| | A Critic at Large How Octavia E. Butler Reimagines Sex and Survival The parasites, hybrids, and vampires of her science fiction make the price of persisting viscerally real. By Julian Lucas | | | | | U.S. Journal A Kansas Bookshop’s Fight with Amazon The owner of the Raven bookstore, in Lawrence, wants to tell you about all the ways that the e-commerce giant is hurting American downtowns. By Casey Cep | | | Books Briefly Noted “The Three Mothers,” “America and Iran,” “Infinite Country,” and “Wild Swims.” | | | | Newsletters Sign Up for the New Yorker Recommends Newsletter Discover what our staff is reading, watching, and listening to each week. | | | | | | Poems “How to Apologize” “Cook a large fish.” By Ellen Bass | | | Poems “Remembering a City and a Sickness” “Where do they, / did they, / go, / the zapped rats, I mean.” By Christian Wiman | | | | | | The Writer’s Voice: Fiction from the Magazine T. Coraghessan Boyle Reads “The Shape of a Teardrop” The author reads his story from the March 15, 2021, issue of the magazine. | | | | | The Front Row On Classic Hollywood’s “Problematic” Movies A new TCM series contextualizes racism in film. Perhaps more insidious are onscreen sins of omission. By Richard Brody | The Art World The X-ed Out World of KAWS The artist KAWS makes work that sails beyond kitsch into a wild blue yonder of self-cannibalizing motifs. By Peter Schjeldahl | | | | | | |
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