Reports from the Slaughterhouse
A century after Upton Sinclair exposed the inhumane and unhygienic conditions of Chicago’s stockyards, life for animals in America’s factory farms and slaughterhouses is still gruesome.
December 19, 2024 issue
On Leverett Pond
For decades I have thought back to a moment of terror I felt one Christmas Eve nearly fifty years ago.
December 24, 2024
Rebels Without a Cause
In Sam Gold’s Romeo + Juliet, the lovers’ headlong rush into marriage is in tension throughout with the surprising regression to childhood that characterizes so much of the production.
January 16, 2025 issue
Far from the Seventies
Two memoirs by women remembering their youthful relationships with older men complicate the definition and implications of “consent.”
January 16, 2025 issue
Joy and Apprehension in Syria
There is widespread relief after Assad’s fall, though no one is more aware than Syrians themselves of the dangers and challenges that await them.
January 16, 2025 issue
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Philip Gossett: The Case for Puccini“Puccini’s melodic language is sumptuous but hardly ever coarse; in each opera he carefully develops a discrete number of musical ideas. He never presents an idea at random.”
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