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The 4.24.22 Issue

Highlights

  1. The Voyages Issue

    The Plastic Paradise of Tokyo’s Famous Kitchen Town

    There is an estimated multibillion-dollar market in Japan for food you can't eat. The craftsmanship can be extraordinary.

     Photographs by

    CreditPhotographs by Kyoko Hamada for The New York Times
  2. The Voyages Issue

    I Lived the #VanLife. It Wasn’t Pretty.

    The writer Caity Weaver’s pursuit of the manifest destiny of the millennial generation ended up looking better in the photos.

     By

    A picture-perfect breakfast in Joshua Tree.
    CreditAngie Smith for The New York Times
  3. THe Voyages Issue

    When I Went Away From the World

    The novelist Rachel Cusk’s pursuit of finality had taken her further and further away. She never considered how she was going to get back.

     By

    CreditIllustration by Kyutae Lee
  1. Julia Roberts Hasn’t Changed. But Hollywood Has.

    “There were incremental shifts in opportunity and it made more sense. Now it’s made more of air.”

     By

    CreditPhoto illustration by Bráulio Amado
    Talk
  2. How Much Should You Be Asked to Donate for a Colleague’s Gift?

    The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on when co-workers may feel pressured into making a donation at the office — and more.

     By

    CreditIllustration by Tomi Um
    The Ethicist
  3. Why Those Moments of Care for Liza Minnelli and Joni Mitchell Felt Different

    Awards shows are a natural setting for honoring aging legends. It’s reassuring when they don’t try to hide the frailty that aging can bring.

     By

    CreditPhoto illustration by Celina Pereira
    Screenland
  4. A Coveted Recipe From Jamaica Is Finally Shared

    This is fish rubbed with garlic and allspice, shallow-fried until the skin crisps, then doused with hot vinegar, carrots, onions and wicked Scotch bonnets.

     By

    CreditChris Simpson for The New York Times. Food stylist: Maggie Ruggiero. Prop stylist: Sophia Pappas.
    Eat
  5. M.R.I.s Are Finding Connections Between Our Brain Activity and Psychology

    How might we leverage knowing that a particular neurological feature makes someone more vulnerable to autism or Alzheimer’s or more likely to achieve academically?

     By

    CreditIllustration by Ori Toor
    Studies Show
  1. Poem: Going Going Gone

    A surreal depiction of grief that shows how it can change within stasis.

     By

    CreditIllustration by R. O. Blechman
    Poem
  2. Judge John Hodgman on a Deathbed Request

    Should it be honored if the person survives?

     By

    CreditIllustration by Louise Zergaeng Pomeroy
    Judge John Hodgman

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