Sponsored by Harvard University Press
James A. Goldston and Aryeh Neier
The ICC: Myths and Realities
The most prominent arguments against the court’s recent arrest warrants for Israeli leaders fall apart under scrutiny.
Ian Tattersall
Look Who’s Talking
When did our first linguistic ancestor emerge, and how did the transition from a nonlinguistic to a linguistic state take place?
Gabriel Winslow-Yost
As You Like It
Sam Barlow’s video games may be the first efforts at interactive cinema—by either a game designer or a filmmaker—that work.
Hannah Gold
Mama Tried
In Kenneth Lonergan’s Hold On to Me Darling, newly revived with Adam Driver, a country star looks back on his wasted years.
Snow Elegy
scraping the louvre glass,
its cellophane sound blurs
a gesture of recoil or beckon…
Free from the Archives
This past Thursday would have been Joan Didion’s ninetieth birthday. In our October 21, 2004, issue, she examined the state of American politics in the run-up to that year’s presidential election—the first in a country still reeling in the aftermath of 9/11.
Joan Didion
Politics in the ‘New Normal’ America
Special Offer
Subscribe for just $1 an issue and receive a FREE 2025 calendar
Politics Literature Arts Ideas
You are receiving this message because you signed up
for email newsletters from The New York Review.
Update your address or preferences
View this newsletter online
The New York Review of Books
207 East 32nd Street, New York, NY 10016-6305
Categories: Culture Wars/Current Controversies

















