The New York Review of Books – N. 07, April 21 2022 7th Edition by Various Authors – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery:
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Author: Various Authors
Table of contents:
Simon Callow
Portrait of the Artist as a Young Pianist
Jeremy Denk’s memoir is not just about piano lessons but about life lessons—how the artist creates a self.
- Book: Every Good Boy Does Fine: A Love Story, in Music Lessons
- Author: Jeremy Denk
Benjamin Nathans
Bureaucrat’s Honor
Three memoirs by Trump administration officials reveal the integrity and moral discipline of the so-called deep state in the face of corruption and philistinism.
- Books:
- Lessons from the Edge by Marie Yovanovitch
- Here, Right Matters: An American Story by Alexander S. Vindman
- There Is Nothing for You Here: Finding Opportunity in the Twenty-First Century by Fiona Hill
Wendy Xu
Work (Poem)
Kamran Javadizadeh
In Between States
In Solmaz Sharif’s new collection of poetry, closed doors are everywhere.
- Book: Customs
- Author: Solmaz Sharif
John Banville
The Imaginative Imperative
Jed Perl’s Authority and Freedom is a defense of the autonomy of the arts against the stranglehold of relevance.
- Book: Authority and Freedom: A Defense of the Arts
- Author: Jed Perl
Peter Gizzi
Revisionary (Poem)
Erin Maglaque
‘Monstrous’ or ‘Prudente’?
A new feminist history asks us to reconsider early modern queenship.
- Book: When Women Ruled the World: Making the Renaissance in Europe
- Author: Maureen Quilligan
Nicole Rudick
‘I Needed to Stay Approximate’
In Very Cold People, Sarah Manguso captures the bewilderment of childhood in the narrator’s flat observations about situations she doesn’t fully understand, supplemented by feral imaginings.
- Book: Very Cold People
- Author: Sarah Manguso
Geoffrey O’Brien
Verdi’s Decentered Epic
The six principal characters of Don Carlos grasp at separate ends, but nothing is finally to be attained.
- Opera: Don Carlos by Giuseppe Verdi
- Venue: Metropolitan Opera, New York City, February 28–March 26, 2022
Ange Mlinko
Potatoes and Pomegranates (Poem)
Merve Emre
The Act of Persuasion
The drama of Elizabeth Hardwick’s life emanated from an elemental restlessness and a desire for sovereignty over her intellect and emotion.
Books:
A Splendid Intelligence: The Life of Elizabeth Hardwick by Cathy Curtis
The Uncollected Essays of Elizabeth Hardwick, edited and with an introduction by Alex Andriesse
Jackson Lears
The Forgotten Crime of War Itself
In his new book, Samuel Moyn argues that efforts to humanize war with smarter weaponry or sanctify it with moral cant have obscured the task of making peace the first goal of foreign policy.
- Book: Humane: How the United States Abandoned Peace and Reinvented War
- Author: Samuel Moyn
M.W. Feldman, Jessica Riskin
Why Biology Is Not Destiny
In The Genetic Lottery, Kathryn Harden disguises her radically subjective view of biological essentialism as an objective fact.
- Book: The Genetic Lottery: Why DNA Matters for Social Equality
- Author: Kathryn Paige Harden
Ursula Lindsey
Refusing Silence in Egypt
Even as the Sisi regime tries to obliterate the story of the Arab Spring, some Egyptian writers remain committed to its memory and ideals.
- Books:
- Here Is a Body by Basma Abdel Aziz, translated from the Arabic by Jonathan Wright
- The Queue by Basma Abdel Aziz, translated from the Arabic by Elisabeth Jaquette
- You Have Not Yet Been Defeated: Selected Works, 2011–2021 by Alaa Abd el-Fattah, translated from the Arabic by a collective, with a foreword by Naomi Klein
- The Book of Sleep by Haytham El Wardany, translated from the Arabic by Robin Moger
Michael Gorr
Being Dickens
Robert Douglas-Fairhurst’s The Turning Point minutely conveys the texture of Charles Dickens’s daily life over the course of a year when he was at the peak of his powers.
- Book: The Turning Point: 1851—A Year That Changed Charles Dickens and the World
- Author: Robert Douglas-Fairhurst
David Cole
When Rights Went Right
Is the American conception of constitutional rights too absolute?
- Book: How Rights Went Wrong: Why Our Obsession with Rights Is Tearing America Apart
- Author: Jamal Greene, with a foreword by Jill Lepore
James McAuley
A Failure of Imagination
The French left has not only abandoned its traditional constituents, it has also been unable to defend a positive vision of the multicultural society that France has become.
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