Category Archives: Personal

Edible products

You’ve heard of n+1? Well, The New Yorker just got nine plus one—that’s ten National Magazine Award nominations, more than anyone else got. Why? Because even with all the cool stuff on the web, and cool new print magazines coming out all the time (see above), it’s still the best magazine in the world, probably the best magazine that ever was (in the words of that vaguely seedy commercial that ran on late-night TV for a million years). From the Times:

The weekly New Yorker received 10 nominations in 9 categories in the 40th annual award lineup. The categories include best magazine for general excellence among magazines with a circulation of one million to two million, and best of the public interest category for three articles by Seymour M. Hersh last May, including one on the Abu Ghraib prison scandal.

Speaking of general excellence, Philip Gourevitch is jumping over to The Paris Review. It’s a great choice (among many superlative choices). AP: “Gourevitch did say he wanted to add nonfiction, especially ‘voice-driven’ reporting ‘you want to read’ because of how it’s written as opposed to what it’s about.” Yep, that sounds pretty New Yorkery. Many other magazines should take note. Gourevitch is working with another incredible well of talent now; it’ll be interesting to see what he does now that he’s in charge. If you haven’t looked at their site in a while, take a look at the Writers-at-Work archive, “The DNA of Literature”—it’ll blow your mind.

In other breaking news, Michele Zipp, Playgirl editor and brave Republican, is leaving. All I can say is, praise the Lord, because that is the most boring magazine that ever was. Except for maybe…how about I let you fill in the blank? On the Playgirl homepage (not to be confused with that of Cosmogirl!—”Battle of the Boys: Who’s hotter? You decide! A new guy every day!”):

Finally, the issue of Playgirl that everyone’s been waiting for! Join us as we explore living like a hedonist and sleeping on ice, plus edible products, sexual health, and our “friends with benefits.” Plus, more MEN! The most unbelievable photos of gorgeous guys including an exotic man from Miami, a tattooed rocker, and a kissable boy-next-door. On newsstands now.

Playgirl—a.k.a. Entertainment for Insomniacs—may want to join the rest of us in the 21st century and expand its reach a bit beyond mooning over Miami and kissing the boy next door. Perhaps if they were on the same page…

Happy birthday to my sister Kate, who doesn’t need to sleep on ice to be the coolest girl on earth.

New Yorker Again Dominates Magazine Award Nominations [NYT]
Paris Review names New Yorker as editor [AP, via Boston.com]
Club Wired—John Seabrook transcript [HotWired, 1995]
Update: ‘Playgirl’ Editor and Assistant Out [Gawker]
Talk of the Town: The Culture Wars: Why Know? [New Yorker; the anti-Kinsey movement]
Jubilees: A Little Old Magazine [New Yorker; Paris Review and Playboy’s 50th anniversaries]

Back to the future


For the perplexed, all posts after this in December are just biding time till they can be moved somewhere more sensible. Poor orphans of chronology! They’ll all have good homes, with hot chocolate before bed, so pat them on the head before you travel on. If you’re looking for more book reviews and other articles by me, I’m gradually compiling as many as I can find here on del.icio.us, even as I continue to battle the Great Scanning Monster. Thanks for stopping here on a snowy evening! (It’s still December in this section.)

Unsung Heroes

I was asked to name my cultural and intellectual heroes for the Normblog profile; here are others, in no particular order.
Cultural heroes:
Pablo Neruda
Frankie Manning
Guy Maddin
Kevin Heelan
James Laughlin
Georgina Sowerby & Brian Luff
Mary Gordon
Cynthia Hopkins
Lauren Bacall
Donald Antrim
Robertson Davies
The Marx Bros.
Alan Rickman
Jonathan Lethem
Steve Martin
Richard Leakey
Ruth Stone
James Joyce
Alan Lomax
Intellectual heroes:
Jane Addams
Roane Carey
Jane Kenyon
Pete Seeger
Margaret Mead
Scott McLemee
Richard Ihle
Nicholson Baker
Phillis Levin
W. H. Auden
Richard Eder
Richard Lingeman
Heroes transcending category:
Thomas Montgomery
Judith Long
Virginia Woolf
Margaret Sanger
Katharine Hepburn
New Yorker all-star team
(a list in progress):

Pauline Kael
James Thurber
Saul Steinberg
Donald Antrim
Ian Frazier
E.B. White
Nancy Franklin
Jane Kramer
John Lahr
Robert Benchley
Ben McGrath
A.J. Liebling
Dorothy Parker
Jonathan Schell
Elizabeth Drew
Joan Acocella
Philip Gourevitch
Sean Wilsey
Todd Pruzan
Jonathan Lethem
Sasha Frere-Jones
Alex Ross
Seymour Hersh
Roz Chast
Charles Barsotti
Bruce Eric Kaplan
Drew Dernavich
Charles Addams
Susan Sheehan
David Owen
Joan Didion
Susan Orlean
Rachel Carson

New Yorker Writers With Websites, &c.

