The New Yorker
BAGELS, RANKED
1. PUMPERNICKEL: The king. Strong flavor, but not too strong. Dances with, rather than fights against, the cream cheese and the lox. (Or whitefish, if that's your thing. I don't judge.)
2 min |
April 21, 2025
The New Yorker
THE PERSONHOOD PRINCIPLE
The anti-abortion movement's new North Star.
10+ min |
April 21, 2025
The New Yorker
THE PORTAL OPENS
For forty years, Phish has jammed—for those with ears to hear.
10+ min |
April 21, 2025
The New Yorker
STARVED IN JAIL
Why are people, arrested during mental-health crises, dying from lack of food and water?
10+ min |
April 21, 2025
The New Yorker
JENNY ANNIE FANNY ADDIE
One morning at Potawatomi day camp, the summer before I became a bat mitzvah, I thought I needed to use the bathroom right in the middle of swimming lessons, but as soon as I was out of the pool I realized I didn't have to go anymore.
10+ min |
April 21, 2025
The New Yorker
THE PLURALISM PIVOT
Colleges search for a way forward in the post-D.E.I. era.
10+ min |
April 21, 2025
The New Yorker
LUDDITE LESSONS
The weavers lost the fight to save their livelihoods. As A.I. looms, can we do better?
10+ min |
April 21, 2025
The New Yorker
GONE GIRL
She became famous as a “lady preacher.” Then she disappeared.
10+ min |
April 21, 2025
Archaeology
THE KING'S THRONE
The Bayeux Tapestry, a 230-foot-long linen cloth crafted in the eleventh century, depicts scenes from William the Conqueror’s invasion of England and his defeat of Harold Godwinson, England’s last Anglo-Saxon king, at the Battle of Hastings in 1066. (See “Unfolding the Bayeux Tapestry,” January/February 2021.)
1 min |
May/June 2025
Archaeology
THE CAT AND THE FAT
During the 19th Dynasty (ca. 1295–1186 B.c.), the village of Deir el-Medina, on the Nile’s west bank in Upper, or southern, Egypt, was home to a community of civil servants and artisans who built and decorated the royal tombs in the nearby Valley of the Kings.
2 min |
May/June 2025
Archaeology
Lost City of the Samurai
Archaeologists rediscover Ichijodani, a formidable stronghold that flourished amid medieval Japan's brutal power struggles
10+ min |
May/June 2025
Archaeology
Desert Paradise Found
How a tiny, water-rich kingdom came to dominate vital trade routes in the Arabian Gulf 4,000 years ago
10+ min |
May/June 2025
Archaeology
A PASSION FOR FRUIT
Exploring the surprisingly rich archaeological record of berries, melons...and more
8 min |
May/June 2025
Archaeology
ARCHAEOLOGICAL INSTITUTE of AMERICA
The cultural heritage of world communities and their ancestral landscapes, historic monuments, museums, and physical artifacts are increasingly vulnerable as a result of global climate change.
1 min |
May/June 2025
Archaeology
MAKING HISTORY
Native American oral history and archaeological data alike suggest that farmers in parts of North America began abandoning major settlements such as Mesa Verde in Colorado and Cahokia in Illinois sometime after 1150.
1 min |
May/June 2025
Archaeology
HERO WORSHIP
A bronze knife handle discovered in the 1990s in the northern English town of Corbridge depicting a left-handed gladiator has offered insight into fandom in the ancient Roman world.
1 min |
May/June 2025
Archaeology
BULOW PLANTATION RUINS, FLORIDA
Seventy-five miles northeast of Disney World, a tangled forest of palms, pines, and mossy oaks nearly reclaims the charred remnants of Bulow Plantation and the hulking ruins of its massive steam-powered sugar mill.
2 min |
May/June 2025
Archaeology
STICKING TO THE RAPTOR DIET
The diet of British birds of prey in the distant past was very different from that of their descendants.
1 min |
May/June 2025
Archaeology
BYZANTINE BOOMTOWN
Archaeologists from the Israel Antiquities Authority have unearthed parts of a Roman and Byzantine settlement just outside the modern city of Kiryat Gat.
1 min |
May/June 2025
Archaeology
PHARAOH'S FATE
Extensive remnants of one of the temples commissioned by the female pharaoh Hatshepsut (reigned ca. 1473-1458 B.c.) have been discovered in the town of Deir el-Bahari on the west bank of the Nile.
1 min |
May/June 2025
Archaeology
Peru's Timeless Threads
More than 1,000 years ago, master weavers kept the ancient traditions of the Moche culture alive
6 min |
May/June 2025
Archaeology
GODDESS AT THE CROSSROADS
Why a city put its trust in a Greek deity feared throughout the mediterranean
10+ min |
May/June 2025
Archaeology
THE MANY FORTRESSES OF ALI PASHA
How a father and son are documenting the architectural legacy of a renegade nineteenth-century warlord
10+ min |
May/June 2025
The New Yorker
Margaret Atwood on Mavis Gallant's "Orphans' Progress"
In 1965, when I was twenty-five and starting out as a writer, I was reading The New Yorker, as all of us young writers did.
3 min |
April 14, 2025
The New Yorker
LIFE AFTER DEATH
Has Colossal, a genetics startup, resurrected the ancient dire wolf?
10+ min |
April 14, 2025
The New Yorker
THE ALIEN EYE
Sayaka Murata sees the ordinary world as science fiction.
10+ min |
April 14, 2025
The New Yorker
GOING NUCLEAR
Some climate activists are giving atomic energy a second look. Should they?
10+ min |
April 14, 2025
The New Yorker
CLEAR AS FOLK
The evolution of a punk troubadour.
7 min |
April 14, 2025
The New Yorker
EXIT WOUNDS
\"Warfare.\"
6 min |
April 14, 2025
The New Yorker
LET IT LIE
A novel about an Austrian town with secrets it would prefer to forget.
8 min |