Emil Bove violated a basic tenet of judicial ethics, presumably on purpose.
Her version of the middle-aged matron was a gentle innocent who faced the world with an unself-conscious enthusiasm.
He shies away neither from harshness nor from unadulterated sweetness. He also writes great female characters.
His urban idylls are populated by bald businessmen who escape reality by biking and daydreaming.
He had his own world: a place where the funny and the horrific crossed paths.
Navied Mahdavian is a cartoonist and a writer. His graphic memoir, “This Country: Searching for Home in (Very) Rural America, ...
Emily Flake, a New Yorker cartoonist, has published books including “Joke in a Box: How to Write and Draw Jokes.” Her version ...
The mayor of the small community of Pollica, Italy, has dedicated his life to making people healthier. Will it get him a ...
Can you make your way through The New Yorker’s labyrinthine offices before our printer shuts down for the holidays?
The comedian gets vulnerable in “Night Thoughts,” his first standup special in twelve years. But the real star of the show ...
The “Bowling alley” singer bowls a few frames and explains how her pal Gracie Abrams inspired her to switch from writing for ...
As the group celebrates its hundredth year, former dancers gather to reminisce about the good old days—bingeing Advil, ...
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