Objects of Desire: Tiffany & Co.’s Hardware Holiday Document’s definitive guide to the season’s most covetable accessories featuring HardWear by Tiffany & Co.
Culture The Last Dinner Party rewrites the rules of pop To celebrate their fashion portfolio featuring Alexander McQueen in Document’s Fall/Winter 2024–25 issue, the British band discusses their decadent imagination
Literature Fine Print: Thirty-three top reads of 2024 Messy! Nasty! Silly! Columnist Drew Zeiba revisits the past year in books
Art At ‘Montez Got Talent,’ karaoke is a competitive sport The Lower Manhattan-based organization’s sixth annual tournament featured an aural battle royale of performance-art all stars
Above the Fold Fine Print: Thirty-three top reads of 2024 Messy! Nasty! Silly! Columnist Drew Zeiba revisits the past year in books by Drew Zeiba Above the Fold Fine Print: You’re a winner, baby On the heels of the National Book Awards announcements, columnist Drew Zeiba asks what prizes mean for publishing by Drew Zeiba Above the Fold Desiring literature with Nate Lippens and Kate Zambreno Following Semiotext(e)‘s release of Lippens’s ‘Ripcord’ and ‘My Dead Book,’ the authors trace consciousnesses of queerness and class through both novels and friendships by Kate Zambreno Above the Fold Fine Print: Did Michel Houellebecq steal Thomas Bernhard’s coat? In his monthly column, Drew Zeiba hunts for clues in the controversial French author’s latest novel, ‘Annihilation’ by Drew Zeiba At Large Shapeshifting press Semiotext(e)’s five decades of politics and poetics For Document’s Fall/Winter 2024–25 issue, Whitney Mallett talks to co-editors, writers, and collaborators of the legendary publisher of theory and fiction by Whitney Mallett Above the Fold August Thompson’s ‘Anyone’s Ghost’ thrums with tenderness and tension The writer’s debut novel interrogates grief and masculinity through a gut-wrenching tale of an all-consuming love by Regina Rosenfeld Above the Fold Fine Print: ‘The weirder and freakier the better’ Columnist Drew Zeiba sits down with ‘Language Arts’ co-editors Layla Halabian and Sophia June to talk about books, bags, and branding by Drew Zeiba Above the Fold Jonathan Lethem’s ‘Cellophane Bricks’ collides art writing with narrative imagination The novelist joins Document to discuss his new collection of prose on the work of Nan Goldin, Rachel Harrison, and several others by Karim Kazemi Above the Fold Sophie Kemp’s reading list for electric and hilarious prose These six unrelenting and effervescent titles inspired the writer as she worked on her debut novel ‘Paradise Logic’ by Zoey Greenwald Above the Fold Roving literary event Casual Encounterz prioritizes the pen over the persona Following stints in Mexico City and LA, writer Sammy Loren brings his reading series to NYC to highlight a mix of fiction heavy hitters and... by Zoey Greenwald Above the Fold Is a socialite just a scammer who succeeded? In an interview with Harron Walker, the author Shola von Reinhold discusses the fabulosity of fabulation and whether some stories should be allowed to disappear by Harron Walker Above the Fold Fine Print: Poetry by any means necessary For his monthly column, Drew Zeiba traverses New York City in search of performances beyond the page by Drew Zeiba Above the Fold Even undead, Joan Didion won’t back down In this AI-facilitated conversation, ‘Mean Boys’ author Geoffrey Mak talks to the late essayist about addiction, critical audacity, and American literature’s CIA roots by Geoffrey Mak Above the Fold Stacy Skolnik’s genre-bending ‘The Ginny Suite’ is an experiment in post-pandemic poetics The writer discusses her dissociative debut novel’s speculative journey through sex, sickness, and literary form by Drew Zeiba Above the Fold Fine Print: In the labyrinth of the no In his monthly column, Drew Zeiba considers the creative merits of giving up through tales of defiant scriveners, starving artists, and painters fluent in refusal by Drew Zeiba Above the Fold Taking care with the weird, wild, and political literatures of Hard to Read In memoriam of storyteller Cecilia Gentili, the co-organizers reflect on their winter conversations program which united writers and activists to discuss our political moment by Hard to Read Above the Fold ‘Like Love’ guides readers through years of Maggie Nelson’s thoughtful work The autotheorist’s latest book is a