Culture
Five Players to Watch at the U.S. Open

The Masters, the primary main of the 12 months, was gained by the 25-year-old Scottie Scheffler, who’s on the rise.
The P.G.A. Championship, the second, was gained by the 29-year-old Justin Thomas, who has been one of many sport’s finest within the final 5 years.
Now comes the third main, this week’s United States Open on the Nation Membership in Brookline, Mass.
Will youth be served as soon as extra, or will somebody in his 30s or 40s produce some magic? Listed below are 5 gamers to keep watch over at Brookline:
Scottie Scheffler
Overlook concerning the missed reduce in final month’s P.G.A. Championship. Scheffler, the No. 1 participant on the planet, rebounded with a second-place end the following week on the Charles Schwab Problem in Fort Price, Texas. If not for Sam Burns, who fired a final-round 65 and made a 38-foot birdie putt within the playoff, Scheffler would have 5 victories this season.
Among the credit score ought to go to his caddie, Ted Scott. The 2 first linked final 12 months. Earlier than working with Scott, Scheffler was in rivalry just a few instances however failed to interrupt by means of. For 15 years, Scott was the caddie for the two-time Masters champion Bubba Watson.
Justin Thomas
Successful a second main, as Thomas did on the P.G.A. this 12 months, places a golfer on a brand new plateau. Successful a 3rd would elevate him even additional. Solely 47 gamers have collected three or extra main championships.
Thomas, who completed third eventually week’s RBC Canadian Open, is greater than able to including to that whole at Brookline. As expert as he’s with the wedge — a primary instance was his method to the inexperienced on the primary playoff gap on the P.G.A. that left him with a 6-foot birdie putt — he’s prone to make his share of saves to maintain himself in rivalry.
Phil Mickelson by no means captured an Open, ending second a document six instances. It could be one thing if his former caddie, Jim Mackay, who now works for Thomas, had been to win one with out him.
Will Zalatoris
In addition to he’s carried out in massive occasions, with 5 high 10s in his final seven majors, it’s arduous to imagine Zalatoris has but to win on the PGA Tour. He’s certain to interrupt by means of.
He took a major step together with his exhibiting within the P.G.A., dropping in a playoff to Thomas. The important thing may be his means to make quick putts, which has plagued him previously.
Zalatoris, 25, who tied for fifth two weeks in the past on the Memorial Match, has registered just one skilled victory, the 2020 TPC Colorado Championship on the Korn Ferry Tour.
Rory McIlroy
McIlroy, 33, who shot a 62 on Sunday in Canada to publish his twenty first tour victory, continues to be attempting to win his first main for the reason that 2014 P.G.A. Championship. What had been the percentages {that a} drought in majors would final this lengthy?
He had his probabilities this 12 months, ending second on the Masters and eighth on the P.G.A. McIlroy wants to begin robust, as he did on the P.G.A. with a five-under 65, and keep inside vary, even when he isn’t at his finest. He trailed by 9 strokes heading into the ultimate spherical of the P.G.A, which is just too massive a deficit even for a participant of his caliber.
To contend, McIlroy might want to putt properly from inside 10 ft.
Dustin Johnson
Given his suspension by the PGA Tour final week for becoming a member of the Saudi-backed LIV Golf tour, there isn’t a doubt that Johnson will likely be attracting numerous consideration at Brookline.
The Open is a United States Golf Affiliation occasion, so the suspension gained’t preserve him from the event, however he’s nonetheless not prone to make a run on the title. Since successful the Masters in 2020, Johnson, 37, who has fallen to No. 16 on the planet rankings, has posted a high 10 in solely one among his six main appearances. As a matter of reality, he hasn’t gained any PGA Tour occasions throughout that span.
In 10 begins this season, his finest end was a fourth on the World Golf Championships-Dell Applied sciences Match Play event in March. He missed the reduce on the P.G.A. with successive rounds of 73.

