The Five Best Books to Read Before an Election
These titles might lend readers a new perspective ahead of November 5.
These titles might lend readers a new perspective ahead of November 5.
Rivals brims with absurd excess, but is deeply serious about pleasure.
The men of The Golden Bachelorette are looking for love—but they’re also finding friendship with one another.
These eight titles are some of the best the true-crime genre has to offer.
George Orwell famously argued that clear language in politics can be a bulwark against oppression. But in the Trump era, his solution no longer holds.
In Conclave, Vatican City isn’t immune to election-season absurdity.
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.
And I’m losing my mind.
The oratorio is a feat of sustained inspiration arguably unsurpassed in the canon of Western classical music.
This year is nothing like 2020, and a collective sense of resignation might make all the difference.
Democratic politics and pop culture have long been entangled—but entertainers seem a bit more sheepish about their endorsements lately.
On reality TV, motherhood is turning into a jumble of feminist ideals and branded domesticity.
The subscription money enriching Jeff Bezos could instead be spent on the journalism crucial to preserving democracy.
A short story
Sean Baker, the director of Anora, has become independent cinema’s best hustler.
When Donald Trump and Elon Musk can turn death threats into punch lines, the joke is on the rest of us—and that’s the point.
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.
Obscure meme costumes are sucking the joy from the holiday.