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The New Yorker

How to Eat a Rattlesnake

In Oklahoma, snake meat was a masculine trophy, edible proof that you were willing to tangle with death, John Paul Brammer writes. This might be why rattlesnake hunters, when asked about the meat’s flavor, tend to insist, a bit defensively, that, no, it’s nothing like chicken at all.

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Above the Fold

Essential reading for today.

How Marjorie Taylor Greene Raises Money by Attacking Other Republicans

The congresswoman is demanding Speaker Mike Johnson’s ouster. Is it principle—or a fund-raising ploy?

The Supreme Court Appears Poised to Protect the Presidency—and Trump

In arguments about Presidential immunity, the conservative Justices made clear that they are less concerned with holding Trump accountable than with shielding former Presidents from retribution.

What Harvey Weinstein’s Overturned Conviction Means for Donald Trump’s Trial

The legal issue behind Weinstein’s successful appeal is also at the heart of the former President’s hush-money case.

Does the “Hot Hand” Exist in Hockey?

Nearly every hockey fan and player will tell you that, when the playoffs arrive, you have to go with the goalie who’s on a roll. Are they right?

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On and Off the Avenue

Spoiler Alert: Leftovers for Dinner

How to host a dinner party for nine using a pre-trash haul from Too Good to Go and other food-waste apps. Carb-averse guests, beware.

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The Food Issue

New items on the menu throughout the week.

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Find new offerings in The New Yorker Store, including limited-edition totes.Browse and buy »

The Political Scene

Donald Trump Is Being Ritually Humiliated in Court

At his criminal trial, the ex-President has to sit there while potential jurors, prosecutors, the judge, witnesses, and even his own lawyers talk about him as a defective, impossible person.

King Donald’s Day at the Supreme Court

A political hit job? A military coup? Trump’s lawyer tests the boundaries of a truly imperial Presidency.

The G.O.P.’s Election-Integrity Trap

Donald Trump has spent years arguing that mail-in voting is fraudulent and corrupt. Now the Republican National Committee, which sees mail-in voting as essential, must persuade his base to embrace it.

The War Games of Israel and Iran

While Netanyahu and the Islamic Republic exchange ballistic “messages,” the question of Palestine demands the moral and strategic courage of actual statesmen.

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Daily Comment

How Columbia’s Campus Was Torn Apart Over Gaza

The university asked the N.Y.P.D. to arrest pro-Palestine student protesters. Was it a necessary step to protect Jewish students, or a dangerous encroachment on academic freedom?

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The Critics

The Current Cinema

Love Means Nothing in Tennis but Everything in “Challengers”

Zendaya, Josh O’Connor, and Mike Faist sustain a three-way rally of romance in Luca Guadagnino’s almost absurdly sexy sports film.

The Front Row

Joanna Arnow’s Deceptively Plain Masterpiece

“The Feeling That the Time for Doing Something Has Passed” mines the comic potential of distance and framing, in an examination of degradations large and small.

The Theatre

“Stereophonic” and “Cabaret” Turn Up the Volume on Broadway

David Adjmi’s cult-hit play features seventies-inspired rock songs by Will Butler, while Eddie Redmayne presides over a demonic version of the Kit Kat Club.

Fault Lines

Could “Mind the Game” Change the Way Sports Are Covered?

The podcast, co-hosted by J. J. Redick and LeBron James, combines analytical commentary with an insider’s perspective—and bypasses traditional media.

Pop Music

The Tortured Poetry of Taylor Swift’s New Album

“The Tortured Poets Department” has moments of tenderness. But it suffers from being too long and too familiar.

Photo Booth

In Justine Kurland’s Photographs, a Mother and Son Hit the Road

Some of the portraits in “This Train” have an Edenic quality to them, as if Kurland is asking: What if my kid and I were the only two people in the world?

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What We’re Reading This Week

A retelling of Mark Twain’s “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” from the perspective of Jim, a collection of piquant essays on our predilection for minimalism, a memoir that charts the investigation of a mother’s murder across a quarter century, and more.

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Secret Ingredients

The Most Treasured Jar in My Pantry

There is nothing “plain” about vanilla when your extract is home-brewed.

How to Season Your Food Like the French

I didn’t really know what black pepper was until I lived in Lyon.

The Unexpected Hero of My Baking Repertoire

Cakes that usually come at you two-fisted—pure butter and sugar—begin to relax when you swap some of the usual white-wheat flour for buckwheat.

A Tamarind Tree’s Sweet and Sour Inheritance

My ancestor was gifted a huge orchard just outside Delhi. The fruits it produced were the taste of my childhood.

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Annals of Gastronomy

In Search of Lost Flavors in Flushing

Rediscovering the tastes of childhood in New York’s biggest Chinatown.