Culture
New Crime Novels With Unexpected Twists

By Jeffery Deaver
Colter Shaw is a professional “rewards seeker,” a skilled tracker who specializes in finding missing people — usually for the reward money, though sometimes out of the goodness of his heart. It’s a simple enough vocation and yet, as the suspense veteran Deaver has demonstrated in four prior Shaw novels (and the TV adaptation “Tracker”), the ways in which Shaw finds peril — or peril finds him — keep multiplying. In SOUTH OF NOWHERE (Putnam, 403 pp., $30), his sister Dorion implores him to help to locate potential survivors after a levee collapses in a small Northern California town.
From here, Deaver is off to the proverbial races. Does every chapter have a twist? Pretty much. Is Colter just likable enough to brush off needless conflict and still find time for romance? Definitely. Is the writing a little too reminiscent of detailed outlines like the ones Deaver is known to fashion before writing a first draft? You bet. Could I put the book down? Not a chance.
The Colter Shaw series prioritizes action and the constant possibility of calamity, leaving only the barest amount of room for character development, like Colter’s continued grappling with the effects of his survivalist upbringing. The books don’t measure up to the best of Deaver’s Lincoln Rhyme novels, but they all accomplish their mission: thrilling engagement.
by Uzma Jalaluddin
Kausar Khan, introduced in DETECTIVE AUNTY (Harper Perennial, 326 pp., paperback, $17.99), has spent the past 20 years relishing the stability of placid North Bay, where she and her husband moved after fleeing busy, bustling Toronto in the wake of a family tragedy.
But then her husband dies shortly after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, and her daughter, Sana, calls with upsetting news: “I’m in trouble. There’s been a murder, and I’m the prime suspect.” It seems Sana’s landlord has been found inside her clothing store with a dagger in his chest. Kausar returns to Toronto’s Golden Crescent neighborhood as both a concerned mother and a tenacious amateur sleuth.
The case against Sana is strong, but as Kausar discovers, the murder victim had many enemies. If only the ghosts of Kausar’s past would stop haunting her present-day investigation!
Jalaluddin, who has crossed into crime fiction from the romantic comedy genre, doesn’t skimp on plotting — the whodunit twist caught me pleasingly flat-footed — but shines most with character and community, showing the complexities of mother-daughter relationships and the variability of longtime friendships. “Detective Aunty” is the first in a new series and I certainly welcome more installments.
by Michael McGarrity
Reading Michael McGarrity’s noir novel NIGHT IN THE CITY (Norton, 263 pp., $28.99), about the midcentury death of a Manhattan socialite named Laura Neilson, I found it difficult to avoid thinking about Vera Caspary’s 1943 classic suspense novel “Laura” (and the equally classic film adaptation featuring Gene Tierney and Dana Andrews). While I wished for more structural innovation along the lines of what Caspary accomplished, I did enjoy McGarrity’s more conventional narrative here: A man finds his ex-lover murdered and must clear his name, rooting out widespread corruption as the atmosphere thickens.
The man is the assistant district attorney Sam Monroe, who dated Laura for a time and never really got over the way she broke up with him by bringing a new flame to the local bar that was “their private haunt and rendezvous.” So when she summons him to her Manhattan penthouse, off Sam goes, waved in by an expectant doorman — only to find her body, his Army dog tags wrapped around her neck. One thing is clear: He’s been set up. With the help of an intrepid private eye and his former lover’s diary, Sam sets out to find her killer.
McGarrity paints a seedy portrait of a bygone New York that pulses with life, lust and larceny.
by Leonie Swann; translated by Amy Bojang
Finally, it gives me great pleasure that Swann’s exceedingly delightful Sheep Detective books are once again available for American audiences. “Three Bags Full,” first published in 2005 and reissued in February, introduced an intrepid flock on the case of who had killed their beloved shepherd. In BIG BAD WOOL (Soho Crime, 384 pp., $28.95), the sheep — including Zora, “a Blackface sheep with a weakness for the abyss,” Ramesses, a “nervous young ram full of good ideas,” and Miss Maple, “the cleverest sheep in the flock and maybe even the world” — return with a new minder, Rebecca.
They’re wintering next to a French château, which sounds idyllic, but the disappearance of other sheep, the mounting deaths of deer and, eventually, a human, strike fear in the hearts of the flock, who are worried they or their shepherd may be next. Is it a werewolf, the shape-shifting creature called Garou, as the local goats seem to believe? Or a more prosaic yet sinister culprit? How the sheep discover the truth will enchant readers who pay close attention.
Culture
Book Review: ‘Warhol’s Muses,’ by Laurence Leamer

