Book Lists

New Releases by David Remnick

David Remnick is the author of Holding the Note (2024), The January 6th Report (2022), Terra Fragile (2021), The Matter of Black Lives (2021), The Fragile Earth (2020).

29 results found

Holding the Note

release date: Jul 30, 2024
Holding the Note
NEW YORK TIMES BEST SELLER • The Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist and editor of The New Yorker gathers his writing on some of the essential musicians of our time—intimate portraits of Leonard Cohen, Buddy Guy, Mavis Staples, Paul McCartney, Bruce Springsteen, Patti Smith, and more. The greatest popular songs, whether it’s “Respect” sung by Aretha Franklin or “Blind Willie McTell” performed by Bob Dylan, have a way of embedding themselves in our memories. You remember a time and a place and a feeling whenever you hear them. In Holding the Note, David Remnick writes about some of the most influential musicians, songwriters, and performers of the past fifty years. He portrays a series of musical lives—Leonard Cohen, Buddy Guy, Mavis Staples, Paul McCartney, Bruce Springsteen, Patti Smith, and more—and their unique encounters with the passing of that essential element of music: time. From Cohen’s performing debut, when his stage fright was so debilitating he couldn’t get through “Suzanne,” to Franklin’s iconic mink-drop at the Kennedy Center, Holding the Note delivers intimate portraits of some of the greatest creative minds of our era, written with a passionate lifelong attachment to their music and an acute appreciation of how it has shaped us.

The January 6th Report

The January 6th Report
**THE INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER** NOTE: The January 6th Report appendices on pages 693–716 can be accessed via the QR code below, along with the hyperlinks from the chapter endnotes and witness testimony transcripts. Celadon Books and The New Yorker present the report by the Select Committee to Investigate the Jan 6 Attack on the United States Capitol. On January 6, 2021, insurgents stormed the U.S. Capitol, an act of domestic terror without parallel in American history, designed to disrupt the peaceful transfer of power. In a resolution six months later, the House of Representatives called it "one of the darkest days of our democracy," and established a special committee to investigate how and why the attack happened. Celadon Books, in collaboration with The New Yorker, presents the committee''s final report, the definitive account of January 6th and what led up to it, based on more than a year of investigation by nine members of Congress and committee staff, with a preface by David Remnick, the editor of The New Yorker and a winner of the Pulitzer Prize, and an epilogue by Congressman Jamie Raskin of Maryland, a member of the committee.

Terra Fragile

release date: Nov 17, 2021
Terra Fragile
CON QUESTO EBOOK CONTRIBUISCI A PIANTARE NUOVI ALBERI NELLA "FORESTA NERI POZZA" SU TREEDOM. Una raccolta di memorabili reportage sul cambiamento climatico, apparsi sul New Yorker negli ultimi trent’anni, dalle penne di Bill McKibben, Elizabeth Kolbert, Jonathan Franzen, Kathryn Schulz e molti altri. Il New Yorker vanta una solida tradizione di articoli sulla vulnerabilità del mondo naturale che risale sino ai primi anni Cinquanta. Da quando, però, nel giugno del 1988, James Hansen, uno studioso delle condizioni atmosferiche del pianeta, mostrò al senato americano che il consumo sfrenato di combustibili fossili produceva un inusitato riscaldamento della terra dalle possibili, catastrofiche conseguenze, gli scritti sulla vulnerabilità lasciarono il posto, sulle pagine del New Yorker, ad ampi, meditati reportage sul cambiamento climatico e sui suoi nefasti esiti. Nel 1989 apparve un lungo saggio di Bill McKibben intitolato Riflessioni: La fine della natura. Era la prima accurata analisi, Condotta in ambito non scientifico, della sparizione di ogni ecosistema non influenzato dall’attività dell’uomo e, di conseguenza, dei disastri ambientali generati dall’irruzione di tale evento nella storia naturale del pianeta. In quegli anni, tuttavia, in cui non si assisteva ancora allo scioglimento delle calotte glaciali e all’estinzione massiccia di alcune specie, il saggio apparve come una sorta di letteratura fantastica che non offriva altro che uno scenario distopico. Oggi, le argomentazioni di Bill McKibben e le previsioni di Hansen – violenti uragani, siccità, incendi e alluvioni – non soltanto si sono dimostrate profetiche, ma in alcuni casi sono state tristemente superate. Ondate di caldo record, livello dei mari in aumento, ghiacciai che minacciano di scomparire, calotte sempre pi∙ sottili, estinzioni di numerose specie sono all’ordine del giorno. I reportage, apparsi sul New Yorker dagli anni Ottanta in poi, e raccolti in questo volume da David Remnick e Henry Finder, ripercorrono la storia di questa drammatica crisi ambientale. Dalla Groenlandia alle Grandi Pianure, da sepolcrali laboratori a foreste pluviali color smeraldo, attraverso gli scritti di divulgatori scientifici, saggisti e altri autori impegnati a «riflettere in mezzo alle intemperie», i diversi approcci al tema del cambiamento climatico presenti in queste pagine offrono un quadro esaustivo di ciò che ci aspetta nell’immediato futuro. Un quadro che ha un solo scopo: destare un comune desiderio di cambiamento e chiamare all’impegno per cercare di evitare, o almeno saper affrontare, i disastri causati dagli sconvolgimenti ambientali in corso. «Illuminante e potente... un libro memorabile con un messaggio clamoroso». Publishers Weekly «Coinvolgente e sconvolgente... Leggendo tre decenni di saggi su questo argomento importante e urgente, si resta inorriditi dal fatto che sappiamo così tanto e abbiamo ripetutamente fatto così poco». Library Journal

