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After Attacking Iran, Israel Girds for What’s Next

Crisis has become the norm in Israel, but this time feels different. Is it a victory, or the start of a new war? Ruth Margalit reports.

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Today’s Mix

President Trump’s Military Games

Trump, always attracted to playing the role of the strongman, is even more inclined than he was in his first term to misuse the military for his own political gratification.

There Are No Perfect Choices in the New York Mayoral Race

Andrew Cuomo and Zohran Mamdani are leading the Democratic field. Even they seem nervous.

Why Netanyahu Decided to Strike Iran Now

The editor-in-chief of Haaretz on how President Trump enabled Israel to carry out an attack years in the making.

Inside the Activist Groups Resisting ICE

As raids spread beyond L.A., organizers, lawyers, and volunteers in Orange County are attempting to slow down arrests and deportations.

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Photo Booth

Reëxamining Victimhood in Guatemala

The photographer Luis Corzo returns to the scene of his own kidnapping.

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In honor of Pride Month, enjoy 20% off all New Yorker covers and cartoons with the code PRIDE20.Browse and buy »

The Lede

A daily column on what you need to know.

Donald Trump’s Dictator Cosplay

Just how dangerous is the President’s week of militarized theatre?

What Trump Missed at the Kennedy Center Production of “Les Mis”

What appalled and obsessed Victor Hugo most was the seemingly “normal nature” of the French regime, even as it committed acts of unprecedented authoritarian menace and cruelty.

The Department of Veterans Affairs Is Not O.K.

V.A. insiders describe themselves as miserable—and they worry that the Trump Administration will do long-term damage to the agency.

Looking for the National Guard in Los Angeles

President Trump’s assertions that federal troops have saved the city from destruction did not appear to reflect reality.

Immigration Protests Threaten to Boil Over in Los Angeles

Over the weekend, Donald Trump’s deportation agenda met its fiercest resistance yet as federal officials conducted worksite raids and clashed with residents.

An Inside Look at Gaza’s Chaotic New Aid System

A humanitarian worker in the territory explains how the situation has devolved in recent weeks—and what she’s doing for her own family.

The Farmers Harmed by the Trump Administration

Four months ago, the government cut funding to agricultural labs. Kansas farmers and researchers say they can see the damage.

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The New Yorker Interview

Barbra Streisand on “The Secret of Life”

The legend discusses her new album, her complicated relationship to performing, and recording a duet with Bob Dylan decades after he first asked her to collaborate.

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The Critics

The Front Row

“Materialists” Is a Feast of Talking Pictures

Celine Song’s romantic tale, starring Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal, and Chris Evans, offers thrilling dialogue but some puzzling silences.

Postscript

Sly Stone’s Political and Musical Awakening

How “There’s a Riot Goin’ On” helped the musician find a purpose beyond hippie-culture stardom.

Pop Music

How the Meanest Genre Got Nice

Hardcore was once brutish and insular. Has Turnstile made it popular?

The Theatre

Jean Smart and John Krasinski Go It Alone, on Broadway and Off

“Call Me Izzy” and “Angry Alan” feature two stars up close and personal.

The Art World

Diane Arbus and the Too-Revealing Detail

In “Constellation,” the photographer’s largest-ever show in New York, images linger in the strange space between intention and effect.

Critics at Large

Our Romance with Jane Austen

The author’s novels are critiques of Regency England’s high society. Why, two hundred and fifty years after her birth, does her work resonate so strongly with modern audiences?

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Peruse a gallery ofcartoons from the issue »

The Best Books We Read This Week

A visually luxurious graphic novel; the story of the men behind the world’s most famous movie studio; a nuanced account of providing end-of-life care to a loved one; and more.

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Persons of Interest

Do Androids Dream of Anything at All?

We have tended to imagine machines as either being our slaves or enslaving us. Martha Wells, the writer of the “Murderbot” series, tries to conjure a truly alien consciousness.

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Goings On

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

The Lost Dances of Paul Taylor

Marina Harss on a revival of Taylor’s timeless and timely pieces from the sixties at the Joyce. Plus: Alexandra Schwartz on her favorite Jane Austen movie adaptations, and more from our critics.

What’s a Neighborhood Restaurant Without a Neighborhood?

