The Books Briefing: The Best Books to Get Lost in This Summer
Memoirs and novels that satisfy the urge for high drama: Your weekly guide to the best in books
Memoirs and novels that satisfy the urge for high drama: Your weekly guide to the best in books
When art about the subject glamorizes it, audiences pay the price.
A poem for Sunday
A poem by Carolyn Forché, published in The Atlantic in 1979
Jackie Collins sold half a billion books, taught women to demand power, and told the truth about Hollywood, yet she’s never gotten her due.
The raw power of correspondence: Your weekly guide to the best in books
The American Guides were unusual not only for their shaggy opulence and Americana maximalism, but also for their source of funding: the federal government.
And how The Mandalorian can restore the true power of George Lucas’s galaxy
Carving out room for freedom and self-identification: Your weekly guide to the best in books
What pioneering new research has revealed about the forest
The Handmaid’s Tale showed the ease with which the unthinkable can become ordinary—a lesson crucial in the age of the Big Lie.
A poem for Sunday
Works that reshape ideas about masculinity for fathers and their children: Your weekly guide to the best in books
Known as a master of horror, he also understood the power—and the limits—of science.
Cultish, a new book by the linguist Amanda Montell, reveals how insidery language informs the communities of modern life.
A captivating new history helps us see the humble appliance’s sweeping influence on modern life.
A poem by W. S. Merwin, published in The Atlantic in 1999
Stories on visibility, self-understanding, and the development of queerness as an identity: Your weekly guide to the best in books
Neither authors nor publishing houses have figured out how to turn the new president into a compelling villain.
A poem for Memorial Day