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- The New Yorker
In This Issue
Robin Wright reports from Gaziantep, the Turkish city that has become America's gateway to the Middle East’s most complicated war in a hundred years.
Too much polish, too much kitsch: Adam Gopnik on how shopping, tourism, and luxury are changing Paris.
Burkhard Bilger on three eight-year-old boys training for the Youth Bull Riders World Finals.
D. T. Max profiles Hans Ulrich Obrist, of London’s Serpentine Gallery. He “seems less to stand atop the art world than to race around, up, over, and through it.”Shouts & Murmurs
Shouts & Murmurs by Paul Rudnick. “The Threeway: In which a mom and her two grown daughters secretly discuss divorcing their husbands, until orgasm.”Fiction
New fiction by Tim Parks: “He was always ready to be meeting people. To be saving their souls.”
The Critics
Sasha Frere-Jones on the new album: it’s a bit defanged, but every m.c. is as strong as he was twenty years ago.
James Wood on Samantha Harvey’s “Dear Thief”: “It is a strange and exhilarating journey, unlike anything I have recently encountered.”
Reviews of “Elsa Schiaparelli,” “Leningrad,” “Shark,” and “The Hilltop.”
Emily Nussbaum reviews one of TV’s few truly experimental series.
Dan Chiasson on Olena Kalytiak Davis, whose new book, “The Poem She Didn’t Write and Other Poems,” is at once tawdry and oddly pure.
David Denby on two films about independence: “Wild,” starring Reese Witherspoon, and “Mr. Turner,” with Timothy Spall.
The Talk of the Town
Jelani Cobb on the “grim recognition” spurred by Ferguson: African-Americans are hemmed in between the dangers of crime and the perils of policing.
Dana Goodyear attends a party for a new social app. Shouldn’t say which one, but it starts with a “W” and rhymes with “hisper.”
Emma Allen and the “O.C.” star discuss adulthood over a tuna melt.
Bob Marley’s son Rohan is starting Marley Natural, a marijuana company. Andrew Marantz reports.
James Surowiecki on why consumers, not the Supreme Court, could undermine the Affordable Care Act.
Goings On About Town
Les Freres Corbusier creates a Herbert Hoover-themed musical spectacular.
David Denby on highlights of a complete Robert Altman retrospective.
Russell Platt on the concert, which features the Either/Or ensemble, conducted by Richard Carrick.
Sasha Frere-Jones on the cool kids who refuse to act cooler than you, at Town Hall on Dec. 3 and 4.
Emma Allen attempts to recreate the travels of Lewis and Clark in state-themed drinks, at a new bar in Williamsburg.
Amelia Lester eats particularly fine Korean fried chicken.
“I got hot.”
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