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The New Yorker

One Family’s Perilous Escape from Gaza City

When Israel invaded Kamal Al-Mashharawi’s neighborhood, he crowded into a basement with his extended family. “The world is closing in on us,” he wrote on WhatsApp. Adam Rasgon reconstructs Mashharawi’s journey through his photos, videos, and messages.

Animation of two text messages overlayed over video of hazy destruction
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The Lede

Reporting and analysis on the affairs of the day.

The Intimate Reality of the J.F.K. Assassination

A visit to Dealey Plaza, after years of thinking and reading about the Kennedy assassination, came as a shock.

Chaos in the Cradle of A.I.

The Sam Altman saga at OpenAI underscores an unsettling truth: nobody knows what A.I. safety really means.

Should U.S. Aid to Israel Be Contingent on Human Rights?

The head of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee argues that humanitarian concerns shouldn’t hold up funding for Israel’s war effort.

The Supreme Court’s Self-Excusing Ethics Code

Under the Court’s new rules, the Justices appear not to have made any mistakes.

The Free-Market Fundamentalism of Argentina’s Javier Milei

The President-elect has been compared to Donald Trump, but his radical views on the economy set him apart.

Elon Musk’s Poisoned Platform

Users and advertisers are fleeing X after Musk’s message supporting an antisemitic conspiracy theory.

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Culture Desk

Lahaina Hallelujah

A cartoonist reflects on his family’s roots in Maui and the devastation of the wildfire.

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Personal History

The Fall of My Teen-Age Self

This particular April, I’d sworn to my mother I wasn’t smoking. Therefore: stolen cigarettes. Therefore: windowsill.

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The Israel-Hamas War

The Making of the World’s Go-To Hostage Negotiator

How Qatar became one of the world’s most prominent mediators of hostage situations.

The Trauma of Gaza’s Doctors

The head of mission for Doctors Without Borders in Palestine on the horrors of practicing medicine under siege.

Escalating Violence Between Israel and Lebanon

There’s a sense of history repeating itself along the border, where tens of thousands have been displaced and the civilian death toll is climbing.

The Use of Children, Hostages, and the Vulnerable in War

The war in Gaza has the feel of history sliding backward.

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Profiles

Joyce Carol Oates’s Relentless, Prolific Search for a Self

In more than a hundred works of fiction, Oates has investigated the question of personality—while doubting that she actually has one.

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Thanksgiving Reads & Recipes

The Open Secret of Thanksgiving, and a Recipe

Whether the feast is transcendent or mediocre, whether you are fond of your dinner companions or can’t stand them, the day is defined by something else.

A Thanksgiving Dinner That Longs for France

Recipes for a small but still lavish holiday meal.

Win Thanksgiving (and Post-Thanksgiving) with Double Stock

A true double stock is a culinary showpiece, an investment of time and ingredients that is worthy of its own spotlight.

Thanksgiving Without Borders

The challenge of cooking Thanksgiving dinner abroad.

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Annals of Communications

All the Newspapers’ Men

In Martin Baron’s “Collision of Power” and Adam Nagourney’s “The Times,” two well-known journalists turn their investigative power on their institutions—and themselves.

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Dept. of Hoopla

Giving thanks for humor.

Ingredient-Substitution Guide for Thanksgiving Recipes

For one can of pumpkin purée, steal three rotting jack-o’-lanterns from your neighbors’ front steps.

The Cranberry Sauce Has Something to Say

Look, do you think I don’t see what you see? I’m repulsive. I stick out like a sore thumb. A red, wobbly sore thumb.

Family Members at Thanksgiving, Ranked

This year, I’m going to work on my boundaries.

Two Truths and a Pie

National history meets personal history meets pastry.

Similarities Between the First Thanksgiving and the First Thanksgiving I Hosted

Both gatherings involved alcohol-induced candor and the Protestant work ethic.

Classic Thanksgiving Stories

The Tyrannosaurus bowed their heads reverently.

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The New Yorker Interview

John Woo Returns to Hollywood

The Hong Kong filmmaker talks about his quest to make personal genre movies, his enduring faith in friendship, and his new, dialogue-free revenge drama, “Silent Night.”

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The Critics

The Current Cinema

Ridley Scott’s “Napoleon” Cannot Quite Vanquish Its Subject

Joaquin Phoenix summons a general prowling the battlements of his own brain, but is Napoleon’s life just too big for any one movie?