Writers’ homepages and blogs
Ken Auletta
Dan Baum
Andy Borowitz [The Borowitz Report]
Mark Danner
Matt Dellinger
Blake Eskin
Sasha Frere-Jones
Malcolm Gladwell [books]
Malcolm Gladwell [blog]
Ben Greenman
Jonathan Lethem
Austin Kelley
Margaret L. Knox
Patricia Marx [Huffington Post blog]
Rebecca Mead
Susan Orlean
Katha Pollitt
Richard Preston
Alex Ross [The Rest Is Noise]
Michael Specter
Publisher and organization bios
Donald Antrim [Random House]
Burkhard Bilger [Houghton Mifflin]
Katherine Boo [New America]
Justin Davidson [Pulitzer]
Alma Guillermoprieto [Radcliffe Institute]
Zadie Smith [British Council]
James Surowiecki [Random House]
Judith Thurman [Random House]
E.B. White [HarperCollins]
Interviews, reviews, papers, &c.
Burkhard Bilger [interview]
Pauline Kael [Salon]
John Seabrook [Booknoise]
Peter Schjeldahl [Blackbird interview]
Fan sites
Steve Martin [The Compleat Steve]
John O’Hara
John O’Hara
Other online resources
Original 1925 prospectus for The New Yorker
Jane Grant collection at the University of Oregon
J.D. Salinger‘s short story “Hapworth 16, 1924”
Herbert Warren Wind [obituaries]
“Protest at New Yorker Is Criticized,” New York Times, January 16, 1987
“New Yorker Fiction, By the Numbers,” New York Times, June 1, 2004
“Life Without Katharine: E. B. White and His Sense of Loss,” New York Times, April 8, 1980
This list is, of course, incomplete. Please email me recommended links or corrections. Thanks!

Who We?

Emily Gordon of www.emdashes.com
Emily Gordon
(Photo: Hillery Stone)
Martin Schneider and Pollux of wwww.emdashes.com
Martin Schneider & Pollux
(Photo: Emily Gordon)
Jonathan Taylor of www.emdashes.com
Jonathan Taylor
(Photo: Todd Marciani)



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Emdashes, founded in 2004, was the first online community devoted to the writers, artists, history, and readers of The New Yorker. With the addition of 11 years, a loyal following, some nice press (MediaShift, Vanity Fair, the Village Voice, Yahoo!, the Toronto Globe & Mail, etc.), a Webby honor, and a host of new contributors, it’s evolved into a general-interest site whose beats include design, theater, and punctuation. While dormant, the site in archive form reflects our motto: “Old news is good news.” Unsigned posts are by Emily Gordon; bios of Emdashers past and present are below.
Emily Gordon, founder and editor, has worked in print and digital content since 1994 and now works at the Yale School of Management as a publicist and editor. (Check out some writing clips here.) At Ogilvy & Mather, she co-led the creative team for IBM’s brand newsroom. Before that, she was managing editor of the pioneering art e-commerce site 20×200. As editor-in-chief of Print magazine, she led the web relaunch and established the magazine’s social media platforms. Print won two National Magazine Awards for General Excellence during her tenure as EIC and managing editor, and garnered numerous honors from the Art Directors Club and the Society of Publication Designers.

She has also been on the editorial and/or digital staffs of The Nation (where, in 1996, she was half of the two-person team that launched thenation.com), The Washington Spectator, Newsday, Mamm magazine, PEN America, Legal Affairs, and Grand Street, and has taught writing at New York University, Dowling College, and IBM. She wrangles two Tumblrs, The Beautiful Sentence and Obscure Controversies.
Additionally, she’s written features, reviews, and op-eds for Print, Newsday, The New York Times Book Review, Time Out Chicago, The Nation, Salon, The Village Voice, The Washington Post Book World, and A Brief Message, among others. Her dialogue with Katha Pollitt appears in the book Letters of Intent: Women Cross the Generations to Talk about Family, Work, Sex, Love and the Future of Feminism. She’s spoken at SXSW Interactive, TypeCon, The Art Directors Club, The National College Media Convention, The Strand, and Eyebeam, among other venues, and read poetry at La MaMa, CBGB 313 Gallery, the Corduroy Club, and elsewhere. She has a B.A. in English from Barnard College and an M.F.A. in creative writing from New York University. Email her at emily at emdashes dot com.

