Tag Archives: Magazines

The New Yorker Magazine – March 24, 2025 Preview

A young woman holds an oversized teacup.

THE NEW YORKER MAGAZINE (March 17, 2025): Amy Sherald’s “Miss Everything (Unsuppressed Deliverance)” – The artist adds some whimsy to her thought-provoking techniques.

The Battle for the Bros

The Battle for the Bros

Young men have gone MAGA. Can the left win them back? By Andrew Marantz

How an American Radical Reinvented Back-Yard Gardening

Ruth Stout didn’t plow, dig, water, or weed—and now her “no-work” method is everywhere. But her secrets went beyond the garden plot. By Jill Lepore

Graydon Carter’s Wild Ride Through a Golden Age of Magazines

The former Vanity Fair editor recalls a time when the expense accounts were limitless, the photo shoots were lavish, and the stakes seemed high. What else has been lost? By Nathan Heller

The New Criterion ——- April 2025 Preview

THE NEW CRITERION (March 15, 2025): The April issue features

The hard Frost by Brenda Wineapple

Vicar’s vision by Micah Mattix

Ambassador of dreams by Gary Saul Morson

The lush fields of allusion by Rachel Hadas

Ezra Pound & the mystery of the calling cards by William Logan

The New York Times Magazine – March 16, 2025

Current cover

THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE (March 15, 2025): The 3.16.25 Issue features Extreme Voyages Issue, Evgenia Abrugaeva on the Ice Age bone hunters of Siberia; J Wortham on a 10-day crash course for surviving the Apocalypse; Doug Bock Clark on adventure racing through a hurricane; Sam Anderson on following the path of The Old Leatherman; Sara Benincasa on a trip to the grocery store as an agoraphobe; and more.

Diving With Siberian Bone Hunters

A search for the fossils of long-extinct creatures, hidden in Russia’s frigid waters.

How Generative A.I. Complements the MAGA Style

Online Trump supporters have embraced a unique form of irony that is hard to parse — and easy to deploy with new technologies. By Dan Brooks

The Old Idea That Could Give New Life to Progressive Politics

During the first Trump era, the resistance engaged in soaring rhetoric about unity — then fell apart. Will this time be different?By Parul Sehgal

    Commentary Magazine – April 2025 Preview

    April 2025 – Commentary Magazine

    COMMENTARY MAGAZINE (March 14, 2025): The latest issue features ‘In Praise Of Big Pharma’; How American Aid has subsidized Terror and The Coalition of the Sentimental & Homicidal for Palestine…

    In Praise of Big Pharma

     “If we allow the hatred of the industry to continue, we are going to lose investment and people are going to die.” by Tevi Troy

    The Putin Trap

    Washington Commentary by Matthew Continetti

    The Evil of Rationalism

    Social Commentary by Christine Rosen

    Science Magazine – March 14, 2025 Research Preview

    SCIENCE MAGAZINE (March 13, 2025): The latest issue features ‘Interstellar Dust’ – Mapping dust properties in the Milky Way…

    Studies seek signs of consciousness before birth

    Fetal and infant brains offer clues to when human experience begins

    In Ukraine, dam’s destruction sets off a ‘toxic time bomb’

    Floods threaten to spread sediments laden with toxicants

    Oceans’ trenches are home to ‘incredible’ diversity

    In trio of studies, scientists explore life in the mysterious hadal zone

    NIH kills existing grants on transgender issues

    Some termination letters cite “biological realities” to dismiss usefulness of such research

    Face to face with the first known Western European

    At least 1.1 million years old, a fossil face suggests more than one type of early human inhabited Europe

    The Economist Magazine – March 15, 2025 Preview

    Image

    THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE (March 13, 2025): The latest issue features America’s new foreign policy

    America’s bullied allies need to toughen up

    To avoid being crushed, they need a better plan than flattery and concessions

    The new economics of immigration

    A fresh critique of migration is gaining ground. Liberals must take it seriously

    Trump’s erratic policy is harming the reputation of American assets

    Like the stockmarket, the dollar is also suffering from falling confidence and rising confusion

    The Guardian Weekly – March 14, 2025 Preview

    Image

    THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY (March 13, 2025): The latest issue features ‘Call to Arms’ – The remilitarization of Europe…

    With unaccustomed speed, Paris, Berlin and London, along with the European Commission, are stepping up with a new “whatever it takes” mentality to create a framework for their own defence. Our coverage, led by Toby Helm and with contributions from our correspondents in Kyiv, Brussels and Berlin, examines how fiscal shibboleths are being shed to allow for increased military spending, and from Berlin a growing enthusiasm for Germany’s chancellor-in-waiting Friedrich Merz to consider sheltering under France’s independent nuclear umbrella.

    Spotlight | ‘Here you will die’
    Mark Townsend reports from Sudan on how the retreat of rebel RSF forces has led to the discovery of a torture centre, evidence of what could be one of the worst atrocities of the civil war

    Technology | Roboshop
    Can an AI agent prove itself smart enough to help Victoria Turk with her shopping? And, if it can order groceries and a takeaway, what else might it soon be able to do?

