolution. Not even the revolutionaries.

10+ min  |

August 11, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

ENEMY OF THE GOOD

The pain of perfectionism.

10+ min  |

August 11, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

DEPT. OF TOURISM SIGN HERE, PLEASE

The “world’s greatest pedestrian,” as an old magazine once put it, may have been a farm boy born outside Zagreb, Croatia, in 1878. He has no Wikipedia page (yet!), though in his heyday his press coverage was abundant.

3 min  |

August 11, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

CRIME SCENE

Immigrants showing up for court dates in Manhattan must now navigate a spectacle of intimidation.

1 min  |

August 11, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

THE POPE'S ASTRONOMER

The Michigan man—and meteorite expert—who runs the Vatican Observatory.

10+ min  |

August 04, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

The Bridge Stood Fast

She was a busy little item.

10+ min  |

August 04, 2025
The New Yorker

The New Yorker

ZONES OF DENIAL

Amid national euphoria after the bombing of Iran, a question lurks: What is Israel becoming?

10+ min  |

August 04, 2025