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The New Yorker @NewYorker

Abdulrazak Gurnah’s 10th novel reverses the pattern of dispersal that drives most of his fiction: strangers become kin, orphans go home, and a diverse society takes shape in the wreckage of a war-torn colony. https://t.co/CdLJodAqOV — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 20, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

Prince wanted his autobiography to be, in part, a handbook for young black artists. “It should teach that what you create is yours,” he said. https://t.co/kY7xpGTT1t — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 20, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

“The figure of this revolution is the body of these women, these unveiled women who are walking in the streets without harming anyone,” the Iranian scholar Fatemeh Shams tells @IChotiner. “And this is unprecedented.” https://t.co/MQJzINNQtF — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 20, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

Amateur archeologists have recovered arrowheads, pieces of atlatls, and other artifacts—including a woman’s body believed to be many hundreds of years old—in a West Texas cave. To whom do their findings belong? https://t.co/OBVhC4Mi52 — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 20, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

Critics say Moore v. Harper, a far-right Republican election-law challenge, has the potential to end American democracy as we know it. A powerful new litigant has joined the respondents opposing it: the conservative former judge J. Michael Luttig. https://t.co/X3xtbIIPr3 — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 20, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

“I like to take the same walk / down the wide, expansive Woodrow to the ocean.” On #NewYorkerRadio, Ellen Bass reads her poem “Ode to Repetition” and explores the habits that take us through life and death. Listen here. https://t.co/sPQKMYhHXd — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 20, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

Nora Ephron’s nonchalant conversationalism is the engine of her magic, so it’s a little surprising that it took 30 years for her book “Heartburn” to take on its third and optimum media form: the audiobook. https://t.co/XRSENbBkK5 — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 20, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

So many Fleet Foxes songs hinge on the speaker’s realization, imagined or otherwise, that he is alone and the past is a place to which he can never repatriate, @blgtylr writes. https://t.co/ca7l9CAJeb — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 20, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

“I believe everyone, on some level, views the world in two halves, which is the seen and the unseen,” Ramy Youssef says. Television and film “can artificially join those two realms, and hopefully start conversations.” https://t.co/JLD7Kszlp2 — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 20, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

“At any rate, she thinks, children are as devious as adults. They lie. They steal. They covet and take what they need.” New fiction by Marisa Silver. https://t.co/ouvJectBqb — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 20, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

“The really cool parts for people in their 40s, 50s, 60s, 70s, whatever, always go to men,” Geena Davis says. “I always say, ‘Go through [the script] and figure out who could be female, or who could be a person of color, and change the first name.’ ” https://t.co/zTBamRfHt0 — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

A powerful new litigant has joined one of the most momentous cases slated to be heard by the Supreme Court this term, @JaneMayerNYer reports. https://t.co/2iiqEampzT — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

As the psychologist Elizabeth Loftus began testifying on behalf of men whom she believed may have been wrongly accused, she came to be seen as an expert who was complicit with institutions of power. In 2021, Rachel Aviv explored Loftus’s work—and her past. https://t.co/SW8bhU4Z7j — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

.@eosnos interviewed six American super­yacht owners, and almost all insisted on anonymity. “It’s really hard to talk about it without being ridiculed,” one confessed. https://t.co/KFIiWVtKAp — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

RT @DruckerP: Out now- Season 2 of my podcast, Tell Me What You Really Think. Check out my first episode, featuring the incomparable David… — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022 Retweet
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

“The only reason I wasn’t standing in the record store at 5:30 P.M. on May 17, 1974, is that a bus strike meant that we’d had to cycle to school”: in a new Personal History, Bono writes about narrowly dodging one of the deadliest bombings of the Troubles. https://t.co/pAgvlLy5MG — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

At Sean Sherman’s restaurant in Minneapolis, every dish is made without wheat flour, dairy, cane sugar, black pepper, or any other ingredient introduced to this continent after Europeans arrived. https://t.co/gfEqBjBNAm — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

RT @williams_paige: Luttig joins "coalition of veteran lawyers/nonpartisan govt-watchdog groups fighting against a far-right Republican ele… — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022 Retweet
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

The confusion and the lack of ideological rigor in Trumpism “is part of fascism’s nature,” @AdamGopnik writes. https://t.co/q8lGrPOX72 — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

“Wartime Elegy” is a jagged affair, but that may be part of the point, and the result is strangely haunting. https://t.co/6JdtHZPgY8 — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

Hilary Mantel is best known for her “Wolf Hall” trilogy, but her earlier novels, which give voice to narrators in more modest, meagre circumstances, might be her most exemplary. https://t.co/hV71S4PtaQ — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

.@IChotiner speaks with the columnist Christopher Caldwell about how the Republican Party should deal with election deniers, and why he thinks Vladimir Putin has become a symbol in our domestic culture wars. https://t.co/OlOON08Pyp — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

RT @JaneMayerNYer: A New name appears on brief just filed in SCOTUS: The Conservative Stalwart Challenging the Far-Right Legal Theory That… — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022 Retweet
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

J. Michael Luttig, known for years as one of the most conservative judges in the U.S., has joined a coalition of veteran lawyers and non-partisan government-watchdog groups fighting against a momentous election-law challenge before the Supreme Court. https://t.co/h17m0C1NKA — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

The footage in “Nuisance Bear,” a new documentary short by Jack Weisman and Gabriela Osio Vanden, reveals as much about the behavior of the humans as that of the bears. Watch here. https://t.co/UEF6SkXZsR — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

Ramy Youssef discusses the third season of his show “Ramy,” which shifts away from its main character and follows the story lines of his Muslim American family and their struggles with assimilation. https://t.co/LDQr02r6H1 — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

Who warned that you should never eat fish at a restaurant on a Monday? https://t.co/jd0mgeQ5cM — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

Creedence Clearwater Revival hit whose title boat is “rollin’ on the river”: nine letters. https://t.co/RAyR86nKTU — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

“What happened to your big, infected wound?” “I guess it just sort of cleared up on its own!” In @newyorkerhumor, a very chill episode of “Game of Thrones.” https://t.co/QQRcncgBiW — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022
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The New Yorker @NewYorker

A copyright case over an Andy Warhol illustration provides “an unwitting commentary on what happens when courts decide what things mean,” @jeanniesgersen writes. https://t.co/5IMUZaRoTE — PolitiTweet.org

Posted Oct. 19, 2022