Briefly Noted Book Reviews - The New Yorker
The New Yorker2026-03-30T10:00:00.000Z
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Kids, Wait Till You Hear This!, by Liza Minnelli, as told to Michael Feinstein (Grand Central). Early in this unvarnished memoir, Minnelli—the daughter of the director Vincente Minnelli and the tormented entertainer Judy Garland—muses, “Was life perfect with my parents? With Papa, yes. With Mama? Stay tuned.” Here, Minnelli, whose cultural footprint extends from television to pop music, chronicles her efforts to establish a career on her own terms, avoid the drug dependencies that afflicted her mother, and reckon with the “intense highs and anxious lows” that have defined her life as a performer. Even dark memories are recounted with an upbeat touch: “I was a Chrysler, honey! Just order up some new parts for me, and you’ll get me back on the road.”

Money Beyond Borders, by Barry Eichengreen (Princeton). The international economy relies on the U.S. dollar, a fact that rewards American banks, businesses, policymakers, and people. As this sweeping history points out, however, the greenback is only the latest in a centuries-long series of global currencies, including the Dutch guilder and the British pound sterling, whose statures have risen and fallen with the fortunes of their issuers. For now, Eichengreen argues, none of the dollar’s would-be challengers, from the renminbi to digital alternatives such as stablecoins, have what it takes to supplant it. But, as America’s debts pile up and its relative wealth and power decline, the dollar’s appeal may fade.
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A Beautiful Loan, by Mary Costello (Norton). “I have been trying to account for certain events in my life,” Anna, this novel’s forty-five-year-old narrator, tells us by way of introduction. The events in question revolve around her relationships with two men: Peter, an older, aloof Irishman whom she met at nineteen and soon married; and Karim, a warm, devout Muslim from Algeria whom she dates after her marriage falls apart. The two couldn’t be more different, but Anna sees both as a means to freedom from “all the outer chaos.” Peter’s penchant for solitude and Karim’s commitment to Islamic rules each seem to offer Anna the buffer and order she desires, but not without a price. This psychologically raw record of one woman’s life explores the consequences of orienting oneself in relation to another.

Spoiled Milk, Avery Curran (Doubleday). The backdrop of this chilling début novel is the Briarley School for Girls, a regimented institution housed in an imposing English estate. “The bells governed our lives,” Emily, the teen-aged narrator, explains, as do the mistresses, who strictly impose propriety. The tragic death of a prized student, however, sets loose something wicked—food begins to rot, people start to disappear, and those who remain become unrecognizable. In search of answers, Emily and her friends find themselves consulting paranormal expertise, in the form of “mediums, and crystal balls.” Brimming with spiritualism and sensuality, this neo-gothic story navigates the terrain between life and death, and between childhood and adulthood.
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