All posts tagged: Glickman

Novels of the Future | Aaron Matz, Willa Glickman

Novels of the Future | Aaron Matz, Willa Glickman

“Difficile est saturam non scribere: if you’re paying attention to present conditions, it’s difficult not to write satire,” writes Aaron Matz, quoting the Roman poet Juvenal, in a review of Dan Sperrin’s State of Ridicule from our March 26, 2026, issue. Unfortunately, literary political satire has been in a long period of decline—and not just because it has been supplanted by faster and more attention-grabbing forms of media in our screen-addled age. Sperrin argues that satire—at least the grand tradition of English political satire, the focus of his book—hasn’t been the same since the late eighteenth century, when state affairs became too complex to effectively mock, and English society, struggling to maintain its cohesion, became less tolerant of withering critique. Matz finds that a more significant factor was the development of mass culture. “There was now simply too much to puncture, the zone of power had far exceeded machinations in government, and a satire on politics could no longer leave out the vast arena of society,” he writes. “The boundary between the two had become too porous.” Matz, a professor …

Life Storage | Willa Glickman

Life Storage | Willa Glickman

At St. Michael’s, small graves sit in view of Home Depot. The triangular cemetery rests in the middle of a highway interchange, bounded on all three sides by humming roads that cordon its hills off from a sunbaked world of outlet stores and cheap motels. In the children’s section, headstones press up against the fence and sit crooked on ground disturbed by tree roots. The dead are mourned in different languages. Our baby died 1951. Unser liebes kind May–June 1937. Nuestro inolvidable hijo 1933–1937. Across a small path are the cemetery’s two most famous residents: the composer Scott Joplin and the inventor Granville T. Woods. Both black men working around the turn of the century, they died impoverished despite their success and were buried in unmarked graves—Woods in a coffin shared with two infants and another adult, Joplin with another adult man and a teenage girl—where they lay in anonymity until the historian and collector Middleton Harris had plaques placed over their burial sites in the 1970s. David L. Head, a historian, author, and former …

Until the Next Storm | Willa Glickman

Until the Next Storm | Willa Glickman

This essay is part of a series in which writers reflect on Zohran Mamdani’s inauguration as the mayor of New York City.  Illustration by Stuart Davis Climate policy didn’t feature much in this mayoral election, possibly because much of the exciting legislation necessary to start moving New York toward a carbon-free future has already been passed. The Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA), signed in 2019, which commits the state to net zero emissions by 2050, is one of the country’s most aggressive climate laws. So is New York City’s Local Law 97, passed the same year, which sets increasingly strict emission limits over time for buildings—which account for over two thirds of local emissions—if they rise above a certain square footage. The All-Electric Buildings Act, a state law passed in 2023, requires most new buildings to use electric heating and appliances. The task that falls to the city and state’s current leaders is equally important but far less politically rewarding: implementing the regulations as they go into effect, even as developers and building …

Runaway Short-Termism | Susannah Glickman, Nic Johnson

Runaway Short-Termism | Susannah Glickman, Nic Johnson

Since retaking the presidency in January, Donald Trump has initiated a blitz of chaotic, damaging economic policies. For months, as Nic Johnson wrote in the NYR Online this past April, he has been waging an unprecedented trade war against much of the world, “imposing punitive tariffs and threatening to retract America’s security umbrella” in the hope of strong-arming various countries into “sharing what he sees as the burdens of providing public goods like the global dollar system and military protection.” One of the ostensible purposes of this ever-shifting tariff regime is to reshore US manufacturing. And yet Trump’s administration has hardly followed through on that promise in practice. Instead, as Susannah Glickman wrote in the NYR Online last month, it has taken “a sledgehammer to the government’s capacity, oversight, and industrial policy,” gutting the state’s ability to plan in the long term and eroding the defense-industrial base by giving ever more military contracts to Silicon Valley firms structurally ill-equipped to produce hardware at a large scale. In matters of trade and industrial policy alike, Glickman …