Have you ever wondered how a book becomes a book? From vats of ink to 800-pound rolls of paper, we went behind the scenes to reveal how exactly a book is made. nyti.ms/3p2FPE2
To illustrate the journey, we followed the creation of Marlon James’s “Moon Witch, Spider King,” a fantastical epic that draws on African mythology. nyti.ms/3p2FPE2
The book jacket is printed first:
The cover for “Moon Witch, Spider King” is unusually complicated. Most covers are printed using black, cyan, magenta and yellow ink, but two additional colors were used for this one: Day-Glo green and a special blue. nyti.ms/3p2FPE2
Proofs of the cover are made to inspect the colors, and then the print run begins. After the covers are printed and laminated, they are put on a truck and driven to a plant that will print the book and package them all together. nyti.ms/3p2FPE2
Next is the press:
“Moon Witch, Spider King” was printed by Lakeside Book Company, one of the largest printing companies in the U.S. The facility where it was printed runs 24 hours a day, seven days a week; it turns out millions of books each week. nyti.ms/3p2FPE2
On printing day, plates of text are installed. Giant rolls of paper, about 800 pounds each, are spliced and spooled. The book is printed 32 pages at a time, and every few hours, the plates must be swapped out so the next 32 pages can be printed. nyti.ms/3p2FPE2
At the end of the printing press, the 32-page sections are automatically cut and folded. The printed sections are then bundled together to keep them in place until they are bound. nyti.ms/3p2FPE2
Next is the binding:
At a bindery, printed pages are loaded into a gathering machine. That machine will put the pages together in order, arranging them as a complete piece for the first time. Then, each book is trimmed and glued together. nyti.ms/3p2FPE2
Next, the books head to a machine called the backer, which readies them for the cardboard cover to be attached, then to a case-in machine to apply the casing, then to a jacket wrapper machine that wraps the book with the printed and cut book jackets. nyti.ms/3p2FPE2
After all of that, copies are ready. “There is still something miraculous about a book, about seeing it,” Marlon James said. nyti.ms/3p2FPE2
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For the three decades that Clarence Thomas has sat on the Supreme Court, he and Ginni Thomas have worked in tandem to take aim at targets like Roe v. Wade and affirmative action. Her views, once seen as fringe, have come to dominate the Republican Party. nyti.ms/34ZMeZQ
In @NYTmag, @dannyhakim and @Jo_Becker report on how blurred the lines between the interests of Justice Thomas and his wife, Ginni Thomas, became during the effort to overturn the 2020 election. nyti.ms/3LSnhQt
This article draws on hours of recordings and internal documents from groups affiliated with the Thomases; interviews with classmates, friends and colleagues, as well as more than a dozen Trump White House aides and some of Justice Thomas’s former clerks. nyti.ms/3LSnhQt
For the last month, dozens of members of the New Mexico National Guard have been deployed to classrooms throughout the state to help with crippling staff shortages that have left schools struggling to maintain in-person learning. nyti.ms/3h2v5Ru
Lt. Col. Susana Corona is one of the members who never envisioned that one of her missions would require learning the classroom phrase “1,2,3 eyes on me!” and being armed with a lesson plan. nyti.ms/3h2v5Ru
Placing uniformed officers in classrooms has drawn mixed reactions. Some critics worry about creating anxiety for student populations that have historically had hostile experiences with law enforcement. But many schools have embraced them as a critical step toward recovery.
Computer scientists say they have identified two men as its likely authors — including one of the first online commentators to call attention to the messages that shaped the viral movement. nyti.ms/36rmLJa
The studies provide the first empirical evidence about the origins of QAnon, a toxic myth and conspiracy theory that has been linked to scores of violent incidents and that the FBI has labeled a potential terrorist threat. nyti.ms/36rmLJa
The analyses built on long-established forms of forensic linguistics that can detect telltale variations.
Sophisticated software broke down the Q texts into patterns of three-character sequences and tracked the recurrence of each possible combination. nyti.ms/36rmLJa
Anna Shcherbakova, 17, of Russia, landed two quadruple jumps and received the highest artistic marks to win the Olympic women’s figure skating competition on Thursday. We broke down how she won the gold. nyti.ms/3GZCUCj
Shcherbakova opened her free skate assuredly with a quad flip-triple toe combination and a separate quad flip. The reigning world champion, she again delivered on the sport’s biggest stage. nyti.ms/3GZCUCj
The heavy favorite — her teammate Kamila Valieva, 15 — stumbled from the start and fell on a quad toe jump to finish a disappointing fourth amid the turmoil of a doping scandal. Entering the Olympics, she was considered the greatest skater of all time. nyti.ms/3GZCUCj
For the first time, the quadruple jump could be essential for Olympic medals in women’s figure skating. It’s a Russian specialty and they are expected to land several in Thursday’s free skate, the only program in which they are allowed to perform quads. nyti.ms/3uVk5h5
The Russian women are so good at those quads that even the top male skater, the Olympic gold medalist Nathan Chen, said he did not want to compete against them. “They are so awesome that I think they’d beat all of us,” he said with a laugh. nyti.ms/3uVk5h5
Men have been landing quadruple jumps for years, beginning in 1988. But on the women’s side, the advent of the jump and its necessity for success is relatively new and has shaken up the sport. nyti.ms/3uVk5h5
Figure skating in the U.S. is now plainly an Asian American sport.
For the second consecutive Winter Games, four of the six figure skaters representing the U.S. in the singles events are Asian American: Karen Chen, Nathan Chen, Alysa Liu and Vincent Zhou. nyti.ms/3HIBZHn
Asians make up around 7% of the U.S. population but have become vividly overrepresented in ice rinks and competitions at every level, from coast to coast.
Gradually, they have transformed a sport that, until the 1990s, was almost uniformly white. nyti.ms/3HIBZHn
Skaters have infused competitions with music that draws from their Asian heritage, expressing their roots while navigating the perils of hate on social media and a climate of anxiety about anti-Asian violence. nyti.ms/3HIBZHn