25 Books to Get Lost in This Summer
The Atlantic’s writers and editors have chosen fiction and nonfiction to match all sorts of moods.
The Atlantic’s writers and editors have chosen fiction and nonfiction to match all sorts of moods.
A historic double brood is upon us. They’ve waited years for this moment.
OpenAI just killed Siri.
I thought this trial was a sideshow; I now think I was wrong.
Why is the GOP passing up such an easy election-year attack?
His true gift lies in his combination of an entertainer’s desperate desire to be liked and an antagonistic streak.
These trees once proliferated wildly across eastern North America, but now they’re dying out.
There isn’t much evidence that intermittent fasting leads to lasting weight loss. Why is it still so popular?
Where the clocks are off in both directions
Some go to great lengths to give kids their own room. But children can thrive without their own space.
Claire Messud tells a complicated and ambivalent tale about her French family’s history in Algeria.
Protecting species from extinction is not nearly enough.
There are more ways to connect with people than ever before. But are these connections real? Or simulating real relationships?
Maya Rudolph’s return to the show proved why she’s so beloved.
Culture and entertainment musts from Caroline Mimbs Nyce
Western leaders do themselves no good when they avoid confronting hard necessities.
A poem for Sunday
“It’s extraordinary how much politics have been warped in the Trump era.”
One thing you quickly learn when speaking with a child: They’re natural philosophers.
If companies can figure out how to mine them.