The X factors of the 2024 presidential race
A recent memoir considers how much we concede when we regard rest as a call to judgment.
In New Hampshire, Republican voters weary of Donald Trump’s histrionics and legal troubles saw a cool, calm candidate they liked.
A 1929 Soviet novel shows how dangerous ideas can destroy a society.
America’s segmented, limited, and naive policy approach toward Iran continues to fail. The U.S. needs to try something new.
He never quite says what precisely he thinks Russia gets right.
Joan Nathan reflects on Judith Jones and the cookbooks she edited.
Putin’s security service is reviving pressure tactics from a terrible past.
Voters who don’t easily make up their minds are usually greeted with annoyance or disdain, but what if they’re the ideal citizens?
Iran’s large-scale attack on Israel presents the United States with the chance to achieve a set of long-standing objectives.