Other contributors:

Pollux is the pen name of Paul Morris, creator of the Emdashes webcomic “The Wavy Rule” and writer of “Sempé Fi”:http://emdashes.com/sempe-fi/, a column devoted to the art on _New Yorker_ covers. Pollux was born in Beverley, England, and studied medieval history at UCLA and Brown University. He is the author of the graphic novels “Ferrex and Porrex”:http://www.blurb.com/my/book/detail/1144467 and “The Golden Helmsman”:http://www.blurb.com/bookstore/detail/1254530, among others. You can see more of his work at his ImageKind page. Email him at polylerus at gmail dot com.
Jonathan Taylor lives in Brooklyn. His writing for The Believer, The Village Voice, Stop Smiling, The Nation, Newsday, Time Out New York, The Stranger, and other publications, as well as contact information, can be found at jonathandtaylor.wordpress.com.
Martin Schneider currently writes the movie-review site Box Office Boffo and, for Emdashes, wrote The Squib Report, an exploration of The Complete New Yorker‘s digital archive and other subjects; he also reported from events in New York City, Austria, and Cleveland. In his paying work life, Martin edits books for university presses and writes book reviews. Email him at martin at emdashes dot com.
Benjamin Chambers pioneered “The Katharine Wheel,” a column about New Yorker-related fiction; the column name honors Katharine White, The New Yorker‘s first fiction editor. Chambers is the editor of The King’s English, a prizewinning online magazine that specializes in novella-length fiction. He received his MFA from Washington University in St. Louis and has had his fiction, poetry, and essays published in numerous journals, including The Iowa Review, ZYZZYVA, MANOA, and The Mississippi Review. You can find contact information at his website.
Brian Sholis is an editor at Artforum.com. He has written for Artforum, Parkett, Afterall, Flash Art, Bookforum, Print, the Detroit Metro-Times, and the New York Press, among other periodicals, and has contributed to books published by Taschen and Phaidon. He is the co-editor, with Noah Horowitz, of The Uncertain States of America Reader (Serpentine Gallery/Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art/Sternberg Press, 2006). His personal site is www.briansholis.com; he lives in Brooklyn.
Quin Browne was born in New Orleans. She writes a blog at FMD, and some of her stories can be found under her name at Six Sentences.
Emdashes has also published contributions by various esteemed guests. They include The New Yorker‘s librarians, Jon Michaud and Erin Overbey, co-authors of the celebrated Ask the Librarians column, which now makes its home at newyorker.com.
The site was designed and built by Patric King and Su at Pretty; most illustrations are by Jesse Ewing at Inkleaf, with others by Carolita Johnson (who writes and draws newyorkette) and Lara Tomlin (represented at iSpot). The pencil-girl logo, based on a 1943 Dorothy Gray ad, was originally created by Jennifer Hadley.
A guide to the topics listed in the top green header:
Hit Parade collects the posts that have gotten Emdashes readers all whirled up like soft-serve ice cream.
Headline Shooter: A rat-a-tat list of breaking stories. Headline Shooter is also the name of a 1933 movie in which Robert Benchley played a radio announcer.
Seal Barks envelops all the posts about art—cartoons, covers, spots, photos, and illustrations. The name comes from the classic 1932 cartoon by James Thurber, in which a fed-up woman says to the man next to her in bed, “All right, have it your way—you heard a seal bark!” In a related category, “O Caption! My Caption!”, Emily interviewed numerous winners of the weekly Cartoon Caption Contest, who must battle thousands of other entrants to make the grade and claim their prize. It’s an elite and fascinating band.
On the Spot: News and reviews of events–readings, talks, plays, musical performances, gallery openings, and so on. “On the Spot” is also for announcing events we couldn’t go to, because they’re in Alaska or something. We have a strict policy of never taking notes at social events, so you’ll have to rely on others for media scuttlebutt.
Looked Into is for focused, critical examination of things (like books and blog posts, but not events).
Pick of the Issue: The pile on the bedside table has become a skyscraper. What to read? The juiciest cuts from The New Yorker and other magazines.
New Yorker Festival: For years, the Emdashes team pounded the gilded pavement at the many festivals The New Yorker puts together, including The New Yorker Festival and the New Yorker Conference.
Eustace Google: Intrepid Emdashers google phrases, names, and other mysteries so you don’t have to. It’s a veritable Katz’s Deli of links in further pursuit of the details in a story, drawing, ad, or news item.
Eds.: Items about New Yorker editors-in-chief since the start of the magazine: Harold Ross, William Shawn, Robert Gottlieb, Tina Brown, and David Remnick.
The Catbird Seat: Friends & Guests is where talented people write about whatever they want.
Jonathans Are Illuminated: This category concerns the Jonathans of letters, both the ones you know well and the ones who have yet to leap into Bright Young Jonathanness.
X-Rea tracks sightings of and inquiries into the work of illustrator, designer, and man-about town Rea Irvin. Irvin is best known for being The New Yorker‘s first art director; he created not only the iconic ironic dandy Eustace Tilley but the magazine’s signature typeface. (Emily wrote a Print feature about his aesthetic and typographic innovations: “Everybody Loves Rea Irvin.”) As you can guess from the column’s title, Irvin’s name is pronounced “Ray” as in Sugar, not “Ree” as in readerly.
Letters & Challenges: Letters from readers. Never fear—we print only the letters you’ve explicitly given us permission to print, whether with your name or anonymously; just let me know. Here’s how to send one. There are also occasional challenges and contests. And prizes.
Personal: At last, something really blogworthy! Read Emily’s Innermost Thoughts, or at least the ones she chooses to share with the wide world web.
Other em dash aficionados:
The Emdash Awards, a prize for artists from Frieze Projects and the Emdash Foundation; the 2011 winner was Anahita Razmi.
Em-Dash Man, a.k.a. photographer Martin Ley
Em Dash: “The Band, Not the Punctuation Mark”
Em Dash Book Publishing, of Victoria, B.C. (Love their tagline: “The beginning of the long dash.”)
More Canadians: Em Dash Design, Montreal
Em Dash, home of a blogger with old-fashioned sensibilities (and we both like using the postal mail)
“Typography from letterpress to web”: emdash
Emdash, a letterpress studio in St. Louis; Ken Botnick, owner
More designers: EMdash Design with Elizabeth E. Maplesden
Emily Raper‘s emdash designs
Em Dash, of San Francisco
endashemdash.com, the elegant Tumblr of Nour Malaeb
This Daily Kos contributor; another from 43 Things; a third on the great COLOURLovers
Punk label Em Dash Music
Grammar Girl on dashes
Honorary dasher Anil Dash
Finally, a mutineer: en dasher!
Further Emily Gordon note by Emily Gordon: Incidentally, the badass Emily V. Gordon (author of Super You: Release Your Inner Superhero, Nerdist impresario, advice columnist, etc.!) is not me. Neither is Emily Fox Gordon (author of Mockingbird Years, Are You Happy?, It Will Come To Me, and Book of Days); Julia Emily Gordon the 19th-century painter; Emily Gordon the singer-songwriter; or Emily Gordon the aikido practitioner, who can definitely beat me up, though I’m sure that’s not her style. There’s a contemporary painter, a real estate practitioner, students and athletes of all stripes, an incredibly cute child, at least one other poet, and a British financial reporter, and they are not me, but if they would like to form an organization, I am all for joining it.