best-of collection of essays equal parts academic and personal by Will Allstetter Above the Fold Fine Print: Like letting the world read your diary Columnist Drew Zeiba considers the risks of leaving a record through the journals of Sheila Heti, Virginia Woolf, and Tina Brown by Drew Zeiba Above the Fold In Jennifer Croft’s ‘The Extinction of Irena Rey,’ literature is alive—even dangerous Set in a Polish forest, the award-winning translator’s first novel embarks on a rewilding of language, narrative, and art itself by Drew Zeiba Above the Fold ‘No Judgment’ with Lauren Oyler The writer’s newest collection of essays reminds us that cultural critics are people too by Madeleine Connors Above the Fold Fine Print: A Tale of One City For his monthly column, Drew Zeiba spends 24 hours partying in Manhattan’s alternate literary realities by Drew Zeiba Above the Fold Fine Print: Can two writers handle real life together? For his first monthly column, Drew Zeiba asks if art is worth it by Drew Zeiba Above the Fold Kaur Alia Ahmed crafts poetry in three dimensions with ‘sky, harp’ The New York–based artist and writer merges sound, sculpture, and sport in their debut solo show by Drew Zeiba Above the Fold Ottessa Moshfegh writes not what we asked for, but what we need Excavating the dark side of human nature, the author invites readers to find divinity in depravity by Camille Sojit Pejcha Above the Fold 50 years at church with the Poetry Project Whitney Mallett reports on the East Village institution’s 12-hour marathon variety show of unhinged spoken word, absurdist musical sets, and unsettling dance numbers by Whitney Mallett Above the Fold Lauren Elkin’s ‘Art Monsters’ thrives in the messy The author’s latest book profiles the great and grimy women of the last century by Olivia Treynor Above the Fold Eli Payne Mandel’s infinite levity in ‘The Grid’ In his first book, the psychoanalyst-in-training reimagines history’s many apocalypses through lost languages, letters from exile, and dead painters by Maya Kotomori Conversations Ishmael Reed and Boots Riley on the art of cultural agitation The novelist and the filmmaker talk Oakland, Basquiat, hip-hop, and propaganda for Document’s Fall/Winter 2023 issue by Jordan Coley Above the Fold Natasha Stagg’s ‘Artless’ is the fringes of fandom The book tunnels down the bottomless pit of celebrity, exploring how self-commodification diminishes star power by making stars of us all by Yasmeen Khan Above the Fold The pen, the sword, and liberation An introduction to Palestinian resistance poetry—a medium for the reclamation of a people’s history by Maya AlZaben Above the Fold Cookie Mueller’s genius takes center stage at the Roxy ‘For People with Short Attention Spans’ drew a crowd of Downtown luminaries, celebrating the singular voice of the late-great raconteur by Jayne O'Dwyer Above the Fold ‘The Future Future’ is obsessed with words and their failures Novelist Adam Thirwell joins Document to explain why 18th-century print culture and 21st-century social media discourse aren’t so different by Olivia Treynor Conversations In the confessional with Jodie Foster and David Sedaris Surveying dialects, dogs, death, and dating, the actor and writer meet for the first time for Document’s Fall/Winter 2023 issue by Megan Hullander Above the Fold Inside the Neo-Decadent movement How a cohort of international writers opposed the status quo, pulling from the endless subjectivity of culture to produce some of the century’s best literature by Ben Dreith Above the Fold ‘New Millennium Boyz’ is most profound at its most profane Following the book’s release, Alex Kazemi joined Document to reflect on its mixed reception and consider the tragedies of teen boyhood by Megan Hullander Above the Fold The next wave of indie publishing The founders of 5 independent publications join Document to discuss the past, present, and future of the little magazine by Camille Sojit Pejcha Above the Fold Daytripping: Publication day In her biweekly column for Document, McKenzie Wark ponders the problem of art in the age of content by McKenzie Wark Above the Fold Greer Lankton’s sketchbook diagrams the construction of a self Primary Information’s latest release immortalizes a month in the trailblazing artist’s life—an addendum to her legacy that leaps off the page by Journey Streams Above the Fold Ben Fama’s ‘If I Close My Eyes’ pits two survivors against the world The novel traces the aftermath of a mass shooting at a Kim Kardashian book signing, blending absurd structures with emotional authenticity by Brittany Menjivar Above the Fold Desired Scenes: Claudia Dey cuts to the core of ‘Daughter’ The author speaks on her latest novel, centering the pleasures, pains, and universalities of the family drama by Emma Cohen Above the Fold Genesis according to Lauren Groff Upon the release of ‘The Vaster Wilds,’ the author talks archival interventions, iambic pentameter, and historical fiction’s bad reputation by Olivia Treynor Above the Fold The superstructure behind Yiyun Li’s fiction In elegiac, lyrical, wry, snarky, and wonderfully plain-spoken prose, the author crafts characters through conversational pairs by Thomas Wee Above the Fold Claire A. Nivola’s ‘The House in the Country’ reckons with the past, and leaves it behind Between mulberry picking and rubbing shoulders with the art-world elite, the book finds universality within an extraordinary childhood by Yasmeen Khan Above the Fold Excavating the missing girl—or, at least, the idea of her ‘Brutes’ and ‘All-Night Pharmacy’ destroy the canonical bad girl, allowing for pure(r) heroines to emerge by Olivia Treynor Above the Fold Motherhood at the end of the world In ‘The Quickening,’ Elizabeth Rush contemplates parenting and procreation amid Antarctica’s rapidly vanishing ice sheets by Alex Hodor-Lee Above the Fold Sophia Giovannitti on sex, art, and labor Working across mediums, the author of ‘Working Girl’ grapples with the contradictions of life under capitalism—complicating notions of consent in a totalizing system by Camille Sojit Pejcha Above the Fold Edan Lepucki’s ‘Time’s Mouth’ is a supernatural labyrinth of past and present The author and LA native speaks on her latest novel, wrestling with California-specific ideals of place, tempo, and doctrine by Diana Ruzova Above the Fold For Donatien Grau, all roads lead to LA California’s cultural capital is the muse behind ‘De Civitate Angelorum,’ the curator’s new book composed entirely in Latin by Morgan Becker Above the Fold Maya Binyam’s ‘Hangman’ is an existential journey The writer’s debut novel traverses an unnamed African nation, exploring the symptoms of diaspora in terms of mourning, identity, and truth by Vivien Lee Above the Fold Instructions for living from Inès Longevial’s bookshelf From Colette to Camus, the French painter shares her favorite reads for finding inspiration in the quotidian by Olivia Treynor
Above the Fold Fine Print: Thirty-three top reads of 2024 Messy! Nasty! Silly! Columnist Drew Zeiba revisits the past year in books by Drew Zeiba
Above the Fold Fine Print: You’re a winner, baby On the heels of the National Book Awards announcements, columnist Drew Zeiba asks what prizes mean for publishing by Drew Zeiba
Above the Fold Desiring literature with Nate Lippens and Kate Zambreno Following Semiotext(e)‘s release of Lippens’s ‘Ripcord’ and ‘My Dead Book,’ the authors trace consciousnesses of queerness and class through both novels and friendships by Kate Zambreno
Above the Fold Fine Print: Did Michel Houellebecq steal Thomas Bernhard’s coat? In his monthly column, Drew Zeiba hunts for clues in the controversial French author’s latest novel, ‘Annihilation’ by Drew Zeiba
At Large Shapeshifting press Semiotext(e)’s five decades of politics and poetics For Document’s Fall/Winter 2024–25 issue, Whitney Mallett talks to co-editors, writers, and collaborators of the legendary publisher of theory and fiction by Whitney Mallett
Above the Fold August Thompson’s ‘Anyone’s Ghost’ thrums with tenderness and tension The writer’s debut novel interrogates grief and masculinity through a gut-wrenching tale of an all-consuming love by Regina Rosenfeld
Above the Fold Fine Print: ‘The weirder and freakier the better’ Columnist Drew Zeiba sits down with ‘Language Arts’ co-editors Layla Halabian and Sophia June to talk about books, bags, and branding by Drew Zeiba
Above the Fold Jonathan Lethem’s ‘Cellophane Bricks’ collides art writing with narrative imagination The novelist joins Document to discuss his new collection of prose on the work of Nan Goldin, Rachel Harrison, and several others by Karim Kazemi
Above the Fold Sophie Kemp’s reading list for electric and hilarious prose These six unrelenting and effervescent titles inspired the writer as she worked on her debut novel ‘Paradise Logic’ by Zoey Greenwald
