The World Beyond BetterMost > The Culture Tent

In the New Yorker...

<< < (497/790) > >>

serious crayons:
I was going to make a comment about the "latest" issue, but then another one came today! July 27. It's interesting too, though, because it appears most if not all of the articles are from long-ago issues. At first I wondered, what could Calvin Trillin have to say about Martin Luther King Jr.? Well, maybe not much in 2020 but plenty in 1964. But my first tip off was the fiction: Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery."

But the issue before that,  July 20, has several interesting articles, including one by Jill Lepore on the history of police. Also one about the history of plagues that I've referred to recently when talking to people who think all this mask and stay-home business is stupid and COVID is no longer a threat. Plagues, of course, usually went on for years, killing a third of Europe and so on.

But the point of the plague piece is that plagues are actually good in a way because they refresh society, helped launched the Renaissance, stuff like that.

My first thought was, that's excellent news! Everything will be better! Then -- oh, wait. It usually takes about a century or so.

But here's the most amazing thing about the July 20 issue. The Shouts & Murmurs is actually funny, something I've seen happen maybe five times in its entire history. Also, I literally LOLed at *two* of their cartoons, which has almost never happened in the entire history of the New Yorker. At least since James Thurber moved on.


Jeff Wrangler:
I'm still way behind in my issues. I'm only up to the July 6 & 13 issues, though, of course, I always jump ahead and read anything by Jill Lepore as soon as I see her by-line.

serious crayons:

--- Quote from: Jeff Wrangler on July 23, 2020, 08:42:19 am ---I'm still way behind in my issues. I'm only up to the July 6 & 13 issues, though, of course, I always jump ahead and read anything by Jill Lepore as soon as I see her by-line.


--- End quote ---

I think you're much more methodical (and probably neater) than I am. I've got stacks of New Yorkers in several places in the house, many of them open to a particular article I was reading but then got distracted by something else.

Was Jeffrey Toobin's piece about how Robert Mueller screwed up in the July 6/13 issue? Anyway, I read that all the way through because the overall thesis and some of the individual points are interesting, but the play-by-play is really boring to read from beginning to end. I suppose he's writing for history or something, but I would have preferred that in about 1,000 words.



Jeff Wrangler:

--- Quote from: serious crayons on July 23, 2020, 10:57:55 am ---I think you're much more methodical (and probably neater) than I am. I've got stacks of New Yorkers in several places in the house, many of them open to a particular article I was reading but then got distracted by something else.
--- End quote ---

I've been reading just about everything in every issue, and in the order they arrive (except for skipping ahead for Jill Lepore), which isn't necessarily my usual habit.



--- Quote ---Was Jeffrey Toobin's piece about how Robert Mueller screwed up in the July 6/13 issue? Anyway, I read that all the way through because the overall thesis and some of the individual points are interesting, but the play-by-play is really boring to read from beginning to end. I suppose he's writing for history or something, but I would have preferred that in about 1,000 words.

--- End quote ---

Yes, its that issue. I started that article yesterday. I'm not very far along, and already I'm horrified at the opportunity that was missed. (I've been pissed off at John Bolton for waiting to write a book instead of coming forward when he might have done some good, but that's another matter.)

serious crayons:

--- Quote from: Jeff Wrangler on July 23, 2020, 11:18:29 am ---Yes, its that issue. I started that article yesterday. I'm not very far along, and already I'm horrified at the opportunity that was missed. (I've been pissed off at John Bolton for waiting to write a book instead of coming forward when he might have done some good, but that's another matter.)

--- End quote ---

I would have preferred it in bullet points, actually.

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[#] Next page

[*] Previous page

Go to full version