The Matter of Black Lives

release date: Sep 28, 2021
The Matter of Black Lives
A collection of The New Yorker''s groundbreaking writing on race in America—including work by James Baldwin, Toni Morrison, Ta-Nehisi Coates, Hilton Als, Zadie Smith, and more—with a foreword by Jelani Cobb This anthology from the pages of the New Yorker provides a bold and complex portrait of Black life in America, told through stories of private triumphs and national tragedies, political vision and artistic inspiration. It reaches back across a century, with Rebecca West''s classic account of a 1947 lynching trial and James Baldwin''s "Letter from a Region in My Mind" (which later formed the basis of The Fire Next Time), and yet it also explores our current moment, from the classroom to the prison cell and the upheavals of what Jelani Cobb calls "the American Spring." Bringing together reporting, profiles, memoir, and criticism from writers such as Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Elizabeth Alexander, Hilton Als, Vinson Cunningham, Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Malcolm Gladwell, Jamaica Kincaid, Kelefa Sanneh, Doreen St. Félix, and others, the collection offers startling insights about this country''s relationship with race. The Matter of Black Lives reveals the weight of a singular history, and challenges us to envision the future anew.

The Fragile Earth

release date: Oct 06, 2020
The Fragile Earth
A New York Times New & Noteworthy Book One of the Daily Beast''s 5 Essential Books to Read Before the Election A collection of the New Yorker''s groundbreaking reporting from the front lines of climate change—including writing from Bill McKibben, Elizabeth Kolbert, Ian Frazier, Kathryn Schulz, and more Just one year after climatologist James Hansen first came before a Senate committee and testified that the Earth was now warmer than it had ever been in recorded history, thanks to humankind''s heedless consumption of fossil fuels, New Yorker writer Bill McKibben published a deeply reported and considered piece on climate change and what it could mean for the planet. At the time, the piece was to some speculative to the point of alarmist; read now, McKibben''s work is heroically prescient. Since then, the New Yorker has devoted enormous attention to climate change, describing the causes of the crisis, the political and ecological conditions we now find ourselves in, and the scenarios and solutions we face. The Fragile Earth tells the story of climate change—its past, present, and future—taking readers from Greenland to the Great Plains, and into both laboratories and rain forests. It features some of the best writing on global warming from the last three decades, including Bill McKibben''s seminal essay "The End of Nature," the first piece to popularize both the science and politics of climate change for a general audience, and the Pulitzer Prize–winning work of Elizabeth Kolbert, as well as Kathryn Schulz, Dexter Filkins, Jonathan Franzen, Ian Frazier, Eric Klinenberg, and others. The result, in its range, depth, and passion, promises to bring light, and sometimes heat, to the great emergency of our age.

