
Where Are the Women Composers?
An engaging multiple biography draws the reader deep into the lives of four British women who attempted to forge careers in the male-dominated field of music composition.
October 5, 2023 issue
‘Obedient to Their Words’
As a writer who is so obviously a real person, Simonides perhaps more than any other ancient poet attracts anecdotes and stories that reflect on his character as much as his work.
October 5, 2023 issue
Constable’s Quiet Tumult
John Constable’s lifelong struggle was to convey his deep feelings for his native countryside to a reluctant public, which preferred escapist historical tableaux and portraits of grandees.
October 5, 2023 issue
The Court’s Conservative Constitutional Revolution
The bloc of conservative justices on the Supreme Court have dismantled many of the legal precedents on their hit list. What’s in store for the new term?
October 5, 2023 issue
Searching for the True Brazil
The writer Mário de Andrade advocated a lusty embrace of the indigenous elements of Brazilian culture.
October 5, 2023 issue
Advertisement
Free from the Archives
Ingrid D. Rowland: A Short Tale of Skyscrapers“The phallic nature of towers has never been subject to much doubt. Medieval Italian cities bristled with them, each one symbolizing, with what the Greek poet Pindar called (in another phallic context) ‘upright hubris.’”
The latest releases from New York Review Books
Give the gift they’ll open all year.
Save 55% off the regular rate and over 75% off the cover price and receive a free 2024 calendar!