Under Review
Coming of Age in Panic Mode
Michael Clune follows up memoirs about drug addiction and computer games with “Pan,” a novel about a teen-ager with anxiety set in the nineties.
By Emily Witt
Under Review
A Brooklyn Renter’s Odyssey
Emily Hunt Kivel’s kooky début novel, “Dwelling,” sends a listless graphic designer on a hero’s journey.
By Lora Kelley
Books
Helen Oyeyemi’s Novel of Cognitive Dissonance
Kinga, the protagonist of “A New New Me,” has an odd affliction: there are seven of her.
By Katy Waldman
Profiles
Patricia Lockwood Goes Viral
The writer’s new novel, “Will There Ever Be Another You,” is a singular account of losing her mind, body, and art to COVID—and of trying to get them back.
By Alexandra Schwartz
Books
How the Poet James Schuyler Wrung Sense from Sensibility
Schuyler once told a friend that “life had been after him with a sledgehammer.” But the poet’s work was sharp and humane, a marvel of twentieth-century literature.
By Dan Chiasson
American Chronicles
The Engines and Empires of New York City Gambling
As plans are laid for a new casino, one can trace, through four figures, a history of rivalry and excess, rife with collisions of character and crime.
By Adam Gopnik
Dept. of Amplification
The History of The New Yorker’s Vaunted Fact-Checking Department
Reporters engage in charm and betrayal; checkers are in the harm-reduction business.
By Zach Helfand
Book Currents
André Aciman on Reading—and Misreading—Emotions
The “Call Me by Your Name” author on novels about people misunderstanding the situations in which they find themselves.
Second Read
The Nineteen-Thirties Novel That’s Become a Surprise Hit in the U.K.
Set in a small village in the Bavarian Alps, Sally Carson’s “Crooked Cross” presents an eerily familiar portrait of the rise of fascism.
By Rebecca Mead
Onward and Upward with the Arts
The Otherworldly Ambitions of R. F. Kuang
The author of “Babel” and “Yellowface” is drawn to stories of striving. Her new fantasy novel, “Katabasis,” asks if graduate school is a kind of hell.
By Hua Hsu
A Critic at Large
The Lives and Loves of James Baldwin
An older generation dismissed him as passé; a newer one has recast him as a secular saint. But Baldwin’s true message remains more unsettling than either camp recognizes.
By Louis Menand