Librarians/Admins

  • EBSCOhost Collection Manager
  • EBSCO Experience Manager
  • EBSCO Connect
  • Start your research
  • EBSCO Mobile App

Clinical Decisions Users

  • DynaMed Decisions
  • Dynamic Health
  • Waiting Rooms
  • NoveList Blog

The New York Review of Books

The New York Review of Books Magazine Subscriptions

For over 50 years, The New York Review of Books has been the place where the world's leading authors, scientists, educators, artists, and political leaders turn when they wish to engage in a spirited debate on literature, politics, art, and ideas with a small but influential audience that welcomes the challenge. Each issue addresses some of the most passionate political and cultural controversies of the day, and reviews the most engrossing new books and the ideas that illuminate them.

Get a digital magazine subscription of The New York Review of Books for your library, school or business which your patrons, students or employees can read on-the-go.

Please note: Flipster is a subscription service for libraries, schools and corporations and is not intended for individual use. Check with your local library to see if they offer Flipster digital magazines.

Publisher : New York Review of Books, Inc.

ISSN: 0028-7504; 1944-7744

Categories: News, Politics & Social Issues; Literary

* Not all titles are available in all markets.

Not a Flipster customer?

Request Information

Banner Image

  • Yale University Library
  • Ask Yale Library

Q. Do I have access to the New York Review of Books?

  • Archives At Yale
  • Communications
  • Separate FAQ
  • 40 Accounts
  • 3 Article Searching
  • 65 Bass Library
  • 12 Bass Media Equipment
  • 26 Beinecke Library
  • 4 Bloomberg Terminal
  • 1 Book Display
  • 25 Borrow Direct
  • 3 Buildings
  • 2 Center for Language Study
  • 2 Citation Management
  • 2 Collaborative Learning Center
  • 8 Contact Information
  • 9 Copyright
  • 18 Course Reserves
  • 6 Cushing/Whitney Medical Library
  • 4 Databases
  • 9 Delivery Services
  • 1 Digital Humanities Lab
  • 137 Discovery
  • 26 Do I have access to?
  • 2 Fines and Fees
  • 1 Foreign Language Tutoring
  • 7 Fortunoff Video Archive
  • 13 Google Scholar
  • 119 Government
  • 42 Haas Arts Library
  • 45 How do I?
  • 47 Interlibrary Loan
  • 11 International Collections
  • 15 Law Library
  • 2 Library Instruction
  • 51 Library Services
  • 4 Major Newspapers
  • 31 Manuscripts and Archives
  • 53 Marx Library
  • 3 Medical Library
  • 8 Microform
  • 14 Multifactor Authentication
  • 12 Music Library
  • 8 Network access
  • 7 New Faculty
  • 4 Newspapers
  • 79 Online Content
  • 1 Painting location
  • 2 Personal Librarian
  • 22 Policies
  • 1 Primary Resources
  • 11 Printers & Scanners
  • 37 Privileges
  • 14 Quicksearch
  • 38 Remote Access
  • 3 Renovation
  • 9 Reproductions
  • 33 Research Assistance
  • 8 Scan and Deliver
  • 4 School of Management
  • 8 Self-Checkout
  • 23 Special Collections
  • 6 Sponsored Identity
  • 15 Statistics
  • 86 Sterling Memorial Library
  • 1 Student Wellness
  • 24 Study Spaces
  • 2 University Archives
  • 1 West Campus
  • 156 Yale Collections
  • 8 Yale Film Archive
  • 16 Yale Info
  • 2 Yale Library History
  • 35 Yale Special Collections

Answered By: Laura Galas Last Updated: Aug 19, 2022     Views: 2775

Through Yale Library's subscription to The New York Review of Books , you have full electronic access to the current issue and archived issues, as well as print and mircofilm options.

Read below for information on how to access these options, or watch the video below for help finding a specific online journal by title.

Find Electronic Access

Here's how to access the New York Times Review of Books online:

  • In Quicksearch , one of our online catalogs, search for "New York Review of Books"
  • On the results page, look at the first result in the Books+ column where you will find the record for the electronic version of the New York Review of Books.
  • Select "Online journal" to connect to the resource.

ny review of books digital subscription

Via Databases

The New York Review of Books is also available through two of our databases:

  • Opinion Archives
  • PressReader

In Print & Microfilm

The New York Review of Books is also available in print and microfilm within the following date ranges:

  • 1963-present

  • Share on Facebook

Was this helpful? Yes 0 No 1

Comments (0)

Related questions, related topics.

  • Yale Collections
  • Do I have access to?

Contact Ask Yale Library!

(203) 826-2053

  • System Status
  • Privacy Policy
  • Accessibility

The New York Review of Books 4+

Designed for ipad.

  • #184 in Magazines & Newspapers
  • 4.8 • 3.1K Ratings
  • Offers In-App Purchases

Screenshots

Description.

Since 1963, The New York Review of Books has been the place where the world’s leading authors, scientists, educators, artists, and political leaders turn when they wish to engage in a spirited debate on literature, politics, art, and ideas with a small but influential audience that welcomes the challenge. Each issue addresses some of the most passionate political and cultural controversies of the day and reviews the most engrossing new books and the ideas that illuminate them. 
The print edition of The New York Review of Books, included in the app, is published 20 times a year. The app also includes all of our online-only content. Articles can be bookmarked for later reading, and the app includes a link to browse our shop, The Reader’s Catalog. Current print and online-only subscribers receive full access to the app through existing website login credentials (email and password). The app may also be purchased directly through the app store. Purchases made through the app store do not include access to The Review’s website and complete archive. App store pricing: • 1-month subscription - $5.99 • 1-year subscription - $59.99 SUBSCRIBERS’ AUTOMATIC-RENEWAL FEATURE: Your subscription will be charged to your iTunes account at confirmation of purchase and will automatically renew unless auto-renew is turned off at least 24-hours before the end of the current period. Your iTunes account will automatically be charged at the same price for renewal, as stated above, within 24 hours prior to the end of the current period. 
Current subscriptions may not be cancelled during the active subscription period, but you can manage your subscription and/or turn off auto-renewal by visiting your iTunes Account Settings after purchase. 
NOTE: WHEN PURCHASING A SUBSCRIPTION OF THIS TITLE, YOU AGREE TO THE PRIVACY POLICY AND TERMS OF SERVICE WHICH CAN BE VIEWED BY GOING TO: Privacy Policy: https://www.nybooks.com/privacy/ Terms of Service: https://www.nybooks.com/about/terms-of-service/

Version 23.0

• Direct subscribers now login using your existing nybooks.com credentials. • Ability to change font size. • Enhanced layout and readability. • Easier article bookmarking.

