Read The New Yorker’s complete coverage of the coronavirus pandemic and Black Lives Matter protests.
The Rabbit Outbreak
A highly contagious, often lethal animal virus arrives in the United States.
Can Our Ballots Be Both Secret and Secure?
A mathematician’s quest to make American elections more trustworthy.
The Study That Debunks Most Anti-Abortion Arguments
For five years, a team of researchers asked women about their experience after having—or not having—an abortion. What do their answers tell us?
How Virginia Woolf Kept Her Brother Alive in Letters
For Woolf, correspondence became a way to transcend a climate of illness—to envision a future she couldn’t see.
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Spotlight
The Unexpected Sunlight of Waxahatchee’s “Saint Cloud�
Katie Crutchfield’s fifth solo album, which was released just as the country went under coronavirus lockdown, has become a talisman of the self-isolation era.
Europe in 1989, America in 2020, and the Death of the Lost Cause
A whole vision of history seems to be leaving the stage.
“Starship Troopers� Aligns with Our American Defeat
Once again, the present has caught up to Paul Verhoeven’s acid vision of the future.
Steven Prince, an Early Scorsese Star, “Was the Guy with the Gun�
The subject of the newly reissued documentary “American Boy� is alive and well and still full of stories.
The True Cost of Dollar Stores
Discount chains are thriving. But what do they do to poor communities?
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The Latest
Tough-Guy Things I Can Do Because I Don’t Wear a Face Mask
I can spit anywhere I want. I can smoke big-ass cigars. I can grit my teeth to show that I’m not exactly happy with how close you’re getting to my PT Cruiser.
Rediscovering “The Happy Ending,� a Movie About the Dreams and Delusions of Marriage (and the Movies)
Richard Brooks’s passionate and cinema-centric drama, from 1969, burrows deeply into one woman’s harrowing experience of domestic life.
Putin Admits Taking SATs for Trump
“I often asked myself, ‘How will Donald Trump ever repay me for putting him on the path to Wharton?’ � the Russian President said.
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From This Week’s Issue
Foraged Foods Shorten the Supply Chain
Chicken-of-the-woods mushrooms that fry up like their namesake, snappy sea beans that need no extra salt, sassafras syrup, and other edible offerings from the wilds outside the city limits.
What Happens When David Mitchell Writes a Rock Novel?
A conventional story of a band’s rise turns into a book on another plane entirely.
What to Do About a Room with a “Vues�?
The wallpaper “Les Vues d’Amérique du Nord� was criticized for being too French when it was first installed in the White House. Now the Spence School is removing the paper from its walls, after black students said that it “glorifies the trans-Atlantic slave trade and abuse of Indigenous peoples.�
“A Transparent Woman�
“She asked if she was under arrest. No, what made her think that? They were just going to have a little chat. The threat hidden in that twee bloodless phrase.�
Video
When Humanitarian Aid Is Considered a Crime
Scott Warren's arrest for providing shelter to two migrants posed a question to his community and the court: Under what circumstances could humanitarian aid be deemed illegal?