Parker Yesko is a reporter for In the Dark, The New Yorker’s Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative podcast.
Dept. of Amplification
The History of The New Yorker’s Vaunted Fact-Checking Department
Reporters engage in charm and betrayal; checkers are in the harm-reduction business.
The New Yorker Interview
The Creator of “Subway Takes” One Hundred Per Cent Disagrees
The “entertainer” Kareem Rahma discusses Kamala Harris’s missed opportunity on his show, meeting Andrew Cuomo, and why disagreement is more fun.
A Reporter at Large
Enemies of the State
How the Trump Administration declared war on Venezuelan migrants in the U.S.
A Critic at Large
The Lives and Loves of James Baldwin
An older generation dismissed him as passé; a newer one has recast him as a secular saint. But Baldwin’s true message remains more unsettling than either camp recognizes.
Annals of Inquiry
The Family Fallout of DNA Surprises
Through genetic testing, millions of Americans are estimated to have discovered that their parents aren’t who they thought. The news has upended relationships and created a community looking for answers.
The Lede
Ghislaine Maxwell’s Petition to the Supreme Court
The convicted sex offender is raising an important legal question—about whether an agreement by one federal prosecutor binds his colleagues across the country.
Profiles
Patricia Lockwood Goes Viral
The writer’s new novel, “Will There Ever Be Another You,” is a singular account of losing her mind, body, and art to COVID—and of trying to get them back.
Books
Elizabeth Gilbert’s Latest Epiphanies
“Eat, Pray, Love” was a huge hit in part because readers imagined they could be like its author. Her new book, “All the Way to the River,” shows how dubious that notion was.
A Critic at Large
Did Racial Capitalism Set the Bronx on Fire?
To some, the fires lit in New York in the late seventies signalled rampant criminality; to others, rebellion. But maybe they were signs of something else entirely.
Under Review
Coming of Age in Panic Mode
Michael Clune follows up memoirs about drug addiction and computer games with “Pan,” a novel about a teen-ager with anxiety set in the nineties.
Q. & A.
The Holocaust Historian Defending Israel Against Charges of Genocide
How the war in Gaza is dividing scholars of Nazi Germany.
The Political Scene
Pam Bondi’s Power Play
Donald Trump now has the Attorney General he always wanted—an ally willing to harness the law to enable his agenda.