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The New Yorker

Mar 01 2021
Magazine

Founded in 1925, The New Yorker publishes the best writers of its time and has received more National Magazine Awards than any other magazine, for its groundbreaking reporting, authoritative analysis, and creative inspiration. The New Yorker takes readers beyond the weekly print magazine with the web, mobile, tablet, social media, and signature events. The New Yorker is at once a classic and at the leading edge.

Contributors

The Mail

Goings On About Town: This Week • The shimmering, polychromatic music that Stravinsky composed for “The Firebird” has inspired many productions since the fairy-tale ballet débuted, in 1910. The one that John Taras choreographed for Dance Theatre of Harlem, in 1982—which is streaming on the company’s YouTube channel on Feb. 27—is less Russian than many. Fantastical sets and costumes by Geoffrey Holder combine orchidaceous foliage out of a Henri Rousseau jungle with a Levantine hero and a Japanese villain. The dancing is equally vibrant and warm.

Goings On About Town: Television

Tables for Two: “Bollywood Kitchen”

Comment: Assessing Threats

Dept. of Red Tape: Vaccine Yenta

The Bench: Swat Team

Man’s Best Friend: The Smell Test

The Pictures: Viewfinder

Coronavirus Chronicles: The Covid Conundrum • Why does the pandemic seem far deadlier in some countries than in others?

Shouts & Murmurs: The Advice Gap

Personal History: My Brother’s Keeper • Early in the Cuban Revolution, my mother made a consequential decision.

Profiles: Figuring It Out • How Nicole Eisenman choreographs bodies on a canvas.

Poem: Allegory

Our Local Correspondents: It’s No Picnic • Battling a global pandemic and a long winter, restaurants struggle to survive.

Poem: Related Matters

Fiction: Good-Looking

Books: O Lucky Man! • Tom Stoppard’s charmed and haunted life.

Books: Briefly Noted

Books: Call It Like It Is • In Viet Thanh Nguyen’s “The Committed,” fiction is criticism.

Performance: Hide and Seek • Acting Black and white onscreen.

Pop Music: Love and Other Drugs • Julien Baker’s songs of addiction and redemption.

Musical Events: Wind Songs • The “Darkness Sounding” festival, in Southern California.

The Art World: Mastering Sorrow • The New Museum’s powerful show of Black American artists.

CARTOON CAPTION CONTEST

Puzzles & Games Dept.: The Crossword • A lightly challenging puzzle.


Expand title description text
Frequency: Weekly Pages: 82 Publisher: Conde Nast US Edition: Mar 01 2021

OverDrive Magazine

  • Release date: February 22, 2021

Formats

OverDrive Magazine

subjects

News & Politics

Languages

English

Founded in 1925, The New Yorker publishes the best writers of its time and has received more National Magazine Awards than any other magazine, for its groundbreaking reporting, authoritative analysis, and creative inspiration. The New Yorker takes readers beyond the weekly print magazine with the web, mobile, tablet, social media, and signature events. The New Yorker is at once a classic and at the leading edge.

Contributors

The Mail

Goings On About Town: This Week • The shimmering, polychromatic music that Stravinsky composed for “The Firebird” has inspired many productions since the fairy-tale ballet débuted, in 1910. The one that John Taras choreographed for Dance Theatre of Harlem, in 1982—which is streaming on the company’s YouTube channel on Feb. 27—is less Russian than many. Fantastical sets and costumes by Geoffrey Holder combine orchidaceous foliage out of a Henri Rousseau jungle with a Levantine hero and a Japanese villain. The dancing is equally vibrant and warm.

Goings On About Town: Television

Tables for Two: “Bollywood Kitchen”

Comment: Assessing Threats

Dept. of Red Tape: Vaccine Yenta

The Bench: Swat Team

Man’s Best Friend: The Smell Test

The Pictures: Viewfinder

Coronavirus Chronicles: The Covid Conundrum • Why does the pandemic seem far deadlier in some countries than in others?

Shouts & Murmurs: The Advice Gap

Personal History: My Brother’s Keeper • Early in the Cuban Revolution, my mother made a consequential decision.

Profiles: Figuring It Out • How Nicole Eisenman choreographs bodies on a canvas.

Poem: Allegory

Our Local Correspondents: It’s No Picnic • Battling a global pandemic and a long winter, restaurants struggle to survive.

Poem: Related Matters

Fiction: Good-Looking

Books: O Lucky Man! • Tom Stoppard’s charmed and haunted life.

Books: Briefly Noted

Books: Call It Like It Is • In Viet Thanh Nguyen’s “The Committed,” fiction is criticism.

Performance: Hide and Seek • Acting Black and white onscreen.

Pop Music: Love and Other Drugs • Julien Baker’s songs of addiction and redemption.

Musical Events: Wind Songs • The “Darkness Sounding” festival, in Southern California.

The Art World: Mastering Sorrow • The New Museum’s powerful show of Black American artists.

CARTOON CAPTION CONTEST

Puzzles & Games Dept.: The Crossword • A lightly challenging puzzle.


Expand title description text