The New York Times Book Review – January 21, 2024

Image

THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW (January 19, 2024): The latest issue features the excitement over advance copy reviews of a January novel, Kaveh Akbar’s “Martyr!” …“You’ve got to read this,” one editor said. “One of the most electric novels I’ve read in a long while,” another said. This kind of thing — everyone thrilled by the same book — is unusual at the TBR, and explains why “Martyr!,” about a grieving young man’s search for meaning, graces our cover this week.

A Death-Haunted First Novel Incandescent With Life

This colorful illustration features a large red bird and a horse’s head and neck, both adorned with Farsi letters, as well as a skyward-bound airplane and a black-hooded figure with many faces holding a torch in one hand and a sword in the other. These details are laid over a backdrop of blue-green mountains and yellow sky.

In “Martyr!,” the poet Kaveh Akbar turns a grieving young man’s search for meaning into a piercing family saga.

Martyr!, by Kaveh Akbar

Reviewed by By Junot Díaz


Cyrus Shams, the aching protagonist at the heart of Kaveh Akbar’s incandescent first novel, is a veritable Rushdiean multitude: an Iranian-born American, a “bad” immigrant, a recovering addict, a straight-passing queer, an almost-30 poet who rarely writes, an orphan, a runner of open mics, an indefatigable logophile, a fiery wit, a self-pitying malcontent. But above all else Cyrus is sad; profoundly, inconsolably, suicidally sad.

Here are the books discussed in this week’s episode:

  • “Knife,” by Salman Rushdie
  • “James,” by Percival Everett
  • “The Book of Love,” by Kelly Link
  • “Martyr,” by Kaveh Akbar
  • “The Demon of Unrest,” by Erik Larson
  • “The Hunter,” by Tana French
  • “Wandering Stars,” by Tommy Orange
  • “Anita de Monte Laughs Last,” by Xochitl Gonzalez
  • “Splinters,” by Leslie Jamison
  • “Neighbors and Other Stories,” by Diane Oliver
  • “Funny Story,” by Emily Henry
  • “Table for Two,” by Amor Towles
  • “Grief Is for People,” by Sloane Crosley
  • “One Way Back: A Memoir,” by Christine Blasey Ford
  • “The House of Hidden Meanings: A Memoir,” by RuPaul

The New Criterion – February 2024 Preview

Image
The New Criterion – The February 2024 issue features:

The importance of Homer  by Joshua T. Katz
Galaxy brains  by Gary Saul Morson
The Thames: river of destinies  by Jeremy Black
“Breakfast Special”: a new story  by Woody Allen

New poems  by Nicholas Friedman, Jessica Hornik & Michael Spence

Museum Tour: ‘European Paintings – 1300 To 1800’ At The Met In New York City

The Met (January 19, 2024): Join curators Stephan Wolohojian, Adam Eaker, David Pullins, and Anna-Claire Stinebring along with their special guests as they guide you through the newly reopened galleries dedicated to European Paintings from 1300 to 1800.

The reconfigured galleries highlight fresh narratives and dialogues among more than 700 works of art from the Museum’s world-famous holdings, which include recently acquired paintings and prestigious loans, as well as select sculptures and decorative art, showcase the interconnectedness of cultures, materials, and moments across The Met collection.

Australian Architecture: ‘Lee House’ Tour In Sydney

The Local Project (January 19, 2024) – A beautiful dance of soft curves and geometric lines, Lee House is a study in balance and restraint where the architect redesigns a 200 year old home. Angelo Candalepas, director of Candalepas Associates and the architect of Lee House, assumes a very conceptual approach to architecture – evident in the house he has crafted.

Video timeline: 00:00 – Introduction to the 200 Year Old Home 01:02 – The Original Concept 02:13 – Seeking Perfection Through Form 03:00 – Behind The Material Palette 04:30 – The Relationship Between Builder and Architect 05:26 – Experiencing the Intimacy of the Home 06:50 – Favourite Aspects

“What we have tried to do is seek aspects of perfection in form that enable us to encourage something in the human condition which isn’t able to be seen, but is perhaps only able to be felt,” reflects Angelo. Here, the architect redesigns a 200 year old home in Sydney’s Watsons Bay. The front façade appears as a humble, one-storey traditional cottage that sits in contrast to the two-storey, modern, geometric façade at the rear. The way the architect redesigns a 200 year old home was a step away from the client’s original brief – removing the existing cottage and creating a large home.