Ratings and Reviews

3.1K Ratings

MAZ App Development

Sorry, 1 star - but, it’s deserved. MAZ is responsible for The Nation Magazine’s app as well as NYReview and signing into both of these apps is like entering a rats nest. If you’re trying to retrieve a password that was initiated using another source - say a desktop, rather than a phone - forget it. I emailed MAZ for solutions to my problem and was emailed back a form letter for a completely different problem. Seriously, the people responsible for choosing their app developers ought to look elsewhere.

Excellent publication, miserable app, and long term failure to improve it.

I find it almost impossible to make effective use of this app. This is a revision of a previous negative review. If anything whatever changes have been made over the past year have only rendered it even worse. In the past, I could at least access archived issues with relative ease, but now having just today (Dec. 7, 2019) returned to the app after a long absence, I’m finding it impossible to find any archived material. I have been using apps for many years, specifically apps connected with various publications and while there is some variation in quality, I have never experienced anything like the problems I have with this one. It’s clear from other recent comments that I am not alone in having serious problems with the NYRB app. Unfortunately, the on going problems with your app suggest either incompetence on the part of whoever is responsible for its operation or near total contempt for digital subscribers.

Bugs and Befuddlement (Edited)

The previous version was highly unstable—it just crashes after a few seconds of reading an issue. So it was unusable. Now this version comes out and it looks great. Except I can’t login (and yes, my credentials are correct). Well, I guess we’ll just have to wait another 6 months or year for it to be fixed. *** The login issues seem to have been fixed. For some reason I had to create a new login, so now I have a login for the app AND the website. This isn’t convenient but it isn’t the end of the world. I wish the devs would have explained this... Now, about the good things. Unlike some other users, I’m personally thrilled about the new functionality. Adding adaptive screen size support is a huge aesthetic upgrade (no more letter boxing on iPhone X devices), and support for things like being able to switch between a text and PDF view is great. I also like how they’ve incorporated some of the NYer Today app’s features like a story stream for new features. It makes it a much more engaging experience. Brilliant job!

App Privacy

The developer, NYREV, INC , indicated that the app’s privacy practices may include handling of data as described below. For more information, see the developer’s privacy policy .

Data Not Linked to You

The following data may be collected but it is not linked to your identity:

  • Identifiers
  • Diagnostics

Privacy practices may vary, for example, based on the features you use or your age. Learn More

Information

  • One Month | New York Review $5.99
  • One Year | New York Review $59.99
  • 21-Dec-17 $5.99
  • July 19, 2018 $5.99
  • NYREV, INC Feed 39 $5.99
  • NYREV, INC Feed 38 $5.99
  • June 28, 2018 $5.99
  • NYREV, INC Feed 52 $5.99
  • NYREV, INC Feed 31 $5.99
  • NYREV, INC Feed 66 $5.99
  • Developer Website
  • App Support
  • Privacy Policy

You Might Also Like

New Republic

Foreign Affairs Magazine

Poetry Magazine App

The Art Newspaper

The Spectator World

MIT Technology Review

The New York Review of Books Magazine (Digital)

The New York Review of Books

About The New York Review of Books

The number of issues included in a magazine subscription (frequency) is subject to change without notice. Additional double issues may be published, which count as 2 issues. Applicable sales tax will be added. Offer void in Vermont. Magazine covers are used for illustrative purposes only and you may not receive a copy of the particular issue depicted. Your subscription will include the most recent issue once your subscription begins. Magazine covers are the property of the publisher. This site is not officially affiliated with, associated with, or endorsed by The New York Review of Books or the publisher.

  • Singapore (SG)
  • Malaysia (MY)

NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS

You may also like.

AMERICAN SCHOLAR

More from the Review

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Best of The New York Review, plus books, events, and other items of interest

  • The New York Review of Books: recent articles and content from nybooks.com
  • The Reader's Catalog and NYR Shop: gifts for readers and NYR merchandise offers
  • New York Review Books: news and offers about the books we publish
  • I consent to having NYR add my email to their mailing list.
  • Hidden Form Source

March 7, 2024

Current Issue

Image of the March 7, 2024 issue cover.

Subscribing to The New York Review of Books App

Print and online-only subscribers to  The New York Review of Books can read complete issues and all of our online-only content on The New York Review of Books App . The app offers text and PDF views (print edition articles only), the ability to save articles, and the ability to search across recent issues and NYR Online content. Instructions for subscribing or signing in follow:

Download or update  The New York Review of Books App and use the “Settings” button to get to the sign-in link. You may log in using the same e-mail address and password you use for this website, www.nybooks.com.

The New York Review of Books App is available through the Apple App Store and the Google Play Store. You may purchase monthly or yearly subscriptions through those app stores if you are not a current Review  subscriber. Subscriptions purchased through the app stores do not include access to the New York Review ’s archive on our website, and only include five years of content at any given time.

If you are having trouble logging in to the app and you subscribe to the print or online edition, please contact us on our website’s contact form , and choose “NYR App Feedback” from the dropdown menu. If you subscribe directly through the app store and are encountering problems, please contact the app store for assistance.

Please note that there is a new version of the NYR App. You may need to update your app manually through your device ’ s app store in order to access new content; instructions for signing in are below. If you subscribed via your device’s app store, you may need to manually update the app and then click the “Restore” button on the settings page in order to regain access to the app once the transition is complete.

ny review of books digital subscription

Subscribe and save 50%!

Get immediate access to the current issue and over 25,000 articles from the archives, plus the NYR App.

Already a subscriber? Sign in

Advertisement

The new york review of books and the paris review : announcing our summer subscription deal.

The art and life of Mark di Suvero

ny review of books digital subscription

Love to read but hate to choose? Starting today and through Labor Day, you really can have it all when you  subscribe  to both  The Paris Review  and  The New York Review of Books  for a combined price of $99. That’s one year of issues from both publications, as well as access to their entire digital archives—seventy years of  The Paris Review  and sixty years of  The New York Review of Books —for $60 off the regular price!

Ever since  The Paris Review ’s former managing editor Robert Silvers cofounded  The New York Review of Books with Barbara Epstein, the two magazines have been closely aligned. So start your summer with an inspired pair, and you’ll have access to prose, poetry, interviews, criticism, and more from some of the most important writers of our time, including T. S. Eliot, Sigrid Nunez, James Baldwin, Toni Morrison, Joan Didion, and Jamaica Kincaid.