Helen Rosner visits Confidant, in the sprawling Brooklyn mall known as Industry City.

Addison Rae’s Path from TikTok to the Pop Charts

Amanda Petrusich reviews the artist’s new album, “Addison,” in which she presents herself as a gently debauched girl next door.

A Tour of Fantastical Worlds

Katherine Rundell, the best-selling author of “Impossible Creatures,” on four noteworthy works set in imaginative realms.

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American Chronicles

The Forgotten Inventor of the Sitcom

Gertrude Berg’s “The Goldbergs” was a bold, beloved portrait of a Jewish family. Then the blacklist obliterated her legacy.

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Our Columnists

Donald Trump Enters His World Cup Era

The upcoming tournament, hosted in North America for the first time in three decades, reflects the President’s nativist and transactional approach to foreign affairs.

How a Family Toy Business Is Fighting Donald Trump’s Tariffs

Despite securing an important court victory against the Administration, the Illinois businessman Rick Woldenberg knows that his battle with the White House is far from over.

Warped Ways of Seeing “P.O.V.”

How our ideas about point of view got all turned around.

The Oklahoma City Thunder’s Good Vibes Are Being Put to the Test

The young team’s rise has been fuelled by a happy chemistry. But, after a Game One loss in the N.B.A. Finals, will it be enough?

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Essay

What Gaza Needs Now

My family is starving. My neighbors are dying. I’m compelled to share these injustices because they need to stop.

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Ideas

Why Do Doctors Write?

In one sense, doctors have always been writers, penning case reports since antiquity. Literary writing by doctors is a more modern development. 

What the Pop Culture of the Two-Thousands Did to Women

“Girl on Girl,” by the critic Sophie Gilbert, is the latest and most ambitious in a series of consciousness-raising-style reappraisals of the decade’s formative texts.

What We Get Wrong About Violent Crime

A Chicago criminologist challenges our assumptions about why most shootings happen—and what really makes a city safe.

The Radical Development of a New Painkiller

The opioid crisis has made it even more urgent to come up with novel approaches to treating suffering. Finally there’s something effective.

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Annals of Hollywood

How I Learned to Become an Intimacy Coördinator

At a sex-choreography workshop, a writer discovered a world of Instant Chemistry exercises, penis pouches, and nudity riders to train for Hollywood’s most controversial job.

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Persons of Interest

Taylor Swift’s Master Plan

Irving Thalberg, the Wizard Behind Hollywood’s Golden Age

Brian Lehrer and Errol Louis Take the Pulse of N.Y.C.

Curtis Yarvin’s Plot Against America

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Letter from Israel

A Doctor Without Borders

Lina Qasem Hassan treated victims of October 7th. She also publicly condemned the war in Gaza—a stance that imperilled her job.

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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

Laugh Lines

Can you place the cartoons in chronological order?

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Cartoon Caption Contest

We provide a cartoon, you provide a caption.

Enter this week’s contest

Name Drop

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

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In Case You Missed It

Donald Trump’s Politics of Plunder
The greed of the new Administration has galvanized America’s aspiring oligarchs—and their opponents.
Green-Wood Cemetery’s Living Dead
How the “forever business” is changing at New York City’s biggest graveyard.
By the Canal
I felt an overwhelming and visceral sense that I had stumbled upon the place where a man had raped me at knifepoint forty years earlier.
How Margaret Fuller Set Minds on Fire
High-minded and scandal-prone, a foe of marriage who dreamed of domesticity, Fuller radiated a charisma that helped ignite the fight for women’s rights.
Throughout her childhood, Constance called the gorse that grew on the hillsides above her house “honey-bottle,” and gathered fistfuls of it despite the spines, so that her hands would smell of it, a smell that seemed to combine oatmeal and hot metal and sun. The smell was somewhat a solace when it came to her devastating shyness, a shyness that so galled her mother that when Constance retreated into sniffing her fingers in public her mother could hardly restrain herself.Continue reading »

The Talk of the Town

Meetup

How Many Naomis Does It Take to Deconstruct “Doppelganger”?

Visiting Dignitary

Jacinda Ardern’s Overseas Experience

Trailblazer Dept.

A First Kiss from America’s First Woman in Space

Endangered Species

The Meatpacking District Packs It In

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