Tag Archives: Magazines

The New York Times Magazine – March 2, 2025

Current cover

THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE: The 3.2.25 Issue features Amanda Hess on the actress Parker Posey; David Leonhardt on Denmark’s brand of progressive politics that features strict immigration measures; Daniel Bergner on the Israeli screenwriter Yehonatan Indursky; and more.Read this issue

How an Anguished Mother Became Netanyahu’s Fiercest Foe

Einav Zangauker, whose son is captive in Gaza, has made herself an enemy of the Israeli government by advocating relentlessly for a hostage deal.

Timothée Chalamet Should Win an Oscar for His Oscar Campaign

Lobbying the public to attract the votes of the academy is an odd practice — but you can’t say Chalamet hasn’t excelled at it.

In an Age of Right-Wing Populism, Why Are Denmark’s Liberals Winning?

Around the world, progressive parties have come to see tight immigration restrictions as unnecessary, even cruel. What if they’re actually the only way for progressivism to flourish?

The Economist Magazine – March 1, 2025 Preview

The Economist's office agony uncle is back

THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘The Don’s New World Order’…

Donald Trump has begun a mafia-like struggle for global power

But the new rules do not suit America

Inheriting is becoming nearly as important as working

More wealth means more money for baby-boomers to pass on. That is dangerous for capitalism and society

Germany’s election victor must ditch its debt rules—immediately

Friedrich Merz has weeks to shore up his country’s defences 

The Guardian Weekly – February 28, 2025 Preview

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY (February 27, 2025): The latest issue features ‘The Middle Man’ – Can Friedrich Merz mend Germany?

Can Germany’s chancellor-in-waiting fend off the far right? Plus: Bong Joon-ho interviewed

Diverting our eyes away from Trumpworld for a moment this week, attention shifted to Germany where Friedrich Merz’s conservative CDU/CSU alliance came out on top in the country’s federal elections.

For many though, the story of the night belonged to the far-right Alternative für Deutschland, which received more than a fifth of the vote and came top in virtually the entire eastern side of the country. Merz’s alliance did not win an outright majority so, having previously vowed not to work with the AfD, the chancellor-in-waiting must now try to form a grand coalition with other mainstream parties, which is likely to include Olaf Scholz’s heavily defeated SPD.

Amid surging support for the far right, Ashifa Kassam and Deborah Cole report from Berlin, where many people from immigrant backgrounds feel real fear for the future. Kate Connolly looks at Merz’s bulging in-tray as likely new leader of the EU’s largest economy, while in an opinion piece Musa Okwonga writes powerfully about the extent of anti-migrant feeling and xenophobia in Germany’s “time of the cowards”.

The New York Review Of Books – March 13, 2025

THE NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS: The latest issue features:

From Comedy to Brutality

With his designs on Greenland and Gaza, Trump has signaled that his first term’s outlandish gestures are the second term’s savage demands.

Caravaggio Lost and Found

As two paintings by Caravaggio return to public view, it is possible to hope that his best-known lost work will reappear after almost half a century.

Caravaggio: The Ecce Homo Unveiled – an exhibition at the Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid, May 28, 2024–February 23, 2025

Caravaggio: The Portrait Unveiled – an exhibition at the Gallerie Nazionali di Arte Antica, Palazzo Barberini, Rome, November 23, 2024–February 23, 2025

Caravaggio, la Natività di Palermo: Nascita e scomparsa di un capolavoro [Caravaggio, the Palermo Nativity: Birth and Disappearance of a Masterpiece] by Michele Cuppone

Eden on Fire

The terrible fires in January were another reminder that urban planning in Los Angeles has long failed to protect the city from the natural disasters that repeatedly threaten the region.

The New Yorker Magazine – March 3, 2025 Preview

The Founding Fathers are escorted out of their offices.

THE NEW YORKER MAGAZINE (February 24, 2025): The latest issue features Barry Blitt’s “You’re Fired!” – The artist puts a historical slant on the current constitutional crisis.