Creative Commons License
Copyright 2004-2016 by Emily Gordon. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike2.5 License.

New Yorker Cartoonists, Artists, & Covers Online

General resources for New Yorker cartoons, art, and cartoonists online
The Cartoon Bank
The New Yorker‘s Cartoon Caption Contest
The New Yorker‘s Cartoonist of the Month blog
Skating cartoons from the magazine
Chris Wheeler’s gallery of cartoons and cartoonists
Cartoon collections and other books of note
They Moved My Bowl: Dog Cartoons by New Yorker Cartoonist Charles Barsotti (Little, Brown)
Funny Ladies: The New Yorker’s Greatest Women Cartoonists And Their Cartoons, by Liza Donnelly (Prometheus Books)
Sex and Sensibility: Ten Women Examine the Lunacy of Modern Love…in 200 Cartoons, edited by Liza Donnelly (Twelve)
Last Laughs: Cartoons About Aging, Retirement…and the Great Beyond, edited by Mort Gerberg (Scribner)
Mixed Company: Cartoons by Michael Maslin (Fireside)
Cartoonists
Charles Addams [Comiclopedia]
Charles Barsotti
Harry Bliss
George Booth [Wikipedia]
Tom Cheney [Comiclopedia]
Sam Cobean
Frank Cotham
Michael Crawford
Leo Cullum [Urban Dog]
C. Covert Darbyshire
Drew Dernavich
Eldon Dedini
Matthew Diffee (plus my review of a Diffee Rejection Show appearance)
Liza Donnelly
Emily Flake
Mort Gerberg
Sid Harris
Marshall Hopkins
Carolita Johnson, a.k.a. newyorkette
B. Kliban
Eric Lewis, cartoonist and sculptor of the ingenious and beautiful Garbage Flowers
Marisa Acocella Marchetto, author of the highly recommended graphic memoir Cancer Vixen: A True Story
Jerry Marcus
Paul Noth
Jason Polan
What to Wear This Very Second [Emily Richards]
Elwood Smith
Mick Stevens [website]
I Really Should Be Drawing [Mick Stevens’s blog]
P.C. Vey
Rowland B. Wilson
Covers and cover artists
Cover Browser [Incredibly rich collection of New Yorker covers]
Covering The New Yorker [Introduction by Françoise Mouly]
45 New Yorker covers
Some ’30s covers
Arthur Getz
Ana Juan [Emdashes on Ana Juan’s cover “Homage,” March 29, 2010]
Jacques de Loustal
Max
Peter De Sève
Gretchen Dow Simpson
Edward Sorel
Art Spiegelman
Adrian Tomine
Photographers
Mary Ellen Mark
Sylvia Plachy
Illustrators and other artists associated with the magazine
Roxanna Bikadoroff
Steve Brodner
Erik T. Johnson
Edel Rodriguez
Gerald Scarfe
Reinhard Schleining
R. Sikoryak
Mark Ulriksen
Related organizations
Thurber House
Old issues and the archive
The debut issue: an eBay auction
Articles, papers, interviews, websites, &c. about art in The New Yorker
Paper: “Eustace Tilley Sees the Thirties Through a Glass Monocle, Lightly: New Yorker Cartoonists and the Depression Years,” by Eric Solomon (San Francisco State University)
Review: Funny Ladies: The New Yorker’s Greatest Women Cartoonists and Their Cartoons, by Liza Donnelly, and The Comic Worlds of Peter Arno, William Steig, Charles Addams and Saul Steinberg, by Iain Topliss; reviewed by Emily Gordon (Newsday)
This list is, of course, incomplete; these categorizations are subjective (cover artists also do cartoons, and so on), and likely to change. Please email me your suggested additions or corrections, and if you are an author or publisher, please let me know if your book should be included here. Thanks!

