Like
-
News
How Do Heavy Metals Like Lead Get in Baby Food?
The problem begins at the farm where plants draw toxins from the soil. There’s no washing them away.
-
Books
A Prophet of Boom With Charts for Every Occasion
With “The Aftermath,” Philip Bump marshals a sea of statistics to debunk myths about that big, self-involved and endlessly discussed postwar generation.
-
Newyork
The Jewelry Designer Bringing Back Teardrops, Hearts and Smiley Rings
Plus: an exhibition of Navajo textiles, Luam Melake’s experimental seating and more recommendations from T Magazine.
-
Newyork
Heart Accessories, Love Them or Hate Them
Either way, you can’t escape them.
-
Books
In Chicago, ‘Opera Can Be Hip-Hop, and Hip-Hop Can Be Opera’
The baritone Will Liverman was singing in Rossini’s “The Barber of Seville” about five years ago when he watched a documentary about Jonathan Larson and his musical “Rent.” “It talked about how ‘Rent’ came to be, and how this guy had the idea of ...
-
Newyork
The Joy of Dressing Like a Rock God
Maneskin has a new album, a best new artist Grammy nomination and a lot of thoughts on fashion.
-
Sports
The Most Important Passing Yards Are Gained on the Ground
Quarterbacks get all the credit but the teams left in the N.F.L. playoffs thrive because playmakers like Deebo Samuel, Travis Kelce, A.J. Brown and Samaje Perine pick up yards after their catches.
-
Books
John Maynard Keynes Can’t Save You Now
Martin Riker’s novel “The Guest Lecture” details a tortured night inside the head of a young economist.
-
Books
The Thrill of Plot or the Richness of Detail? Try Both.
Laurent Mauvignier’s “The Birthday Party” is a thriller with an intense focus on its characters’ interior worlds.
-
Books
Closing the Book on Promises to Myself
This year’s resolution: No more worrying about all the volumes I know I’ll never read.