After many discussions, the client developed a modesty about their brief. “It meant we could work with an incredibly quiet house… something that is purely an interior design,” says Angelo. The architect redesigns a 200 year old home with a material palette that is simultaneously robust, raw and refined. Timber flooring and ceilings make the space feel spacious yet cosy and is also used in the kitchen for joinery, the dining table and the base of the island bench. This is complemented by the heavy use of concrete for walls, stairs and detailing, softened by round curves. Styling is dominated by minimalist furniture and neutral tones.

The New York Times Magazine- January 21, 2024

Image

THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE (January 19, 2024): The new issue features ‘The Whale Who Went AWOL’ – How do you solve a problem like Hvaldmir?; How Group Chats Rule the World – They quietly became the de facto spaces to share dumb jokes, grief or even plans for an insurrection…

The Whale Who Went AWOL

Hvaldimir escaped captivity and became a global celebrity. Now, no one can agree about what to do with him.

By Ferris Jabr

On April 26, 2019, a beluga whale appeared near Tufjord, a village in northern Norway, immediately alarming fishermen in the area. Belugas in that part of the world typically inhabit the remote Arctic and are rarely spotted as far south as the Norwegian mainland. Although they occasionally travel solo, they tend to live and move in groups. This particular whale was entirely alone and unusually comfortable around humans, trailing boats and opening his mouth as though expecting to be fed. And he seemed to be tangled in rope.

How Group Chats Rule the World

An illustration of people falling into chat bubbles.

They quietly became the de facto spaces to share dumb jokes, grief or even plans for an insurrection.

By Sophie Haigney

I am texting all the time. I am, at the very least, receiving texts all the time, a party to conversations in which I am alternately an eavesdropper and an active participant. This is because I am in a lot of group chats — constant, interlinked, text-message-based conversations among multiple friends that happen all day long. I dip into and out of these conversations, on my phone and on my computer. Sometimes I will put both away for two hours and return to find 279 new messages waiting.

The New York Review Of Books – February 8, 2024

Image

The New York Review of Books (January 18, 2024)The latest issue features Crime Fiction Addiction; Chantal Akerman’s Proust & Albertine; Toward and Ethics of Spycraft; Regarding the Pain of Avatars; Was Weimar Doomed to Fail? and The Truth About Tampons….

Ethical Espionage

What moral principles should guide our intelligence-gathering agencies?

By Tamsin Shaw

Spies: The Epic Intelligence War Between East and West by Calder Walton

Spying Through a Glass Darkly: The Ethics of Espionage and Counter-Intelligence by Cécile Fabre

On October 7, as Hamas fighters roared into southern Israel from Gaza, bringing terror and death to anyone they encountered—Israeli soldiers, Bedouins, young people dancing and getting high together, kibbutzniks scooping up small children into desperate arms—I was sleeping in a comfortable hotel room in Georgia. All around me in the sultry darkness of a beautiful resort, many of the US intelligence community’s finest minds were also slumbering. We awoke with the expectation that we would be addressed by CIA director William Burns at the opening of the Cipher Brief’s annual Threat Conference, a yearly gathering of national security professionals from the private and public sectors, plus a few academics and journalists.

News: Pakistan And Iran Border Missile Strikes, Somalia-Ethiopia Dispute

The Globalist Podcast (January 19, 2024) We discuss the regional fallout following Pakistan’s retaliatory strikes in Iran.

Plus: the Somalia-Ethiopia dispute over the Somaliland maritime deal, media freedom in Ukraine following reports of press intimidation and a special interview with Alexander Payne, the director of ‘The Holdovers’.

The New York Times — Friday, January 19, 2024

Image

Eyeing Super Tuesday, Trump Is Eager to Dispatch Rivals Sooner Than Later

A line of people outside a brick building. They are bundled up in warm clothing. A woman near the front of the line has a Trump winter hat.

The former president is looking to lock up the nomination by Super Tuesday on March 5, but Nikki Haley and Ron DeSantis insist they plan to compete deep into March.

How Biden’s Immigration Fight Threatens His Biggest Foreign Policy Win

The debate over immigration in the United States is spilling over into other parts of President Biden’s agenda, particularly the war in Ukraine.

Nikki Haley Is Chasing Independents. They Have a Mind of Their Own.

Her chance to beat Donald J. Trump in New Hampshire depends on her ability to win over its famously freethinking voters. Her challenge is that they come in all stripes.

A Reporter’s Journey Into How the U.S. Funded the Bomb

Watching “Oppenheimer,” a journalist wondered (perhaps a bit obsessively): How did the president get the $2 billion secret project past Congress?