Founded in 1925, The New Yorker publishes the best writers of its time and has received more National Magazine Awards than any other magazine, for its groundbreaking reporting, authoritative analysis, and creative inspiration. The New Yorker takes readers beyond the weekly print magazine with the web, mobile, tablet, social media, and signature events. The New Yorker is at once a classic and at the leading edge.
Contributors
The Mail: The Mail
Goings On • What we’re watching, listening to, and doing this week.
Tables for Two: UnTable • 529 Henry St., Brooklyn
Comment: Speaking Freely
The Bench: Spectator Sport
Dept. of Dudes: Sophisticated Meatheads
D.I.Y. Dept. Eight Hertz
Sketchpad: Little Acts of Rudeness • It’s that time of year again! Cold, expensive, and senselessly hectic. That’s why we compiled this list of ways you can contribute your own …
Annals of Gaming: Rearrangements • Crosswords, immigrants, and the American melting pot.
Shouts & Murmurs: A Glossary of Laughs
Puzzles & Games Dept.: Only in New York
Comic Strip: Dumb Luck
Puzzles & Games Dept.: Seeing Stars
Comic Strip: Happy Hour
Comic Strip: Not Forever Ago
Puzzles & Games Dept.: Lost in Central Park
Comic Strip: Sunday in Times Square
Puzzles & Games Dept.: Track Maintenance • The M.T. A. is behind on its construction schedule and needs your help laying new subway tracks.
Puzzles & Games Dept.: Cryptic Crossword • Uptown, downtown.
Comic Strip: Spent It with Lou
Puzzles & Games Dept.: Trimming the Tree
Comic Strip: Return to the City
Sketchbook: The News That Fits • “Newsbreaks” are reader-sourced, found snippets of text that, per E. B. White, contain “some error of typography or judgment,” and have long been how we fill the gap at the end of too-short articles. To stuff your stockings, we’ve dug up some favorites from the thirties.
Puzzles & Games Dept.: Triple Play • A whopper of a puzzle.
Sketchbook: The Funnies • Some cartoons about life in the Big Apple, for locals and tourists alike.
A Reporter at large: Speed • The competition to create the world’s fastest road cars—and the rich people who drive them.
Poems: Eurydice
Poems: Greetings, Friends!
Comic Strip: Vanishing Panels
A Critic at Large: Family Matters • Am I one of the last living relatives of Bruno Schulz?
Books: Briefly Noted
Books: Spacing Out • The novelist Samantha Harvey sends astronauts, and readers, into orbit.
On Television: Royal Blues • The end of “The Crown,” on Netflix.
The Theatre: Musical Revolution • “Buena Vista Social Club” and “How to Dance in Ohio.”