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The Magazine

July 22, 2024

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Goings On

Goings On

Tadáskía’s Awe-Inspiring Art, at MOMA

Also: Dorrance Dance, “From Here,” Charley Crockett, and more.
The Food Scene

The Central Park Boathouse Is Back, and It’s Perfectly Fine

Recently reopened under new management, the pricey tourist-bait canteen is more satisfying than it has any right to be.

The Talk of the Town

Evan Osnos on the Joe Biden dilemma; swimming the Seine; rescuing historic signs; Wilco in the Berkshires; relic hunters.

Comment

F.D.R.’s Election Lessons for Joe Biden and the Democrats

Less than six weeks before Democrats formally choose their nominee, the President is marching down a path of constant peril.
Testing the Waters

A (Covert) Pre-Olympics Dip in the E. Coli-Infested Seine

Tired of the stalling of French officials who’d vowed to swim in Paris’s purportedly clean waters, one American expat takes matters into his own hands.
Dept. of Keeping

Where New York’s Signs and Marquees Go When They Die

Bummed by today’s aesthetic monoculture, David Barnett is personally cobbling together the permanent collection of the New York Sign Museum.
At the Festivals

The Art of the Dibs

An attendee with a balky back at the Solid Sound music festival seeks Jeff Tweedy’s counsel on joint replacements and the ethics of claiming viewing space with a folding chair.
Atlanta Postcard

How to Find Civil War Skeletons Under Your Condo

After burst water mains caused an “aqua apocalypse” in Atlanta, one relic hunter used the extensive digging for repairs as an opportunity to search for lost treasures.

Reporting & Essays

Annals of the Sea

Were Pirates Foes of the Modern Order—or Its Secret Sharers?

We’ve long viewed them as liberty-loving rebels. But it’s time to take off the eye patch.
Onward and Upward with Technology

How Lawrence Abu Hamdan Hears the World

The artist and audio investigator, who calls himself a “private ear,” investigates crimes that are heard but not seen.
Letter from Washington

Inside the Trump Plan for 2025

A network of well-funded far-right activists is preparing for the former President’s return to the White House.
Our Local Correspondents

Paradise Bronx

From the time of the Revolutionary War to the fires of the nineteen-seventies, the history of the borough has always been shaped by its in-between-ness.

Shouts & Murmurs

Shouts & Murmurs

Bot Therapy

He was a widower who had lost his wife to cancer and his only son in a hideous boating accident. He worked in a bunker in Paris. I took the bait.

Fiction

Fiction

“Freedom to Move”

“Is our boy full?” Ketevan asked. “Grandfather’s diet is very strict. No dessert, no bread. Meat to feed a bird. But our boy loves to eat. Let him enjoy himself.”

The Critics

Books

1982 and the Fate of Filmgoing

A new book claims that a few big summer movies heralded an epochal shift in the motion-picture industry, but is that really how cultural history works?
Books

The Original Bluestockings Were Fiercer Than You Imagined

In eighteenth-century England, a cohort of intellectual women braved vicious mockery. But when it came to policing propriety, they could dish it out, too.
Books

Briefly Noted

“The God of the Woods,” “Gretel and the Great War,” “They Called It Peace,” and “The Friday Afternoon Club.”
Pop Music

Clairo Believes in Charm as an Aesthetic and Spiritual Principle

The artist discusses her new album, moving upstate, and the wallop and jolt of romantic connection.
Dancing

Does Ballet Need Narrative?

“Woolf Works,” a dance triptych by Wayne McGregor, is based on the life and work of Virginia Woolf, but its engagement with her ideas is frustratingly intermittent.
The Current Cinema

“Sing Sing” Puts a Prison Theatre Program in the Spotlight

Greg Kwedar’s film, starring Colman Domingo and Clarence (Divine Eye) Maclin, brings us deep—though not deep enough—into the process of rehabilitation through art.

Poems

Poems

“Port of Havana”

“in the distance / a boat heads off to carve / into the navel of the sky”
Poems

“Dead Reckoning”

“We are driving the Middle West, lost / as Oklahoma or Kansas slowly spins / into darkness.”

Cartoons

Puzzles & Games

Crossword

The Crossword: Monday, July 15, 2024

A challenging puzzle.
The Mail
Letters should be sent with the writer’s name, address, and daytime phone number via e-mail to themail@newyorker.com. Letters may be edited for length and clarity, and may be published in any medium. We regret that owing to the volume of correspondence we cannot reply to every letter.