Plus: One Battle After Another; The Birth of Nations; James Schuyler; Gianni Rodari
| Our November 20 issue is now online, with Fintan O’Toole on Kamala’s pointless campaign memoir, Jonathan Lethem on One Battle After Another, Anne Diebel on the trials of infertility, Colin B. Bailey on Watteau’s sad clowns, Linda Kinstler on the invention of sovereign states, Langdon Hammer on James Schuyler’s shimmering poetry, Samuel Stein on NIMBYs and YIMBYs, Miranda Seymour on Frankenstein’s mother, Adam Shatz on Alice Coltrane, a poem by Rae Armantrout, and much more. Through Mary Shelley’s letters, journal, and work-in-progress, we can trace the development of Frankenstein from a simple ghost story to her most famous novel. Paul Thomas Anderson fits a generation’s worth of cineplex joys into One Battle After Another, but the revolution refuses to get off the couch. World War I set the stage a century ago for new ways of thinking about where states come from and what happens when they disappear. The first biography of James Schuyler suggests that his tendency to withdraw was both a harbinger of his disabling mood disorder and the wellspring of his shimmering poetry. The stories of the radical Italian children’s author Gianni Rodari always seem to be emerging anew, forged into being by accident or circumstance. Fintan O’Toole in Conversation with David Cole and Pamela KarlanThursday, November 6, 2025, 5:00 PM EST Join the Review’s Advising Editor Fintan O’Toole for a wide-ranging conversation on the Supreme Court with New York Review contributors David Cole and Pamela Karlan. This online event is pay-what-you-wish (with a suggested fee of $10) and open to the public. Special Offer Subscribe for just $1 an issue and receive a FREE 2025 calendar You are receiving this message because you signed up for email newsletters from The New York Review. The New York Review of Books 207 East 32nd Street, New York, NY 10016-6305 |