Listening Booth

André 3000 Disrupts Our Sense of Time

André Benjamin’s début solo album of deeply soothing instrumental music asks for little beyond our attention.

The Art World

The Artist Making Wellness Culture Look a Little Sick

In “Needy Machines,” Ilana Harris-Babou continues her study of self-improvement, taking on everything from luxury bathrooms to health-care documents.

Cultural Comment

The Surprising Sweetness of the Ayn Rand Fangirl Novel

Lexi Freiman’s “The Book of Ayn” paints an obsession with the godmother of libertarianism as a useful but transient phase.

On Television

Why Can’t We Quit “The Morning Show”?

Apple’s glossy experiment in prestige melodrama is utterly baffling—and must-watch TV.

Books

Nostalgia Isn’t What It Used to Be

As our faith in the future plummets and the present blends with the past, we doomscroll and catastrophize and feel certain that we’ve reached the point where history has fallen apart.

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A Mother’s Grief in New Haven

Laquvia Jones lost both of her sons to shootings. Now she wonders why a city with a deep sense of community—and one of the wealthiest universities in the world—can’t figure out how to address gun violence. 

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Annals of Artificial Intelligence

The Godfather of A.I. Fears What He’s Built

Geoffrey Hinton has spent a lifetime teaching computers to learn. Now he worries that artificial brains are better than ours.

A Coder Considers the Waning Days of the Craft

Coding has always felt to me like an endlessly deep and rich domain. Now I find myself wanting to write a eulogy for it.

Does A.I. Lead Police to Ignore Contradictory Evidence?

Too often, a facial-recognition search represents virtually the entirety of a police investigation.

What the Doomsayers Get Wrong About Deepfakes

Experts have warned that realistic A.I.-generated videos might wreak havoc through deception. What’s happened is troubling in a different way.

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John Updike on the Kennedy Assassination

Sixty years ago this afternoon, stunned onlookers witnessed the shooting of President John F. Kennedy as his motorcade passed through Dealey Plaza, in Dallas. Millions more would watch the tragedy on TV. The days that followed, which included the vigilante killing of the assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, on live TV, were among the strangest in American history. 

Updike’s words, in this Comment from 1963, still impart an otherworldly feeling: something “unsearchably significant” had happened.

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The Food Scene

A Food-Themed Holiday Gift Guide

Kitchen tools, culinary trinkets, tinned treats, dinner-party fixings, and many more curios for the person of appetites in your life.

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Puzzles & Games

Take a break and play.

Name Drop: Make Me Laugh

Can you guess the identities of these nine comedy legends?

The Crossword

A puzzle that ranges in difficulty, with themes on Fridays.

Solve the latest puzzle

The Cryptic

A puzzle for lovers of wily wordplay.

Solve this week’s puzzle

Caption Contest

We provide a cartoon, you provide a caption.

Enter this week’s contest
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Photo Booth

A Hidden Stash of Extraordinary Self-Portraits

A début monograph by Carla Williams lets the world in on a quietly thrilling collection of images that have been tucked away for nearly four decades.

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Listen to The New Yorker

The Kingpin Who Kidnapped Migrants for Ransom

An Eritrean trafficker promised to help Africans desperate to reach Europe—then brutalized them inside a Libyan compound while extorting their families back home. With his fortune, he partied in Dubai.

Bayard Rustin Gets to Shine in Our Era

The civil-rights mastermind was sidelined by his own movement. Now he’s back in the spotlight. What can we learn from his strategies of resistance?

Can Happiness Be Taught?

Bolstered by Oprah, a Harvard Business School professor thinks you should run your inner self like a company.

A Trans Teen in an Anti-Trans State

One family’s move to find gender-affirming care.

Fiction

“Beauty Contest”

Photograph by Kyoko Hamada for The New Yorker
My mother had two treasures. One was an opal ring, the only present she ever received from my late father. She kept it in a small box and took it out only once or twice a year, on special occasions, for a few short hours. The box, which was covered in deep-blue velvet, made a little sound, like a kitten yawning, when it was opened.

When I was alone in the house, I often opened the box to stare at the opal.Continue reading »

The Talk of the Town

Fetish Dept.

Johnny Marr Loves his Axes

Now You See It

The Statue Wars Turn to Cyberspace

London Postcard

Milk, the Book!

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