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The New Yorker

February 15-22, 2021
Magazine

Founded in 1925, The New Yorker publishes the best writers of its time and has received more National Magazine Awards than any other magazine, for its groundbreaking reporting, authoritative analysis, and creative inspiration. The New Yorker takes readers beyond the weekly print magazine with the web, mobile, tablet, social media, and signature events. The New Yorker is at once a classic and at the leading edge.

Contributors

The Mail

Goings On About Town: This Week • In an effort to slow the spread of the coronavirus, many New York City venues are closed. Here’s a selection of culture to be found around town, as well as online and streaming.

Tables for Two: CookUnity

Comment: Senate Rules

The Mayoral Race: Love Center

Free Speech Dept.: Private-Ish

Showrunner: Two Viruses

Sketchpad: The Future of Trump Communications

Personal History: Better Than a Balloon • Life in an unloved neighborhood.

Shouts & Murmurs: Kill Your Darlings

Profiles: The Believer • Glennon Doyle’s best-selling gospel of honesty.

Coronavirus Chronicles: Don’t Tell Me What to Do • As North Dakota’s hardest-hit county battled the pandemic, a mask mandate became another battleground.

Poem: Turner

Portfolio: The Butterfly Forest • Environmental destruction and violence threaten one of the world’s most extraordinary insect migrations.

Fiction: Casting Shadows

Poem: The Gift

Books: Flame On • We all live in Stan Lee’s universe. How much of it did he create?

Books: Dream Lover • Tove Ditlevsen turns estrangement into art.

Books: Briefly Noted

Books: Eastward Ho! • In “My Year Abroad,” Chang-rae Lee again shifts course.

A Critic at Large: The Icon-Maker • The director Andrei Tarkovsky fashioned a new way of looking at the world.

The Art World: Home Goods • On loving the Frick.

On Television: Tasteless • “The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City,” on Bravo.

The Current Cinema: Small Pleasures • “French Exit” and “The World to Come.”

CARTOON CAPTION CONTEST

Puzzles & Games Dept.: The Crossword • A moderately challenging puzzle.


Expand title description text
Frequency: Weekly Pages: 102 Publisher: Conde Nast US Edition: February 15-22, 2021

OverDrive Magazine

  • Release date: February 8, 2021

Formats

OverDrive Magazine

subjects

News & Politics

Languages

English

Founded in 1925, The New Yorker publishes the best writers of its time and has received more National Magazine Awards than any other magazine, for its groundbreaking reporting, authoritative analysis, and creative inspiration. The New Yorker takes readers beyond the weekly print magazine with the web, mobile, tablet, social media, and signature events. The New Yorker is at once a classic and at the leading edge.

Contributors

The Mail

Goings On About Town: This Week • In an effort to slow the spread of the coronavirus, many New York City venues are closed. Here’s a selection of culture to be found around town, as well as online and streaming.

Tables for Two: CookUnity

Comment: Senate Rules

The Mayoral Race: Love Center

Free Speech Dept.: Private-Ish

Showrunner: Two Viruses

Sketchpad: The Future of Trump Communications

Personal History: Better Than a Balloon • Life in an unloved neighborhood.

Shouts & Murmurs: Kill Your Darlings

Profiles: The Believer • Glennon Doyle’s best-selling gospel of honesty.

Coronavirus Chronicles: Don’t Tell Me What to Do • As North Dakota’s hardest-hit county battled the pandemic, a mask mandate became another battleground.

Poem: Turner

Portfolio: The Butterfly Forest • Environmental destruction and violence threaten one of the world’s most extraordinary insect migrations.

Fiction: Casting Shadows

Poem: The Gift

Books: Flame On • We all live in Stan Lee’s universe. How much of it did he create?

Books: Dream Lover • Tove Ditlevsen turns estrangement into art.

Books: Briefly Noted

Books: Eastward Ho! • In “My Year Abroad,” Chang-rae Lee again shifts course.

A Critic at Large: The Icon-Maker • The director Andrei Tarkovsky fashioned a new way of looking at the world.

The Art World: Home Goods • On loving the Frick.

On Television: Tasteless • “The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City,” on Bravo.

The Current Cinema: Small Pleasures • “French Exit” and “The World to Come.”

CARTOON CAPTION CONTEST

Puzzles & Games Dept.: The Crossword • A moderately challenging puzzle.


Expand title description text