Welcome to Today in Books, our daily round-up of literary headlines at the intersection of politics, culture, media, and more. I Saw The Best Minds of My Generation Code Increasingly Derivative Casual Word GamesIt probably is not the case that casual, complete-with-coffee digital brainteasers are not the internet equivalent of classified ads in newspapers: a low-cost, high-engagement substrate on which basically whole enterprises ride. Probably. Also: I will definitely invest far too much of my self-esteem via imagined appreciation of my prowess with this.
The Best True Crimes Books of 2025I browsed this list hoping for something bloodless to pick up on audio (thefts, cons, forgeries, corporate grifting that sort of thing), but alas: bodies, bodies everywhere. Still, several here that I would read were I a fundamentally different person. Pictures of Paddington: The Musical Can Save UsI didn’t think I could ever be more charmed by Paddington than in the truly excellent Paddington 2. But I clearly am a man of closed imagination. Because it never occurred to me that modern animatronics combined with live action performers could ever make something this purely and powerfully adorable. (Note to AI/robot hypesters: do not make your vaporware humanoids look like crash test dummies from the year 2500. Make them look like shambling, well-mannered animals. We will fall for it). n+1’s Bookmatch is Back
For the last five years, N+1 has run a genuinely inspired holiday fundraising drive. Donate any amount, fill out your preferences, and you will get a curated selection of book recommendations (supplied by serious readers I might add). There are way worse ways to blow a few dollars and if you care about good writing and quality internet, few better. The Perfect TragedyIn this latest episode of Zero to Well-Read, we tackle Sophocles’s Oedipus the King, which none other than Aristotle called the perfect tragedy. Spoiler: there is a reason for that. Join us as we talk about the play’s history, what it’s like to read it now, and the questions it asks that make it shockingly alive.
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