Poem in Autumn
A poem by May Sarton, published in The Atlantic in 1942
A poem by May Sarton, published in The Atlantic in 1942
Works that meditate on the intense bonds forged in our early years: Your weekly guide to the best in books
Novels partially based on their author’s life are more popular than ever. Ironically, invention built on the truth can be the best kind of escapism.
He had no choice.
A brilliant new account upends bedrock assumptions about 30,000 years of change.
A poem for Sunday
Almost 100 years ago, Mrs. Dalloway anticipated the anxiety of seeing—and being seen.
See you in the funny pages: Your weekly guide to the best in books
Picture books aren’t just for children.
Is the collapse of genre boundaries and the erosion of fervent musical loyalties a good thing?
Why did he lie about his sources?
At last he’s put aside the pyrotechnics and gone all in on his great theme: the American family.
A poem by Adam Zagajewski, published in The Atlantic in 2011
The case for and against e-readers: Your weekly guide to the best in books
Sanjena Sathian on the thin border between the unreal and the real
A short story
In her writings, Simone de Beauvoir repeatedly returned to a childhood friendship that deeply influenced her views on freedom and human desire.
A poem for Sunday
Works that critique police brutality, racism, and our obsession with true crime: Your weekly guide to the best in books
A poem by Linda Gregerson, published in The Atlantic in 2014