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Enter the Beaux-Arts

A new book highlights the gilded Beaux-Arts architecture of turn-of-the-last-century New York City

The Man Who Invented Movies

While Thomas Edison is widely known as “the father of motion pictures,” a Frenchman by the name of Louis Le Prince actually got there first—and then disappeared

Paris Snatch

Citizen Cimino

Staff Picks

Don’t miss an investigation into the aftermath of the Sandy Hook school shooting; a new biography of Harry Truman; and a Broadway memoir

Bright Lights, Big City

Books and a Place to Read Them

From the director of Chicago’s Seminary Co-op, an ode to the quiet magic of independent bookshops around the country

From Glasgow, with Love and Struggle

The Royal Treatment

Murder, They Wrote

Stormy weather plays a central role in this month’s best mystery novels. Plus, revisiting one of the first-ever police procedurals

Brainspotting

The world-renowned neurologist A. J. Lees is on a mission to humanize doctors

“Hold It Right There … ”

With a devoted following among the fashion crowd—and a girlfriend in Kate Moss—Nikolai von Bismarck is London’s photographer of the moment

Tour de Force

Charles Dickens highlighted Americans’ most unappealing habits (bad table manners) and practices (slavery). So why haven’t Republicans gone after him?

A New Oxford Dictionary

War Songs

During 1973’s Yom Kippur War, an unexpected ally joined the front lines to boost Israeli soldiers’ morale: Leonard Cohen

Boeuf Neanderthal!

In an excerpt from Martin Walker’s new “Bruno” story collection, the quintessential Frenchman experiments with prehistoric food and wine

One Hundred Years of the BBC

The High and Low

By day, Miriam Leslie was a titan of publishing and the perfect model of the Victorian lady. By night, she was the seductress behind a memorable ménage à trois

The Goon Squad, Revisited

Collector’s Edition

In a posthumous essay and drawings, the illustrator Pierre Le-Tan reflects on the art—and sport—of collecting

L.A. Confidential

From briefing Si Newhouse to smoking with Seth Rogen and Danny McBride, a former Vanity Fair editor looks back at the Oscar parties of yore

The Shame Game

Bridging the Gap

Julia Quinn, the woman behind the novels that inspired the hit Netflix TV show Bridgerton, discusses the screen adaptation of her Regency romance

The Soros Cosmos

Edited by George Soros’s longtime publisher and friend, a new collection of essays tells the life story of the financier turned philanthropist