Monocle Films – Monocle’s February 2023 issue is all about celebrating places that work, whether that’s a parliament, home or metro carriage. From a floating office to a school teaching children the rules of the road, we profile the locations that look good and work well for those who use them. Plus: Charleston’s hospitality boom and why you should learn Russian.
Tag Archives: Magazines
Previews: The New Yorker Magazine- January 30, 2023

The New Yorker – January 30, 2023 Issue:
The Mayor and the Con Man
Eric Adams’s friends and allies have puzzled over his relationship with Lamor Whitehead, a fraudster Brooklyn church leader.
After Bolsonaro, Can Lula Remake Brazil?
Following a prison term, a fraught election, and a near-coup, the third-time President takes charge of a fractured country.
What’s the Matter with Men?
They’re floundering at school and in the workplace. Some conservatives blame a crisis of masculinity, but the problems—and their solutions—are far more complex.
Financial Review: Barron’s Magazine- January 23, 2023

Barron’s Magazine – January 23, 2023 Issue:
Our Roundtable Pros Scoured the Market. Here Are 26 of Their Top Stock Picks.
Shares of companies with strong fundamentals are poised to shine this year, no matter the economic backdrop. Toyota and Warner Bros. fit the bill.
When a Target-Date Fund Just Doesn’t Cut It for Retirement Investors
Target-date funds have become a mainstay of America’s retirement plans. While they have their benefits, investors may be better off with a more nuanced approach, especially as they near retirement.
How to Capture Electric-Vehicle Tax Credits
The window to snag a $7,500 credit may be closing fast, though leasing may be a loophole in the new tax rules. How to navigate the obstacles.
Commentary: When Goods Move but People Don’t
Work rules in Nafta and its successor could help with North America’s labor shortages. But Washington isn’t interested, Edward Alden writes.
Arts & Culture: The New Criterion – February 2023
The New Criterion – February 2023 Issue:
Caesar & the republic by Adrian Goldsworthy
Otto von Habsburg’s legacy by Edwin J. Feulner
Garshin: a genius at suffering by Gary Saul Morson
Saarinen & starchitecture by Michael J. Lewis
New poems by Rachel Hadas, Ryan Wilson & Duncan Wu
Culture: The New Review Magazine- January 22, 2023

The New Review (January 22, 2023) – Maria Pevchikh @pevchikh, right-hand woman to imprisoned Putin critic @navalny, talks to @carolecadwalla.
Our critics’ picks for the Oscars How the science of Covid vaccines may aid the fight against cancer. Plus @WainBright, director Simon Stone & more.
Culture: New York Times Magazine- January 22, 2023

The New York Times Magazine – January 20, 2023:
Selling False Hope in India’s Cram City
In Kota, students from across the country pay steep fees to be tutored for elite-college admissions exams — which most of them will fail.
Cockfighting Is Illegal in the U.S. Why Does It Breed so Many Fighting Birds?

The long tradition of American game-fowl breeding has produced some of the world’s most coveted roosters.
A rescued rooster named Twister at Vine Sanctuary in Vermont. The staff members there say he has two speeds: mellow and 100 miles per hour .Credit…Andres Serrano for The New York Times
This Soup Is Yotam Ottolenghi’s Comfort Food

In this soup, lamb meatballs and semolina dumplings come with a zest of history.
Research Preview: Science Magazine- January 20, 2023
Science Magazine – January 20, 2023 issue:
Stem cell factors reverse signs of aging in mice
Will reprogramming technique one day help people?
Light pollution is skyrocketing
Data from citizen scientists reveal a worrying growth in light pollution over the past decade
Pirates and politics
An anthropologist argues that experimental communities in Madagascar influenced the European Enlightenment
In Science Journals
Highlights from the Science family of journals
Books: New York Review Of Books- February 9, 2023

The New York Review of Books – February 9, 2023:
Beyond the Pale
After the Russian Revolution, Jews had to navigate a new identity: aspiring muscular worker and New Soviet Man.
How the Soviet Jew Was Made by Sasha Senderovich
Going to Extremes
For Matisse art was a perpetual emergency, a matter of testing boundaries, breaking through.
Matisse: The Red Studio – an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City, May 1–September 10, 2022; and SMK–National Gallery of Denmark, Copenhagen, October 13, 2022–February 26, 2023
Matisse in the 1930s – an exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, October 20, 2022–January 29, 2023; the Musée de l’Orangerie, Paris, March 1–May 29, 2023; and the Musée Matisse Nice, June 23–September 24, 2023
Reckoning with Silence
Dionne Brand’s poetry has the weight and sonority of prophetic utterance without a hint of melodrama.
Nomenclature: New and Collected Poems by Dionne Brand
Arias of Despair
What can opera elicit from The Hours that the page and the screen cannot?
The Hours – an opera by Kevin Puts, with a libretto by Greg Pierce, at the Metropolitan Opera, New York City, November 22–December 15, 2022
Previews: New Scientist Magazine- January 21, 2023

New Scientist Magazine – 21 January 2023:
Web3 promises to reclaim the internet from tech giants – will it work?
There’s a lot of hype surrounding the idea of a decentralised version of the internet that would give more power to ordinary users. Here’s what it would take to make it happen
Fresh ideas about the causes of depression are bringing new treatments
By upending the idea that a chemical imbalance in the brain is behind depression, we are starting to understand some of its mysteries and develop better treatments
How we finally tracked European eels all the way to the Sargasso Sea
Where European eels start and end their lives was long a mystery, but an audacious expedition has finally revealed the last details of their incredible migration
Lifestyle: Country Life Magazine – Jan 18, 2023

Country Life Magazine – – 18 January 2023:
Blue-sky thinking
Glasshouses can be havens for people as well as their plants, Caroline Donald discovers
Getting a few words in hedgewise
Alan Titchmarsh speaks out in defence of the privet hedge
All aboard for Ironhenge!
In the first of a two-part series Marcus Binney explores the park of Fawley Hill, Berkshire
Are you stark raven mad?
Ian Morton lauds the intelligence of the much-maligned corvid