Subscribe today and you’ll receive:

—One year of The Paris Review  (four issues). —One year of The New York Review of Books  (twenty issues). —Full access to both the  New York Review   of Books  and  Paris Review  digital archives—that’s sixty years of  The New York Review of Books  and seventy years of  The Paris Review .

If you already subscribe to  The Paris Review , we’ve got good news: this deal will extend your current subscription, while your new subscription to  The New York Review of Books  will begin immediately.

Canadian and international readers, this deal is available to you, too—for $109 and $139, respectively!

ZINIO logo

The New York Review of Books

For over 50 years, The New York Review of Books has been the place where the world's leading authors, scientists, educators, artists, and political leaders turn when they wish to engage in a spirited debate on literature, politics, art, and ideas with a small but influential audience that welcomes the challenge. Each issue addresses some of the most passionate political and cultural controversies of the day, and reviews the most engrossing new books and the ideas that illuminate them. Get The New York Review of Books digital magazine subscription today.

in this issue

Contributors.

Matthew Aucoin is a composer and conductor. His newest piece, Music for New Bodies, based on the poetry of Jorie Graham, will have its premiere in Houston in April. John Banville’s novel The Singularities was published last year. Miron Białoszewski (1922–1983) was an acclaimed Polish poet, playwright, and prose writer, a volume of whose work will be published in English in 2025. Clare Cavanagh is the Frances Hooper Professor in the Arts and Humanities at Northwestern. She received an American Academy of Arts and Letters Award in Literature for her translations of Polish poetry. Michał Rusinek is a translator and writer and the Director of the Wisława Szymborska Foundation. He teaches at Jagiellonian University in Kraków. Dean Browne’s chapbook Kitchens at Night was published in 2022, and his first collection…

NEW FROM NEW DIRECTIONS

The Novel Prize, a biennial award for a book-length work of literary fiction written in English, rewards novels that explore and expand the possibilities of the form. Open to published and unpublished writers around the world, the winning books are proudly published by New Directions, Fitzcarraldo, and Giramondo. THE CO-WINNERS: “Sad, shocking, funny, prophetic, visceral, and deeply human.”—JEFF VANDERMEER “I was absolute putty in this book’s hands.”—ALEXANDRA KLEEMAN “A thought-provoking, artfully constructed narrative enriched by the mysteries that expand and proliferate throughout. It’s a deliciously fraught tour de force.”—PUBLISHERS WEEKLY (STARRED) “Affecting, carefully drafted, quietly tumultuous.”—TLS NEW DIRECTIONS INDEPENDENT PUBLISHER SINCE 1936 NDBOOKS.COM…

At Ease Amid the Ruins

In Praise of Failure: Four Lessons in Humility by Costica Bradatan. Harvard University Press, 273 pp., $29.95 The Last Days of Roger Federer and Other Endings by Geoff Dyer. Picador, 283 pp., $18.00 (paper) According to the best estimates, 99.9 percent of all the species that ever existed on earth have gone extinct. A similar fate awaits the extant ones. A lot has to go right for a new species to establish itself, yet even then most of its members do not partake in the species’s success, for they either die early, fail to reproduce, or get eliminated by enemies, competitors, or nature’s adversities. Given the great quotient of failure in the struggle for life, one could say that every living organism descends from ancestors that beat the odds—that were…

Ducks in the Drawing Room

Barbara Comyns: A Savage Innocence by Avril Horner. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 361 pp., £30.00 In 1978, at the age of seventy, Barbara Comyns jotted down a new idea for a novel: I’ve an idea for a book—“Waiting.” Elderly people retiring to a new little house on a garden estate waiting to die but things keep happening. They feel even more intensely than when they were young. Some good things happen, some exciting and some almost horrifying. A year later she sent the manuscript, which sounds a bit like Beckett’s End-game, to her agent. Publishers said they liked it, but no one took it on; they didn’t think it would sell. Comyns protested: “There may be a revival of interest in my books in the not so distant future. Remember…

Alone in Paradise

Picture a day like this an opera with music by George Benjamin and text by Martin Crimp, directed by Daniel Jeanneteau and Marie-Christine Soma at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London, September 22–October 10, 2023 In opera, the bleakest imaginable tragedies and disasters—murder, suicide, war, the apocalypse—are practically everyday occurrences. And yet, of all the varieties of human suffering on which this art form quasi-vampirically sustains itself, tales of the death of a child feature only infrequently in opera’s first three centuries, from roughly 1600 through 1900. It might be argued that the death of children is just about the most unbearable subject matter there is, as well as one that doesn’t offer the salacious satisfactions of love triangles and revenge killings. But it’s also the case that for…

Circuit Breakers

Judges reveal themselves in footnotes. They use citations as signals and shout-outs, displaying their predilections and alliances. When Anthony Kennedy and Stephen Breyer served on the Supreme Court, they would occasionally invoke judicial decisions in other countries, not because those rulings were binding in the United States but because they wanted to demonstrate their internationalist inclinations. Likewise, Edith Jones, a judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, sent a message in a footnote in a 2022 opinion. The Fifth Circuit, which hears appeals from Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi, is one of thirteen federal courts of appeals: twelve regional courts and one for specialized issues like patent law. There are 179 seats on the circuit courts, and the judges have life tenure. Because the Supreme Court…

you may also like

Recent issues, the new york review of books - february 22, 2024, the new york review of books - february 8, 2024, the new york review of books - january 18, 2024, the new york review of books - december 21, 2023, the new york review of books - december 7, 2023, the new york review of books - november 23, 2023, the new york review of books - november 2, 2023, the new york review of books - october 19, 2023, the new york review of books - october 5, 2023, the new york review of books - september 21, 2023.

Advertisement

Supported by

editors’ choice

9 New Books We Recommend This Week

Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.

  • Share full article

Our recommended books this week run the gamut from a behind-the-scenes look at the classic film “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” to a portrait of suburbia in decline to a collection of presidential love letters with the amazing title “Are You Prepared for the Storm of Love Making?” (That question comes from a mash note written by Woodrow Wilson.) In fiction, we recommend debuts from DéLana R.A. Dameron, Alexander Sammartino and Rebecca K Reilly, alongside new novels by Cormac James, Ashley Elston and Kristin Hannah. Happy reading. — Gregory Cowles

COCKTAILS WITH GEORGE AND MARTHA: Movies, Marriage and the Making of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” Philip Gefter

Rarely seen diary entries from the screenwriter who adapted Edward Albee’s Broadway hit are a highlight of this unapologetically obsessive behind-the-scenes look at the classic film starring the super-couple Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor.

ny review of books digital subscription

“Showed how the ‘cartoon versions of marriage’ long served up by American popular culture ... always came with a secret side of bitters.”

