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Skip to main content * Newsletter Story Saved To revisit this article, select My Account, then View saved stories Close Alert Close Sign In Search Search * News * Books & Culture * Fiction & Poetry * Humor & Cartoons * Magazine * Puzzles & Games * Video * Podcasts * Archive * Goings On * Shop Open Navigation Menu Menu Story Saved To revisit this article, visit My Profile, then View saved stories Close Alert Close THE NEW YORKER Support The New Yorker’s award-winning journalism.Subscribe today » NEWS & CULTURE News Desk SCOOPING THE SUPREME COURT The first Roe v. Wade leaks happened fifty years ago. By Jane Mayer Letter from Biden’s Washington WHAT CHOICE DOES BIDEN HAVE? With the impending evisceration of Roe v. Wade, partisanship is the only course for a President in our broken system. By Susan B. Glasser Photo Booth A FRESH VIEW OF QUEER MASCULINITY, THROUGH SCRAPS OF OLD MAGAZINES Pacifico Silano’s soft-core source material is unmistakable but elusive, like a memory resurfacing or a dream slipping away. By Vince Aletti Q. & A. THE JOURNALISTIC PITFALLS OF THE TRUMP ERA The authors of a new book discuss how quickly journalists should share scoops with the public and what Mitch McConnell managed to extract from Donald Trump. By Isaac Chotiner Daily Comment WHAT THE SUPREME COURT LEAK SAYS ABOUT THE FUTURE OF ABORTION By Jeannie Suk Gersen The Current Cinema “HAPPENING” AND THE SOLITARY WOE OF AN ILLEGAL ABORTION By Anthony Lane The Boards THE REDISCOVERY OF A LOST BLACK PLAYWRIGHT By Michael Schulman The Front Row “IN FRONT OF YOUR FACE,” REVIEWED: THE GREAT HONG SANGSOO REACHES NEW HEIGHTS By Richard Brody Daily Comment OF COURSE THE CONSTITUTION HAS NOTHING TO SAY ABOUT ABORTION By Jill Lepore PUZZLES & GAMES NAME DROP A quiz that tests your knowledge of notable people, published every weekday. 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. SPOTLIGHT Listening Booth KEHLANI’S SONGS OF SELF-IMPROVEMENT The artist’s soothing new record, “blue water road,” is their most considered work yet. By Sheldon Pearce Shouts & Murmurs MASTERING THE ART OF STRESS EATING If Julia Child were alive today, you can bet she’d be putting Flamin’ Hot Cheetos in the ratatouille. By Jiji Lee The Daily EMBEDDING WITH A MEDICAL BATTALION IN UKRAINE The correspondent Luke Mogelson talks about reporting from the front lines and the sense of unity that the conflict has created in the country. By The New Yorker Books THE MAKING OF A FEMICIDE A Mexican novelist explores how murderous male rage flourishes in an ailing society. By Juan Gabriel Vásquez Tables for Two BULLFROG IS A MUST AT SO DO FUN The new Gramercy restaurant serves Sichuan for a Cantonese clientele, with specialties including sliced beef with pickles and tomato soup. By Hannah Goldfield Cultural Comment A VISIONARY SHOW MOVES BLACK HISTORY BEYOND BORDERS “Afro-Atlantic Histories,” now at the National Gallery of Art, offers an epic survey of the diaspora. By Julian Lucas The Political Scene WHAT J. D. VANCE’S VICTORY IN OHIO MEANS FOR TRUMPISM The “Hillbilly Elegy” author will be a strong favorite in the race for the U.S. Senate, where he would become one of its most controversial members. By Benjamin Wallace-Wells Photo Booth A “PHOTOGRAPHIC SHIVA” FOR A LIFE PARTNER LOST TO COVID After the curator Maurice Berger died, in the early days of the pandemic, Marvin Heiferman started sharing his grief through images. By Chris Wiley The best of The New Yorker, in your in-box.Sign up now for our newsletters today. LISTEN TO THE NEW YORKER Catch up where and when it suits you. For easy listening, download the New Yorker app. Audio available Profiles HOW ELISABETH MOSS BECAME THE DARK LADY OF THE SMALL SCREEN The actor—who is also a director, a rom-com fan, and a Scientologist—likes to swim in the weird. By Michael Schulman Audio available A Critic at Large OUR OBSESSION WITH ANCESTRY HAS SOME TWISTED ROOTS From origin stories to blood-purity statutes, we have long used genealogy to serve our own purposes. By Maya Jasanoff Audio available Letter from Ukraine HOW UKRAINIANS SAVED THEIR CAPITAL When Russia attacked Kyiv, Ukrainians dropped everything to protect the