New Yorker-Related Books, Organizations, &c.

Books
New Yorker collections [Cartoon Bank]
About the New Yorker and Me: A Sentimental Journey [E.J. Kahn]
About Town: The New Yorker and the World It Made [Ben Yagoda]
A Life of Privilege, Mostly [Gardner Botsford]
At Seventy: More about the New Yorker and Me [E.J. Kahn]
The Comic Worlds of Peter Arno, William Steig, Charles Addams, and Saul Steinberg [Iain Topliss]
Defining New Yorker Humor [Judith Yaross Lee]
Funny Ladies: The New Yorker’s Greatest Women Cartoonists And Their Cartoons [Liza Donnelly]
Genius in Disguise: Harold Ross of the New Yorker [Thomas Kunkel]
Gone: The Last Days of the New Yorker [Renata Adler]
Here at The New Yorker [Brendan Gill]
Here But Not Here: My Life with William Shawn and the New Yorker [Lillian Ross]
Katharine and E.B. White: An Affectionate Memoir [Isabel Russell]
Letters From the Editor: The New Yorker’s Harold Ross [Thomas Kunkel]
New Yorker Profiles 1925-1992: A Bibliography [compiled by Gail Shivel]
Nobrow: The Culture of Marketing, the Marketing of Culture [John Seabrook]
Onward and Upward: A Biography of Katharine S. White [Linda H. Davis]
Maeve Brennan: Homesick at The New Yorker [Angela Bourke]
The Portable Dorothy Parker [Marion Meade, editor]
Remembering Mr. Shawn’s New Yorker: The Invisible Art of Editing [Ved Mehta]
Reporting: Writings from The New Yorker [David Remnick]
Ross and the New Yorker [Dale Kramer]
Ross, the New Yorker and Me [Jane Grant]
The World Through a Monocle: The New Yorker at Midcentury [Mary F. Corey]
The Years With Ross [James Thurber]
Organizations
The Robert Benchley Society
Nathaniel Benchley [Grandson, wit]
The Dorothy Parker Society
Thurber House
The Algonquin Hotel & Round Table
The Algonquin Round Table
The Algonquin’s Oak Room
Algonquin Hotel, Wikipedia
Portraits of Algonquin folks
Algonquin-related links
Matilda, Algonquin hotel cat [NPR]
Missing a piece of your pattern?
To suggest additions or corrections to these lists, please email me.