Muhammed Ali

release date: Sep 01, 2018

The Best American Sports Writing 2017

release date: Jan 01, 2017
The Best American Sports Writing 2017
The latest addition to the acclaimed series showcasing the best sports writing from the past year

Muhammed Ali Dünyanin Krali

release date: Aug 01, 2016

Up in the Old Hotel

release date: Jul 15, 2015
Up in the Old Hotel
Saloon-keepers and street preachers, gypsies and steel-walking Mohawks, a bearded lady and a 93-year-old “seafoodetarian” who believes his specialized diet will keep him alive for another two decades. These are among the people that Joseph Mitchell immortalized in his reportage for The New Yorker and in four books—McSorley''s Wonderful Saloon, Old Mr. Flood, The Bottom of the Harbor, and Joe Gould''s Secret—that are still renowned for their precise, respectful observation, their graveyard humor, and their offhand perfection of style. These masterpieces (along with several previously uncollected stories) are available in one volume, which presents an indelible collective portrait of an unsuspected New York and its odder citizens—as depicted by one of the great writers of this or any other time.

Lenin's Tomb

release date: Apr 02, 2014
Lenin's Tomb
Winner of the Pulitzer Prize One of the Best Books of the Year: The New York Times From the editor of The New Yorker: a riveting account of the collapse of the Soviet Union, which has become the standard book on the subject. Lenin’s Tomb combines the global vision of the best historical scholarship with the immediacy of eyewitness journalism. Remnick takes us through the tumultuous 75-year period of Communist rule leading up to the collapse and gives us the voices of those who lived through it, from democratic activists to Party members, from anti-Semites to Holocaust survivors, from Gorbachev to Yeltsin to Sakharov. An extraordinary history of an empire undone, Lenin’s Tomb stands as essential reading for our times.

The Devil Problem

release date: Apr 02, 2014
The Devil Problem
Readers know from his now classic Lenin''s Tomb that Remnick is a superb portraitist who can bring his subjects to life and reveal them in such surprising ways as to justify comparison to Dickens, Balzac, or Proust. In this collection, Remnick''s gift for character is sharper than ever, whether he writes about Gary Hart stumbling through life after Donna Rice or Mario Cuomo, who now presides over a Saturday morning radio talk show, fielding questions from crackpots, or about Michael Jordan''s awesome return to the Chicago Bulls -- or Reggie Jackson''s last times at bat. Remnick''s portraits of such disparate characters as Alger Hiss and Ralph Ellison, Richard Nixon and Elaine Pagels, Gerry Adams and Marion Barry are unified by this extraordinary ability to create a living character, so that the pieces in this book, taken together, constitute a splendid pageant of the representative characters of our time.

Il re del mondo. La vera storia di Cassius Clay, alias Muhammad Ali

release date: Jan 01, 2014

Grobowiec Lenina

release date: Jan 01, 2014

We Are Alive

release date: Nov 25, 2013
We Are Alive
From America’s cultural gatekeeper comes a profile of the man who defines the nation’s soul. David Remnick, Pulitzer Prize–winning writer and editor of The New Yorker, applies his unique journalistic voice to paint a portrait of rock legend and working-class poet Bruce Springsteen. The result is what Rolling Stone called ‘one of the most thorough profiles of Springsteen ever published’. Remnick shadows Springsteen from his recent Wrecking Ball world tour, the whole way back to the beginning, back to Asbury Park, to childhood rock’n’roll fantasies. Details of Springsteen’s strained relationship with his father, his battle with mental illness, his marriage, and the joys and anguish of friendships forged and lost with ephemeral E Street Band members, are all delicately woven through a career that spans over four decades as America’s working-class hero. We Are Alive not only tells the story of a living legend, but also produces an insight into the heart of America, the drive of self-transformation and renewal. Remnick has created an important text on the history of music.

De brug

release date: Jun 21, 2011
De brug
Deze nieuwe biografie van Barack Obama is veelomvattend, genuanceerd en diepgravend. David Remnick schetst niet alleen het leven van de 44ste president van de vs, maar ook de complexe geschiedenis van de afgelopenvijftig jaar en de strijd voor rassengelijkheid en burgerrechten waarvan zijn verkiezing niet los kan worden gezien. Obama s verkiezing symboliseert een keerpunt in de Amerikaanse geschiedenis. In 1965 werden bij de beroemde Edmund Pettusbrug in Alabama zwarte demonstranten nog met geweld door de politie verjaagd. Nog geen halve eeuw later werd een zwarte man president van de Verenigde Staten. Remnick sprak met Obama s familieleden, vrienden, docenten, mentoren en rivalen, en met Obama zelf. Voor het eerst verschijnen ook brieven van Obama in druk. De belangrijkste journalist van Amerika schetst in dit boek een zeer compleet en persoonlijk beeld van de huidige president van de Verenigde Staten.