Above the Fold Roving literary event Casual Encounterz prioritizes the pen over the persona Following stints in Mexico City and LA, writer Sammy Loren brings his reading series to NYC to highlight a mix of fiction heavy hitters and... by Zoey Greenwald
Above the Fold Is a socialite just a scammer who succeeded? In an interview with Harron Walker, the author Shola von Reinhold discusses the fabulosity of fabulation and whether some stories should be allowed to disappear by Harron Walker
Above the Fold Fine Print: Poetry by any means necessary For his monthly column, Drew Zeiba traverses New York City in search of performances beyond the page by Drew Zeiba
Above the Fold Even undead, Joan Didion won’t back down In this AI-facilitated conversation, ‘Mean Boys’ author Geoffrey Mak talks to the late essayist about addiction, critical audacity, and American literature’s CIA roots by Geoffrey Mak
Above the Fold Stacy Skolnik’s genre-bending ‘The Ginny Suite’ is an experiment in post-pandemic poetics The writer discusses her dissociative debut novel’s speculative journey through sex, sickness, and literary form by Drew Zeiba
Above the Fold Fine Print: In the labyrinth of the no In his monthly column, Drew Zeiba considers the creative merits of giving up through tales of defiant scriveners, starving artists, and painters fluent in refusal by Drew Zeiba
Above the Fold Taking care with the weird, wild, and political literatures of Hard to Read In memoriam of storyteller Cecilia Gentili, the co-organizers reflect on their winter conversations program which united writers and activists to discuss our political moment by Hard to Read
Above the Fold ‘Like Love’ guides readers through years of Maggie Nelson’s thoughtful work The autotheorist’s latest book is a best-of collection of essays equal parts academic and personal by Will Allstetter
Above the Fold Fine Print: Like letting the world read your diary Columnist Drew Zeiba considers the risks of leaving a record through the journals of Sheila Heti, Virginia Woolf, and Tina Brown by Drew Zeiba
Above the Fold In Jennifer Croft’s ‘The Extinction of Irena Rey,’ literature is alive—even dangerous Set in a Polish forest, the award-winning translator’s first novel embarks on a rewilding of language, narrative, and art itself by Drew Zeiba
Above the Fold ‘No Judgment’ with Lauren Oyler The writer’s newest collection of essays reminds us that cultural critics are people too by Madeleine Connors
Above the Fold Fine Print: A Tale of One City For his monthly column, Drew Zeiba spends 24 hours partying in Manhattan’s alternate literary realities by Drew Zeiba
Above the Fold Fine Print: Can two writers handle real life together? For his first monthly column, Drew Zeiba asks if art is worth it by Drew Zeiba
Above the Fold Kaur Alia Ahmed crafts poetry in three dimensions with ‘sky, harp’ The New York–based artist and writer merges sound, sculpture, and sport in their debut solo show by Drew Zeiba
Above the Fold Ottessa Moshfegh writes not what we asked for, but what we need Excavating the dark side of human nature, the author invites readers to find divinity in depravity by Camille Sojit Pejcha
Above the Fold 50 years at church with the Poetry Project Whitney Mallett reports on the East Village institution’s 12-hour marathon variety show of unhinged spoken word, absurdist musical sets, and unsettling dance numbers by Whitney Mallett
Above the Fold Lauren Elkin’s ‘Art Monsters’ thrives in the messy The author’s latest book profiles the great and grimy women of the last century by Olivia Treynor
Above the Fold Eli Payne Mandel’s infinite levity in ‘The Grid’ In his first book, the psychoanalyst-in-training reimagines history’s many apocalypses through lost languages, letters from exile, and dead painters by Maya Kotomori
Conversations Ishmael Reed and Boots Riley on the art of cultural agitation The novelist and the filmmaker talk Oakland, Basquiat, hip-hop, and propaganda for Document’s Fall/Winter 2023 issue by Jordan Coley
Above the Fold Natasha Stagg’s ‘Artless’ is the fringes of fandom The book tunnels down the bottomless pit of celebrity, exploring how self-commodification diminishes star power by making stars of us all by Yasmeen Khan
