“He got out of the car, closing his door quietly, and crept through the woods toward the brick house.”
By Lauren Groff
This Week in Fiction
Lauren Groff on Violence and Masculinity
The author discusses her novella “What’s the Time, Mr. Wolf?”
By Cressida Leyshon
Novellas
“The Vanishing Point”
If you liked ““What’s the Time, Mr. Wolf?,” we think you will enjoy this novella, from 2017.
By Paul Theroux
Newsletters
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Essays & Criticism
Comma Queen
Grammar-Nerd Heaven
A new exhibit showcases the surprisingly contentious history of English grammar books.
By Mary Norris
Books
Did Home Economics Empower Women?
For pioneers of the field, it was a gateway to the male-dominated world of science; for those it purported to help, it could be yet another domestic trap.
By Margaret Talbot
On This Day
Page-Turner
What Two Forgotten Pieces Tell Us About Harper Lee
Reading the profile that Lee—who was born on this day in 1926—wrote of Truman Capote, one longs to read her on everyone else she knew.
By Casey Cep
More from The New Yorker
Culture Desk
Turning Colors Into a Rainbow
Portraits of kids making art, and some of their own creations.
By Jenny Kroik
On and Off the Avenue
New Products Arrive in The New Yorker Store
Our latest offerings range from kites to coffee mugs.
By The New Yorker
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