The Bridge

release date: May 07, 2010
The Bridge
The rise of Barack Obama is one of the great stories of this century: a defining moment for America, and one with truly global resonance. This is the book of his phenomenal journey to election. Through extensive on-the-record interviews with friends and teachers, mentors and disparagers, family members and Obama himself, David Remnick has put together a nuanced, unexpected and masterly portrait of the man who was determined to become the first African-American President. Most importantly, The Bridge argues that Obama imagined and fashioned an identity for himself against the epic drama of race in America. In a way that Obama''s own memoirs cannot, it examines both the personal and political elements of the story, and gives shape not only to a decisive period of history, but also to the way it crucially influenced, animated and motivated a gifted and complex man.

Obama. Una storia della nuova America

release date: Jan 01, 2010

Life Stories

release date: Dec 18, 2007
Life Stories
One of art''s purest challenges is to translate a human being into words. The New Yorker has met this challenge more successfully and more originally than any other modern American journal. It has indelibly shaped the genre known as the Profile. Starting with light-fantastic evocations of glamorous and idiosyncratic figures of the twenties and thirties, such as Henry Luce and Isadora Duncan, and continuing to the present, with complex pictures of such contemporaries as Mikhail Baryshnikov and Richard Pryor, this collection of New Yorker Profiles presents readers with a portrait gallery of some of the most prominent figures of the twentieth century. These Profiles are literary-journalistic investigations into character and accomplishment, motive and madness, beauty and ugliness, and are unrivalled in their range, their variety of style, and their embrace of humanity. Including these twenty-eight profiles: “Mr. Hunter’s Grave” by Joseph Mitchell “Secrets of the Magus” by Mark Singer “Isadora” by Janet Flanner “The Soloist” by Joan Acocella “Time . . . Fortune . . . Life . . . Luce” by Walcott Gibbs “Nobody Better, Better Than Nobody” by Ian Frazier “The Mountains of Pi” by Richard Preston “Covering the Cops” by Calvin Trillin “Travels in Georgia” by John McPhee “The Man Who Walks on Air” by Calvin Tomkins “A House on Gramercy Park” by Geoffrey Hellman “How Do You Like It Now, Gentlemen?” by Lillian Ross “The Education of a Prince” by Alva Johnston “White Like Me” by Henry Louis Gates, Jr. “Wunderkind” by A. J. Liebling “Fifteen Years of The Salto Mortale” by Kenneth Tynan “The Duke in His Domain” by Truman Capote “A Pryor Love” by Hilton Als “Gone for Good” by Roger Angell “Lady with a Pencil” by Nancy Franklin “Dealing with Roseanne” by John Lahr “The Coolhunt” by Malcolm Gladwell “Man Goes to See a Doctor” by Adam Gopnik “Show Dog” by Susan Orlean “Forty-One False Starts” by Janet Malcolm “The Redemption” by Nicholas Lemann “Gore Without a Script” by Nicholas Lemann “Delta Nights” by Bill Buford

