| Fiction “The Winged Thing” “What did a story mean to the baby? It meant a soft voice, reassurance that everything outside her still went on, still would go on.” By Patricia Lockwood | | | This Week in Fiction Patricia Lockwood on the Extremely Online The author discusses “The Winged Thing,” her story from this week’s issue of the magazine. By David Wallace | Fiction “Orange World” If you liked “The Winged Thing,” we think you will enjoy this story, from 2018. By Karen Russell | | | Newsletters Sign Up for The New Yorker’s Food Newsletter Get essays on food, restaurant reviews, and notes for the kitchen, all delivered to your in-box. | | | | | Page-Turner Letters to Woofy “I’m overseas, dear heart, in a land full of poetic references which the censor won’t let me make,” a young Kurt Vonnegut writes to his future wife. “The same may be said for caustic comment.” By Kurt Vonnegut | | | | Page-Turner The Tennessee Solution to Disappearing Book Reviews Chapter 16 is one of only a few nonprofit media outlets in the country dedicated to coverage of the arts. By Casey Cep | | | Personal History The Bridge Dog I thought I could stave off the grief of losing one dog by getting another. By Sarah Miller | | | Page-Turner Danielle Evans’s Sublime Short Stories “The Office of Historical Corrections,” an extraordinary new collection of fiction, examines alienation and the phantasmagoria of racial performance. By Katy Waldman | | | | | Annals of Inquiry How Close Is Humanity to the Edge? Toby Ord, a philosopher who studies our species’s “existential risk,” has been both frightened and encouraged by our response to the pandemic. By Corinne Purtill | On and Off the Avenue Introducing The New Yorker Store Opening in time for the holidays, our new online shop offers limited-edition apparel, home goods, and other items for the New Yorker lover in your life. By The New Yorker | | | | | | |
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