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Goings On

Recommendations from our writers on what to read, eat, watch, listen to, and more.

Teresita Fernández’s Shifting Sculptural Landscapes

Plus: the eerie chills and tender warmth of Jane Schoenbrun’s new film; this year’s Long Play Festival, which celebrates contemporary music and minimalism; and Helen Shaw’s top theatre picks.

Stories About Human-Robot Relationships Push Our Buttons

Jennifer Wilson writes about two new novels, “Annie Bot” and “Loneliness & Company,” that reflect anxieties about A.I. coming for our hearts as well as for our jobs.

“Civil War” Is a Tale of Bad News

The grim political fantasy about secession and violence revolves around a war photographer but has little to say about the making and consumption of news images. Richard Brody reviews Alex Garland’s latest film.

The Return of the Power Lunch

Helen Rosner visits Four Twenty Five—a luxe new dining room from the mega-restaurateur Jean-Georges Vongerichten—which takes square aim at the expense-account crowd.

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Peruse a gallery ofcartoons from the issue »
They were newly married, each for the second time after living alone for years, like two grazing creatures from separate pastures suddenly finding themselves—who knows why—herded into the same meadow and grazing the same turf.

That they were “not young,” though described by observers as “amazingly youthful,” must have been a strong component of their attraction to each other.Continue reading »

Ideas

How to Die in Good Health

The average American celebrates just one healthy birthday after the age of sixty-five. Maybe it doesn’t have to be this way.

How Gullible Are You?

People may fervently espouse symbolic beliefs, cognitive scientists say, but they don’t treat them the same as factual beliefs. It’s worth keeping track of the difference.

Get Real

Video-game engines were designed to mimic the mechanics of the real world. How perfectly can reality be simulated?

What Is Noise?

Sometimes we embrace it, sometimes we hate it—and everything depends on who is making it.

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Annals of Gastronomy

A Martini Tour of New York City

My month of vermouth-rinsing and fat-washing.

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The Weekend Essay

The “Epic Row” Over a New Epoch

Scientists, journalists, and artists often say that we live in the Anthropocene, a new age in which humans shape the Earth. Why do some leading geologists reject the term?

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Puzzles & Games

Take a break and play.

The Crossword

A puzzle that ranges in difficulty, with the occasional theme.

Solve the latest puzzle

The Mini

A bite-size crossword, for a quick diversion.

Solve the latest puzzle

Name Drop

Can you guess the notable person in six clues or fewer?

Play a quiz from the vault

Cartoon Caption Contest

We provide a cartoon, you provide a caption.

Enter this week’s contest
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In Case You Missed It

When Babies Rule the Dinner Table
In the past two decades, American parents have started to ditch the purées and give babies more choice—and more power—at mealtime. 
The Dada Era of Internet Memes
How the viral TikToks of a Chinese glycine factory elucidate our increasingly chaotic digital environment.
How Gaza’s Largest Mental-Health Organization Works Through War
Dr. Yasser Abu-Jamei on providing counselling services to Palestinian children: “When relatives are killed, we try somehow to calm the child and then ask questions: What are you going to do tomorrow? What are you going to do the day after tomorrow?”
The Haiti That Still Dreams
The country is being defined by disaster. What would it mean to tell a new story?
Culture Desk

What Cartoonists Saw in Isolation: A Portrait of the Pandemic

In the spring of 2020, artists captured silliness, sexiness, despondence, and hope. What does quarantine look like when viewed from the other side?

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The Talk of the Town

London Postcard

Hearing the Voices of Grenfell Tower

Dept. of Inspiration

The Evanescent Art of the Sandcastle

The Pictures

Culling the Kim’s Video Mother Lode

Death Valley Postcard

The Death Valley Lake That’s Gone in a Flash

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Fiction from the Archives

Zadie Smith

Selected Stories

Photograph by Vittorio Zunino Celotto / Getty
As Zadie Smith once wrote, fiction “is a medium that must always allow itself . . . the possibility of expressing intimate and inconvenient truths.” Her stories, which have been appearing in The New Yorker since 1999, when she was twenty-four, are full of those truths, whether she’s inhabiting an immigrant living in servitude in London, Billie Holiday, or villagers held hostage by two armed strangers.

Selected Stories

Now More Than Ever

“I instinctively sympathize with the guilty. That’s my guilty secret.”

The Embassy of Cambodia

“Nobody could have expected it, or be expecting it. It’s a surprise, to us all.”

Two Men Arrive in a Village

“A kind of wildness descends, a bloody chaos, into which all the formal gestures of welcome and food and threat seem instantly to dissolve.”

Escape from New York

“He could not get over how well he was handling the apocalypse so far.”