From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A list of the published work of
Adam Gopnik , American writer and editor.
Books
Gopnik, Adam (1980). Voila Carême . Drawings by Jack Huberman. New York: St. Martin's Press.
Varnedoe, Kirk & Adam Gopnik, eds. (1990). Modern art and popular culture : readings in high & low . New York: Abrams in association with the Museum of Modern Art.
Gopnik, Adam (2000). Paris to the Moon . New York: Random House.
—, ed. (2004). Americans in Paris : a literary anthology . New York: Library of America.
— (2005). The king in the window . New York: Hyperion Books For Children.
— (2006). Through the children's gate : a home in New York . New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
— (2009). Angels and ages : a short book about Darwin, Lincoln, and modern life . New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
— (2010). The steps across the water . Illustrated by Bruce McCall. New York: Disney/Hyperion Books.
— (2011). Winter : five windows on the season . Berkeley, CA: House of Anansi Press.
— (2011). The table comes first : family, France, and the meaning of food . New York: Knopf.
ISBN
9780307593450 .
— (2017). At the strangers' gate . London:
Quercus .
ISBN
978-1786489197 .
— (2019).
A thousand small sanities : the moral adventure of liberalism . Basic Books.
ISBN
978-1541699366 .
— (2019). All alike . Thornwillow Press.
— (2023). The real work : on the mystery of mastery . New York: Liveright.
Essays, reporting and other contributions
2005–2009
Heiferman, Marvin, ed. (2005). City art : New York's Percent for Art Program . Essay by Eleanor Heartney; introduction by Adam Gopnik; preface by Michael R. Bloomberg; featured photography by David S. Allee. New York: Merrell.
ISBN
185894290X .
Varnedoe, Kirk (2006). Pictures of nothing : abstract art since Pollock . Preface by Adam Gopnik. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Gopnik, Adam (February 12, 2007). "Whitney Balliett". The Talk of the Town. Postscript. The New Yorker . 82 (49): 31.
— (December 8, 2008).
"Man of fetters : Dr. Johnson and Mrs. Thrale" . The Critics. A Critic at Large. The New Yorker . 84 (40): 90–96.
— (September 28, 2009).
"Read all about it" . The Talk of the Town. Comment. The New Yorker . 85 (30): 21–22.
2010–2014
Gopnik, Adam (March 15, 2010).
"Plant TV" . The Talk of the Town. Bright Ideas. The New Yorker . 86 (4): 23–24.
— (April 5, 2010).
"No Rules! Is Le Fooding, the French Culinary Movement, More Than a Feeling?" . The New Yorker . 86 (7): 36–41.
— (May 24, 2010).
"What Did Jesus Do? Reading and Unreading the Gospels" . A Critic at Large. The New Yorker . 86 (14): 72–77.
Zweig, Stefan (2011). Departures : Memoirs . Foreword by Adam Gopnik; introduction by Morris Dickstein. New York: Other Press.
Gopnik, Adam (February 14, 2011).
"The information : how the internet gets inside us" . The New Yorker . 87 (1): 124–130.
— (April 4, 2011).
"Get smart" . The Critics. Books. The New Yorker . 87 (7): 70–74.
Stevens, Norma & Yolanda Cuomo, eds. (2012). New York at night : photography after dark . Texts by Norma Stevens, Pete Hamill, Adam Gopnik, Vince Aletti, Patricia Marx. New York: Powerhouse Books.
ISBN
9781576876169 .
Gopnik, Adam (January 16, 2012).
"Enquiring minds : the Spanish Inquisition revisited" . The Critics. A Critic at Large. The New Yorker . 87 (44): 70–75.
— (January 30, 2012).
"The caging of America" . The New Yorker . 87 (46): 72–77.
— (November 26, 2012).
"Military secrets" . The Talk of the Town. Comment. The New Yorker . 88 (37): 19–20.
[1]
— (January 28, 2013).
"Music to your ears : the quest for 3-D recording and other mysteries of sound" . Onward and Upward with the Arts. The New Yorker . 88 (45): 32–39.
— (February 11–18, 2013).
"Moon man" . The Critics. A Critic at Large. The New Yorker . 89 (1): 103–109. Retrieved June 18, 2014 .
