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Skip to main content * Newsletter Story Saved To revisit this article, select My Account, then View saved stories Close Alert Sign In Subscribe Limited-time offer. Get 12 weeks for $29.99 $6, plus a free tote. Subscribe Cancel anytime. Search Search * News * Books & Culture * Fiction & Poetry * Humor & Cartoons * Magazine * Puzzles & Games * Video * Podcasts * Goings On * Shop Open Navigation Menu Menu Story Saved To revisit this article, visit My Profile, then View saved stories Close Alert Support The New Yorker's award-winning journalism. Subscribe today » THE NEW YORKER NEWS & CULTURE The Political Scene JIM JORDAN’S CONSPIRATORIAL QUEST FOR POWER How the Ohio Republican built an insurgent bid for Speaker on the lies of Donald Trump. By Jonathan Blitzer Books DID MITT ROMNEY SAVE HIS SOUL? In “Romney: A Reckoning,” we get an intimate view of a man trying to reconcile faith and politics. By Michael Luo Books WHY TUPAC NEVER DIED It’s because the rapper’s life and work were a cascade of contradictions that we’re still trying to figure him out today. By Hua Hsu News Desk WHY DID SIDNEY POWELL PLEAD GUILTY? The former attorney for Donald Trump was one of nineteen people indicted in Georgia for allegedly conspiring to overturn the result of the 2020 U.S. Presidential election. By Charles Bethea and Sue Halpern News Desk ANOTHER HOSPITAL IN GAZA IS BLEEDING By Adam Rasgon and David D. Kirkpatrick Comment BIDEN’S ISRAEL POLICY GETS PUT TO THE TEST By Steve Coll Dispatch THE SIMMERING LEBANESE FRONT IN ISRAEL’S WAR By Rania Abouzeid The Art World HENRY TAYLOR’S FRAUGHT ART OF SEEING By Jackson Arn The New Yorker Interview DR. BECKY KENNEDY WANTS TO HELP PARENTS LAND THE PLANE By Jessica Winter SPOTLIGHT Photo Booth HOW THE CAMERA RE-TAUGHT AN ARTIST TO SEE Jay DeFeo’s career was dominated by a single massive painting. Then photography showed her a way forward. By Vince Aletti Our Columnists IBRAM X. KENDI’S ANTI-RACISM The historian espoused grand ambitions to dismantle American racism, but the crisis at his research center suggests that he always had a more limited view of change. By Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor The Weekend Essay THE VIEW FROM MY WINDOW IN GAZA Two days before Israel escalated attacks in the Gaza Strip, my family bought some bread. After we evacuated, I biked home to get it. By Mosab Abu Toha Culture Desk RYUICHI SAKAMOTO’S BEAUTIFUL, UNPREDICTABLE LIFE The composer and artist always seemed to anticipate the future of sound. By Sasha Frere-Jones Musical Events REORIENTING “MADAMA BUTTERFLY” At Detroit Opera, a new production subverts Puccini’s depiction of Japan. By Alex Ross Dispatch THE DEVASTATION OF BE’ERI In one day, Hamas militants massacred, tortured, and abducted residents of a kibbutz, leaving their homes charred and their community in ruins. By Ruth Margalit The Food Scene JOSÉ ANDRÉS PUTS ON A SHOW The Bazaar, the latest New York restaurant from the chef and humanitarian, tends to foreground spectacle over satiety. By Helen Rosner Dispatch THE ANGUISHED FALLOUT FROM A PRO-PALESTINIAN LETTER AT HARVARD Students issued a statement blaming Israel for the Hamas attacks. Then a doxing campaign tested the courage of their conviction. By Eren Orbey Read the best of The New Yorker in our Daily newsletter.Sign up now. THE CRITICS The Front Row THE SILENT THUNDER OF “KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON” Martin Scorsese’s masterpiece is intent on not merely narrating history but awakening a collective confrontation with racialized murder. By Richard Brody On Television “BECKHAM” SHOWS US HOW DAVID AND VICTORIA BECKHAM SEE THEMSELVES A new four-part documentary on Netflix offers viewers a fascinating if flatteringly partial look inside a British celebrity match made in heaven. By Rebecca Mead Cultural Comment THE VISUAL POWER OF BLACK REST Black people are generally pictured as doing anything but relaxing—as being attacked, or agitating, or performing. The Black Rest Project aims to widen the lens. By Emily Lordi Listening Booth NANCI GRIFFITH’S LONE STAR STATE OF MIND The late singer-songwriter rarely felt at home either in her native Texas or in the music industry, but her nostalgic ditties of