Compliments & Press

This MediaShift interview by Simon Owens gets it just about right. Archly titled “Vanity Fair, New Yorker Fan Blogs Give Free PR to Conde Nast,” in fact, the piece reflects the delirious allegiance that Vanityfairer‘s Sonal Chokshi and I gave our chosen objects. We had no master plan–we were just magazine people in the seeming dusk of print media. We knew we were romanticizing these fallible and human-crafted things, but loved the crap out of them anyway, and our readers let us know we weren’t alone.
More mentions of note:
“Many New York blogs are about New Yorkers; Emdashes is about The New Yorker (mostly). Although it’s an online magazine about a magazine, it has a full life of its own. Along with analyses of each week’s New Yorker contents, it runs its own cartoons, columns, interviews, spot coverage, contests, and so on. Emdashes counts among its many devoted fans The New Yorker itself; the magazine’s head librarians, Jon Michaud and Erin Overbey, started answering reader questions in 2006 in a column on the Emdashes site. (Last year, The New Yorker took over “Ask the Librarians” at its own site.)…” —The Village Voice, “I Blog New York: Your Guide to Gotham’s Best”
“This isn’t some lowbrow gossip site. Don’t poke your musky head in there thinking you’re going to discover what makes John Seabrook ‘tick,’ or be treated to grisly samurai tales about Henry Finder’s ruthless mastery as an editorial infighter. It’s a more belletristic enterprise than that, with a monthly column contributed by the New Yorker‘s librarians, whom I believe once tried to have me abducted.” —James Wolcott, vanityfair.com
“It’s been nearly two years since I stumbled across this fresh and imaginative blog created by Emily Gordon. She has dedicated herself to exploring where the em dash (a punctuation mark the length of the letter m) goes: in this case, between the lines and behind the stories of The New Yorker magazine. Emdashes, as with all good blogs, is fueled by obsession. ‘Like me, you read The New Yorker. With interest. Loyally, actively, critically. Ardently,’ wrote Gordon, an editor at PRINT magazine with an impressive freelancer’s pedigree. Two years later, she still fits that profile, and she has added a raft of new features for New Yorker aficionados. For the time-pressed, she provides a welcome service: sifting through the week’s New Yorker for the best and brightest fact, fiction, criticism and poetry…. Perhaps now that I have Emily Gordon as my guide, I will find time for a magazine that rarely disappoints.” —Chip Scanlan, Poynter
“Emily Gordon is a writer and an editor at Print magazine. She also edits Emdashes, a site dedicated to The New Yorker and (more or less) related subjects, from movies to semicolons to Ricky Gervais. The logo and site was designed by none other than uber-fabulous House of Pretty.” —Debbie Millman
“Fans of The New Yorker are a dedicated bunch. They relish its arrival every week, check the bylines, and then dive right into a 20,000-word piece. It’s no wonder this passion for a beloved magazine has spawned a site devoted to its pages past and present. Whip-smart writer Emily Gordon obsessively blogs about all topics great and small related to her favorite periodical…. Whether you’re a cover-to-cover obsessive or just a grazer passionate about “Talk of the Town,” you’ll find Ms. Gordon has created a delicious companion to America’s best magazine.” —Yahoo! Picks (which interviewed Emily)
The New Yorker between the lines is the mission of this site that, though unaffiliated with the magazine, is extremely attuned to its subtext, syntax, and semiotics.” —Manhattan User’s Guide, which named Emdashes one of “The 400”–“a thoroughly subjective selection of 400 links—from institutional websites to single-person blogs—that we think make a distinctive contribution to life in New York.” Later on the site: “The subtext, syntax, and semiotics of The New Yorker.”
“Emdashes [is] a uniquely geeky literary blog devoted to loving The New Yorker. It’s written with style, grace, and the obsessive love that only a true nerd can feel for something that will never, ever help them get laid.” —Jeff Simmermon, And I Am Not Lying
“I get a little too excited about The New Yorker, and sometimes people’s eyes glaze over as I go on and on. It’s nice to go to a place where you all understand the passion.” —Linda Kao (New Yorker reader since 1996, Emdashes reader since 2008)
“A supercool blog about The New Yorker that anyone interested in the magazine’s past, present, and future should be reading.” —Quiet Bubble
“Emdashes is wholly New Yorker-centric, for moments when one wants to read the amusing Q & A with The New Yorker‘s librarians, or to ponder issues raised in the magazine. Emily Gordon is a smart and generous blogger; how I feel about The New Yorker depends on the day and the issue.” —Biffles at the Bijou
“Give me quality of writing over quantity of posts any day. That’s one of the reasons I recommend a four-month-old blog on The New Yorker that oozes good stuff. You don’t have to be a refugee from John McPhee’s three-part series on geology to enjoy blogger Emily Gordon’s lovely touch with the language, as she alternately strokes and skewers the masthead.” —Lisa Stone (On fourteen “bloggers you may not know, but should,” for Jay Rosen’s PressThink)
“Read her blog about the magazine and anything else that strikes her fancy. Amazing collection of New Yorker links; nobody can touch Emily’s hard work there.” —Kevin Fitzpatrick, Dorothy Parker Society of New York
“Un blogue qui se consacre à disséquer la réputée snob publication, dans ses moindres détails.” —Sylvie St-Jacques, La Presse
“Most footers are useless. They usually contain a handful of throw-away links, maybe a copyright statement, and contact information. Nobody reads them, because they’re not worth reading…. One of my favorite footers is found on Emily Gordon’s blog. This is a writer’s footer. This is information to be enjoyed. She talks about herself, offering notes on what she’s written and why she’s writing. She directly addresses her reader assuring him of his privacy. When I get to her footer and see all that she offers down there at the bottom of the page, I feel like she expected me to read that far, and is acknowledging my visit. I love that she’s taken the opportunity to offer me more information than I asked for, in a place I didn’t expect to find it. I feel rewarded at the end of reading her blog, and that’s what I call a wonderful user experience.” —Amber Simmons, A List Apart
Miscellaneous press:
In the Toronto Globe & Mail, pronouncing on the DVD archive. They printed a poem by me: “My Mother Saved Copies of The New Yorker.”
In the Baltimore Sun, about town at the New Yorker Festival: “‘The New Yorker wants to be the kind of magazine that people love so much that they’re obsessed with it,’ said Emily Gordon…. Gordon was running between festival events all weekend, blogging the readings and performances on her iBook.”
In the Daily News (link no longer active), on that notorious Adam-and-Eve-banished-to-Brooklyn cover.
The full La Presse interview. Test your French!