The Chaos of Trump’s Guantánamo Plan

The confusion surrounding the detention of migrants at the base and their sudden deportation shouldn’t be mistaken for a broader lack of planning. By Jonathan Blitzer

Dredging Up the Ghostly Secrets of Slave Ships

A global network of maritime archeologists is excavating slave shipwrecks—and reconnecting Black communities to the deep. By Julian Lucas

The Population Implosion

Birth rates are crashing around the world. Should we be worried? By Gideon Lewis-Kraus

The New York Times Magazine – Feb 23, 2025

Current cover

THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE: The 2.23.25 Issue features Jonathan Mahler and Jim Rutenberg on the Murdochs’ succession drama; David Yaffe-Bellany on the cryptocurrency scam that turned a small community on itself; Ismail Muhammad on the comedian Roy Wood Jr….

Six Takeaways About the Murdoch Succession Fight

Here are the main revelations about the battle for control from a secret Nevada trial.

The Comedian Looking for Something All of America Can Laugh At

Roy Wood Jr. performs in small clubs from Georgia to Wyoming, finding humor in the moments that leave us humbled and confused.

The Cryptocurrency Scam That Turned a Small Town Against Itself

How did a successful, financially sophisticated banker gamble his community’s money away?

Read this issue

Reason Magazine ————April 2025 Preview

Reason magazine, April 2025 cover image

    REASON MAGAZINE (February 21, 2025): The latest issue features ‘Trump’s Dramatic Crossroads’…

    Trump’s Dramatic Crossroads

    The GOP faces a choice about how to move forward. Stephanie Slade

    How To Get Rid of a Tenured Professor

    “Officially, it was a voluntary departure. But I sure felt like I’d been pushed out.” Roger Pielke Jr.

    The American Right Is Abandoning Mises

    The Austrian economist’s principled thought once served as a check on the intellectual right. Brian Doherty

    Country Life Magazine – February 19, 2025 Preview

    COUNTRY LIFE MAGAZINE (February 18, 2025):

    The legacy

    Kate Green celebrates the Revd Gilbert White, the original ecologist whose 1789 book on flora and fauna has never been out of print

    Mad as a box of frogs

    Our amphibious friends were once thought to possess mystical powers and they now aid the advance of medicine, as Ian Morton discovers

    The ghost of golden daffodils

    David Jones traces the fall and rise of the Tenby daffodil — all but extinct in the wild, but making a return as a cultivated bloom

    Country Life 19 February 2025

    The lure of Venice

    Matthew Dennison investigates Britain’s long-standing love affair with the Italian maritime republic, fuelled by Canaletto’s enchanting, kaleidoscopic vedute

    Playing the fool

    Who could have foreseen the influence of tarot cards down the ages? Deborah Nicholls-Lee delves into decks and divination

    Dr Ximena Fuentes Torrijo’s favourite painting

    The Ambassador of Chile picks a vast, dreamlike Surrealist work that portrays a turbulent world.

    A sense of delight

    John Goodall marvels at the outstanding array of new and restored buildings on the grand Aldourie estate in Inverness-shire

    19 February 2025

    Snakes and snails and puppy-dog tales

    Matthew Dennison pays tribute to Peter and Iona Opie, who pre-served much-loved folklore and fairy tales for future generations

    The good stuff

    Work out in style with Hetty Lintell’s elegant exercise picks

    Interiors

    Amelia Thorpe shares the best of London Design Week wares, plus an elegant room with a view

    Shaping the view

    Tiffany Daneff admires the vista of rural Northamptonshire from the delightful Modernist garden created for a converted cart house

    Foraging

    Listen in as John Wright shares his thoughts on wood ears, the fungus with a gelatinous texture

    Arts & antiques

    Thomas Girtin’s exquisite landscapes were a match for Turner before the artist was cut down in his prime, reveals Carla Passino

    History triumphs over invention

    A brilliantly acted historical play conquers overproduced Greek mythology for Michael Billington

    The Economist Magazine – February 15, 2025 Preview

    THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE (February 13, 2025): The latest issue features ‘Battle for the Pentagon‘ – Can Donald Trump remake American defense?

    Will Donald Trump and Elon Musk wreck or reform the Pentagon?

    America’s security depends upon their success

    After DeepSeek, America and the EU are getting AI wrong

    Europe has a chance to catch up, whereas America should ease up

    Countering China’s diplomatic coup

    China has turned much of the global south against Taiwan. That could be laying the ground for forced unification

    Can Friedrich Merz save Germany—and Europe?

    He is on track to win the election, but to fix Europe he will have to fix his country first