    Feature | All the young Reform dudes
    What is it about Nigel Farage’s Reform party that is attracting young men fed up with establishment politics? Gaby Hinsliff finds out

    Opinion | The Sicilian ways of Donald Trump
    The US president’s way of doing business is uncomfortably close to the fictional Corleone method, but without the mafia’s sense of honour, says Jonathan Freedland

    Culture | Arthouse animation moves on up
    Hot on the Academy Awards’ success of Flow, Xan Brooks looks at how independent animators are taking on the big-budget Hollywood studios and finding audiences are falling back in love with stop-go techniques

    Nature Magazine – March 13, 2025 Research Preview

    Volume 639 Issue 8054

    NATURE MAGAZINE (March 12, 2025): The latest issue features ‘Good Or Bad?’ – Simple two-point rating system curbs racial bias in the gig economy.

    Who’s likely to wake up from a coma? Brainwaves provide a clue

    The presence of a pattern called a sleep spindle helps to predict which people will recover from an unresponsive state.

    A super-gel stays supple from −115 ºC to 143 ºC

    A network of two polymers plus sulfuric acid allows a hydrogel to keep its elasticity and softness at extreme temperatures.

    Ancient puppets that smile or scowl hint at shared rituals

    Clay figurines found on top of the remnants of a pyramid in what is now El Salvador might have been used in public ceremonies.

    The surprising culprit for the loss of huge swathes of tropical forest

    Analysis of satellite imagery of the Brazilian Amazon, the Congo Basin and New Guinea helps to show that ‘secondary’ roads take an outsized toll.

    The Scientist Magazine – March 2025 Issue

    Issues | The Scientist Magazine® | The Scientist

    THE SCIENTIST MAGAZINE (March 12, 2025): The latest issue features ‘Peto’s Paradox’ – How gigantic species evolved to beat cancer…

    Peto’s Paradox: How Gigantic Species Evolved to Beat Cancer

    Scientists dive into the genomes of whales, elephants, and other animal giants looking for new weapons in the fight against cancer.

    DNA Profiling: Tracing Killers and Solving Mysteries Using Genetic Clues

    Every DNA fragment tells a story. Forensic experts use these genetic breadcrumbs to solve old mysteries and modern crimes.

    Generation X and Millennials Face a Steep Rise in Early-Onset Colorectal Cancer Cases

    Younger individuals are developing colorectal cancer earlier in life compared to older generations, and scientists don’t know why.

    Country Life Magazine – March 12, 2025 Preview

    cover of Country Life 12 March 2025

    COUNTRY LIFE MAGAZINE (March 11, 2025): The cover of Country Life’s 12 March 2025 issue, featuring The Garden Hall at Pitshill House, West Sussex, as photographed by Paul Whitbread.

    Water you wading for?

    The village pond, once the hub around which community life revolved, is being reinvented as a ‘superpower’ habitat for rare species, finds Vicky Liddell

    fish

    Sorry seems to be the easiest word

    Deborah Nicholls-Lee makes no apology for asking why there is nothing more British than saying sorry (up to eight times a day, we regret to say)

    Two’s company, three’s a crowd farmer

    Jane Wheatley is impressed by a new European project linking farmers direct to consumers in an effort to ensure fair pricing

    Peak sugar

    Harry Pearson is sweet on Kendal Mint Cake, the original energy snack that is still going strong after conquering Everest and crossing the Antarctic

    kendal mint cake

    Arts & antiques

    Nature’s beauty and vulnerability are laid bare in a new exhibition at Chatsworth in Derbyshire, as Carla Passino discovers

    Josh Eggleton’s favourite painting

    The chef and restaurant owner chooses a contemporary collage that keeps the viewer guessing

    Like cats on a hot tin roof  

    A feline stand-off in a Wiltshire farmyard has echoes of tax and trade talks for Minette Batters 

    Gothic splendours

    John Goodall hails the rebirth of Victorian gem Allerton Castle in North Yorkshire, some two decades after a devastating fire

    castle

    The legacy

    Kate Green lauds the brilliant, but tragically brief blooming of cello prodigy Jacqueline du Pré

    The red army

    Ian Morton reveals why we don’t want wood ants in our pants

    The good stuff

    Pretty pastels are back for spring, so think pink, says Hetty Lintell

    pink things

    Bring me everlasting flowers

    Catriona Gray meets a man crafting blooms from coppiced hazel

    If you want colour…

    Picture-perfect primulas offer an easy way to festoon the garden with a kaleidoscope of colour, suggests Charles Quest-Ritson

    Foraging

    John Wright savours the peppery crunch and kick of black mustard, but he’ll never pick it in Yeovil

    It’s a Scream

    The wild work of Edvard Munch betrayed a troubled soul, but the Norwegian artist found salvation in Nature, declares Jessica Lack

    munch article