Wonderful Town

release date: Dec 18, 2007
Wonderful Town
New York City is not only The New Yorker magazine''s place of origin and its sensibility''s lifeblood, it is the heart of American literary culture. Wonderful Town, an anthology of superb short fiction by many of the magazine''s most accomplished contributors, celebrates the seventy-five-year marriage between a preeminent publication and its preeminent context with this collection of forty-four of its best stories from (so to speak) home. East Side? Philip Roth''s chronically tormented alter ego Nathan Zuckerman has just moved there, in "Smart Money." West Side? Isaac Bashevis Singer''s narrator mingles with the customers in "The Cafeteria" (who debate politics and culture in four or five different languages) and becomes embroiled in an obsessional romance. And downtown, John Updike''s Maples have begun their courtship of marital disaster, in "Snowing in Greenwich Village." Wonderful Town touches on some of the city''s famous places and stops at some of its more obscure corners, but the real guidebook in and between its lines is to the hearts and the minds of those who populate the metropolis built by its pages. Like all good fiction, these stories take particular places, particular people, and particular events and turn them into dramas of universal enlightenment and emotional impact. Each life in it, and each life in Wonderful Town, is the life of us all. Including these stories from the magazine''s most iconic writers: “The Five-Fourty-Eight” by John Cheever “Distant Music” by Ann Beattle “Sailor off the Bremen” by Irwin Shaw “Physics” by Tama Janowitz “The Whore of Mensa” by Woody Allen “What it was Like, Seeing Chris” by Deborah Eisenberg “Drawing Room B” by John O’Hara “A Sentimental Journey” by Peter Taylor “The Balloon” by Donald Barthelme “Another Marvellous Thing” by Laurie Colwin “The Failure” by Jonathan Franzen “Apartment Hotel” by Sally Benson “Midair” by Frank Conroy “The Catbird Seat” by James Thurber “I See You, Bianca” by Maeve Brennan “You’re Ugly, Too” by Lorrie Moore “Signs and Symbols” by Vladimir Nabokov “Poor Visitor” by Jamaica Kincaid “In Greenwich, There Are Many Gravelled Walks” by Hortense Calisher “Some Nights When Nothing Happens Are the Best Nights in this Place” by John McNulty “Slight Rebellion Off Madison” by J. D. Salinger “Brownstone” by Renata Adler “Partners” by Veronica Geng “The Evolution of Knowledge” by Niccolo Tucci “The Way We Live Now” by Susan Sontag “Do the Windows Open?” by Julie Hecht “The Mentocrats” by Edward Newhouse “The Treatment” by Daniel Menaker “Arrangement in Black and White” by Dorothy Parker “Carlyle Tries Polygamy” by William Melvin Kelley “Children Are Bored on Sunday” by Jean Stafford “Notes from a Bottle” by James Stevenson “Man in the Middle of the Ocean” by Daniel Fuchs “Me Spoulets of the Splendide” by Ludwig Bemelmans “Over by the River” by William Maxwell “Baster” by Jeffrey Eugenides “The Second Tree from the Corner” by E. B. White “Rembrandt’s Hat” by Bernard Malamud “Shot: A New York Story” by Elizabeth Hardwick “A Father-To-Be” by Saul Bellow “Farewell, My Lovely Appetizer” by S. J. Perelman “Water Child” by Edwidge Danticat “The Smoker” by David Schickler

Reporting

release date: May 08, 2007
Reporting
David Remnick is a writer with a rare gift for making readers understand the hearts and minds of our public figures. Whether it’s the decline and fall of Mike Tyson, Al Gore’s struggle to move forward after his loss in the 2000 election, or Vladimir Putin dealing with Gorbachev’s legacy, Remnick brings his subjects to life with extraordinary clarity and depth. In Reporting, he gives us his best writing from the past fifteen years, ranging from American politics and culture to post-Soviet Russia to the Middle East conflict; from Tony Blair grappling with Iraq, to Philip Roth making sense of America’s past, to the rise of Hamas in Palestine. Both intimate and deeply informed by history, Reporting is an exciting and panoramic portrait of our times.

Ritratti da vicino

release date: Jan 01, 2007

Into the Clear

release date: Jan 01, 2000

Resurrection

release date: May 26, 1998
Resurrection
Pulitzer Prize-winning author David Remnick chronicles the new Russia that emerged from the ash heap of the Soviet Union. From the siege of Parliament to the farcically tilted elections of 1996, from the rubble of Grozny to the grandiose wealth and naked corruption of today''s Moscow, Remnick chronicles a society so racked by change that its citizens must daily ask themselves who they are, where they belong, and what they believe in. Remnick composes this panorama out of dozens of finely realized individual portraits. Here is Mikhail Gorbachev, his head still swimming from his plunge from reverence to ridicule. Here is Vladimir Zhirinovsky, the half-Jewish anti-Semite who conducts politics as loony performance art. And here is Boris Yeltsin, the tottering populist who is not above stealing elections. In Resurrection, they become the players in a drama so vast and moving that it deserves comparison with the best reportage of George Orwell and Michael Herr. "This is what happens when a good writer unleashes eye and ear on a story that moves with the speed of light. Resurrection has the feel of describing vast, historical change even as it is happening."--Chicago Tribune

How Muhammad Ali Changed the Press

release date: Jan 01, 1998

Zmartwychwstanie

release date: Jan 01, 1997
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