The Sonic Signatures of Salvatore Sciarrino and Kaija Saariaho The music of these painterly modern composers is as distinct as Schubert’s or Debussy’s. June 12, 2023 How Russia Went from Ally to Adversary The Cold War ended. The United States declared victory. Then things took a turn. June 12, 2023 Lorrie Moore’s Death-Defying New Novel In “I Am Homeless if This Is Not My Home,” the writer slices through the conventions of literary form with violent precision, carving out new possibilities. June 12, 2023 The Startling Intimacy of Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour Even addressing a stadium of seventy thousand people, the singer seems to be speaking directly to you, confessing something urgent. June 12, 2023 Briefly Noted Book Reviews “Be Mine,” “August Blue,” “V Is for Victory,” and “Easily Slip Into Another World.” June 12, 2023 The Dance of Death in “The Comeuppance” In Branden Jacobs-Jenkins’s new play, at Signature Theatre, friends gathering for their twenty-year high-school reunion are each inhabited by the Reaper himself. June 12, 2023 Economists Love Immigration. Why Do So Many Americans Hate It? In a democracy, a policy appraisal has to contend with political as well as economic consequences. June 5, 2023 The Afterlives of Susan Taubes Her suicide, on the publication of her first novel, made her an icon of doomed femininity, but rediscovered works are revealing a more complex writer. June 5, 2023 Briefly Noted Book Reviews “The Wounded World,” “Samuel Barber,” “Commitment,” and “An Honorable Exit.” June 5, 2023 The Perils and Potential of the Runaway Imagination In “Owlish,” Dorothy Tse’s dreamlike début novel, a lonely professor falls in love with a mechanical ballerina. June 5, 2023