From Alexandra Jacobs’s review

Bloomsbury | $32

TRONDHEIM Cormac James

James’s new novel is a deep dive into a family navigating a crisis. It follows two mothers waiting in the I.C.U. to see if their son will wake up from a coma, and through that framework, explores their lives, their relationship, their beliefs and much more.

ny review of books digital subscription

“Hospital time has a particular and peculiar quality, and ‘Trondheim’ is dedicated to capturing the way it unfolds.”

From Katie Kitamura’s review

Bellevue Literary Press | Paperback, $17.99

REDWOOD COURT DéLana R.A. Dameron

This richly textured and deeply moving debut novel begins with an innocuous question: “What am I made of?” From there, a young Black girl in South Carolina begins to grapple with — and attempt to make sense of — a complicated family history and her place in it.

ny review of books digital subscription

“Dameron is a prizewinning poet and it shows: She does a beautiful job weaving in local vernacular and casting a fresh gaze on an engaging, though flawed, cast of characters.”

From Charmaine Wilkerson’s review

Dial Press | $28

LAST ACTS Alexander Sammartino

In this hilarious debut, a young man moves in with his father after a near-fatal overdose and decides to help save the family business, a Phoenix gun shop facing foreclosure. Their idea is to pledge a cut of every sale to fighting drug addiction, but they soon find themselves mired in controversy.

ny review of books digital subscription

“Sammartino is extraordinarily good at balancing the farcical nature of contemporary America with the complex humanity of his characters. He’s also a magnificent sentence writer.”

From Dan Chaon’s review

Scribner | $27

DISILLUSIONED: Five Families and the Unraveling of America’s Suburbs Benjamin Herold

Once defined by big homes, great schools and low taxes, the country’s suburbs, Herold shows in this dispiriting but insightful account, were poorly planned and are now saddled with poverty, struggling schools, dilapidated infrastructure and piles of debt.

ny review of books digital subscription

“An important, cleareyed account of suburban boom and bust, and the challenges facing the country today.”

From Ben Austen’s review

Penguin Press | $32

ARE YOU PREPARED FOR THE STORM OF LOVE MAKING? Letters of Love and Lust From the White House Dorothy and Thomas Hoobler

This charming collection features presidents from Washington to Obama writing about courtship, marriage, war, diplomacy, love, lust and loss, in winningly besotted tones.

ny review of books digital subscription

“Answers the question ‘What does a president in love sound like?’ with a refreshing ‘Just as dopey as anybody else.’ ... It is a lovely book, stuffed with romantic details.”

From W.M. Akers’s review

Simon & Schuster | $28.99

GRETA & VALDIN Rebecca K Reilly

Reilly’s generous, tender debut novel follows the exploits of two queer New Zealand 20-something siblings from a hodgepodge, multicultural family as they navigate the chaos of young adulthood, and as they come closer to understanding themselves and their desires.

ny review of books digital subscription

“If this novel shows us anything, it’s that love — of family, of romantic partners, of community — is most joyful when it’s without limits.”

From Eleanor Dunn’s review

Avid Reader Press | $28

THE WOMEN Kristin Hannah

In her latest historical novel, Hannah shows the Vietnam War through the eyes of a combat nurse. But what the former debutante witnesses and experiences when she comes home from the war is the true gut punch of this timely story.

ny review of books digital subscription

“The familiar beats snare you from the outset. ... Hannah’s real superpower is her ability to hook you along from catastrophe to catastrophe, sometimes peering between your fingers, because you simply cannot give up on her characters.”

From Beatriz Williams’s review

St. Martin’s | $27

FIRST LIE WINS Ashley Elston

In Elston’s edgy, smart thriller, Evie Porter has just moved in with her boyfriend, a hunky Louisiana businessman. Sadly for him, their relationship is likely to be short-lived, because she’s a criminal and he’s her latest mark.

ny review of books digital subscription

“Evie makes for a winning, nimble character. Elston raises the stakes with unexpected developments.”

From Sarah Lyall’s thrillers column

Pamela Dorman Books | $28

Explore More in Books

Want to know about the best books to read and the latest news start here..

In her new memoir, “Splinters,” the essayist Leslie Jamison  recounts the birth of her child  and the end of her marriage.

The Oscar-nominated film “Poor Things” is based on a 1992 book by Alasdair Gray. Beloved by writers, it was never widely read  but is now ripe for reconsideration.

Even in countries where homophobia is pervasive and same-sex relationships are illegal, queer African writers are pushing boundaries , finding an audience and winning awards.

In Lucy Sante’s new memoir, “I Heard Her Call My Name,” the author reflects on her life and embarking on a gender transition  in her late 60s.

Do you want to be a better reader?   Here’s some helpful advice to show you how to get the most out of your literary endeavor .

Each week, top authors and critics join the Book Review’s podcast to talk about the latest news in the literary world. Listen here .

  • Fellowships
  • Business Models
  • Mobile & Apps
  • Audience & Social
  • Aggregation & Discovery
  • Reporting & Production
  • Translations

The New York Times ended 2023 with 10.36 million subscribers, including 9.7 digital-only subscribers, according to an end-of-year report presented to investors on Wednesday.

The Times added 300,000 new digital-only subscribers in the last months of 2023, more than it added in any quarter for the previous year. The Times now makes more than twice as much revenue from digital subscriptions as it does from print subscriptions. Revenue from digital subscriptions totaled $1.09 billion in 2023.

RELATED ARTICLE The New York Times hits 10 million subscribers by using non-news products as an on-ramp Sarah Scire November 8, 2023 The New York Times, we’ve noted before , no longer features a news-only subscription. Instead, it’s all about The Bundle. With significantly better retention rates for subscribers who use multiple Times products, the company is pushing its all-access digital bundle that includes Games, Cooking, Wirecutter, and The Athletic alongside its journalism. At the end of 2023, a little under half — 4.22 million or 43% — of digital-only subscribers were bundle or multi-product subscribers.

“Other revenues” were up 10% in 2023, due to higher Wirecutter affiliate referral revenues and licensing. Total digital-only average revenue per user also grew 3.5% compared to 2022 after the Times was able to successfully graduate more subscribers from promotional rates. “Tenured non-bundled subscribers” were the most likely to see price increases.

ny review of books digital subscription

Overall ad revenue — volatile across the industry — came up short for the Times in the last quarter of 2023, though the slump took longer to catch up with the Times than it did with other news outlets. Total advertising revenues decreased 8.4% to $164.1 million with digital ad revenue dropping 3.7% and print ad revenue dropping 16.2%. The Times told investors it expected digital ad revenues to increase by single digits in the first quarter of 2024 and total ad revenue to decrease by “mid single digits” over the same period.

