| Comment The Supreme Court’s Conservatives Have Asserted Their PowerBut what if their big and fast moves, eviscerating some constitutional rights and inflating others, are bound for collision? By Jeannie Suk Gersen | | | | Editor’s Picks | The New Yorker Interview Patricia Arquette Is Still Sick of Women Coming LastThe actress discusses her role on “Severance,” being wooed by Nicolas Cage, growing up on a commune, and how women are mistreated in Hollywood and beyond. By Michael Schulman | | Kitchen Notes The Unbreakable Rules of the Chicago Dog—and When to Bend ThemIn the Windy City, brook no compromises. Everywhere else, work with what you’ve got. By Helen Rosner | | | | | Culture Dept. | Double Take Sunday Reading: Writers at Work From the archive: extraordinary portraits of literary artists. By The New Yorker | Books Briefly Noted “Fire Island,” “The Hangman and His Wife,” “Keats,” and “Imaginary Languages.” | | Poems “Fracture Story” “Inside me, minerals were mending themselves.” By Nell Wright | Poems “The Bread, the Butter, the Orange Marmalade” “Nothing was what I wanted.” By Mary Jo Bang | | | | Fun & Games Dept. | Name Drop Play the Quiz Can you guess the notable person in six clues or fewer? By Will Nediger | Cryptic Crossword The Cryptic Puzzle Bury cooked T-bone around back of mausoleum: six letters. By Patrick Berry | | Daily Shouts Collegiate Punctuation Marks Trying to Be the Next Oxford Comma The Notre Dame semicolon, Sarah Lawrence quotation marks, the Iowa Writers’ Workshop em dash, and others. By Madeline Hester | Cartoons from the Issue Cartoons from the Issue Funny drawings from this week’s magazine. | | | | | | | |
No comments:
Post a Comment