| Fiction “Separation” “What happened next wasn’t that she recovered, but she did move to a new city, where she’d have to bump into life every day.” By Clare Sestanovich | | | This Week in Fiction Clare Sestanovich on Narrative Coherence The author discusses “Separation,” her story from the latest issue of the magazine. By Willing Davidson | Fiction “Night Swim” If you liked “Separation,” we think you will enjoy this story, from last year. By Anne Enright | | | Newsletters Sign Up for the New Yorker Recommends Newsletter Discover what our staff is reading, watching, and listening to each week. | | | | | Second Read “Bear” Is About Much More Than Having Sex with a Bear Marian Engel’s classic novel, first published in 1976, is slim, elegant, and inexhaustible. By Claire Cameron | | | On Television A New Hemingway Documentary Peeks Behind the Myth Ken Burns and Lynn Novick’s film examines the burden of the author’s performance of himself. By Hilton Als | | | Books The Messy Art of Life With her innovative soak-stain paintings, Helen Frankenthaler embraced color for its own sake. By Adam Gopnik | | | | | Fiction Podcast Weike Wang Reads Lara Vapnyar The author joins Deborah Treisman to read and discuss “Katania,” by Lara Vapnyar, which appeared in a 2013 issue of the magazine. | | | | Culture Desk Manhattan as a Muse “Decoding Manhattan” is a loving excavation of a singular place, and a reminder to keep your eyes open as you walk around the island. By Françoise Mouly and Genevieve Bormes | Photo Booth The Photo Book That Let Lesbians See Themselves With “Eye to Eye,” the photographer JEB created not a paean to lesbian life but something more essential. By Sasha Archibald | | | | | |
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