You can read the end-of-year report here .

ny review of books digital subscription

“ Shooting The Messenger (Or how to turn a $50 million investment into $3 million of revenue) ,” Elizabeth Spiers, 2/6/2024:

Finkelstein wanted to replicate that with The Messenger, and brought along Neetzan Zimmerman, the viral content guru who had developed The Hill’s content farm/traffic engine. He hired Richard “Mad Dog” Beckman, who left Conde Nast circa 2010 after years of running ad sales there when he had trouble adapting to changes in the ad market and got demoted to run Fairchild’s ad sales. The two of them together are not exactly the picture of media innovation in 2024. Zimmerman knows far more about the way the Internet works than they do and even what he’s doing is outdated. I teach a class on the topic at NYU and the people I bring into the program to talk to my students are working on things like using local LLMs to scrape public documents, building digital products that provide solutions to civic problems, and testing new business models that focus first on audience needs. But this is the team that got $50 million in funding, because “experience.” And let’s be honest, they’re white guys of a certain age who fit the profile of the white guys of a certain age who funded them. (Insert culture fit bullshit.) The fact that a reach play monetized by programmatic ads is a laughable thing to build now was considered irrelevant because investors assume that prior success is indicative of lower risk. And possibly that white guys of a certain age are lower risk. (I joking refer to this as Demographic De-risking, but as a female founder who’s been told I’m too high risk despite having some successes under my belt, it does periodically make me want to move to a desert island with no internet connection and never think about this industry again. But I won’t because I’m a masochist.) A bunch investors basically paid a couple of horse and buggy specialists $50 million to build a Ferrari.

“ Top Messenger executive accused of homophobic slur ,” Daily Beast, 2/5/2024:

[Jimmy] Finkelstein, too, repeatedly belittled the outlet’s top editors, three senior staffers noted — especially [Dan] Wakeford, deputy editor Michelle Gotthelf, and politics editor Marty Kady. Multiple insiders told Confider that Finkelstein would regularly call Gotthelf at 4 a.m. to berate her over the editorial direction of the site as she was in charge of the newsroom, including telling her he didn’t want to see any Trump trial coverage on the homepage. (Before joining The Messenger, Gotthelf settled with the New York Post over her claims she was sexually harassed and retaliated against at the company.) Finkelstein’s yelling would become so bad, senior staffers said, that some employees were left shaking and crying over how “rude and aggressive” he was. “And he always seemed to be worse with women,” a senior male editor told Confider. “I deny berating top editors in the past eight months,” Finkelstein said in a statement. “I think it’s fair to say there were a handful of disagreements, but I deeply respected the editorial team, and our conversations were civilized.” Meanwhile, [Richard] Beckman, who announced he was leaving The Messenger for health reasons just before the site’s spectacular implosion, also used his final few weeks to push some historical revisionism on his colleagues. Just before the site’s launch, he’d publicly pushed fanciful boasts about $100 million yearly revenue goals and impossibly high traffic, and also told prospective hires that The Messenger had enough funding to last three years, sources told Confider. But this past month, Beckman began telling employees that he’d urged Finkelstein to delay the launch of The Messenger for a year. Beckman, notably, was also the person sounding the alarm in the fourth quarter that the company was “ out of money .”

ny review of books digital subscription

The Messenger was run with ineptitude bordering on cruelty. My colleagues and I deserved better. We were the reason it got anywhere at all. And yet, some good work got done. Here are some of my favorite Messenger stories. Some of them I edited, some of them other people edited. — Liam Mathews (@liamaathews) February 5, 2024

“Post-mortem praise for The Messenger,” Real Clear Politics, 2/5/2024 :

The Messenger published my clients’ political op-eds, my personal apolitical pieces, and hundreds or thousands of other thoughtful pieces across the political and apolitical spectra. Look, The Messenger failed. According to some reports, it failed pretty badly . But that shouldn’t be a green light for all the onlookers to pile onto its leadership, like the early 20th-century people Roosevelt criticized, or like what keyboard warriors do when MMA fighters lose, or like what much of the navel-gazing media commentariat has done to Los Angeles Times owner Soon-Shiong.
Why The Messenger killed all of our stories when it died is truly puzzling https://t.co/BPQGcNTEWk — Marc Caputo (@MarcACaputo) February 5, 2024

ny review of books digital subscription

“ The spectacular collapse of the Messenger is a lesson on how not to do journalism ,” The Guardian, 2/2/2024:

Facile ideas that sound too good to be true — especially in this gloomy media environment — probably are simply bad. Even some of the highest-quality news organizations are struggling to survive; many are finding it impossible. There’s no such thing as a quick fix. Second, the notion of “centrism” — often a thinly disguised conservative slant — as a surefire way to attract a mass audience and vast revenue is a well-worn joke. Let us recall Chris Licht’s failed experiment at CNN to do something like that, which featured an apology tour of Republican election denialists. Another flameout. And finally, I can understand why some job seekers grasped at the Messenger’s straws. It’s tough out there. But if you’re an employed journalist recruited by a rich guy with lofty notions about saving the industry, you should run. Fast.

ny review of books digital subscription

“ The Messenger’s desperate bid to merge with LA Times collapsed when time ran out ,” The Wrap, 2/1/2024:

In the final hours of The Messenger, owner Jimmy Finkelstein reached out to offer a merger with the Los Angeles Times, telling his staff that a deal was imminent, The Wrap has learned. But the Los Angeles Times insisted that there was no such deal on the table, only a desperate call from Finkelstein to owner Patrick Soon-Shiong, according to an insider there. Two individuals with ties to The Messenger told The Wrap that Finkelstein and Soon-Shiong were eager to merge their organizations, but could not get the deal done fast enough to outrun a lack of cash. “Patrick was very keen to do the merger — which is why the announcement to staff about The Messenger closing was delayed. Patrick had the money, and at that point, Jimmy would have taken anything,” said the first individual with knowledge of the negotiations.

“Former Messenger employees sue shuttered news site ,” Politico, 2/1/2024:

The lawsuit alleges that the company’s actions violated both federal and New York state labor protections under the WARN Act, and claims — as many reporters from the company also did on social media Wednesday — that The Messenger failed to deliver employees severance and terminated their healthcare.

