| Personal History Notes from Prince Harry’s GhostwriterCollaborating on his memoir, “Spare,” meant spending hours together on Zoom, meeting his inner circle, and gaining a new perspective on the tabloids. By J. R. Moehringer | | | | This Week’s Cover | Cover Story “Safe Travels”Friends and colleagues of Bruce McCall, who created this week’s cover, reflect on the late artist’s zeal for life. By Françoise Mouly | | | | Shop this cover and others from The New Yorker in the Condé Nast Store » | | | Reporting and Commentary | A Reporter at Large The Problem with Planned Parenthood Many abortion providers feel that the organization is too cautious and too corporate—forcing independent clinics to take the biggest risks. By Eyal Press | Letter from Iskenderun Turkey’s Earthquake Election The disaster highlighted the corruption and authoritarianism of President Erdoğan. Can he finally be defeated? By Suzy Hansen | | Profiles The Filmmakers Who Voyaged Inside the Body For more than a decade, two “recovering” anthropologists have brought documentary closer to the human experience. Now they’ve made the camera part of our flesh and blood. By Alexandra Schwartz | Comment Ending the Covid Public Health Emergency Isn’t All Good News Pandemic-era policy contained flashes of what is possible: real achievements in making life easier for millions of Americans. By Dhruv Khullar | | | | The Critics | Books Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Perilous Power of Respectability We revere the man and revile the strategy, but King knew what he was doing. By Kelefa Sanneh | Books BuzzFeed, Gawker, and the Casualties of the Traffic Wars Ben Smith’s new book shows how the race for clicks spawned—then strangled—the new media. By Nathan Heller | | Musical Events Yo-Yo Ma Goes Underground with the Louisville Orchestra Teddy Abrams, the ensemble’s music director, has created a work about Mammoth Cave—and staged the piece inside its reverberating walls. By Alex Ross | The Current Cinema “BlackBerry” Tracks a Tech Dream That Died In contrast to the business triumphalism of Ben Affleck’s “Air,” Matt Johnson’s film shows that a rise and fall is more gripping, and more morally provoking, than pure success. By Anthony Lane | | | | Fiction from the Issue | Fiction “Maintenance, Hvidovre”“I didn’t want to go in and see to my child. The strangeness of what the diaper hid frightened me.” By Olga Ravn | | | | Newsletters Sign Up for The New Yorker’s Books & Fiction NewsletterBook recommendations, fiction, poetry, and dispatches from the world of literature, twice a week. | | | | Humor from The New Yorker | Shouts & Murmurs Is Not Drinking a Problem for You? I wasn’t one of those people who got messy, cracking open another LaCroix with a burp. By Cora Frazier | Cartoons from the Issue Cartoons from the Issue Funny drawings from this week’s magazine. | | Crossword A Challenging Puzzle Summer month in Chile: five letters. By Elizabeth C. Gorski | Name Drop Play Today’s Quiz Can you guess the notable person in six clues or fewer? By Matt Jackson | | | | More from The New Yorker | The New Yorker Interview Bill Hader Just Wants to Make Weird Things The co-creator and star of the HBO comedy “Barry” on the end of the series, his film-nerd past, and why he has no desire to be part of “the conversation.” By Rachel Syme | On Television Watching “Succession” Amid the Fox News Scandals The real-life Murdoch drama has supercharged the HBO show’s final season, making its satire feel even more delightfully loaded. By Inkoo Kang | | | | | | |
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