When New York Made Baseball and Baseball Made New York The rise of the sport as we know it was centered in Gotham, where big stadiums, heroic characters, and epic sportswriting once produced a pastime that bound a city together. March 25, 2024 Briefly Noted Book Reviews “Ashoka,” “Pax Economica,” “Here in Avalon,” and “Bitter Water Opera.” March 25, 2024 You Say You Want a Revolution. Do You Know What You Mean by That? Two new books, by Fareed Zakaria and Nathan Perl-Rosenthal, demonstrate the concept’s allure and perils. March 25, 2024 Briefly Noted Book Reviews “Errand Into the Maze,” “A Map of Future Ruins,” “Wild Houses,” and “The Road from Belhaven.” March 18, 2024 The Forgotten History of Hitler’s Establishment Enablers The Nazi leader didn’t seize power; he was given it. March 18, 2024 How Candida Royalle Set Out to Reinvent Porn As a feminist in the adult-film industry, she believed the answer wasn’t banning porn; it was better porn. March 18, 2024 Briefly Noted “The Survivors of the Clotilda,” “Goodbye Russia,” “Held,” and “The Fetishist.” March 11, 2024 How an Enthusiast of Soviet Socialism Fell Afoul of the Authorities Andrei Platonov’s “Chevengur” depicts a Communist utopia, but Stalin loathed his writing, calling the author “scum.” March 11, 2024 When Marilynne Robinson Reads Genesis The novelist calls the Bible “a meditation on the problem of evil,” which must reconcile the darker sides of humanity with God’s goodness, and the original goodness of being. March 4, 2024 Keith Haring, the Boy Who Cried Art Was he a brilliant painter or a brilliant brand? March 4, 2024