First published on February 1st, 1963, The New York Review of Books has been hailed to be one of the world's leading intellectual literary magazines. Known for its sharp and critical insights, commentaries and book reviews on culture, literature and current affairs, The NYRB has had much success in gaining attention from and written contributions by eminent scholars, intellectuals and writers such as Margaret Atwood, Noam Chomsky, Harold Bloom, John Updike, Gore Vidal, Joan Didion, (who also recently came to LIVE from the NYPL on November 21, 2011, to talk to Author Sloane Crosley) and Mary Beard (who will also be coming to LIVE from the NYPL on November 30, 2011, to talk about the future of classics). The magazine was published in response to a printing strike in 1963 when The New York Times had ceased publication temporarily. This was a grand opportunity for The NYRB editors to promote new books and run in depth reviews on them.
From the political shockwaves of the Arab Spring in the Middle East to a book review of Nicholson Baker's sinfully delicious novel: House of Holes, The NYRB publishes an array of intellectually engaging essays that will make you think twice about the prerogatives of the human condition and consciousness.
Just 2 years shy from 50, The NYRB still gracefully rocks the literary runway with a pair of high intellectual heels; on the political and literary discourses of society and culture, the magazine stands out with cutting edge critiques and thought-provoking analyses.Here at NYPL, we have the whole collection of The NYRB — from the first issue in microfilm to the latest issue in hardcopy ready to be read and intellectually devoured in the elegant DeWitt Wallace Periodicals Reading Room in the Stephen A. Schwarzman Building. You can also view the NYRB online!
We also have many scholarly and literary works reviewed in the periodical as well as other works by the writers and reviewers. If you know the author's, editor's or reviewer's name, you can easily find works by him or her through the Library's catalog under author or title. Once the results come up you can also narrow it down to location on the left hand side; the most extensive literary and historical works as well as the complete run of The NYRB are kept in the Stephen A. Schwarzman Building. The NYRB comes out once every two weeks.
For other intellectually driven and stimulating magazines/newspapers that review other works, consider the following:
- The New Yorker (access online)
- The Paris Review (access online)
- Book Review under The New York Times (access online)
- Booklist from The American Library Association
- The London Review of Books
- Harper's Magazine (access online)
- Times Literary Supplement (access online)
- The New Republic (access online)
- The Book World from The Washington Post
- Yale Review
- Harvard Review (access online)
- The Atlantic Monthly (access online)
- The Nation (access online, on-site)
- The Commentary Magazine (access online)
- Jewish Review of Books
- The Threepenny Review (access online)
One of my colleagues, Jean Strouse, Director of the Cullman Center at NYPL, best known for her deftly written, award-winning biographies of Alice James and J.P Morgan, describes her entry into literary New York, "My first job out of college was as assistant to Bob Silvers, one of the two editors at The Review (the other being Barbara Epstein). Working there with Bob gave me an extraordinary immersion-education in the world of contemporary literary culture — and in the fine arts of editing and writing."
On December 7th, Wednesday at 6 PM in The Stephen A. Schwarzman Building: South Court Auditorium, Conversations From The Cullman Center will have a free public program called The James Family. Jean Strouse will talk about the James Family and the re-issue of her first biographical work: Alice James with Lorin Stein, editor of The Paris Review. Reserve your tickets!
We hope to see you there!