The Growing Gender Divide, Three Minutes at a Time
Sabrina Carpenter tackles the exasperation of being young, female, straight, and single in 2024.
Sabrina Carpenter tackles the exasperation of being young, female, straight, and single in 2024.
We found out that our new neighbors were supporting January 6 insurrectionists. Coming September 18.
They have endured so much, and to endure this, they’ll have to adapt dramatically.
Eric Adams ran as a law-and-order candidate. But too often he creates his own drama.
In her new book, Eliza Griswold examines the forces that led to one congregation’s collapse.
She hasn’t had an in-depth interview with a journalist since she became the presumptive Democratic nominee for president.
A poem for Wednesday
After a Supreme Court ruling challenged his case, the special counsel filed a fresh indictment of Donald Trump.
A judge blocked the FTC’s effort to ban noncompetes. But the federal agency wasn’t the only one with its eye on these agreements.
About an hour before my first book event, I heard from my publicist that the bookstore had “concerns” about my conversation partner, Rabbi Andy Bachman, because he was a “Zionist.”
Ruby Opalka’s “Spit,” a new short story in The Atlantic, captures the intensity of young love.
In my years of government service, I saw again and again how they make agencies more accountable, efficient, and honest.
Wronged explores how the practice of claiming harm has become the rhetorical province of the powerful.
Did they waste it?
The pro-life justification for supporting the former president has now collapsed.
The hidden history of how some enslaved people exercised legal rights
Chicago vividly illustrated the limits of one approach—and the potential of another.
The rage and shame of the anti-anti-Trumpers is getting worse.
No one alive has seen a race like this.
Like viruses, illicit and prescription drugs leave behind traces in the country’s wastewater systems.