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Author: The New Yorker
Sunday in the Amusement Park with Elon
Who knows who you’ll bump into?
Briefly Noted Book Reviews
“Seeking Shelter,” “Dust and Light,” “What You Make of Me,” and “Casualties of Truth.”
Why We Can’t Quit Talking About Jesus
Scholars debate whether the Gospel stories preserve ancient memories or are just Greek literature in disguise. But there’s a reason they won’t stay dead and buried.
Haley Mlotek’s “No Fault: A Memoir of Romance and Divorce,” Reviewed
The battle for custody of a contested institution.
The Quintessentially American Story of Indian Pizza
In the eighties, a Punjabi immigrant bought an old Italian restaurant in San Francisco. The dish he pioneered became a phenomenon.
R. Kikuo Johnson’s “Upstairs, Downstairs”
A tale of two schlepps.
Helen, Help Me: Should I Be Cooking with Ostrich Eggs?
Our food critic answers a reader’s question about alternatives to the beleaguered chicken egg.
Disney’s “Snow White” Remake Whistles But Doesn’t Work
Loathed even before its release, the latest live-action version of an animated classic embodies many of the cynical moves of the remake racket.
For Elias Williams, the Hip-Hop Beat Machine Carries the Soul of Community
In “Straight Loops, Light & Soul,” a project evoking Roy DeCarava’s Harlem jazz pictures and the music of J Dilla, Williams captures the underground beat-maker scene of New York City.
Your A.I. Lover Will Change You
A future where many humans are in love with bots may not be far off. Should we regard them as training grounds for healthy relationships or as nihilistic traps?
The Flawed Heart of “Adolescence”
The creators of the British miniseries think of the contemporary English boy as a fragile creature, abandoned by society.
The Hitchcockian Wonders of “Misericordia”
Alain Guiraudie’s intimate thriller, about sex and death in a rustic village, bends classic tropes into modern forms.
What to Watch That Isn’t “The White Lotus”
Also: the audacious Andy Kaufman; Richard Learoyd’s haunting new photography; and the Wooster Group gets wistful.
In “The Alto Knights,” Robert De Niro Sings a Familiar Gangland Tune
The great veteran of Mafia roles, cast as the rival bosses Frank Costello and Vito Genovese, anchors Barry Levinson’s exploration of mid-century Mob life.
The Resurrection of a Lost Yiddish Novel
At the end of the twentieth century, Chaim Grade preserved the memory of a Jewish tradition besieged by the forces of modernity.
A British Detective Comedy About a Reclusive Puzzle-Maker
In “Ludwig,” David Mitchell tries to solve mysteries—and the problem of being a person in the world.
“Being Maria” Brings Maria Schneider’s Traumatic Career to Light
Jessica Palud’s portrait of the actress, who starred, with Marlon Brando, in “Last Tango in Paris,” centers the abuse that Schneider endured on that shoot, and its lifelong aftereffects.
Could We Store Our Data in DNA?
It might allow us to keep everything, forever.
“Purpose” on Broadway and “Vanya” Downtown
Branden Jacobs-Jenkins’s latest offers another family battle royale, and Andrew Scott dazzles in a one-man tour de force.
The Game Designer Playing Through His Own Psyche
Davey Wreden found acclaim in his twenties, with the Stanley Parable and the Beginner’s Guide. His new game, Wanderstop, grapples with the depression that followed.
“Who by Fire” Is a Brilliant Drama of Male Rage at Its Most Elemental
In Philippe Lesage’s film, several strains of wounded masculinity derail an idyllic retreat in the mountains of Quebec.
Laurie Santos’s Pursuit of Happiness
Yale’s resident well-being expert talks about what it means to live a good life and shares some books that might help us get within reach of one.
The Best Books We’ve Read in 2025 So Far
Our editors and critics review notable new fiction, nonfiction, and poetry.
The Ecstatic Intimacies of Joe Brainard
The multitalented poet, painter, and cartoonist made work first and foremost to delight.
Pedro Lemebel, a Radical Voice for Calamitous Times
Lemebel’s writing was entirely focussed on those living on the farthest margins of society—people escaping the norms and seen as different.
Amy Sherald’s “Miss Everything (Unsuppressed Deliverance)”
The artist adds some whimsy to her thought-provoking techniques.
Mister Lonely, the New TV Hero
Widowers drive the plots of “Paradise,” “Severance,” and “American Primeval,” to poignant effect.
Restaurant Review: La Tête d’Or and the Revenge of the American Steak House
The ne plus ultra of expense-account dining is making a comeback, with help from the indefatigable French chef Daniel Boulud.
The Parental Panic of “Adolescence”
The Netflix series, about a thirteen-year-old killer, attempts to grapple with the crisis facing boys today—but its true sympathies lie with the baffled adults around them.
The Strange Experimental-Theatre Experience Giving New Meaning to “Show, Don’t Tell”
The minds behind “You Me Bum Bum Train,” which has sparked a ticket frenzy, discuss re-creating real-life scenarios, crafting a show that gives people “epiphanies,” and why they ask participants to sign an N.D.A.
Uneven Revivals of “A Streetcar Named Desire” and “Ghosts”
Paul Mescal and Patsy Ferran star in a heavy-handed production of Tennessee Williams’s masterpiece, and a mismatched cast stumbles around Henrik Ibsen’s haunted classic.
Two Young Pianists Test Their Limits
Yunchan Lim tackles Bach’s Goldberg Variations, and Seong-Jin Cho presents a Ravel marathon.
How “Severance” Makes a Fetish of the Office
In its second season, the show continues to indict the corporate workplace while secretly longing for it.
Jeremy Denk’s Musical Account of American Divisions
The award-winning pianist on the relationship between music and politics—and on five books that hold them in tension.
A Crowning Moment for the New Orleans King Cake
During Carnival, the ingenuity of the city’s bakers is on full display.
The playwrights Samuel D. Hunter and Sam Shepard Try to Go Home Again
Fifty years apart, the playwrights Samuel D. Hunter and Sam Shepard examine our national obsession with family inheritance.
An 1887 Opera by a Black Composer Finally Surfaces
Edmond Dédé’s “Morgiane” shows how diversity initiatives can promote works of real cultural value.
Before He Formed Led Zeppelin, Jimmy Page Played a Prom in Ohio
A new documentary about the band’s early days offers a rich backdrop to an unlikely performance of a star on the rise.