News

The New Yorker magazine has managed to insult Christians and Jews alike with a cartoon depicting the Last Supper in an April ...
In “Darkenbloom,” by the Austrian novelist Eva Menasse, the citizens of a European border town have secrets they’d prefer to forget.
Hearing aids and cochlear implants have been getting better for years, but a new type of device—eyeglasses that display ...
Religion News Service on MSN17d
The New Yorker's tone-deaf Holy Week cartoon
The New Yorker magazine has just managed to insult Christians and Jews alike with a cartoon depicting the Last Supper. In the drawing, by Adam Sacks, Jesus, sitting at what we take to be the Last ...
Catholic Bishop Robert Barron took exception to a "rather annoying article" from The New Yorker this week that attempted to downplay Christianity’s legitimacy. The New Yorker released a piece ...
Imbuing his work with a volatile mix of tenderness, aggression, sophistication, and obscenity, the Roman poet left a record of a divided and fascinating self.
The author of “Convenience Store Woman” has gained a cult following by seeing the ordinary world as science fiction.
Scott called the practical knowledge accumulated by locals “metis,” after the ancient Greek word for “skill ... has written for The New Yorker since 2016, on topics including cities ...
I was first introduced to Brownian motion 50 years ago in medical school as I peered through a microscope and saw nonliving particles moving randomly on a microscope slide. This phenomenon was first ...