The Cruelest Sport
“Professional boxing is the only major American sport whose primary, and often murderous, energies are not coyly deflected by such artifacts as balls and pucks.”
“Professional boxing is the only major American sport whose primary, and often murderous, energies are not coyly deflected by such artifacts as balls and pucks.”
Joyce Carol Oates New York Review of Books Feb 1992 15min Permalink
Rampant rape and murder in the Brazilian slums.
Suketu Mehta New York Review of Books Aug 2013 20min Permalink
“Violence, being instrumental by nature, is rational to the extent that it is effective in reaching the end which must justify it.”
Hannah Arendt New York Review of Books Feb 1969 45min Permalink
What the writer’s newly revealed letters mean for her long-debated legacy.
Hermione Lee New York Review of Books Jun 2013 15min Permalink
“A curious thing about the United States is that anticommunism has always been far louder and more potent than communism.”
Adam Hochschild New York Review of Books May 2013 15min Permalink
Three boys falsely accused of murder, and what the twenty-year saga says about all of us.
Nathaniel Rich New York Review of Books Apr 2013 20min Permalink
A history of how Tuareg separatists, jihadists seeking a “desert caliphate,” cigarette smugglers, and narcotraffickers have turned Northern Mali into “the globe’s most significant terrorist threat.”
Joshua Hammer New York Review of Books Mar 2013 20min Permalink
On commercial diving, the third most deadly profession.
Nathaniel Rich New York Review of Books Jan 2013 20min Permalink
On joy, pleasure and Ecstacy.
Zadie Smith New York Review of Books Dec 2012 Permalink
A consideration of Chris Ware.
Gabriel Winslow-Yost New York Review of Books Dec 2012 20min Permalink
Behind the tabloid story of the “murder orphan” in Queens.
Debates surrounding physician-assisted dying in the U.S.
Marcia Angell New York Review of Books Oct 2012 15min Permalink
How Wall Street thoroughly dominated Obama’s economic policy.
Paul Krugman, Robin Wells New York Review of Books Jul 2012 15min Permalink
A Supreme Court Justice revisits a rape trial from the 1950s.
A literary exploration of Obama’s voice.
Zadie Smith New York Review of Books Feb 2009 Permalink
The story of a young man on the run in the slum he dreams of escaping.
A lyrical meditation on morning in the city, from the newly published Berlin Stories collection.
"A giantess like this doesn’t dress so quickly; but each of her beautiful, huge motions is fragrant and steams and pounds and peals. "
Reviewing Newt Gingrich as historian and intellectual.
Joan Didion New York Review of Books Aug 1995 20min Permalink
On Patti Smith.
It was easy for lazy journalists to caricature her as a stringbean who looked like Keith Richards, emitted Dylanish word salads, and dropped names—a high-concept tribute act of some sort, very wet behind the ears. But then her first album, Horses, came out in November 1975, and silenced most of the scoffers.
Luc Sante New York Review of Books Feb 2012 15min Permalink
An essay drawn from the introduction of Davidson’s iconic book Subway, first published in 1986:
To prepare myself for the subway, I started a crash diet, a military fitness exercise program, and early every morning I jogged in the park. I knew I would need to train like an athlete to be physically able to carry my heavy camera equipment around in the subway for hours every day. Also, I thought that if anything was going to happen to me down there I wanted to be in good shape, or at least to believe that I was. Each morning I carefully packed my cameras, lenses, strobe light, filters, and accessories in a small, canvas camera bag. In my green safari jacket with its large pockets, I placed my police and subway passes, a few rolls of film, a subway map, a notebook, and a small, white, gold-trimmed wedding album containing pictures of people I’d already photographed in the subway. In my pants pocket I carried quarters for the people in the subway asking for money, change for the phone, and several tokens. I also carried a key case with additional identification and a few dollars tucked inside, a whistle, and a small Swiss Army knife that gave me a little added confidence. I had a clean handkerchief and a few Band-Aids in case I found myself bleeding.
Bruce Davidson New York Review of Books Dec 2011 10min Permalink
An investigation into the events surrounding Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s May 2011 arrest for sexual assault.
Edward Jay Epstein New York Review of Books Dec 2011 15min Permalink
On Michael Lewis and the global financial crisis.
Previously: The Michael Lewis World Tour of Economic Collapse
John Lanchester New York Review of Books Nov 2011 15min Permalink
How the contradiction-rich “country the size of Connecticut” that birthed Al-Jazeera has played an integral and surprising role in the revolutions of the Arab Spring.
Hugh Eakin New York Review of Books Oct 2011 20min Permalink
How LA-style gang life migrated to the slums of San Salvador.
Alma Guillermoprieto New York Review of Books Oct 2011 15min Permalink
On Terri Schiavo, “persistent vegetative state,” and life or death decisions:
Imagine it. You are in your early twenties. You are watching a movie, say on Lifetime, in which someone has a feeding tube. You pick up the empty chip bowl. “No tubes for me,” you say as you get up to fill it. What are the chances you have given this even a passing thought?
Joan Didion New York Review of Books Jun 2005 35min Permalink