New York Magazine (9-15 November 2015)

New York Magazine (9-15 November 2015)

Language: English

Pages: 120

ISBN: B01M4QEXP4

Format: PDF / Kindle (mobi) / ePub


This magazine is edited for those interested in critical examination of news, style, contemporary ideas and trends. It regularly deals with politics, business, literature, the fine arts, entertainment, home furnishings, food, wine and fashion.

New York Magazine (16-22 November 2015)

Even More Children's Miscellany: Smart, Silly, and Strange Information That's Essential to Know

Children's Miscellany: Useless Information That's Essential to Know

Billboard (28 May 2016)

Time (18 April 2016)

SFX (Summer 2016)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

treasures might have fallen through the cracks in the pre-Stonewall era. Carol is certain to bring new readers to Highsmith, and once they dig in, they will be ravenous for more. ■ Biography of Patrick Hardison’s face was not always his own. Three months ago, it belonged to a young Brooklyn bike mechanic. for the moment, the face belongs to no one. It floats in a bowl of icy, hemodynamic preserving solution, paused midway on its journey from one operating room to another, from a 26-year-old

another—chasing him with a hatchet or whatever. They came from the bar on the corner. He jumped up to the large window in the front of the house, in order to get away. I had a Doberman at the time. The dog was just standing there, looking at him. Thank God.” Debra Lamb’s home in 1986, left, and again after renovation. november 16–22, 2015 | new york 49 Where New Yorkers who moved to MacDonough came from: 1960 1970s 1980 1990s 2000–2010s The Block Jane Benson, 43, and Lucas Cooper, 46,

are destroyed. Raw: Milk that is neither pasteurized nor homogenized. In New York, the sale of raw milk is only legal at farms. rBGH-Free: Without the hormone injected into dairy cattle that increases milk production. Widely used by factory farms in the U.S., it’s been banned in many other parts of the world, given its deleterious effects on cows. Ultrapasteurized: Milk heated at an even higher temperature for an even shorter amount of time than in traditional pasteurization, extending the milk’s

sleep still with a spoonful of Alpo or some other patented vitaminized kibble. 4 That I always woke up: pressed against and her turned away. She holding in her breasts, wrapped around each 5 At first they watched the rain watched it come inside the tent. 6 curtain’s sudden sweeping. 7 I won’t well, understood, perhaps—so unused of our meeting I thought: this is a One. He adored New York City. He From 1 Katherine Carlyle By Rupert Thomson From The Mare By Mary Gaitskill From The Clasp By

E S T O R T R E A T S O L D E I L E X I S N T One of Russia’s most-read (and increasingly denounced) novelists writes page-turners that just happen to be monumentally important. Her focus here, as usual, is on the past, but the parallel between the post-Stalinism under which her three intellectual characters suffer and the Putinism of today is hard to miss. Like that other plot-forward dissident Boris Pasternak, Ulitskaya puts characters first and politics second. b.k. POP 19. See Erykah

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