Above the Fold The pen, the sword, and liberation An introduction to Palestinian resistance poetry—a medium for the reclamation of a people’s history by Maya AlZaben
Above the Fold Cookie Mueller’s genius takes center stage at the Roxy ‘For People with Short Attention Spans’ drew a crowd of Downtown luminaries, celebrating the singular voice of the late-great raconteur by Jayne O'Dwyer
Above the Fold ‘The Future Future’ is obsessed with words and their failures Novelist Adam Thirwell joins Document to explain why 18th-century print culture and 21st-century social media discourse aren’t so different by Olivia Treynor
Conversations In the confessional with Jodie Foster and David Sedaris Surveying dialects, dogs, death, and dating, the actor and writer meet for the first time for Document’s Fall/Winter 2023 issue by Megan Hullander
Above the Fold Inside the Neo-Decadent movement How a cohort of international writers opposed the status quo, pulling from the endless subjectivity of culture to produce some of the century’s best literature by Ben Dreith
Above the Fold ‘New Millennium Boyz’ is most profound at its most profane Following the book’s release, Alex Kazemi joined Document to reflect on its mixed reception and consider the tragedies of teen boyhood by Megan Hullander
Above the Fold The next wave of indie publishing The founders of 5 independent publications join Document to discuss the past, present, and future of the little magazine by Camille Sojit Pejcha
Above the Fold Daytripping: Publication day In her biweekly column for Document, McKenzie Wark ponders the problem of art in the age of content by McKenzie Wark
Above the Fold Greer Lankton’s sketchbook diagrams the construction of a self Primary Information’s latest release immortalizes a month in the trailblazing artist’s life—an addendum to her legacy that leaps off the page by Journey Streams
Above the Fold Ben Fama’s ‘If I Close My Eyes’ pits two survivors against the world The novel traces the aftermath of a mass shooting at a Kim Kardashian book signing, blending absurd structures with emotional authenticity by Brittany Menjivar
Above the Fold Desired Scenes: Claudia Dey cuts to the core of ‘Daughter’ The author speaks on her latest novel, centering the pleasures, pains, and universalities of the family drama by Emma Cohen
Above the Fold Genesis according to Lauren Groff Upon the release of ‘The Vaster Wilds,’ the author talks archival interventions, iambic pentameter, and historical fiction’s bad reputation by Olivia Treynor
Above the Fold The superstructure behind Yiyun Li’s fiction In elegiac, lyrical, wry, snarky, and wonderfully plain-spoken prose, the author crafts characters through conversational pairs by Thomas Wee
Above the Fold Claire A. Nivola’s ‘The House in the Country’ reckons with the past, and leaves it behind Between mulberry picking and rubbing shoulders with the art-world elite, the book finds universality within an extraordinary childhood by Yasmeen Khan
Above the Fold Excavating the missing girl—or, at least, the idea of her ‘Brutes’ and ‘All-Night Pharmacy’ destroy the canonical bad girl, allowing for pure(r) heroines to emerge by Olivia Treynor
Above the Fold Motherhood at the end of the world In ‘The Quickening,’ Elizabeth Rush contemplates parenting and procreation amid Antarctica’s rapidly vanishing ice sheets by Alex Hodor-Lee
Above the Fold Sophia Giovannitti on sex, art, and labor Working across mediums, the author of ‘Working Girl’ grapples with the contradictions of life under capitalism—complicating notions of consent in a totalizing system by Camille Sojit Pejcha
Above the Fold Edan Lepucki’s ‘Time’s Mouth’ is a supernatural labyrinth of past and present The author and LA native speaks on her latest novel, wrestling with California-specific ideals of place, tempo, and doctrine by Diana Ruzova
Above the Fold For Donatien Grau, all roads lead to LA California’s cultural capital is the muse behind ‘De Civitate Angelorum,’ the curator’s new book composed entirely in Latin by Morgan Becker
Above the Fold Maya Binyam’s ‘Hangman’ is an existential journey The writer’s debut novel traverses an unnamed African nation, exploring the symptoms of diaspora in terms of mourning, identity, and truth by Vivien Lee
Above the Fold Instructions for living from Inès Longevial’s bookshelf From Colette to Camus, the French painter shares her favorite reads for finding inspiration in the quotidian by Olivia Treynor