THE HUDSON REVIEW MAGAZINE – WINTER 2026

The Hudson Review | A Magazine of Literature and the Arts

THE HUDSON REVIEW: The latest issue features….

ESSAYS

The Mysterious Case of Gothic Verse Narratives by Brian Brodeur
The Intertidal Zone by Michael Carson

FICTION

Krista Robinson, Age 21 3/4, Wants These Things to Be True by Leslie Pietrzyk

POETRY

The Fells by Natania Rosenfeld
Sonnet Upon the James Webb Space Telescope; The Names of the Seasons by Robert Schultz
A Dance by Brian Swann Memorable Figures by Ellen Kaufman
Stanley Moss by Priscilla Long

ARTS CHRONICLES

Dancing in New York: Variations on a Theme by Marina Harss
Recurring Themes at the New York Film Festival by Erick Neher
Balancing Acts by Becky Y. Lu
At the Galleries by Karen Wilkin

BOOK REVIEWS

Letters of T. S. Eliot, Vol. 10 by William H. Pritchard
Poet, Lucky Poet: The Poems of Seamus Heaney by Mark Jarman
Revivals, Pastorals, a Shroud of Golden Silk by Robert Archambeau
The Making of Gertrude Stein by David Mason

THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE- MARCH 1, 2026

THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘The Victims Who Fought Back’ – A new law was supposed to help free women convicted of killing their abusers. Why are nearly all of them still in prison?

They Killed Their Abusers. Should They Spend Their Lives in Prison?

A new law was supposed to help reduce the sentences of survivors of domestic violence. Most are still behind bars.

They Fought for the C.I.A. in Afghanistan. In America, They’re Living in Fear.

A shooting in Washington, D.C., threw their immigration status into jeopardy — and brought attention to a long-hidden dimension of America’s war.

The Interview – Maggie Gyllenhaal Thinks Hollywood Likes Women to Direct ‘Little Movies’

BARRON’S MAGAZINE – MARCH 2, 2026 PREVIEW

March 2, 2026 - Barron's Magazine

BARRON’S MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘The Trillion-Dollar Electric Bill’ – Tech giants are paying up to power AI. Utilities could be big winners.

Tech Giants Are Paying Up to Power AI. These Utilities Will Be Big Winners.

Electric companies are gaining the upper hand in deals with Alphabet, Amazon, and others.

Netflix Walks Away a Winner After Losing Warner Bros. to Paramount

Paramount is taking on a lot of debt to buy Warner Bros. Discovery, faces a difficult approval process, and will have a tough time absorbing the media giant.

Insider Trading Is Shaping Prediction Markets. Polymarket Sees an Edge.

Polymarket’s social-media account has repeatedly identified signs of insider trading on its prediction-market platform. It isn’t clear what happens next.

American Airlines Stock Is Ready for Takeoff

The stock has underperformed other airlines for too long. Time to buy the shares.

Barron’s Best Fund Families

The top fund families of 2025 had exquisite timing—and managers with strong stomachs. How they navigated a tumultuous year.

THE NEW YORK TIMES – SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 2026

U.S. Attacks Iran as Trump Calls for Overthrow of Government

Israel joined the major U.S.-led assault as President Trump pledged to eliminate Iran’s nuclear program and devastate its military. Iran vowed retaliation and several Arab states that host U.S. military bases said they had been attacked.

Tehran Retaliates, Firing Missiles at Israel and U.S. Bases in Region

OpenAI Reaches A.I. Agreement With Defense Dept. After Anthropic Clash

The deal came hours after President Trump had ordered federal agencies to stop using artificial intelligence technology made by Anthropic, an OpenAI rival.

The Bloody Rise and Fall of Mexico’s Top Crime Boss

El Mencho’s brutality and business acumen put him atop the cartel world, until he made a fatal mistake.

Abrupt Change for Warner Bros. Prompts Many Grim Faces

Employees at the company had started to warm to the idea of Netflix as its corporate owner. Now they face the prospect of major cuts under Paramount.

The Hedgehog Review – Spring 2026 Preview

Humanism in a Posthumanist Age

THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW: The latest issue features ‘Humanism in a Posthumanist Age’ – What we are witnessing today is a cultural swerve away from the informing humanist idealism of the modern liberal democratic project.

Will Human Voices Wake Us?

Antón Barba-Kay

How Antihumanism Turned on Its Authors

Geoff Shullenberger

The Human Condition or the Conditional Human?

David Polansky

Up from Darkness

Alan Jacobs

Essays

The Buried Tombstone, the Melting Iceberg, and the Random Bullet

R.F. Foster

A Matter of Time

Witold Rybczynski

Managing the Facts of Life

Sarah M. Brownsberger

We’ve Been Getting the Ancient Greeks All Wrong

Colin Wells

The Consolations of Simulation

Paul Nedelisky

THE NEW YORK TIMES – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2026

The U.S. Birthrate Is Plunging. Here’s Why Some Say That’s a Good Thing.

The political class is worried about the historic drop. But the biggest change is among the youngest women, who are the least ready to have children.

Trump’s Foreign Policy: Resurrecting Empire

President Trump’s approach is a revival of the mission of empire — acquiring the territories and resources of sovereign peoples.