Leamer is undeniably excellent at setting a scene, especially a louche one. He knows just when to have someone wonder if he’s caught crabs from a couch or a crotch. And Leamer is very good on rich people playing at being disheveled, tuned to the comic possibilities of that particular brand of tourism. (Holzer, of Florida real estate wealth, announces after seeing the Stones for the first time that “they’re all from the lower classes. … There is no class anymore. Everyone is equal.” Leamer adds that Holzer’s “maid and butler might have disagreed.”) Nearly every page has at least one great sleazy anecdote or pinch of gossip.
The problem is that so many of these scenes, however expertly set, are variations on the same stale theme of boomers getting up to wild stuff because the times they were a-changin’. Does anyone still need reminding that “the ’60s was a decade of radical political and cultural dissent”? Or that it was once considered shocking that a high-culture figure such as Rudolf Nureyev could go straight from a performance of “Swan Lake” to dancing “to rock ’n’ roll in a nightclub wearing dungarees. Dungarees! Not a suit and tie like some uptight New York businessman”? Reading this book felt akin to being trapped in an endless Time-Life loop of jingle jangle mornings, lazy Sunday afternoons and warm San Franciscan nights, the author providing the stentorian voice-over as the usual footage rolls by: Bob Dylan “would soon emerge as the poetic troubadour of the ’60s”; Brian Jones, “addicted to drugs and sex … was on a short road to an early death”; Jim Morrison, “a troubadour of the counterculture … wrote poetic lyrics that chronicled the lives of his generation.”
Such minor sins might have been forgiven had I ultimately gleaned some deep or unforeseen insight into the lives of the book’s subjects — a group that includes Ultra Violet, Ingrid Superstar, Brigid Berlin and other Factory figures — or, failing that, into Andy Warhol’s work. But I got neither. Nor was I convinced by the whopping claim that “without his Superstars, Warhol might never have become a world-celebrated artist.”
Meeting these 10 historical actors in roughly chronological order as they enter Warhol’s life, one has a view of the artist and his milieu that actually narrows rather than widens. Warhol, a shape-shifter so manic and intense that he could slide into several personas in the span of a single season, is here reduced to a necessarily static figure so that the women can bounce off him. Which is fine as a narrative strategy, but then not much happens to the women, either. As each one flickers into view, her upbringing (often troubled) is dutifully covered before she provides some service to Warhol — as entertainment, as emotional consort, as visual material, as key holder to Park Avenue penthouses — and then fades out to make room for the next one. (Sedgwick is the exception, a frequent and always beguiling presence; Solanas, the would-be assassin, and not one of the 10 Superstars, stands out as foil rather than helpmeet, but appears only briefly.)
Rarely is there any sense of genuine collaboration or exchange. The book’s subtitle gives away the game: In the end, these women of varied backgrounds, with their respective dreams and desires, are all here to play the same passive role — to be inevitably and unsurprisingly “destroyed by the Factory fame machine.”
Culture
Book Review: ‘The Family Dynamic,’ by Susan Dominus

Take the Murguia family: Amalia and Alfredo immigrated from a small region in central Mexico to Kansas City, and had seven children, five of whom shared three beds in one of the house’s two bedrooms. Alfred, one of the older children, excelled academically and was the first in his family to enroll in college — and, at every stage, helped guide his siblings into a variety of educational and social opportunities. As Dominus writes, “What the siblings had going for them above all else was one another.” They “pushed one another but also provided logistical support, connections and counsel,” along with “unquestionable loyalty.”
Similarly, the Chens, who immigrated from China after having violated that country’s one-child policy, settled in Virginia, where they opened a restaurant. While the parents had high standards, they had little time to guide their children. Instead, their cousin tells Dominus that “when he pictures one Chen child playing piano, a sibling is on the bench as well, refining the younger sibling’s technique; they leaned over homework together, the older teaching the younger.”
In large measure, the families Dominus portrays are not particularly well off. But what she calls “enterprising parents” go to great lengths to expose their children to music, theater, museums, libraries and, most important, mentors. One of the customers at the Chens’ restaurant was the head of a high school marching band; he volunteered to give their child lessons — and that child became a drum major.
Laurence Paulus, a producer of arts television programming and of modest means, took his children to openings at the Metropolitan Opera. Unable to afford tickets, they sat outside the theater to absorb the charged atmosphere, a transistor radio broadcasting the music. They waited in line for free performances of Shakespeare in the Park; they played music at home. One daughter became a world-famous theater director; another, the principal harpist in one of Mexico’s premier orchestras; their brother would co-found NY1, one of the nation’s first 24-hour community TV stations.
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