“ Inside the meltdown at The Messenger: Out-of-touch brass, outraged staffers and pure pandemonium ,” The New York Post, 2/1/2024:

The only thing they received was a FedEx account number to return their company-issued MacBooks to the New York office. “I’ve got news for you, nobody is sending their laptops back, I can promise you that,” a staffer said.

Lovely to see Microsoft making new friends in journalism! The tech giant, which has invested $13 billion in OpenAI , is “launching several collaborations with news organizations to adopt generative AI,” it announced Monday . Those partnerships:

Semafor will work with us to harness AI tools to assist journalists in their research, source discovery, translation, and more with Semafor Signals , helping journalists provide a diverse array of credible local, national, and global sources to their audience. The Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at CUNY will invite experienced journalists to a tuition-free program to explore ways to incorporate generative AI into their work and newsrooms in a three-month hybrid and highly interactive program. The AI Journalism Lab will be run by Nikita Roy , a data scientist, entrepreneur, and host of the podcast Newsroom Robots, which explores AI applications in journalism. The Online News Association will embark on a year of AI programming that aims to inform, educate, and convene journalists to discuss AI solutions and policies, and scale best practices across the industry. The programming will include lab sessions to test tools, practical training, and a monthly gathering of innovators to share experiences. The GroundTruth Project , which sends local journalists into newsrooms around the world through its Report for America and Report for the World programs, will add an AI track of work for its corps members through the AI in Local News initiative with the goal of helping make reporting and newsrooms themselves more efficient and sustainable for the future. Nota , a startup dedicated to putting high-quality AI tools into newsrooms to help improve newsroom operations, has expanded to more than a 100 newsrooms with support from Microsoft. Its suite of tools are helping newsrooms reach new audiences, expand social media presence and better tailor content to audience information needs. Nota will soon release a new tool called PROOF, an assistive recommendation widget that will give real-time tips to journalists and editors about how to better reach audiences with their content through readability, SEO analysis, link integrity, and more.

Microsoft’s announcement was written by Noreen Gillespie , who started as the first-ever journalism director of Microsoft’s Democracy Forward initiative this fall after more than two decades at the Associated Press. “Working directly with newsrooms, universities, journalists, and industry groups,” Gillespie wrote, Microsoft “will help these organizations use AI to grow audiences, streamline time-consuming tasks in the newsroom, and build sustainable business operations. Our goal is to support thriving, sustainable newsrooms with the technology they need to perform the essential function of informing the world.”

At least one of the partners announced Monday also appears to be receiving actual Microsoft money. “As part of the agreement, Microsoft is paying an undisclosed sum of money to Semafor” to sponsor Signals, the FT reported . “The companies would not share financial details, but the amount of money is ‘substantial’ to Semafor’s business, said a person familiar with the matter…[Semafor] made more than $10 million in revenue in 2023.”

Microsoft insists it doesn’t own a traditional stake in OpenAI, though, as Charles Duhigg reported recently in The New Yorker , it has “effectively received a forty-nine-per-cent stake in OpenAI’s for-profit arm, and the right to commercialize OpenAI’s inventions, past and future, in updated versions of Word, Excel, Outlook, and other products — including Skype and the Xbox gaming console — and in anything new it might come up with.” The New York Times is suing Microsoft and OpenAI for copyright infringement.

🟡 @Semafor , utilizing @Microsoft technology, has produced a new human-directed, AI-supported editorial product — Semafor Signals — which is designed to combat bias, polarization and mistrust through real-time distillation of multiple global sources. pic.twitter.com/ZX1zZQNVcc — Semafor (@semafor) February 5, 2024
Thanks to a new partnership with @Microsoft , @Report4America and @Report4theWorld newsrooms will have the opportunity to define and implement ethical approaches to AI to meet editorial and business goals. More: https://t.co/luSDwKlSGU #journalism #AI @MSFTIssues pic.twitter.com/g6BvxdXzhP — The GroundTruth Project (@GroundTruth) February 5, 2024
We are launching the AI Journalism Lab, a new, 3-month, hybrid and tuition-free program by the @newmarkjschool , with support from @Microsoft ! We invite experienced journalists at all levels to explore, innovate and lead on AI. https://t.co/fpqO3fOQmK — Newmark J+ (@NewmarkJPlus) February 5, 2024
As Microsoft agrees to pay "undisclosed sum [to] Semafor to sponsor a breaking news feed called “Signals”" produced with aid of GenAI, thousands of publishers globally may wonder 'how many deals will there be?' Ten? Twenty? Platform darlings all over again https://t.co/V95zyMsrLb — Rasmus Kleis Nielsen (@rasmus_kleis) February 5, 2024

With both mistrust in media and AI-generated news  on the rise, The New York Times has rolled out new byline pages that emphasize the ethical guidelines and real-life humans behind its reporting.

We’ve covered the expanded bylines and datelines that’ve previously come from the news org’s cross-functional trust team . Now, the Times has rolled out hundreds of freshly expanded byline pages . These byline pages — what others might call profile pages or author bios — now include sections titled “What I Cover,” “My Background,” “Journalistic Ethics,” and “Contact Me.”

Edmund Lee , an editor for the trust team, said more than 80% of reporters “across the major news desks (Politics, National, Washington, Business, Metro, Investigations, and International)” have updated their bios with the new format. A little under 500 bios have been expanded and updated so far. Eventually, the Times hopes to have all journalists — the company has more than 1,700 — update their pages.

Trust-building initiatives, of course, don’t work if readers can’t be bothered to read or click through to the additional material. Lee said the Times has seen evidence readers will reach the expanded byline pages.

“Our research has shown that when readers disagree with a story or encounter something they dislike, they tend to click on the byline,” Lee said. “We saw that as an opportunity to explain our process. Trust in news has declined partly because people have become less aware of how newsrooms operate.”

ny review of books digital subscription

Reader surveys showed a clear preference for bios written in the first-person. Each reporter wrote their own, and the level of disclosure and detail varies widely.

Damien Cave , an international correspondent based in Australia, for example, includes traditional bio information — including a list of previous titles and beats — before adding a more personal note to his “background” section. “I grew up in Worcester, Mass., a working-class son of liberal hippies turned conservative Christians, in a family of rich and poor, with marriages mixed across religious and ethnic lines — America in microcosm,” he writes. “I now feel incredibly lucky to be covering how a changing America and a changing world intersect.”

RELATED ARTICLE “Riding shotgun between Missouri and Texas”: The New York Times is experimenting with more colorful bylines and datelines Sarah Scire February 10, 2022 Readers have responded especially well to the new ethics section, Lee said, which spells out how the rules and constraints applicable to all New York Times journalists are followed in practice. Some journalists highlighted standard ethical guidelines in their bios. (“During assignments, I always identify myself as a reporter for The Times,” notes East Africa correspondent Abdi Latif Dahir .) Others dive into more personal or beat-specific detail.

