The New Yorker - September 09, 2024Add to Favorites

The New Yorker - September 09, 2024Add to Favorites

Obtén acceso ilimitado con Magzter ORO

Lea The New Yorker junto con 9,000 y otras revistas y periódicos con solo una suscripción   Ver catálogo

1 mes $9.99

1 año$99.99 $49.99

$4/mes

Guardar 50%
Hurry, Offer Ends in 10 Days
(OR)

Suscríbete solo a The New Yorker

1 año $99.99

1 mes $9.99

comprar esta edición $8.99

Regalar The New Yorker

7-Day No Questions Asked Refund7-Day No Questions
Asked Refund Policy

 ⓘ

Digital Subscription.Instant Access.

Suscripción Digital
Acceso instantáneo

Verified Secure Payment

Seguro verificado
Pago

En este asunto

THE TALK OF THE TOWN
Tyler Foggatt on the politics of cool;
Francis Ford Coppola, hotelier; a mag for mercenaries;
Hollywood meets the Vineyard; COVID déjà vu.

SHOUTS & MURMURS
Emily Zauzmer | Every Obituary’s First Paragraph

PROFILES
Molly Fischer | Be Her Guest | Ina Garten’s age of abundance.

BRAVE NEW WORLD DEPT
Dhruv Khullar | Drug of Choice | How A.I. learned to make medicine

THE HEM OF HIS GARMENT

An audience with the Pope.

THE HEM OF HIS GARMENT

10+ mins

SPREADING THE WEALTH

Why a young heiress asked fifty strangers to redistribute her fortune.

SPREADING THE WEALTH

10+ mins

EVERY OBITUARY'S FIRST PARAGRAPH

Alfred T. Alfred, whose invention of the plastic fastener that affixes tags to clothing upended the tag industry and made him one of America’s youngest multimillionaires—until he lost his plastic fastener fortune in a 1993 game of badminton, as depicted in the Lifetime original movie “Bad Minton”— died on Saturday. He was eighty-one.

EVERY OBITUARY'S FIRST PARAGRAPH

2 mins

BE HER GUEST

The plush ambience of Ina Garten's good fortune.

BE HER GUEST

10+ mins

Drug of Choice - The natural world contains many billions of potential medications. The question is how to find the ones that work.

AI. is transforming the way medicines are made. Bacteria produce numerous molecules that could become medicines, but most of them aren’t easily identified or synthesized with the technology that exists today. A small percentage of them, however, can be constructed by following instructions in the bacteria’s DNA. Burian helped me search the sequence for genes that looked familiar enough to be understandable but unfamiliar enough to produce novel compounds. We settled on a string of DNA that coded for seven linked amino acids, the same number found in vancomycin. Then Burian introduced me to Robert Boer, a synthetic chemist who would help me conjure our drug candidate.

Drug of Choice - The natural world contains many billions of potential medications. The question is how to find the ones that work.

10+ mins

GREEN SLEEVES

“What I want to know,” the woman said to the therapist, “is why the voices always say mean, terrible things.

GREEN SLEEVES

10+ mins

WILD THING

MJ Lenderman resists the smoothing, neutering effects of technology.

WILD THING

9 mins

LUCK OF THE DRAW

Nate Silver argues that poker can help us game our uncertain world.

LUCK OF THE DRAW

10+ mins

DESPERATELY SEEKING

The supreme contradictions of Simone Weil.

DESPERATELY SEEKING

10+ mins

DUTY DANCING

How Seamus Heaney wrote his way through a war.

DUTY DANCING

10+ mins

Leer todas las historias de The New Yorker

The New Yorker Magazine Description:

EditorCondé Nast

CategoríaCulture

IdiomaEnglish

FrecuenciaWeekly

The New Yorker is a weekly magazine that features journalism, commentary, criticism, essays, fiction, satire, cartoons, and poetry. It was founded in 1925 and is published by Condé Nast. The magazine is known for its in-depth reporting, its sharp and witty writing, and its iconic cartoons.

The New Yorker has a long and distinguished history. It has published some of the most important and influential writers of the 20th and 21st centuries, including Dorothy Parker, E.B. White, John Updike, Philip Roth, and Susan Sontag. The magazine has also won numerous awards, including the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting.

The New Yorker is a must-read for anyone who wants to stay informed about current events and culture. It is also a great source of entertainment and thought-provoking essays.

Here are some of the things you can expect to find in The New Yorker Magazine:

*In-depth reporting on current events, politics, and culture
*Sharp and witty commentary on the news and the world around us
*Essays on a wide range of topics, from personal experiences to philosophical musings
*Fiction by some of the best writers in the world
*Satire and cartoons that poke fun at the powerful and the ridiculous

If you are looking for a magazine that is intelligent, informative, and entertaining, then The New Yorker is the magazine for you. It is a magazine that has something to offer everyone.

  • cancel anytimeCancela en cualquier momento [ Mis compromisos ]
  • digital onlySolo digital