New 9/11 Evidence Points to Deep Saudi Complicity
Two decades of U.S. policy appear to be rooted in a mistaken understanding of what happened that day.
Two decades of U.S. policy appear to be rooted in a mistaken understanding of what happened that day.
The weight-loss effects of GLP-1 drugs have little to do with the gut.
On the ground in the Georgia congresswoman’s alternate universe
Google is serving an audience that wants quick and easy results. That may lead to disaster.
Justice Alito blamed his wife for the incident, but he did not disavow what the symbol stands for.
We’re all on the Eras Tour, forever.
In her slim books, the French writer Colombe Schneck stares honestly at her own life, without illusions or sentimentality.
Inside the competition to lure affluent travelers with luxurious lounges
In rural Virginia, religious and community groups are filling cavities, treating diabetes, and stepping into a health-care void.
Rediscovering the killing that helped spur my family’s exodus from Mississippi
The engrossing darkness of The Crow
In living with cancer, Suleika Jaouad has learned to wrench meaning from our short time on Earth.
Pigs have a track record of hosting flu viruses that jump to us.
A rap feud, a New Yorker essay, and the skin-deep racialism that still holds us back
Teen fashion used to be distinct. But the line separating it from adult style has blurred.
And that will decide the outcome in November
With months to go before the election, the show is running out of things to say about Donald Trump.
Autocrats in China, Russia, and elsewhere are now making common cause with MAGA Republicans to discredit liberalism and freedom around the world.
Life is not measured by a moment. Focus on getting the big things right.
The Atlantic’s writers and editors have chosen fiction and nonfiction to match all sorts of moods.