city—and to ease one another’s suffering. By Luke Mogelson Audio available Annals of Innovation A RENEWABLE-ENERGY REVOLUTION WILL NEED RENEWABLE STORAGE Can gravity, pressure, and other elemental forces save us from becoming a battery-powered civilization? By Matthew Hutson CONTRIBUTORS Richard Brody The Front Row THE RETURN OF “ADIEU PHILIPPINE,” AN OVERLOOKED MASTERWORK Jessica Winter Daily Comment WHAT’S MISSING FROM ALITO’S DECISION TO REVOKE THE RIGHT TO ABORTION Jeannie Suk Gersen Comment IF ROE V. WADE IS OVERTURNED, WHAT’S NEXT? John Cassidy Our Columnists JUSTICE ALITO’S DRAFT RULING ON ABORTION SHOWS THE NEED TO CURB MINORITY RULE Margaret Talbot Books HOW THE REAL JANE ROE SHAPED THE ABORTION WARS E. Tammy Kim Dispatch AMAZON’S CAMPAIGN TO DERAIL A SECOND STATEN ISLAND UNION DRIVE Jelani Cobb Daily Comment RON DESANTIS AND THE UNLEARNED LESSONS OF THE G.O.P.’S CULTURE WAR Doreen St. Félix On Television “THE FIRST LADY” IS A BAD-WIG COSTUME DRAMA DAILY CARTOON This week’s cartoons » “For Mother’s Day, my mom would like the activism of her youth to not be for nothing.” * Facebook * Twitter * Email * Shopping Sign up for the Daily Humor newsletter » NEW YORKER FAVORITES THE NEW YORKER RECOMMENDS Sign up to receive our weekly newsletter about what to read, watch, and listen to. 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 » Luke Mogelson on volunteer medics in Ukraine, Michael Schulman on Elisabeth Moss, Maya Jasanoff on ancestry, and more. Table of Contents » May 9, 2022 “Hang Time,” by Kadir Nelson. FICTION FROM THE ARCHIVES More by this author » JOHN UPDIKE SELECTED STORIES * THE FULL GLASS “That icy water held an ingredient that made me, a boy of nine or ten, eager for the next moment of life, one brimming moment after another.” * OUTAGE “When he had seen her in the center of the road he had thought for an instant she was a ghost.” * SNOWING IN GREENWICH VILLAGE “The snow, invisible except around street lights, exerted a fluttering, romantic pressure on their faces. ‘Coming down hard now,’ Richard said.” Photograph by Sally Soames / Camera Press / Redux John Updike’s career at The New Yorker began with a poem, published in 1954, when he was twenty-two, and ended with a poem, published in 2009, a few weeks after his death. In between, Updike, whom George Saunders called “a once-in-a-generation phenomenon, if that generation is lucky,” published more than a hundred and forty stories exploring family, marriage, infidelity, mortality, and what he called “the American Protestant small-town middle class.” SELECTED STORIES THE FULL GLASS “That icy water held an ingredient that made me, a boy of nine or ten, eager for the next moment of life, one brimming moment after another.” OUTAGE “When he had seen her in the center of the road he had thought for an instant she was a ghost.” SNOWING IN GREENWICH VILLAGE “The snow, invisible except around street lights, exerted a fluttering, romantic pressure on their faces. ‘Coming down hard now,’ Richard said.” Fiction Podcast Roger Angell reads John Updike Personal History Lost Art More by this author » HUMOR Daily Shouts WINE-BUYING TIPS FOR PEOPLE WHO ARE RUNNING LATE The only geography to note is the bottle’s proximity to the store’s exit—the closer it is, the quicker you can check out! By Nate Odenkirk Daily Shouts EXPENSIVE JOURNALS YOU’VE BOUGHT OVER THE YEARS: WHERE ARE THEY NOW? So many journals, so much time spent not writing in them. By Julia Edelman and Sofia Warren Satire from The Borowitz Report KAVANAUGH ASKS IF ANYONE HAS SEEN BRIEFCASE HE ACCIDENTALLY LEFT AT BAR The jurist said that, after work last Friday, he dropped into a bar near the Supreme Court “to have a few pops.” By Andy Borowitz Blitt’s Kvetchbook LADY LIBERTY’S RESPONSE TO JUSTICE ALITO Beware the mighty woman with a torch. By Barry Blitt Daily Shouts I’M NOT A PROFESSIONAL ATHLETIC TRAINER, I’M JUST A WOMAN Is your goal to fit into a little black dress or simply to burn it all down to the ground? By Kimberly Harrington Daily Shouts WHAT YOUR INDOOR PLANT SAYS ABOUT YOU You have somehow killed seven of these already but you are hoping that the eighth time’s the charm. 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