Worms’ Work
For five thousand years there has been no shortage of uses for silk, from Genghis Khan’s undershirts to nerve repair.
September 19, 2024 issue
Between a Joke & a Prophecy
Ed Park’s latest book—rich with errant wordplay, historical high jinks, and a fixation on the clandestine and conspiratorial—takes its place in the great tradition of the American systems novel.
September 19, 2024 issue
Mode for Joe
The tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson was at once a vessel of tradition and a Romantic individualist, a consummate professional in an art form that lionized rebels.
September 6, 2024
Major Details
In Ordinary Human Failings, Megan Nolan works to balance her novel’s ambitious scale and grave themes with an attention to emotional minutiae.
September 19, 2024 issue
Mexico: Anatomy of a Mass Murder
Marcela Turati’s account of the massacres in San Fernando, Tamaulipas, is arguably the most thorough piece of investigative journalism yet produced about Mexico’s brutal political economy.
September 19, 2024 issue
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Andrew Delbanco: Mysterious, Brilliant Frederick Douglass“As his fame grew, and with it his independence, he became less a scripted witness and more his own man—a man, moreover, of growing political consequence, to whom antislavery activists and, eventually, mainstream politicians turned for advice and for the sheer prestige of his affiliation.”
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