These Are a Few of My Favorite Things

The list below reflects the fancies of Emily Gordon, as well as some of her influences and acknowledgments.
Solid gold dancers: currently reading regularly
The Awl
The Last Psychiatrist
Gynomite! [another awesome Emily Gordon]
Salon
Slate
Lindsay Robertson
Rosscott, Inc.
Enthusiasts par excellence
James Wolcott
Taddle Creek magazine, edited by Conan Tobias
Ftrain.com [Paul Ford]
Chiasmus
Steven Heller
Arnjuice [Web comic by Emdashes staff cartoonist Pollux, whose collections are for sale or download at Lulu]
Bill Kartalopoulos [on comics, graphic novels, and more]
Ben Bass (and Beyond)
Slice [pizza authority Adam Kuban]
Love Shine [best store in Williamsburg, Brooklyn]
Cinders Gallery [best gallery in Williamsburg, Brooklyn]
Greatest Films [Tim Dirks]
The Corduroy Appreciation Club [Miles Rohan, founder]
Most charming 21st-century DJ (tie): Bob Dylan, Theme Time Radio Hour [XM Radio]; Michael Cumella, The Antique Phonograph Music Program [WFMU]
The Sound of Young America [Jesse Thorn]; now on WNYC
The Comics Curmudgeon [Josh Fruhlinger]
Scott McLemee, and his blog Quick Study
Collision Detection [Clive Thompson]
The Eleanorian [Eleanor Levine]
Meg Hourihan
Jason Kottke
The Dorothy Parker Society
The Magazineer
Robert W. Gordon, a.k.a. Emily’s dad
Design for lovin’, art with class
A Brief Message
Winterhouse Studio [Jessica Helfand and William Drenttel]
Debbie Millman
Toon Books and Françoise Mouly
Flog! The Fantagraphics Blog
Nick Abadzis [image and sketch blog]
Pogo
Ray Fenwick
An Atlas of Radical Cartography
Funnel Incorporated [Lori Wilson & Lin Wilson]
Art Fag City [Paddy Johnson]
Chris Payne Photography
Emily Flake
Jasmin Chua
American Chickens [Lisa Brown]
Patricia Storms
El Rey Del Art [James Barnett]
Egon
Today’s Inspiration
Various New Yorker artists with websites
Bookish brilliance and overall write-eousness
The Queen’s Gambit, by Walter Tevis [a perfect novel]
The Clumsiest People in Europe, by Todd Pruzan and Mrs. Favell Lee Mortimer
OR Books, publishers of Going Rouge: Sarah Palin–An American Nightmare, edited by Richard Kim and Betsy Reed
Frankie Manning: Ambassador of Lindy Hop, by Frankie Manning and Cynthia Millman
Katha Pollitt
The National Book Critics Circle
How to Be Useful [Megan Hustad]
The Abbeville Manual of Style [an incredibly helpful helper]
The New Haven Review
Titlepage: passionate conversations about books
Betsy Lerner
Watershed [Morgan Noel]
Elizabeth Crane
The Abbeville Manual of Style
Unpleasant Event Schedule [Daniel Nester]
Jonathan Taylor
Matthew Thorburn
Lilit in Stereo and Save the Assistants [Lilit Marcus]
Josh Wolk
Maud Newton
Olivia Birdsall
Nicole Hefner
Shiva’s Tears
Marcy Dermansky
MetaxuCafé
The Millions (A Blog About Books) [C. Max Magee]
Daniel Radosh
Global Worming [Jeremy Lehrer]
Michael Broder
Today in Letters
Normblog [Norman Geras]
Painted Bride Quarterly [how to submit]
Surfette [Lisa Stone]
BlogHer
Oxford University Press blog
Eric Umansky
Jeffrey MacIntyre
Writing Degree Zero
About Last Night [Terry Teachout]
Young Manhattanite [Andrew Krucoff]
The Old Hag [Lizzie Skurnick]
BookLust [Patricia Storms]
Beatrice [Ron Hogan]
Ryan Sloan
n+1 magazine
Stephen McCauley
Francesca Segrè
Children’s-book writer Amy Gordon [and Emily’s aunt]
Nicole Hefner
Steamboats Are Ruining Everything [Caleb Crain]
Sophie Pollitt-Cohen
Starnosedmole [Maureen Thorson]
