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The New Yorker

President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden at the airport in Atlanta following his debate with former President...

The Bidens Can’t Let Go

Joe Biden’s family has defended him by invoking his past. But these arguments aren’t landing, Benjamin Wallace-Wells writes, since the case against his Presidency is that he isn’t even capable of leading as he could twelve months ago.

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Above the Fold

Essential reading for today.

The Kamala Harris Social-Media Blitz Did Not Just Fall Out of a Coconut Tree

The memes, riffs, and fancams represent a vaguely hallucinatory near-consensus that the Vice-President’s time is now.

Tory Tears on the U.K.’s Election Night

Viewed from across the pond, or even from across the Channel, the Labour Party’s wipeout win looks like an anomaly—a liberal bulwark against a wave of right-wing populism.

Nate Cohn Explains How Bad the Latest Polling Is for Biden

The Times’ chief political analyst reflects on whether it’s still possible for the President to launch a comeback, and what the polls can tell us about other Democratic Presidential candidates.

This Is What the Twenty-fifth Amendment Was Designed For

If President Biden doesn’t willingly resign, there’s another solution, which would allow Democrats to unite around a new incumbent.

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Annals of Publishing

Fitzcarraldo Editions Makes Challenging Literature Chic

In ten years, the London publishing house has amassed devoted readers—and four writers with Nobel Prizes.

July 1, 2024

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Fiction

“Kaho”

He may have been patiently waiting, for the longest time, for me to show up in front of him, she thought. Like an enormous spider waiting for its prey in the dark.

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The Political Scene

The Reckoning of Joe Biden

For the President to insist on remaining the Democratic candidate would be an act not only of self-delusion but of national endangerment.

The Supreme Court’s Immunity Ruling Is a Victory for Donald Trump

The conservative Justices gutted the January 6th case—and have made it harder to prosecute any President.

The Case for Biden Staying in the Race

The known bad candidate is better than the chaos of the unknown.

Why the French Far Right Triumphed

An expert on French politics explains where President Emmanuel Macron went wrong in calling a snap election.

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Letter from the South

The Fake Oilman

Alan Todd May passed himself off as an oil magnate, insinuated himself into West Palm Beach high society, and conned people out of millions.

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Fiction

“The Drummer Boy on Independence Day”

Illustration by Leigh Guldig
In our town, as in most, we celebrated the Fourth of July with a parade around the square and a few speeches from the steps of City Hall. An indispensable part of the ceremony, of course, was the Civil War veteran, and at the time I’m telling about we still had one—a Confederate, naturally, an old man of bone and leather named John Sewetti. John had been a drummer boy with T. J. Jackson.Continue reading »

Love and Heartbreak

Sidebars from the Fiction Issue.

Bound Together

I felt that I was being tied to the women in my family, those who had come before and those yet to come.

Diorama of Love

Love is wherever love is felt, and with love being a complete statement, well, that’s enough.

Weeping at the Lake Palace

I tried to compete with my rivals by spending money.

Up the Stairs

Granddad had apparently taken the bus quite a distance and walked very far that day, to reach a certain apartment building.

Lost Stories

I promised myself that I would not write memoir again; it was too strenuous, too costly, too harmful, no matter how cathartic it might be.

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Personal History

The Last Rave

In the summer of 2020, I felt as if I’d entered the wrong portal, out of the world I knew and into its bizarro twin.

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Summer Deal in The New Yorker Store! Through July 8th, enjoy free delivery on all orders of more than $100.Browse the store »

The Critics

Page-Turner

What to Read This Summer

Ronan Farrow, Jia Tolentino, and other New Yorker writers on the classic books that changed their lives.

The Current Cinema

Kevin Costner’s “Horizon” Goes West but Gets Nowhere

The actor-director’s three-hour Western, the first installment of a planned tetralogy, rushes through its many stories and straight past American history.

Pop Music

Ivan Cornejo’s Mexican American Heartache

“Regional Mexican” music is booming, but one young singer is in no mood to celebrate.

On Television

“Clipped” Is A Romp Back Through an N.B.A. Racism Scandal

The FX series about the fallout from a leaked recording of the L.A. Clippers’ owner is extremely entertaining, especially if you are not hoping to learn anything about race.

