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Plot Twists – The New York Times

May 10, 2025
in News
Reading Time: 6 mins read
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Live Updates: Trump Announces Truce Between India and Pakistan

Powell may have a hard time avoiding Trump’s ‘Too Late’ label even as Fed chief does the right thing

I’d just finished and loved Miranda July’s novel “All Fours” last year when my colleague Marie Solis wrote a profile of July with the headline, “She Wrote the First Great Perimenopause Novel.” This was the first time I’d heard the book mentioned in these superlative terms. “All Fours” is about a woman in her 40s who sets off on a road trip from California to New York but gets waylaid a few miles from home, rents a motel room and stays there for three weeks, during which time she reconsiders all the received ideas she’s internalized about being a wife, mother, woman, artist. I’d read the book the way I consume most of July’s work — quickly, excitedly, marveling at how her brain works, how she’s able to take seemingly ineffable experiences and make them explicit.

“All Fours” spoke to me, but it didn’t dawn on me until I read Marie’s article that this was going to be such an important book to so many people. Soon, everyone I knew was reading it. It became “the talk of every group text — at least every group text composed of women over 40,” The Times said. The Book Review named it one of its 10 best books of the year.

And the conversation has continued. July has since started a Substack. There’s a mini-series coming. Surely even more people will be reading and chatting about the book when it comes out in paperback on Wednesday. A couple of weeks ago, July was a guest on the Modern Love podcast. She reflected on the success of the book, how it was no accident that it became as big as it has. She deliberately set out to write a book that would “change our conception of older women and their sexuality and just their lived lives and what goes on in their heads.”

I was struck by one portion of the interview in which she mentions that, when she was working on “All Fours,” she and her friend Isabel would “meet once a week and eat and talk about the idea that we were always changing.” This set my mind racing: I meet up regularly with friends, but we seldom have an agenda beyond catching up. How exciting and productive to have a regular meetup with a theme!

July and Isabel specifically focused their get-togethers on the biological changes they were experiencing during perimenopause — “that we were actually pretty different at different times of the month and that we were kind of putting on an act of sameness” — but if that isn’t applicable to your own circumstances, you could just talk about how you’ve changed generally, your outlook or your routines or your tastes. Imagine inviting a friend to coffee and telling them you’d like to focus the date on how you’re “always changing.” It’s weird, but it would direct your conversation in a way that might be interesting. Who knows what you might discover?

This is what I love about July’s work: She seems to see the world as a canvas for creativity, her life as a space of possibility where just because things have always been done a certain way doesn’t mean they have to continue along those lines. In the 1990s, she created a videotape chain letter of movies made by girls and women. In 2014, she created an app that allowed you to enlist a stranger in delivering an in-person message to a friend. And I was recently thrilled to find that one of my favorite pieces of July’s audio fiction, “School of Romance,” from the late, great WNYC radio show “The Next Big Thing,” is available on SoundCloud. It’s gorgeous, delightful, heartbreaking, and, like “All Fours” and her other fiction and films, it makes me want to live my life a little more creatively. Like all good art, it makes me want to question things.

THE LATEST NEWS

India-Pakistan Conflict

CULTURE CALENDAR

Plot Twists – The New York Times

🎮 Doom: The Dark Ages (Thursday): The 1993 computer game Doom dropped players onto a Martian moon with just two objectives: Run fast and blast demons. It was wildly inventive, with graphics and gameplay that moved the medium forward. It was also, for its time, wildly violent; Germany restricted sales of the game for nearly two decades. The moral panic around video games has since subsided, and this new Doom is unlikely to cause much of a stir, even though its monster guts are far more detailed. But players who loved the original will be happy to find that, 32 years later, the objectives remain the same: Run fast. Blast demons.

The Hunt: After years overseas, a couple came home for a quiet life in upstate New York with an $800,000 budget. Which home did they choose? Play our game.

What you get for $625,000: A 1930 American Foursquare house in Newburgh, N.Y.; an 1810 house in Sandwich, Mass.; or a 1908 Craftsman bungalow in Portland, Ore.

LIVING

A big green sofa and real plants: See inside Antoni Porowski’s Manhattan apartment.

Travel: Spend 36 hours in Santa Fe.

Touch grass and show vulnerability: This week the Well desk hosted the Well Festival, which brought together doctors, relationship experts, athletes, authors and celebrities to talk about maximizing happiness. Read takeaways here.

ADVICE FROM WIRECUTTER

Sleeves that keep the sun at bay

I’ve found that 15 minutes between meetings is plenty of time to pull out a few weeds (especially with my beloved stirrup hoe). It’s also plenty of time for me to get a sunburn. I rarely want to slather myself in sunscreen for these spontaneous outings. Enter: sun-protective gardening sleeves. These $20-ish sleeves not only prevent sunburn, but also offer scratch protection from the usual garden irritants. And the lightweight fabric is so pleasant to wear, I’ve even considered sporting them outside the garden, to baseball games or fishing. Best of all, I can easily slip them off when I return from the garden. I reassume my position at my desk with no evidence of my midday garden rendezvous. — Sebastian Compagnucci

GAME OF THE WEEK

Boston Celtics vs. New York Knicks, N.B.A. playoffs: Knicks fans were surprised when their team overcame a 20-point deficit in Game 1 to beat the Celtics in Boston. There may not be an adjective strong enough to describe their shock — and their glee — when the team did the very same thing in Game 2. Can Boston figure out its 3-point shooting woes and get back into the series? Or have the Knicks figured out the formula to shut down the defending champs? Today at 3:30 p.m. Eastern on ABC

NOW TIME TO PLAY

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