[2]
— (March 18, 2013).
"Happy birthday" . The Talk of the Town. Comment. The New Yorker . 89 (5): 21–22.
— (April 1, 2013).
"Sauced" . Talk of the Town. Master Class. The New Yorker . 89 (7): 23–24.
— (April 8, 2013).
"Andre, again" . Goings on About Town. The Pictures. The New Yorker . 89 (8): 27.
— (April 22, 2013).
"Yellow fever : a hundred and twenty-five years of National Geographic" . The Critics. A Critic at Large. The New Yorker . 89 (10): 102–108.
— (June 10–17, 2013).
"In the back cabana: the rise and rise of Florida crime fiction" . The Critics. A Critic at Large. The New Yorker . 89 (17): 104–107.
— (November 4, 2013).
"Bread and women : two muses, one loaf" . Personal History. The New Yorker . 89 (35): 66–70.
— (November 4, 2013).
"Closer than that : the assassination of J.F.K., fifty years later" . The Critics. A Critic at Large. The New Yorker . 89 (35): 100–107.
— (December 23–30, 2013).
"Two bands" . The Critics. A Critic at Large. The New Yorker . 89 (42): 121–127.
— (January 6, 2014).
"Two ships" . The Talk of the Town. Comment. The New Yorker . 89 (43): 17–18.
— (April 21, 2014).
"Go giants : a new survey of the Great American Novel" . The Critics. Books. The New Yorker . 90 (9): 102–104.
[3]
— (May 12, 2014).
"Team spirit" . The Talk of the Town. Comment. The New Yorker . 90 (12): 23–24.
— (September 1, 2014).
"Heaven's gaits : what we do when we walk" . The Critics. A Critic at Large. The New Yorker . 90 (25): 74–77.
— (December 22–29, 2014).
"The fires of Paris : why do people still fight about the Paris Commune?" . The Critics. Books. The New Yorker . 90 (41): 145–149.
2015–2019
Hughes, Robert (2015). The spectacle of skill : new and selected writings of Robert Hughes . Introduction by Adam Gopnik.
Gopnik, Adam (January 12, 2015).
"The outside game : how the sociologist Howard Becker studies the conventions of the unconventional" . Paris Journal. The New Yorker . 90 (43): 26–31.
— (February 2, 2015).
"The driver's seat : what we learn when we learn to drive" . Personal History. The New Yorker . 90 (46): 48–55.
— (March 16, 2015).
"In the memory ward : the Warburg is Britain's most eccentric and original library. Can it survive?" . Dept. of Culture. The New Yorker . 91 (4): 34–41.
[4]
— (May 4, 2015).
"Trollope trending : why he's still the novelist of the way we live now" . The Critics. A Critic at Large. The New Yorker . 91 (11): 28–32.
— (July 27, 2015).
"Sweet home Alabama : Harper Lee's Go set a watchman " . The Critics. Books. The New Yorker . 91 (21): 66–71.
— (August 3, 2015).
"The comparable Max : Max Beerbohm's cult of the diminutive" . The Critics. Books. The New Yorker . 91 (22): 74–79.
Charb (2016). Open letter : on blasphemy, Islamophobia, and the true enemies of free expression . Foreword by Adam Gopnik. New York: Little, Brown.
ISBN
9780316311335 .
[5]
Stettner, Louis (2016). Penn Station, New York . Introduction by Adam Gopnik. Thames & Hudson.
Gopnik, Adam (February 1, 2016).
"Vaucluse" . Goings on About Town. Tables for Two. The New Yorker . 91 (46): 13.
— (April 25, 2016).
"Long play : the charmed lives of Paul McCartney" . A Critic at Large. The New Yorker . 92 (11): 46–49.
[6]
— (May 23, 2016).
"Liberal-in-Chief" . The Talk of the Town. Comment. The New Yorker . 92 (15): 23–24.
— (July 11, 2016).
"Cool runnings : how to become President of Iceland" . Letter from Reykjavik. The New Yorker . 92 (21): 44–49.
[7]
— (January 16, 2017).
"Mixed Up" . A Critic at Large. The New Yorker . 92 (45): 81–85.
