Ode to Uncertainty
I’m not sleeping and neither are you.
I’m not sleeping and neither are you.
A poem for Sunday
Alexei Navalny’s memoir, in particular, reminds readers how crucial the freedoms to vote and dissent are.
These titles might lend readers a new perspective ahead of November 5.
These eight titles are some of the best the true-crime genre has to offer.
A poem for Wednesday
The late Gary Indiana kept the culture of his time close to his chest because it fueled his indignation—and his fixations.
A new book argues that privacy is the key to a meaningful existence.
The oratorio is a feat of sustained inspiration arguably unsurpassed in the canon of Western classical music.
A poem for Sunday
Political autobiographies are usually dreck, but some rise above their genre.
In a new novel, France’s famously abrasive author progresses from barbed satire to a spiritual-conversion narrative.
The musician’s greatest songs are dramatic, psychologically complex, and often very bleak.
Hackish campaign memoirs shouldn’t indict the entire genre—there are truly excellent books written about power from the inside.
How did Alexei Navalny stand up to a totalitarian regime?
A poem
The Tesla and X mogul has long dreamed of redesigning the world in his own extreme image. Trump may be his Trojan horse.
Cases of loose inspiration or coincidental convergences in art can be fascinating, because they force us to rethink what originality really means.
In Alia Trabucco Zerán’s novel Clean, a housekeeper’s testimony exposes social fissures that have endured after Pinochet.
These immersive works of journalism follow ordinary Americans facing long odds.