Tech reporter Cecilia Kang , for example, writes that she doesn’t own any individual stocks in any companies. The science and global health reporter Apoorva Mandavilli , who often covers vaccines and drugs, writes she does not “have any financial or other ties to biotech and pharmaceutical companies” and declines “press junkets sponsored by companies or hospitals” along with “fees for lectures sponsored by anyone I might write about.” The recipe columnist Melissa Clark notes she does not accept “restaurant meals, food, gifts, money, or favors” from anyone involved in her reporting. Chief White House correspondent Peter Baker explains why he chooses not to vote.

The differences between news journalists and opinion columnists can be especially opaque to readers. In her expanded byline page, columnist Lydia Polgreen notes that columnists abide by the same standards as Times journalists. “I am an opinion columnist and write about my views and convictions, but I am deeply committed to independence, rigorous reporting and accuracy,” Polgreen adds. Another columnist, Charles M. Blow , writes, “Every piece I publish is fact-checked and edited.”

The New York Times also found readers liked seeing contact information listed and “not because they were itching to talk to us,” Lee said. “Simply knowing we were reachable made them feel more reassured [that] we’re not a faceless institution operating in a distant tower.”

“The theme of our work is explaining what we do to everyday readers,” Lee added. “We’re not changing how we do our journalism. But we are talking about it more.”

Student journalists in Iowa will now have more chances to hone their reporting skills while strengthening local news. The Daily Iowan , the University of Iowa’s independent student newspaper, has purchased two weekly local newspapers in the state, per an announcement on Monday.

Media company Woodward Communications sold the Mount Vernon-Lisbon Sun and Solon Economist to the Daily Iowan in Iowa City. The papers will keep their respective staffs and operate from their current offices. They’ll continuing printing weekly editions on Thursdays, according to Daily Iowan executive editor Sabine Martin . The university’s School of Journalism and Mass Communication will help operate the papers to “provide student journalists with opportunities to contribute to the publications and gain local reporting experience.”

The Sun currently has four staff members: one editor, one sports writer, an advertising representative, and an office/sales assistant. The Economist has a staff of three: an editor, a reporter, and an office/sales assistant. By contrast, the Daily Iowan covers a student population of more than 31,000 and has a staff of more than 100 student journalists.

“News-academic partnerships like this one are more important now than ever before as community newspapers reduce staff or close,” said Melissa Tully , the school’s director, in the announcement. “Investing in local journalism and working with nearby communities offers students a chance to produce meaningful work and gain professional experience while working alongside veteran journalists at the newspapers.”

ny review of books digital subscription

In 2021, the owners of the Oglethorpe Echo in Georgia donated the paper to  the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Georgia . There, UGA students learned firsthand how to report for and operate a rural, community newspaper. In the first 18 months under UGA, the paper launched “six digital products, won awards, tripled advertising, and doubled subscriptions to the 149-year-old weekly newspaper,” as professor and Echo editor Amanda Bright wrote for Nieman Lab last year.

Read the full announcement here .

Universities have long propped up literary magazines that aren’t otherwise profitable. Could they save local newspapers? Iowa’s student paper just acquired two small weeklies in nearby towns, and they’re keeping the regular staff and supplementing with student journalists. https://t.co/FKcTNulMGK — Maurice Chammah🍹🎻 (@MauriceChammah) January 30, 2024
The idea of having young journalists cut their teeth by covering small town. news is wonderful. You can do all the crime and UI stories you want, but there are other skills you fan learn by covering small town city council meetings and community events. https://t.co/kzn1R6NrGj — Tommy Lang (@tommylang1630) January 30, 2024
Good news about local newspapers. ⁦ @TheDailyIowan ⁩ is leading the way saving local news in collaboration with ⁦ @UIOWA_SJMC ⁩. Happy to see the commitment to #journalism #news https://t.co/lSkhdCzXif — Lyle Muller (@LyleMuller) January 29, 2024

Cite this article Hide citations

Scire, Sarah. "The New York Times made more than $1 billion from digital subscriptions in 2023." Nieman Journalism Lab . Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard, 7 Feb. 2024. Web. 7 Feb. 2024.

Scire, S. (2024, Feb. 7). The New York Times made more than $1 billion from digital subscriptions in 2023. Nieman Journalism Lab . Retrieved February 7, 2024, from https://www.niemanlab.org/2024/02/the-new-york-times-made-more-than-1-billion-from-digital-subscriptions-in-2023/

Scire, Sarah. "The New York Times made more than $1 billion from digital subscriptions in 2023." Nieman Journalism Lab . Last modified February 7, 2024. Accessed February 7, 2024. https://www.niemanlab.org/2024/02/the-new-york-times-made-more-than-1-billion-from-digital-subscriptions-in-2023/.

{{cite web     | url = https://www.niemanlab.org/2024/02/the-new-york-times-made-more-than-1-billion-from-digital-subscriptions-in-2023/     | title = The New York Times made more than $1 billion from digital subscriptions in 2023     | last = Scire     | first = Sarah     | work = [[Nieman Journalism Lab]]     | date = 7 February 2024     | accessdate = 7 February 2024     | ref = {{harvid|Scire|2024}} }}

To promote and elevate the standards of journalism

Covering thought leadership in journalism

Pushing to the future of journalism

Exploring the art and craft of story

ny review of books digital subscription

The Nieman Journalism Lab is a collaborative attempt to figure out how quality journalism can survive and thrive in the Internet age.

It’s a project of the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University .

  • Subscribe to our email
  • Follow us on Twitter
  • Like us on Facebook
  • Download our iPhone app
  • Subscribe via RSS
  • Tweet archive

IMAGES

  1. The New York Review of Books turns 50

    ny review of books digital subscription

  2. The New York Review of Books

    ny review of books digital subscription

  3. The New York Review of Books Magazine (Digital) Subscription Discount

    ny review of books digital subscription

  4. New York Review Of Books Digital Subscription

    ny review of books digital subscription

  5. The New York Review of Books Magazine Subscription

    ny review of books digital subscription

  6. Table of Contents

    ny review of books digital subscription

VIDEO

  1. Academy Arcanist Book 1 by Shami Stovall · Audiobook preview

  2. My Worst Books of 2023 🤮

  3. Ratings and Reviews

  4. Why Are eBooks Priced the Way They Are? #publishing

COMMENTS

  1. Subscription Rates

    Print + Digital Subscriptions. The New York Review of Books publishes twenty issues annually. Print + Digital rates are listed below. All subscriptions include print and digital issues, complete archive access dating to 1963, and the NYR App. You may subscribe here. US Subscriptions. 1-year: $129.95; 2-year: $219.00; Canadian Subscriptions. 1 ...

