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BY THE BOOK

The New Yorker

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July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

What we learn from reading the fiction touted in our début issue.

- BY THOMAS MALLON

BY THE BOOK

Several months before the first issue of The New Yorker appeared, Harold Ross's fundraising prospectus promised, along with much else, that “Judgment will be passed upon new books of consequence.” The publication's literary coverage would take a while to settle down into the distinct critical sensibilities of Dorothy Parker and Clifton Fadiman, and at the start “books of consequence” were something noticed haphazardly. “The Great Gatsby,” for example, received more attention for its theatrical adaptation in 1926—“a play of shrewd, hard humor, of self-respecting sentiment”—than for its appearance as a novel, a year earlier.

Much of the magazine's earliest book reviewing was written under the byline Touchstone, who was actually a man named Harry Este Dounce. It's hard now for a reader to perceive Touchstone's own touchstones, to discern a critical standard beyond his own struggle to figure out who this new publication's readers might or ought to be. In the first issue, of February 21, 1925, he sort of recommends “Those Barren Leaves,” by Aldous Huxley—if, that is, “you like your novels professionally clever and intellectual.” Late in November, reviewing John Dos Passos’s “Manhattan Transfer,” Dounce felt compelled to note that the author’s Manhattan “is not the hypothetical typical New Yorker reader's,” though he did find it to be “very much like the real, complete thing—which is to say, like a hell of chaotic futility.”

The New Yorker’s inaugural number has Touchstone critiquing eight books in two columns of type. On the opposite page, the magazine offered a list called “Tell Me a Book to Read.” As if determined to prove brevity the soul of crit, the column outdoes Touchstone’s terseness by recommending eight novels, two collections of short stories, and several “Biographies and Things” all in a single column, with little more than a noun phrase to characterize each.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA The New Yorker

The New Yorker

The New Yorker

KICKS DEPT.ON THE LINE

On a chilly night last month, the Rockette Alumnae Association held its first black-tie charity ball, at the Edison Ballroom, in midtown.

time to read

4 mins

December 22, 2025

The New Yorker

Portraits of Everyday Life in Greenland

The thirty-six-year-old Greenlandic photographer Inuuteq Storch didn't know much about Inuit culture growing up. In school, for instance, he was taught about ancient Greek deities, but there was no talk of a native pantheon of gods

time to read

2 mins

December 22, 2025

The New Yorker

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SELECTIVE MEMORY

\"Marjorie Prime\" and \"Anna Christie.\"

time to read

7 mins

December 22, 2025

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The New Yorker

SPLIT TAKE

\"Is This Thing On?\"

time to read

6 mins

December 22, 2025

The New Yorker

THE MUSICAL LIFE - NO-FRILLS NOVICE

As the singer-songwriter Audrey Hobert descended into the Gutter, a Lower East Side bowling alley, the other day, she shared a confession.

time to read

3 mins

December 22, 2025

The New Yorker

The New Yorker

RISK, DISCIPLINE

When Violet and I finally decided to get married, I was in the middle of a depression so deep it had developed into something more like psychosis.

time to read

28 mins

December 22, 2025

The New Yorker

The New Yorker

CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTORS

The second Presidency of Donald Trump has been unprecedented in myriad ways, perhaps above all in the way that he has managed to cajole, cow, or simply command people in his Administration to carry out even his most undemocratic wishes with remarkably little dissent.

time to read

4 mins

December 22, 2025

The New Yorker

The New Yorker

THE PUZZLE MAESTRO

For Stephen Sondheim, crafting crosswords and treasure hunts was as fun as writing musicals.

time to read

16 mins

December 22, 2025

The New Yorker

The New Yorker

GREETINGS, FRIENDS!

As now the year two-oh-two-five, Somewhat ragged but alive, Reels and staggers to the finish, All its drawbacks can't diminish, Friends, how gladly 'tis we greet you! We aver, and do repeat, you Have our warm felicitations Full of gladsome protestations Of Christmastime regard! Though we have yet to rake the yard, Mercy! It's already snowing.

time to read

2 mins

December 22, 2025

The New Yorker

The New Yorker

NINE LIVES DEPT. NIGHT THOUGHTS

First, a moment of silence. The beloved cat of the actor-comedian Kumail Nanjiani died three months ago. Her name was Bagel. She was seventeen.

time to read

2 mins

December 22, 2025

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