Monday, February 23, 2026

Culture

Richard Price’s Street Life | The New Yorker

When I arrived at the novelist Richard Price’s five-story, nineteenth-century brownstone, in East Harlem, in December, the doorbell was broken. Price and his wife, the writer Lorraine Adams, had left the door unlocked, in anticipation of my visit....

Restaurant Review: JR & Son

JR & Son is a new-old establishment that conjures the past while deliciously disrupting expectations. Source link

Sink or Swim | The New Yorker

He was surprised by what he found in California: “I guess in your imagination you see four or five people wandering around, where in reality it’s piles, crowds of people moving around, so it’s much more enticing, engaging,...

Far-Flung Local Gems | The New Yorker

In the spirit of summer travel, we’ve asked some of our writers living outside New York City to share a few of their favorite local spots. Read Lauren Collins on an irresistible Parisian toy store; Hannah Goldfield on...

The Tragedy of the Diddy Trial

Sean Combs mouthed “thank you” to the jurors, his hands clasped in prayer. The intricacies of their deliberations will be revealed later on, in the requisite television interviews, but, as of Wednesday morning, what mattered was that Combs...

Lorde Strips Down to Start Over

Lorde is contemporary pop’s greatest demystifier, and also its greatest mystic. This contradiction has animated her music from the beginning. “We aren’t caught up in your love affair,” she declared in 2013’s “Royals,” taking a defiant stance against...

Finding a Family of Boys

In 1981, I was a student of art history at Columbia University. I was twenty-one and worked to support myself at a variety of jobs. Columbia was an all-boys school then. Old oak desks and a million cigarettes....

The Met’s Renovated Michael C. Rockefeller Wing, Reviewed

It may be the most impressive of the recently modernized colonial collections, far surpassing Berlin’s much criticized Humboldt Forum. One laudable shift is the variety of media exhibited—not just sculpture, which was the first so-called primitive art to...

How Eva Victor Reimagined the Trauma Plot

At one point in “Sorry, Baby,” a new film written, directed, and starring the actor and comedian Eva Victor, the main character, an English professor named Agnes, has an anxiety attack while driving. She pulls over into the...

An Enduring Archive of Queer Writers’ Portraits

Giard grew up in a working-class family in Hartford, Connecticut. When he entered public high school, he was shunted onto the remedial track, because, as he wrote, “it was simply assumed that most kids coming out of my...
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27 Nordstrom Items For Winter to Spring Transitional Weather

During that in-between time where Winter starts to settle down, and Spring is soon to emerge, getting dressed...
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