This week’s cover, “Brooklyn or Bust,” by Bruce McCall.
> The photographer Al Thompson captures the residue of gentrification > and change in a once-vibrant and diverse suburban town. His sparse, > black-and-white palette convey...
> After Kathryn Schulz’s father died, she inherited some of his > books: Dickens and Dostoyevsky, biology and natural history, > literary fiction and light verse and tr...
This week’s cover, “Crazy Time,” by Mark Ulriksen.
> The former U.S. Poet Laureate W. S. Merwin, who was known for his > antiwar and ecological activism, died last Friday. Since 1955, > Merwin published over two hundred...
> Hulu’s show “Shrill” presents a likable début with the clever > casting of Aidy Bryant, a warm, welcoming comedian from “Saturday > Night Live." Read Emily Nus...
This week’s cover, “Spring to Mind,” by Malika Favre.
> The chef Niki Nakayama, and her wife and collaborator, Carole Iida, > are two of a small number of female chefs in a high-end Japanese > culinary landscape that is ...
Read the full story, “Places My Cat Sleeps Other Than His Cat Bed,” here.
This week’s cover, “The Real Emergency,” by Barry Blitt.
> Amid dire warnings of mass extinctions and ecological catastrophe, > the migratory flights of monarch butterflies are vanishing. Habitat > loss, insecticides, and increasi...
A cartoon by Karl Stevens. Follow @newyorkercartoons on Instagram for more. #TNYcartoons
> Bryan Washington frequented Korean diners across Houston, Texas, > where he fell in love with soondubu jjigae, a Korean stew of soft > tofu served in a spicy anchovy�...
> As a twenty-two-year-old art student, Janice Guy stored a series of > experimental self-portraits in a friend’s basement. Now, more than > forty years later, they hav...
A cartoon by Harry Bliss. Follow @newyorkercartoons on Instagram for more. #TNYcartoons
> Between the years 1897 and 1922, the photographer Hugh Mangum set up > makeshift studios across North Carolina and Virginia, where he > invited black and white portrai...
In today’s daily cartoon, by Shannon Wheeler, love isn’t blind anymore. Follow @newyorkercartoons on Instagram for more #TNYcartoons.
The cover for this year’s Anniversary Issue, “Spring Blossoms,” by Kadir Nelson.
> Nashville hot chicken may sound like a viral novelty, like the > cronut, but it long predates Instagram: it became popular more than > eighty years ago, in the city�...
A cartoon by P. C. Vey. Follow @newyorkercartoons on Instagram for more. #TNYcartoons