All posts by New Yorkerest

Just the one can't-miss piece from each issue of the New Yorker. All because we know you're busy. And because we're really nice.

Can Russia’s Press Ever Be Free?

November 22, 2021 New Yorker cover
November 22, 2021

Can Russia’s Press Ever Be Free?
by Masha Gessen

The journalists of Novaya Gazeta report on dangerous conflicts—and endure threats of their own.

The Great Organic-Food Fraud

November 15, 2021 New Yorker cover
November 15, 2021

The Great Organic-Food Fraud
by Ian Parker

There’s no way to confirm that a crop was grown organically. Randy Constant exploited our trust in the labels—and made a fortune.

When the Man in Black Met the Guys in Tie-Dye

November 8, 2021 New Yorker cover
November 8, 2021

When the Man in Black Met the Guys in Tie-Dye
by Nick Paumgarten

Owsley Stanley, the legendary Grateful Dead soundman and LSD chemist, left behind thirteen hundred reels of live recordings from his sonic laboratory, including a newly released recording of the night Johnny Cash came to town.

When a Witness Recants

November 1, 2021 New Yorker cover
November 1, 2021

When a Witness Recants
by Jennifer Gonnerman

At fourteen, Ron Bishop helped convict three innocent boys of murder. They’ve all lived with the consequences.

Exiled

October 25, 2021 New Yorker cover
October 25, 2021

A Black Communist’s Disappearance in Stalin’s Russia
by Joshua Yaffa

What happened to Lovett Fort-Whiteman, the only known African American to die in the Gulag?

Let the Record Show

October 18, 2021 New Yorker cover
October 11, 2021

Paul McCartney Doesn’t Really Want to Stop the Show
by David Remnick

Half a century after the Beatles broke up, he’s still correcting the record—and making new ones.

The Precious Contingencies of Immigrants in “Sanctuary City”

October 11, 2021 New Yorker cover
October 11, 2021

The Precious Contingencies of Immigrants in “Sanctuary City”
by Vinson Cunningham

Martyna Majok’s play, presented by New York Theatre Workshop at the Lucille Lortel, focusses on two precisely defined characters to explore the injustices experienced by Dreamers in America.

When Black History Is Unearthed, Who Gets to Speak for the Dead?

October 4, 2021 New Yorker cover
October 4, 2021

When Black History Is Unearthed, Who Gets to Speak for the Dead?
by Jill Lepore

Efforts to rescue African American burial grounds and remains have exposed deep conflicts over inheritance and representation.

An Accidental Collection

September 27, 2021 New Yorker cover
September 27, 2021

An Accidental Collection
by Haruki Murakami

How I amassed more T-shirts than I can store.

How the Real Jane Roe Shaped the Abortion Wars

September 20, 2021 New Yorker cover
September 20, 2021

How the Real Jane Roe Shaped the Abortion Wars
by Margaret Talbot

The all-too-human plaintiff of Roe v. Wade captured the messy contradictions hidden by a polarizing debate.