  2. The New York Review of Books Subscriptions

    7 Feb 2024. Media and Entertainment Industry Reporter. 25 May 2022. In Touch (USA) 19 Feb 2024. Star (USA) 19 Feb 2024. Buy a digital subscription to The New York Review of Books with PressReader.com and enjoy unlimited reading on up to 5 devices. 7-day free trial.

  3. The New York Review of Books Kindle Edition

    Date First Available ‏ : ‎ March 18, 2011. Publisher ‏ : ‎ The New York Review of Books (January 30, 2024) ASIN ‏ : ‎ B004OYTR5C. Best Sellers Rank: #234,578 in Kindle Store ( See Top 100 in Kindle Store) #1 in News & Political Commentary eMagazines. #2 in Arts, Music & Photography eMagazines. #3 in Literary, Sci-Fi & Mystery ...

  4. The New York Review of Books

    Please note: Flipster is a subscription service for libraries, schools and corporations and is not intended for individual use. Check with your local library to see if they offer Flipster digital magazines. Publisher: New York Review of Books, Inc. ISSN: 0028-7504; 1944-7744. Categories: News, Politics & Social Issues; Literary.

  5. Q. Do I have access to the New York Review of Books?

    Answered by: Laura Galas. Through Yale Library's subscription to The New York Review of Books, you have full electronic access to the current issue and archived issues, as well as print and mircofilm options. Read below for information on how to access these options, or watch the video below for help finding a specific online journal by title.

  6. Announcing Our Summer Subscription Deal

    Announcing our summer subscription deal: starting today and through the end of August, you'll find plenty to talk about when you subscribe to both The Paris Review and The New York Review of Books for a combined price of $99. That's one year of issues from both publications, as well as their entire archives—sixty-eight years of The Paris ...

  7. The New York Times Book Review

    The New York Times Book Review contains reviews of new releases, author interviews and coverage of the book world. It also has best-seller lists for fiction, nonfiction, paperbacks and more. The New York Times Book Review is included with Sunday Home Delivery subscriptions. You can also subscribe separately to the Book Review. To purchase a New ...

  8. The New York Review of Books

    NYRB Classics Book Club - Page 45; Open Air Modern - Page 59; Platform Books LLC - Page 10; Rachel Comey - Page 5; Summer Classics in Santa Fe - Page 8; The Art Institute of Chicago - Page 4; The New York Review of Books - Page 47; The New York Review of Books - Page 48; The New York Review of Books - Page 49; The New York Review of Books - Page 59

  9. The New York Review of Books

    Love to read but hate to choose? Announcing our summer subscription deal: starting today and through the end of August, you really can have it all when you subscribe to both The Paris Review and The New York Review of Books for a combined price of $99.That's one year of issues from both publications, as well as their entire archives—sixty-nine years of The Paris Review and fifty-nine years ...

  10. The New York Review of Books 4+

    The print edition of The New York Review of Books, included in the app, is published 20 times a year. The app also includes all of our online-only content. Articles can be bookmarked for later reading, and the app includes a link to browse our shop, The Reader's Catalog. Current print and online-only subscribers receive full access to the app ...

  11. Digital Subscriptions

    Subscribers to All Access get to experience all of The Times' digital products and is the only New York Times subscription that includes News.. All Access Includes: News: global reporting, commentary, culture and much more, including audio and video, on nytimes.com and on our News app, available for both iOS and Android.; Games: Spelling Bee, Wordle, an archive of over 10,000 crosswords and ...

  12. The New York Review of Books Magazine Subscription (Digital)

    Get The New York Review of Books digital magazine subscription today. The number of issues included in a magazine subscription (frequency) is subject to change without notice. Additional double issues may be published, which count as 2 issues. Applicable sales tax will be added.

  13. Book Review

    6 New Paperbacks to Read This Week. Selected paperbacks from the Book Review, including titles by Esther Yi, Ralph Ellison, Emily Henry and more. By Shreya Chattopadhyay. Children's Books.

  14. NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS

    Issue: 22/02/24. For over 45 years, THE NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS has been the place where the world's leading authors, scientists, educators, artists, and political leaders turn when they wish to engage in a spirited debate on literature, politics, art, and ideas with a small but influential audience that welcomes the challenge.

  15. Issue December 8, 2022

    Buy The New York Review of Books, December 8, 2022 on our Newsstand or get the subscription to the digital magazine and read it anywhere, anytime. ... Get The New York Review of Books digital magazine subscription today. Read More. Buy Issue. $7.95. Subscribe. $59. 20 Issues. in this issue.

  16. Subscribing to The New York Review of Books App

    Print and online-only subscribers to The New York Review of Books can read complete issues and all of our online-only content on The New York Review of Books App.The app offers text and PDF views (print edition articles only), the ability to save articles, and the ability to search across recent issues and NYR Online content. Instructions for subscribing or signing in follow:

  17. The New York Review of Books

    If you already subscribe to The Paris Review, we've got good news: this deal will extend your current subscription, while your new subscription to The New York Review of Books will begin immediately. Canadian and international readers, this deal is available to you, too—for $109 and $139, respectively!

  18. Issue December 21, 2023

    The New York Review of Books. December 21, 2023. Add to favorites. For over 50 years, The New York Review of Books has been the place where the world's leading authors, scientists, educators, artists, and political leaders turn when they wish to engage in a spirited debate on literature, politics, art, and ideas with a small but influential ...

  19. 7 Book Subscription Boxes We Love for Adults and Kids

    If this leaves you feeling uneasy, The Book Drop's month-to-month option is reasonably priced. All adult subscriptions, including large print, are $21 a month; young adult books are $15 monthly ...

  20. 9 New Books We Recommend This Week

    In her new memoir, "Splinters," the essayist Leslie Jamison recounts the birth of her child and the end of her marriage. The Oscar-nominated film "Poor Things" is based on a 1992 book by ...

  21. The New York Times made more than $1 billion from digital subscriptions

    The New York Times ended 2023 with 10.36 million subscribers, including 9.7 digital-only subscribers, according to an end-of-year report presented to investors on Wednesday. The Times added 300,000 new digital-only subscribers in the last months of 2023, more than it added in any quarter for the previous year.