The Sporting Scene

The Euros Are Like Europe, Only Better

Something is afoot in this tournament, a spectacle that has been explosively enjoyable and peppered with surprises.

The Art World

The Man Who Could Paint Loneliness

Though known for his gloomy landscapes, Caspar David Friedrich was chasing the sublime—the divinity, in all of nature, that made us seem small.

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What We’re Reading This Week

A portrait of Harriet Tubman’s spiritual life amid physical torture and emotional terror; an acute critical history of reality TV; a rich collection of interviews with artists discussing their creative practices, from the odd to the inspirational; and more.

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Peruse a gallery ofcartoons from the issue »

Goings On

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

Arts in the Parks

Jackson Arn on three public art works, temporarily on display in Brooklyn and Queens, that prove that, sometimes, even bureaucrats get beauty right.

Summer Reading

Reflections from Ronan Farrow, Jia Tolentino, and other writers on the books that transported and transformed them.

A Little Bit of Everything at “Summer for the City”

Marina Harss on the Lincoln Center festival, which includes nightly dance parties. Plus: Jennifer Wilson’s favorite novels about vacations gone wrong, and more.

The Central Park Boathouse Is Back and Better

Helen Rosner visits the tourist-bait canteen, recently reopened under new ownership, which is more satisfying than it has any right to be.

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On Religion

Losing a Beloved Community

I wanted to understand how a radical evangelical church fused faith and a commitment to social justice. Instead, I watched it unravel.

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Robert Caro’s “The Power Broker”

Fifty years ago, The New Yorker published an epic series about the most powerful person in the city—the urban planner Robert Moses—and his transformation of N.Y.C.

Part I: How Moses Transformed New York

As he rose in politics, an idealistic urban planner discovered that decisions about the city’s future would be based not on democracy but on power.

Part II: Moses Takes On Long Island’s Millionaires

To give N.Y.C. residents public beaches, he reappropriated dunes and woodlands. Then he faced down the wealthy golfers who lived there.

Part III: How Moses Got Things Done

By the fifties, he had total dominion over the city’s housing, parks, and transportation. How did an unelected official gain so much control?

Part IV: How Moses Lost His Empire

He warped New York’s democratic processes in order to achieve his own vision. What sort of city did he leave behind?

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The Political Scene

Do the Democrats Have a Gen Z Problem?

Young people were critical to Biden’s victory in 2020, but recent polls indicate that loyalty might be fraying. Voters of Tomorrow, which was founded by a teen-ager, is trying to get the kids back on board.

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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

Would You Clone Your Dog?
We love our dogs for their individual characters—and yet cloning implies that we also believe their unique, unreproducible selves can, in fact, be reproduced.
Élite Gymnasts Are Aging Up
It used to be assumed that a gymnast’s peak came around sixteen years of age. So why will the Olympic team be stocked with women in their twenties?
John Fetterman’s War
Is the Pennsylvania senator trolling the left or offering a way forward for Democrats?
Hayek, the Accidental Freudian
The economist was fixated on subconscious knowledge and dreamlike enchantment—even if he denied their part in his relationships.

Fiction from the Archives

Annie Proulx

Selected Stories

Photograph by Ulf Andersen / Getty
“Brokeback Mountain,” Annie Proulx’s first story in The New Yorker, published in 1997, introduced many readers to a hitherto unfamiliar world of cowboys and ranch hands in rural Wyoming, a world of isolation, machismo, and forbidden attachments. Since then, in her novels and her stories, Proulx has explored some of the continent’s most turbulent history, infusing it with all the brutal, passionate, and comical details of life.

Selected Stories

A Resolute Man

“Was it not his responsibility to save the woman who had saved him?”

Tits-Up in a Ditch

“ ‘Way we see it,’ Bonita said to Dakotah, ‘is you ought a join the Army yourself. They take women.’ ”

Brokeback Mountain

“They never talked about the sex, let it happen, at first only in the tent at night, then in the full daylight.”

Them Old Cowboy Songs

Travails of a homesteading couple.

The Talk of the Town

Sentimental Journey

Alan Braufman’s Loft-Jazz Séance

Art Work

Steve McQueen Is an Art Doer

Near-Misses Dept.

How to Survive Lions and Bears and Racism in Nature

Sketchpad

High-Roller Presidential Donor Perks

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