[8]
— (January 30, 2017).
"No cigar" . The Talk of the Town. Encore Dept. The New Yorker . 92 (47): 20–21.
[9]
— (March 20, 2017).
"The illiberal imagination : are liberals on the wrong side of history?" . The Critics. Books. The New Yorker . 93 (5): 88–93.
[10]
— (July 3, 2017).
"A new man : Ernest Hemingway, revised and revisited" . The Critics. Books. The New Yorker . 93 (19): 61–66.
[11]
— (December 4, 2017).
"Wired : what Alexander Calder set in motion" . The Critics. Books. The New Yorker . 93 (39): 73–77.
[12]
— (February 12–19, 2018).
"After the fall : drawing the right lessons from the decline in violent crime" . The Critics. Books. The New Yorker . 94 (1): 92–97.
[13]
— (March 4, 2019).
"Diderot dicta : how a pornographer, polemicist, and prisoner became the Age of Reason's greatest impresario" . The Critics. Books. The New Yorker . 95 (2): 54–60.
[14]
— (May 20, 2019).
"Younger longer : can the infirmities of aging be postponed?" . Brave New World Dept. The New Yorker . 95 (13): 36–43.
[15]
— (December 30, 2019).
"Sad buildings in Brooklyn : scenes from the life of Roz Chast" . Profiles. The New Yorker . 95 (42): 32–39.
[16]
2020–
Gopnik, Adam (January 6, 2020).
"Good old days" . The Talk of the Town. Comment. The New Yorker . 95 (43): 13–14.
[17]
— (June 1, 2020).
"The empty couch" . Coronavirus Chronicles. The New Yorker . 96 (15): 16–20.
[18]
— (December 28, 2020).
"Hot-ice-cream dreams : the marvellously mixed–up masters of early animated cartoons" . The Critics. Books. The New Yorker . 96 (42): 78–82.
[19]
— (January 4–11, 2021).
"Fault lines" . The Talk of the Town. Comment. The New Yorker . 96 (43): 15–16.
[20]
— (September 6, 2021).
"Cooked books : real food from fictional recipes" . The Critics. Readings. April 9, 2007. The New Yorker . 97 (27): 74–76.
[21]
[22]
— (May 23, 2022).
"Power up : are today's dictators different?" . The Critics. Books. The New Yorker . 98 (13): 56–61.
[23]
— (January 13, 2023).
"Writer Adam Gopnik on His Surprise Cameo Opposite Cate Blanchett in Tár " .
Esquire . London.
Gopnik, Adam , "Winter Sun: How Camille Pissarro went from mediocrity to magnificence",
The New Yorker , 1 & 8 January 2024, pp. 53–57.
Notes
^ Discusses General
David Petraeus .
^ Recent books on
Galileo .
^ Reviews
Buell, Lawrence (2014). The dream of the Great American Novel . Belknap/Harvard University Press.
ISBN
9780674051157 . .
^ Online version is titled "The world's weirdest library".
^ Originally published in French in 2015 as Lettre aux escrocs de l'islamophobie qui font le jeu des racistes.
^ Title in the online table of contents is "Paul McCartney’s Magnificent Melodic Gift".
^ Online version is titled "Iceland's historic candidate".
^ Online version is titled "Montaigne on Trial".
^ Online version is titled "Daniel Barenboim's New York anniversary".
^ Online version is titled "Are liberals on the wrong side of history?".
^ Online version is titled "Hemingway, the sensualist".
^ Online version is titled "How Alexander Calder made art move".
^ Online version is titled "The great crime decline".
^ Online version is titled "How the man of reason got radicalized".
^ Online version is titled "Can we live longer but stay younger?".
^ Online version is titled "Scenes from the life of Roz Chast".
^ Online version is titled "Storytelling across the ages".
^ Online version is titled "The new theatrics of remote therapy".
^ Online version is titled "The mixed–up masters of early animated cartoons".
^ Online version is titled "What we get wrong about America’s crisis of democracy".
^ Originally published in the April 9, 2007 issue.
^ Online version is titled "What’s the point of food in fiction?".
^ Online version is titled "How to build a Twenty-first-Century tyrant".