
About The New York Review of Books
About The New York Review of Books
The New York Review of Books was launched during the New York City newspaper strike of 1963, when the magazine’s founding editors, Robert Silvers and Barbara Epstein, alongside Jason Epstein, Robert Lowell, and Elizabeth Hardwick, decided to start a new kind of publication—one in which the most interesting, lively, and erudite minds of the time could write about current books and issues in depth. For more than sixty years The New York Review has been guided by its founding philosophy that criticism is urgent and indispensable.
What You'll Find Here
Brief Encounters: A weekly interview series featuring conversations with contributors to the Review. Saturday mornings
The Art Newsletter: Monthly dispatches from our Art Editor, Leanne Shapton, highlighting recent illustrations in the print magazine. One Wednesday per month
New in the Review: Previews of the latest articles and essays on politics, literature, arts, and ideas. Tuesday and Thursday mornings
From the Archives: Selections from our sixty-year archive.