
‘I Run the Country and the World’
Donald Trump believes he’s invincible. But the cracks are beginning to show.
Donald Trump believes he’s invincible. But the cracks are beginning to show.
They thought they’d reached their journeys’ end. Now many of them have come full circle.
The Atlantic’s writers and editors have chosen fiction and nonfiction to match all sorts of moods.
I loved my mom more than my dog. So why did I cry for him but not for her?
The Israeli leader and his allies bet everything on Trump. But he’s just not that into them.
While many Democrats remained in denial, Mike Quigley perceived something painfully familiar.
Americans need to get off the tidiness treadmill.
A worrying pattern has taken hold in public television.
A feature that lets you virtually try on clothes has a dangerous flaw.
In 1965, the two intellectual giants squared off in a debate at Cambridge. It didn’t go quite as Buckley hoped.
The “perfect” platonic bond used to be between two men. What happened?
The 47th president seems to wish he were king—and he is willing to destroy what is precious about this country to get what he wants.
The PKK is disarming. Can Turkey keep the peace?
A swannery in southern England, tornado damage in Kentucky, drought conditions in the Florida Everglades, a rally race in a Chinese desert, and much more
Trump’s vandalism of the national-security structure, Signalgate, and a conversation with Susan Rice
The author is willing to let her main character be both her double and the butt of her joke.
To figure out who will benefit most, doctors should consider a particularly toxic kind of fat.
The person charged with attacking an American Jewish gathering and killing two Israeli-embassy aides disingenuously invoked the Palestinian struggle as a pretext to harm Jews.
The 1970s campaign fought to get women paid for their work in the home—and envisioned a society built to better support motherhood.
My street got leveled by 150-mph winds. Why do I feel somehow at ease?