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ALIAZON REVISTAS
jueves, 14 de mayo de 2026
Arrow MultiSolution Day 2026 (Palacio Municipal de IFEMA. Madrid, 28 de Mayo 2026)
martes, 12 de mayo de 2026
Last chance: Get Nancy Lemann’s ‘Lives of the Saints’ with the NYRB Classics Book Club
Sign up now for a one-year membership to the NYRB Classics Book Club to get $70 off the regular rate. As a club member, you will receive a newly published book from the NYRB Classics series in your mailbox each month. Each selection is handpicked by NYRB editors.Now is your last chance to receive the May selection with this discount. Order by this Wednesday, May 13, and we’ll begin your membership with Nancy Lemann’s Lives of the Saints, a cult-classic debut novel about a young woman reentering the ranks of the “wastrel-youth contingent” in her native New Orleans. As Dwight Garner writes in his New York Times review of the book, “Lives of the Saints is funny but also has the condensed quality of a dream. It imparts a lingering sadness, one that follows you around for a few days after you’ve read it.... [Lemann will] put you in mind of writers such as Lorrie Moore, Lydia Davis, Mary Robison and Fran Lebowitz, the four horsewomen of the anarchapocalypse. Women who take no bull hockey from anyone.”You are receiving this message because you signed up for newsletters from The New York Review or New York Review Books. You can choose the types of messages you wish to receive: |
lunes, 11 de mayo de 2026
The Bundists’ Promise
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Today in The New York Review of Books: Adam Hochschild remembers the Bundists; Prudence Peiffer advances New York’s 1960s avant-garde; David Wheatley reads contemporary Scottish poetry; a poem by Dan Chiasson; and, from the archives, Arlene Croce on Fred Astaire. Adam Hochschild
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miércoles, 6 de mayo de 2026
Last Chance: Marilynne Robinson on the New Testament
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Four weekly sessions, starting tomorrow evening! Each week will focus on a book from the New Testament: Luke, Acts, First Corinthians, and John. The course as a whole is intended to draw attention to the fact that the Scriptures are, whatever else, a very great literature. Considering their importance to Western Civilization, it is remarkable how vulnerable they are now to misuse and ridicule. Over centuries writers returned to these texts, confident of finding a high order of meaning in them, as great writers have done for centuries after the canon was closed. This is far too extraordinary a phenomenon to be left to cynical use or to neglect. Four one-hour sessions: May 6, 13, 20, and 27.
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