And I Am Not Lying [Jeff Simmermon]
Dorothy Surrenders [Dorothy Snarker]
The Wisdom of the Illiterati
Various New Yorker writers with websites
Comedy prevents unprovoked shin-kicking of strangers
WTF with Marc Maron [new favorite]
Comedy 365 [Georgina Sowerby & Brian Luff]
Wendy Spero
You Look Nice Today: A Journey of Emotional Hygiene
The Morning News
Simulacrum [Chris Skinner]
Drink at Work [Francesco Marciuliano]
Minor Tweaks [Thomas Bartlett]
Variety Shac [Shonali Bhowmik, Heather Lawless, Andrea Rosen, & Chelsea Peretti]
Go Fug Yourself
Lance Baker [Chicago actor extraordinaire]
Music is everything
Gloria Deluxe [Cynthia Hopkins]
The Ironic Mullet [Lee Ann Westover]
The Lascivious Biddies
The M Shanghai String Band
The Dizzies
Oni Buchanan
All the Young Mod Soldiers
Untouched By Work or Duty [Marlow Riley]
Complicated Fun [Peter Scholtes]
Solomon Douglas [Jazz pianist, bandleader, swing-dance teacher]
Movies are also everything
Jürgen Fauth’s Muckworld
GreenCine
No More Marriages!
Kabluey [a wonderfully funny movie by Scott Prendergast; get it on DVD!]
Lindy hop is the ticket to joy
Yehoodi [lindy hop community and news]
The Yehoodi Talk Show
Frankie Manning
The Click Heard Round the World [Rik Panganiban]
Politics make the world go ’round
The Center for American Progress [home of Kate Gordon, sister extraordinaire]
The Apollo Alliance
Laura Dickinson [Faculty Director, Center for Transnational Public-Private Governance at the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law at Arizona State University, and Emily’s brilliant stepsister]
The Center on Wisconsin Strategy
Liza Featherstone
Fighting Bob
Women for Afghan Women
Sabrina Tavernise
The Public Works Project
Left Business Observer [Doug Henwood]
Various necessities
Camaje [Abby Hitchcock’s delicious bistro on MacDougal St.]; Abigail is her new and beautiful restaurant in Prospect Heights
Seascape Soapworks [foamy soap made by Emily’s best friend’s mother and her partner; they take PayPal!]
Brainiads
The Morning News
Irene Montgomery
Alex Montgomery
Strange Maps
The Culture Archive
The Harringay Arms
NYC Blocks
Gingerpop
Fralinger’s [salt water taffy, almond macaroons, Atlantic City]
The Toast-O-Lator
∗ Emily is (or has been) a member, editor, contributor, or crepe consumer
Acknowledgments. These stalwart Emdashes supporters deserve a lifetime supply of Nutella (at least): Katha Pollitt, Jennifer Hadley, Robert Gordon, and the prodigiously talented PK & Su and Jesse Ewing. I’m grateful to cheerpeople Jasmin Chua, Ashby Jones, Liz Galst, Lisa Stone, Jay Rosen, Hillery Stone, T.M.D.V., Amy Hosig, the late and irreplaceable M.K., Hugo, Todd Pruzan, Jeremy Lehrer, Patricia Storms, Darren Johnson, Elizabeth Riley, Kevin Fitzpatrick at The Dorothy Parker Society, Scott McLemee, Morgan Noel, Andrew Hearst, David Perrotta, Peter Terzian, Laurie Muchnick, Eric Umansky, my family, Heather Stewart, and Caitlin and Liza Featherstone, who were enthusiastic from the start in 2004. Ron Hogan has been a godsend. Print veterans Kristina DiMatteo, Caitlin Dover, and Lindsay Ballant made invaluable suggestions during the redesign, and Marlow Riley was a true constable of last-minute aid. Carolita Johnson is the dearest friend ever found through starting an often inexplicable project. And, of course, thanks to everyone at and of The New Yorker–present, past, and future–for the best magazine I know.
–Emily Gordon