【Busty Lifeguards (2010)】
What We’re Loving: Dancing Horses,Busty Lifeguards (2010) Critical Fashion
This Week’s Reading
For reasons I don’t begin to understand, Washington Irving’s Life of Oliver Goldsmithused to be required reading in American high schools. My own copy (1905) is a schoolbook edition, complete with suggestions for extra credit (“The teacher should know Thackeray’s English Humorists, D’Arblay’s Diary and Letters, Dobson’s Eighteenth Century Vignettes,” and four other books you’ve never heard of). It is hard to believe that such a fascinating biography was ever taught to kids. What did they care about the economics of Grub Street, or the incredible elegance with which writers once knew how to break a contract? Irving and Goldsmith both did plenty of hack work—a term Irving uses without prejudice—but this is clearly a labor of love and obsession. And it’s that rare thing in literary history: a penetrating essay by a great humorist, whose work is still just within our reach, about another who stands outside the pale. —Lorin Stein
For many of us, fashion is a tricky thing: while both the way people choose to dress themselves and the art form are fascinating, the intersection can be, to say the least, problematic. Enter Fashion Projects, a journal devoted to critical discourse in fashion. If that sounds oxymoronic, try issue 4, out now: an interview with Judith Thurman, Jay Ruttenberg on Bill Cunningham, and fashion criticism as political critique are just a few things it takes on. —Sadie Stein
If you need distraction from the state of your own life, reach for Mark Haddon’s A Spot of Bother. The novel opens with poor old George, recently retired, coming to terms with his “imminent death” (due to an unsightly spot of eczema he’s convinced is really cancer). As things escalate—cue his daughter’s marriage to a high-school dropout, and the troubling presence of both his wife’s lover and his son’s boyfriend at said wedding—George decides to “maintain a Buddhist detachment from the whole thing to stop it taking ten years off my life.” In presenting situations that we all know, heightened and sharpened, Haddon somehow manages to remind us that we all could have it much, much worse. —Matthew Smith
I have long wanted to see Nick Cave’s fantastical, handcrafted Soundsuits in action (not the Bad Seed Nick Cave, the Alvin Ailey–trained performance artist Nick Cave), and this week I finally had my chance. Thirty of his roughly life-size Soundsuit horses, each manned by a pair of Ailey dancers, are promenading at either end of Grand Central’s Vanderbilt Hall twice a day, only through Sunday. Midway through the performance, the brightly festooned equines, accompanied by live harp and percussion, break in two; the otherwise docile horse heads and horse ends engage in a roiling, choreographed performance equal parts African dance and Mardi Gras blowout. I never thought I’d see unadulterated joy on so many faces in the world’s largest train station. —Nicole Rudick
Aside from Brideshead Revisited—a wonderful novel to read during the slow onset of spring—my favorite book for the days leading up to Easter is Du Bose Hayward’s The Country Bunny and the Little Gold Shoes. There is no abundance of classic Easter stories for children the way there are Christmas, Thanksgiving, even Halloween stories; most books in the genre are either overtly religious, saccarine, or both. This title, about a young female rabbit who aspires to be an Easter bunny, is a prominent exception. Illustrated by Marjorie Flack in rich, Easter-egg hues and published in 1939, The Country Bunnyhas all the charms of children’s literature of its era, but was lightyears ahead in its treatment of the roles of women and mothers. It still feels fresh, and properly celebratory, today. —Clare Fentress
A recent conversation with our poetry editor left me thinking about the difference between prose poetry and micro-fiction. Red Olen Butler, annual judge of the World’s Best Short-Short Story Contest, defines prose poetry as epiphany-driven, whereas micro-fiction “has at its center a character who yearns.” Micro Fictionis a pocket-size anthology in which to explore the overlapping genres while perfectly filling the space between train stops. —Kendall Poe
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
“Sound of the Axe,” a Poem by Denise Levertov
2025-06-26 14:01Staff Picks: Sophie Pinkham, Robyn Creswell, Kelly Reichardt
2025-06-26 13:39Does Your Wine Bottle Need a Short Story on It? (Hint: No)
2025-06-26 13:33We Test a $1,000 CPU From 2010 vs. Ryzen 3
2025-06-26 12:59Popular Posts
Amazon Big Spring Sale 2025: Best portable speaker deal
2025-06-26 14:54Max adds tribute to Matthew Perry before every 'Friends' season
2025-06-26 13:45Why do I bleed after sex?
2025-06-26 13:31Trump tariff news: See the latest impacts on consumer tech
2025-06-26 13:28Featured Posts
Watch how an old Venus spacecraft tumbled before crashing to Earth
2025-06-26 15:36'Five Nights at Freddy's' is Blumhouse's biggest opening ever
2025-06-26 14:59New M3 iMac announced at Apple's 10/30 event
2025-06-26 14:59Read This Never
2025-06-26 13:22Amazon Spring Sale 2025: Best Apple AirPods 4 deal
2025-06-26 12:53Popular Articles
Then and Now: 6 Generations of GeForce Graphics Compared
2025-06-26 15:15Introducing the NYRB Classics + Paris Review Book Club
2025-06-26 14:27When Poets Packed Stadiums and Literature Was Money
2025-06-26 13:56Bisexual zine 'Anything That Moves' is relevant 30 years later
2025-06-26 13:33Apple is reportedly still working on smart glasses of some kind
2025-06-26 13:23Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (59681)
Highlight Information Network
Waitin’ on the Student Debt Jubilee
2025-06-26 15:07Creation Information Network
Best deals of the day Oct. 5: Shark air purifier, Amazon Echo devices, and Sony 4K TVs
2025-06-26 14:36Trendy Information Network
It Was Just This Moment: 6 Paintings by Katharina Wulff
2025-06-26 14:22Smart Information Network
The Apple Mac event was a scary bad Halloween flop
2025-06-26 14:05Global Information Network
Best portable power station deal: Save $179.01 on the EcoFlow River 2 Max
2025-06-26 13:33