girlhood captured a potent sense of place. By Rachel Syme Dots LISTEN TO THE NEW YORKER Catch up where and when it suits you. For easy listening, download the New Yorker app. THE GREAT CASH-FOR-CARBON HUSTLE Offsetting has been hailed as a fix for climate change—but the market’s largest firm sold millions of credits for carbon reductions that weren’t real. By Heidi Blake A TRANS TEEN IN AN ANTI-TRANS STATE After Tennessee passed a ban on gender-transition treatment for minors, a family moved to Virginia to get the care their daughter needs. By Emily Witt THE NEXT TARGETS FOR THE GROUP THAT OVERTURNED ROE Alliance Defending Freedom has won fifteen Supreme Court cases. Now it wants religious exemptions to anti-discrimination laws—and is going after trans rights. By David D. Kirkpatrick A YOUNG ARCHITECT’S DESIGNS FOR THE CLIMATE APOCALYPSE Pavels Hedström believes that most architecture separates us from nature. He wants to make nonhuman life inescapable. By Sam Knight Dots DAILY CARTOON “This is the third year she’s dressed me up as the devil, and she still expects me to believe I’m a good boy?” Cartoon by Hilary Fitzgerald Campbell This week’s cartoons » NEW YORKER FAVORITES GOINGS ON NEWSLETTER Sign up to receive a weekly guide to what we’re watching, listening to, and doing. PHOTO BOOTH The work of great photographers, past and present. THE NEW YORKER DOCUMENTARY Uncommon perspectives on issues that matter to us now. THE NEW YORKER RADIO HOUR A weekly mix of in-depth interviews, profiles, and more, hosted by David Remnick. FROM THIS WEEK’S ISSUE All issues » Jonathan Blitzer on Jim Jordan’s vendettas, Evan Osnos on China’s age of malaise, Yiyun Li on gardening, Rebecca Mead on marriage, and more. Table of Contents » October 30, 2023 “Spooky Spiral,” by Mark Ulriksen. IN CASE YOU MISSED IT Persons of Interest HOW JANE MCALEVEY TRANSFORMED THE LABOR MOVEMENT The renowned organizer and theorist has a terminal-cancer diagnosis. But she has long been fighting the clock. By Eleni Schirmer Annals of Inquiry WHY ARE WE SO BAD AT GETTING BETTER? Convalescence used to be central to medicine. We don’t talk about it anymore. By Dhruv Khullar Infinite Scroll HOW SOCIAL MEDIA ABDICATED RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE NEWS The Israel-Hamas war has displayed with fresh urgency the perils of relying on our feeds for updates about events unfolding in real time. By Kyle Chayka Photo Booth THESE PEOPLE USED TO LIVE HERE? Before the Chelsea Hotel got swanky, a long-term resident captured the louche building—and its iconic guests—with a black-and-white-film camera. By Naomi Fry FICTION “UPSTATE” By Emma Cline Illustration by Dennis Eriksson Before the rental could be confirmed, Djuna wanted Kate’s full name and the full name of her boyfriend. Djuna wanted to know the license-plate number of the car they’d be driving. Djuna wanted to remind them, before their arrival, that shoes were not to be worn in the house. Djuna wanted to be very clear, yet again, that no pets were allowed—they would not be bringing any pets, correct?Continue reading » This Week in Fiction Emma Cline on Performative Vacationing All fiction » SHOUTS & MURMURS Cartoons, comics, and other funny stuff. Sign up for the Humor newsletter. Shouts & Murmurs “MY NAME IS BARBRA,” EXCERPTED Daily Shouts SCORPIONS AND FROGS ALL THE WAY DOWN Daily Shouts BILLBOARD ADS FOR THINGS I’D DEFINITELY BUY ON THE SPOT Daily Shouts AFFIRMATIONS FOR A DEBT-FREE LIFE Satire from The Borowitz Report GEORGE SANTOS DECLARES JIM JORDAN’S IDENTITY NOT WORTH STEALING Blitt’s Kvetchbook THE FUTURE LOOKS BRIGHT DotsDots PUZZLES & GAMES NAME DROP A quiz that tests your knowledge of notable people. THE CROSSWORD A puzzle that ranges from lightly to considerably challenging, published every weekday. THE CRYPTIC CROSSWORD A weekly puzzle for lovers of wily wordplay. CAPTION CONTEST We provide a cartoon, you provide a caption. VIDEO icon PlayCNE LA ISLA: WOMEN SPEAK OUT AFTER MASS ARRESTS IN EL SALVADOR icon PlayCNE AIRHOSTESS-737: HOW TO HANDLE A CRISIS MID-FLIGHT Limited-time offer. Get 12 weeks for $29.99 $6, plus a free tote. Subscribe Cancel anytime. Get 12 weeks for $29.99 $6, plus a free tote. Subscribe Cancel anytime. 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