It’s filled with light. And contradictions.
By Justin Davidson
Will the California drought signal the end of affordable guacamole for all?
By Adam Sternbergh
But it’s still the biggest bout in decades.
By Kerry Howley
The scientists who want to fix America’s intestines started with their own.
By John Swansburg
The paranoia behind the machismo behind the Republican response to everything.
Come watch Amanda Oleander.
Cubs co-owner and a big-deal Democrat in a family of big-deal Republicans.
Is the first date too early for couples therapy?
Shamir Bailey’s post-gender, post-genre charm.
The very public saga of Karl Ove Knausgaard.
Critic Ta-Nehisi Coates dons his fanboy cape to unpack the importance of superheroes.
Funny people tell the jokes that changed their lives.
Two weeks, nine openings: It must be Tony season.
Twenty-five things to see, hear, watch, and read.
A century old, the spring staple still signals elegance.
Readers sound off on Hillary Clinton, Ray Rice, and more.
Our deliberately oversimplified guide to who falls where on our taste hierarchies. Mouse over or tap the image for related links.
Four canteens; a pencil shop comes to Forsyth Street.
The Pennsylvanian transplant channeling Marilyn Monroe.
Platt on Momofuku Ko.
King Bee introduces New York to the donair.
The resurgence of the lowly crudité.
Raclette in the East Village takes melted cheese to the next level.
First look at Danny Meyer’s Untitled, opening at the new Whitney.
Pearl & Ash’s stylish sister Rebelle.
Eighteen architects and interior designers on the New York spaces they love most.