In Trump’s Case for War With Iran, a Series of False or Unproven Claims

Key elements of the Trump administration’s arguments this week for another military campaign against Iran do not hold up.

A Call From Trump Ignited a Bitter Feud Between Two U.S. Allies

A request made to President Trump about the war in Sudan is at the heart of a diplomatic dispute between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE – FEBRUARY 28, 2026 PREVIEW

THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘Digging for victory’…

America’s dangerous pursuit of critical-mineral dominance

With a more focused approach, it could break China’s chokehold

Donald Trump is at risk of launching a war without purpose

A conflict with Iran without a clear objective would be recklessly dangerous

The right response to private-market dangers

Was a Blue Owl fund mismanaged, or did it reveal fundamental problems about the industry?

America’s states should beware of copying Europe too much

Welfare is rightly becoming more generous. But regulatory fragmentation is a problem

Heathrow’s third runway is turning into another infrastructure fiasco

The government must step in

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY – FEBRUARY 27, 2026 PREVIEW

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY: The latest issue features ‘Can Britain’s Monarchy Survive the Andrew Crisis?’…

The arrest of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor last week, after allegations he had shared confidential information with the late US sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, sent shock waves around the world.

What happens next is unclear, but the ramifications will go far beyond the former prince, who has consistently denied any wrongdoing related to Epstein. It was one of the most consequential days for Britain’s monarchy in generations, shattering the traditional aura of royal mystique and raising questions of accountability, deference and whether the royal family should have acted sooner.

In a powerful essay for our big story this week, Stephen Bates asks whether the royal family can survive the unfolding scandal.

Spotlight | The limits to the supreme court’s assent
Last week’s declaration by the conservative-heavy court that Trump’s sweeping tariffs are unlawful is a major setback for the president, writes Ed Pilkington

Health | Why big pharma stands to gain from weight-loss pills
Oral tablets could bring obesity treatment into the mainstream, with the sector predicted to be worth $200bn by the end of the decade. Julia Kollewe reports

Special report | The road to war in Ukraine
In a remarkably detailed piece drawing on more than 100 interviews with senior intelligence officials and other insiders, Shaun Walker explains how the CIA and MI6 got hold of Putin’s Ukraine plans – and why nobody believed them

Opinion | A degree? A trade? Every rung for young people is a trap
Is it to be a degree and heavy debt when graduate jobs are shrinking? Or forgoing a degree, knowing society still worships them? Confused, angry: who wouldn’t be, asks Jason Okundaye

Culture | Big in Beijing (but less so in Blackpool)
James Balmont’s band, Swim Deep, plays to crowds of hundreds across the UK – but in China, they perform in front of tens of thousands. And they’re not the only ones

THE NEW YORK TIMES – THURSDAY, FEB. 26, 2026

For Trump, Military Strike in Iran Could Serve a Dual Purpose

Administration officials said it would allow President Trump to claim a military win. But top officials also hope it would drive Iran to give up its nuclear enrichment program.

How Israelis Feel About Another Potential War With Iran

The national mood is somewhere between anxiety, resignation and anticipation as President Trump considers whether to attack Iran.

Trump’s Push for Election Power Raises Fears He Will ‘Subvert’ Midterms

President Trump appears to be undermining Americans’ faith in the outcome, at a moment when Republicans face an uphill climb to keep control of Congress.

New A.C.A. Plans Could Increase Family Deductibles to $31,000

The Trump administration is proposing Obamacare plans that it says will lower health insurance premiums. But critics warn they would make care unaffordable.

Epstein Files Are Missing Records About Woman Who Made Claim Against Trump

A woman’s unverified accusation that Donald Trump assaulted her when she was a minor is in the files. But several memos related to her account are noT.

For Hillary Clinton, an Epstein Deposition Is the Latest ‘Stand by Your Man’ Moment

The former secretary of state had no dealings with Jeffrey Epstein but today she is once again under pressure to answer for her husband’s actions.

MIT TECHNOLOGY REVIEW – MARCH/APRIL 2026 PREVIEW

MIT TECHNOLOGY REVIEW: The Crime issue features ‘It’s a bad, bad, bad, bad world out there’. From AI-powered scams to roboticized drug-smuggling submarines. New technologies have supercharged the human knack for wrongdoing, just as they’ve juiced the law’s ability to chase them—challenging privacy and equity along the way. Plus, read about crypto shenanigans, breast biomechanics, heist science, and music that’s really, really deep.

AI is already making online crimes easier. It could get much worse.

Some cybersecurity researchers say it’s too early to worry about AI-orchestrated cyberattacks. Others say it could already be happening.

Welcome to the dark side of crypto’s permissionless dream

Jean-Paul Thorbjornsen is a leader of THORChain, a blockchain that is not supposed to have any leaders—and is reeling from a series of expensive controversies.

How uncrewed narco subs could transform the Colombian drug trade

Fast, stealthy, and cheap—autonomous, semisubmersible drone boats carrying tons of cocaine could be international law enforcement’s nightmare scenario. A big one just came ashore.

Hackers made death threats against this security researcher. Big mistake.

Allison Nixon had helped arrest dozens of members of the Com, a loose affiliation of online groups responsible for violence and hacking campaigns. Then she became a target.

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