Sponsored by Hadar
Hundreds of thousands of people in Gaza are at the brink of famine—a human-made disaster with roots in Israel’s history of using food as a weapon.
Justine Triet’s Anatomy of a Fall reveals that every parent’s marriage plot is her child’s Bildung.
Jonathan Blitzer’s new book deftly explains the impact of decades of US foreign policy on Central America, but fails to move beyond the troubled terrain of our immigration policy “crisis.”
Norman Mailer wrote with an unstable mixture of self-indulgence and self-awareness, bravado and diffidence, glibness and bracing honesty, macho posturing and an almost sheepish gentleness.
Central to the PR crisis over Kate Middleton’s cancer diagnosis is whether her body should be seen as mortal or immortal.
You are receiving this message because you signed up
for email newsletters from The New York Review.
The New York Review of Books
207 East 32nd Street, New York, NY 10016-6305